Marcelo Gallardo
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Marcelo Gallardo | ||
Personal information | ||
---|---|---|
Full name | Marcelo Daniel Gallardo | |
Date of birth | January 18, 1976 (age 31) | |
Place of birth | Merlo, Buenos Aires, Argentina | |
Height | 169 cm | |
Nickname | El Muñeco (The Doll) | |
Playing position | Attacking midfielder | |
Club information | ||
Current club | Paris Saint-Germain | |
Number | 10 | |
Senior clubs1 | ||
Years | Club | App (Gls)* |
1992-1999 1999-2003 2003-2006 2007- |
River Plate Monaco River Plate Paris Saint-Germain |
109 (17) 102 (18) 63 (21) 6 (2) |
National team | ||
1994- | Argentina | 44 (14) |
1 Senior club appearances and goals |
Marcelo Daniel Gallardo (born January 18, 1976 in Merlo, Buenos Aires, Argentina) is an Argentine footballer who currently plays for Paris Saint-Germain having joined them from River Plate of Primera División Argentina in January 2007. He is an attacking midfielder in the role of playmaker.
Contents |
[edit] Club career
[edit] Early years
Nicknamed El Muñeco (the doll) due to his small frame (169 cm, 70 kg), Gallardo started his football career back in 1992-93 season with River Plate and won 3 Argentinian Torneo de Apertura (93, 94 and 96), 1 Argentinian Torneo de Clausura (1997) and 1 Copa Libertadores (1996).
His initial spell with the Los Millonarios lasted until season 1998-99, by then he had played 109 first-class games for them and scored 17 goals.
[edit] Europe
In 1999, he was snapped up by Monaco. In his first season in Europe, Gallardo proved his worth and played 28 games, scoring 8 goals and formed lethal partnership with Ludovic Giuly in Midfield.
In the following season, Gallardo won his first Première Division and Trophée Des Champions with Monaco.
As a team containing many big-name players such as Marco Simone, Christian Panucci, Ludovic Giuly, Philippe Christanval and Rafael Márquez, Monaco enjoyed their success domestically and it was evident Gallardo was one of the star players, having won the French League Footballer of the Year that year.
However in his third season, things did not go well off the pitch for Gallardo as he was not in good terms with his coach Didier Deschamps[1] after being named on the bench midway through 2000-01 season. Following the examples of Panucci and Simone, Gallardo decided to leave Monaco at the end of the season.
[edit] Back to Argentina
After making 75 appearances and scoring 17 goals for Monaco, Gallardo returned to his old club River Plate as club captain, he helped them win another Clausura in 2004.
[edit] Back to France
Marcello Gallardo has signed in January 2007 for two years in Paris Saint-Germain and made his debut in a 3-0 cup win against Nîmes on January 7.
On January 13, 2007 he played his first Ligue 1 match for PSG against Valenciennes [1]
[edit] National team
Gallardo made his international debut for Argentina in 1994 against Chile and made over 43 appearances and scored 14 goals. He was also in the Argentina squad for the 1998 World Cup and 2002 World Cup.
[edit] Honours
Olympic medal record | |||
Competitor for Argentina | |||
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Men's Football | |||
Silver | 1996 Atlanta | Team Competition |
- FIFA U-20 World Cup (1997)
- Primera División Argentina (1993A, 1994A, 1996A, 1997C, 2004C)
- Copa Libertadores (1996)
- Recopa Sudamericana (1997)
- With AS Monaco FC
- Ligue 1 (2000)
- Trophée des champions (2000)
- Coupe de la Ligue (2003)
- Individual
- French Ligue 1 Footballer of the Year (2000)
[edit] References
- ^ Tactical Formation. Football-Lineups.com. Retrieved on February 5, 2007.
[edit] External links
- Profile and statistics of Marcelo Daniel Gallardo at FootballDatabase
Argentina squad - 2002 FIFA World Cup | ||
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1 Burgos | 2 Ayala | 3 Sorín | 4 Pochettino | 5 Almeyda | 6 Samuel | 7 C. López | 8 Zanetti | 9 Batistuta | 10 Ortega | 11 Verón | 12 Cavallero | 13 Placente | 14 Simeone | 15 Husaín | 16 Aimar | 17 G. López | 18 González | 19 Crespo | 20 Gallardo | 21 Caniggia | 22 Chamot | 23 Bonano | Coach: Bielsa |
Argentina squad - 1998 FIFA World Cup Quarter-finalists | ||
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1 Roa | 2 Ayala | 3 Chamot | 4 Pineda | 5 Almeyda | 6 Sensini | 7 López | 8 Simeone | 9 Batistuta | 10 Ortega | 11 Verón | 12 Burgos | 13 Paz | 14 Vivas | 15 Astrada | 16 Berti | 17 Cavallero | 18 Balbo | 19 Crespo | 20 Gallardo | 21 Delgado | 22 Zanetti | Coach: Passarella |
Paris Saint-Germain FC - Current Squad |
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1 Landreau | 4 Rozehnal | 5 Mendy | 6 Yepes | 7 Luyindula | 8 Cissé | 9 Pauleta | 10 Gallardo | 11 Diané | 12 Mabiala | 13 Frau | 14 N'Gog | 15 Kalou | 16 Alonzo | 17 Traoré | 18 Pietre | 19 Mulumbu | 20 Chantôme | 21 Rodriguez | 22 Armand | 23 Clément | 24 Hellebuyck | 25 Rothen | 26 Dramé | 27 Baning | 30 Cousin | 31 Owono | 32 Boli | 33 Ngoyi | Manager: Le Guen |
Categories: 1976 births | Living people | Argentine footballers | People from Buenos Aires Province | River Plate footballers | AS Monaco FC players | Paris Saint-Germain players | FIFA World Cup 1998 players | FIFA World Cup 2002 players | Footballers at the 1996 Summer Olympics | Olympic silver medalists for Argentina | Olympic footballers of Argentina | Argentina international footballers