Lionel Messi

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Lionel Andrés Messi (born 24 June 1987 in Rosario, Argentina) is an Argentine football player, who currently plays as a second striker for FC Barcelona. He is often touted in the media as "the new Diego Maradona".

Lionel Messi
File:Messi01 2.jpg
Personal information
Full name Lionel Andrés Messi
Height 1.69 m (5 ft 7 in)
Position(s) Forward
Team information
Current team
FC Barcelona
‡ National team caps and goals as of June 30 2006

Career

Beginnings

Lionel Messi started playing football at a very early age for his hometown club, Newell's Old Boys. From the age of 11, he suffered from a hormone deficiency. As his parents were unable to pay for treatment in Argentina, they decided to move to Barcelona, Spain. Shortly after arriving, Lionel tried his luck with a trial at FC Barcelona, despite being only 13 years of age. He excelled at the trial and rapidly found himself starting for the Barcelona B team, averaging more than a goal per game.

Barcelona debut

In October 2004 Messi made his official debut for the first team against RCD Espanyol, becoming the third-youngest player to ever play for FC Barcelona. When he scored his first senior goal for the club against Albacete on May 1 2005, Messi was only 17 years, 10 months and 7 days old, making him the youngest player ever to score a league goal for FC Barcelona.

Argentina U-20

Messi was offered the chance to play for the Spanish national side, but he declined, preferring to wait for the opportunity to play for the country of his birth. In June 2004 he got his chance, playing in an under-20 friendly match against Paraguay.

In June 2005 Messi starred for the Argentina U-20 team that won the Football World Youth Championship in Netherlands, picking up the Golden Boot as top scorer with 6 goals, and the Golden Ball for the best player of the tournament. Despite his youth, Lionel was already being compared to Diego Maradona, one of the greatest football players of all time. On June 27, FC Barcelona renewed his contract until 2010, establishing a selling clause of €150 million.

International debut

On August 4, José Pekerman called him up to the senior Argentine national team. He made his debut against Hungary. However, he only played for three minutes of the game, being shown a red card and making him leave the field in his first attempt on goal. Messi famously acknowledged this shortened tenure before Argentina's next match against Paraguay saying "This is a re-debut, The first one was a bit short."

2005-06 season

Messi obtained Spanish citizenship on September 25 and was finally able to make his debut in this season's Spanish First Division. He had previously been unable to play because FC Barcelona had filled their quota of non-EU players. Messi's first outing in the UEFA Champions League at the Nou Camp was on September 28 against the Italian club Udinese. He impressed with some great passing and a seemingly telepathic relationship with Ronaldinho that earned him a standing ovation from the 70,000-odd Nou Camp faithful. In December of that year, the Italian newspaper Tuttosport awarded him the Golden Boy 2005 title for the best under-21 player in Europe, ahead of Wayne Rooney and Lukas Podolski.[1]

Messi scored 6 goals from 17 league appearances and scored 1 Champions League goal from the 6 games he featured in. Barcelona ended the season as champions of Spain and Europe.

World Cup 2006

The injury that kept him from playing for two months at the end of the 2005/06 league, jeopardized his presence in the 2006 FIFA World Cup. Nonetheless, Messi was selected in the Argentina squad for the 2006 FIFA World Cup on May 15, 2006. He also played in the farewell match against the Argentinian U-20 team and a friendly against Angola. Messi witnessed Argentina's opening match win against Ivory Coast from the bench. In the next match against Serbia and Montenegro, he came on as a late substitute to assist Hernán Crespo's goal within minutes of entering the game and also scored the final goal in the 6-0 victory.

Argentina advanced to the Round of 16 as top qualifiers from Group C. In the following game against Mexico, Messi came on as a substitute for Javier Saviola in the 84th minute, with the score tied 1-1. Argentina proceeded to win the game 2-1 in extra time. The win placed them into the quarter-finals, where they lost to the host nation Germany on penalties. Due to a controversial substitution call by coach José Pekerman, Messi did not play in the quarter-finals and spent the entire match on the bench.

Quotes

  • "I have seen the player who will inherit my place in Argentine football and his name is Messi" - Diego Maradona
  • "He's playing at the level of Diego in 1979 and a bit more" - Julio Grondona
  • "I have never seen a player with such quality at his age, not even Pele' or Maradona were that good at his age" - Karl-Heinz Rummenigge

Honours

References

  1. ^ "Lionel Messi: football's new "Golden Boy"". XINHUA online. 2005-12-15. Retrieved 2006-07-01. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= and |date= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)


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