Footballer Sergio Ramos spotted wearing a Patek Philippe

Sergio Ramos was recently photographed wearing a Patek Philippe Nautilus 5740G-001, the white gold perpetual calendar variant of what is already one of the most coveted sport-luxury watches on the planet. The sighting adds the Spanish footballer to a short list of collectors who have managed to acquire this notoriously difficult reference — a watch that, even at retail, almost no authorized dealer will sell to a walk-in customer.
Introduced at Baselworld 2018, the Patek Philippe Nautilus 5740G marked a watershed moment for the collection. It was the first time Patek placed a grand complication inside the Nautilus case — specifically the caliber 240 Q, an ultra-thin self-winding perpetual calendar movement measuring just 3.98mm in height. The 40mm white gold case retains the classic integrated bracelet and horizontally embossed dial architecture designed by Gerald Genta in 1976, while the perpetual calendar module adds instant displays for date, day, month, leap year, and moon phase, all with no need for manual correction until 2100. The blue sunburst dial with gold applied hour markers and luminescent coating threads the needle between sports watch legibility and grand complication elegance.
From a collector standpoint, the 5740G occupies rare territory. It successfully marries one of watchmaking's most respected complications with the Nautilus's status as a cultural icon, and the white gold execution gives it a cooler, more contemporary character than the yellow gold 5740J. Patek Philippe discontinued the reference in 2021 as part of a broader Nautilus portfolio restructuring, which immediately transformed the 5740G from a difficult-to-source new piece into an actively hunted discontinued reference.
Ramos, who built his career as one of European football's most decorated defenders across spells at Real Madrid and PSG, has long demonstrated a taste for serious timepieces. Choosing the 5740G rather than the more ubiquitous 5711 or 5726 signals genuine horological intent — this is not a watch bought for visibility alone.
On the secondary market, the Patek Philippe Nautilus 5740G-001 trades well above its already substantial retail price of $126,500. Current grey market values sit around $240,000, reflecting both the reference's discontinuation and the enduring demand for anything that sits at the intersection of the Nautilus identity and Patek's complication pedigree. For serious collectors, it remains one of the most justified premiums in the current market.