Messi, Guardiola donate money, Ronaldo finances hospitals for corona

Barcelona forward Lionel Messi and Manchester City coach Pep Guardiola have both made donations worth €1 million to help overburdened health care systems deal with the coronavirus pandemic, ESPN reports. The large part of Messi and Guardiola's contributions will go towards the fight against COVID-19 in Spain, the second-most affected country in Europe after Italy. The latest figures made available by the Spanish health ministry on Tuesday revealed there had been almost 40,000 confirmed cases and nearly 3,000 deaths in the country. Messi's donation will be split between two medical centers: Hospital Clinic in Barcelona and another in his native Rosario, Argentina. A source told ESPN that the total contribution is worth around €1m.  

Thank you, Leo, for your commitment and your support," the Twitter account for Hospital Clinic posted on Tuesday. Messi has regularly donated to hospitals in Barcelona. Last year, through his foundation, he helped found a new cancer wing at the Sant Joan de Deu children's hospital in the city. Former Barcelona coach Guardiola has also provided support to help Catalonia's battle against coronavirus. The region in the northeast of Spain has registered 8,000 cases so far. There have been over 200 deaths. Guardiola's donation, also to the total of €1m, will go to the Barcelona Medical College and the Angel Soler Daniel foundation. A statement said it would be used for the "acquisition of sanitary material during the COVID-19 emergency." Messi and Guardiola join a growing list of personalities from the world of football to offer financial help as the world grabbles to contain the spread of the virus. Juventus' Cristiano Ronaldo has also stepped in by combining with his agent, Jorge Mendes, to finance hospitals in Portugal. They will fund North Lisbon's University Hospital Centre (CHULN) with two intensive care wings and an intensive care wing in Porto's Santo Antonio hospital, which is part of Porto's University Hospital Centre. 

Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo Donate $2.16M To Help Fight Pandemic Coronavirus 

Juventus' Cristiano Ronaldo has also stepped in by combining with his agent, Jorge Mendes, to finance hospitals in Portugal. They will fund North Lisbon's University Hospital Centre (CHULN) with two intensive care wings and an intensive care wing in Porto's Santo Antonio hospital, which is part of Porto's University Hospital Centre. Bayern Munich striker Robert Lewandowski has also contributed €1m to the fight against the pandemic, while members of the German national team joined together to give €2.5m. Meanwhile, Cristiano Ronaldo has stepped in to help amid the coronavirus pandemic by combining with his agent to finance hospitals in Portugal. Ronaldo and agent Jorge Mendes will fund North Lisbon's University Hospital Centre (CHULN) with two intensive care wings and an intensive care wing in Porto's Santo Antonio hospital, which is part of Porto's University Hospital Centre. The CHULN, which includes Santa Maria and Pulido Valente hospitals, confirmed to ESPN that the two new intensive care wings would carry the names of the two football personalities. "Businessman Jorge Mendes and Cristiano Ronaldo will donate two intensive care wings for the CHULN; each wing will be equipped and will have the capacity for ten beds," CHULN told ESPN. "The units will be equipped with the charitable contribution of Mendes and Ronaldo. This equipment includes beds, ventilators, heart monitors, pumps and infusion syringes, essential equipment in the care of critically ill patients with COVID-19. 

Enjoyed this article? Stay informed by joining our newsletter!

Comments
Norainizah - Mar 27, 2020, 9:48 AM - Add Reply

Very generous

You must be logged in to post a comment.
Johanes Oliam - Mar 27, 2020, 2:42 PM - Add Reply

Wow! Thats a lot of money to be giving away.

You must be logged in to post a comment.
SK Ibrahim 440 - May 18, 2020, 5:36 AM - Add Reply

nice

You must be logged in to post a comment.

You must be logged in to post a comment.

About Author