The following year, Rivaldo was totally untouchable, scoring and setting up goals all over the place as Barcelona racked up big wins in La Liga and played out two 3-3 thrillers with Manchester United in the Champions League. Barca won the league again, finishing an awesome 11 points ahead of Real Madrid, and Rivaldo finished second in the top-scorer charts for the second year in a row, just one goal behind Raul.
That summer, he carried that superstardom back to South America as he powered Brazil to Copa America success. He scored five in as many games, including two goals and an assist as he, Ronaldo, Roberto Carlos and Cafu beat Uruguay 3-0 in the final.
Rivaldo, therefore, romped to the 1999 Ballon d’Or, and there was no real debate. He finished far ahead of David Beckham and Andriy Shevchenko in the voting, and rightly so.
That, success, however, was a turning point. According to Van Gaal, Rivaldo walked in the next day and declared that it was he who calls the shots now, not the head coach. Van Gaal was apoplectic because of the arrogance, but also irritated that the star would not acknowledge the team’s contribution to his Ballon d’Or win.
“I always put Rivaldo on the left,” Van Gaal explained. “He did that very well. The team adapted to Rivaldo. The day after he won the Ballon d'Or, he came to me. He thought he should talk to the team. I actually thought he meant to thank them, but that wasn't it. [Rivaldo said] ‘I no longer play on the left, I will play as a number 10 from now on’. I told him that he would no longer play in the first team and that he had been voted the best in the world thanks to his team-mates and because he was on [the left wing]. I told him to go and thank his team-mates for his election."
But what could Van Gaal do? He had to accommodate the world's No.1 somehow. Sadly, it all went wrong. Barca lost their Liga title, finishing five points behind Deportivo, lost in the Copa del Rey semi-finals to Atletico Madrid, and, most painfully, were beaten by Valencia in the Champions League semi-finals. According to the manager, it was Rivaldo's fault.
"He was important to us and I gave in to it," he said. "Although the Spanish media portray me as arrogant, I do listen to others: the players, the people of the club, the president. However, it was too late. That's why we lost that semi-final to Valencia. That was the biggest disappointment of that time."