Oh he's definitely an egomaniac but I think a lot of sports people are, even those who appear to be humble, deep down are narcissistic they're just better at hiding it. You see them retiring a lot later now, Roger Federer is one, he should have retired in 2017 after he won Wimbeldon, go out on his court, watched by his family and adoring fans, instead goes out with a whimper on Instagram, but his ego didn't allow it, only his body breaking down did. I think Nadal and Djokovic will be the same go on until their bodies can't do it anymore. Also, there's Zlatan, Serena Williams, Tom Brady, Fernando Alonso, lots of boxers never know when to quit. There's lots more but that's off the top of my head.
In their defence it must be hard to quit when you're 30-40, its still young, they still have a whole lot of life left and be told you can't do what you love anymore because you're body has been pushed too much and the younger generation are coming along must be hard, and if your brain is telling you can still do it, you probably ignore what your body is telling you, until you can't ignore it any longer.
I think Ronaldo here is finding it hard to accept his career might be over soon. That's the crux of the matter here, imo. That he's an extroverted diva doesn't help.
Well, that is Dr Dels introspective musings of the day done.
That said I don't care much either, didn't watch the interview, only saw the snippets.
Lately, when I've been saying...that something is quicker/faster...I've been using 'Kanye getting kicked out a Bar mitzvah' now I can change it up a little with 'Ronaldo getting kicked out of OT', so there's that, lol.