Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Lionel Messi
















Player Information
Full name: Lionel Andrés Messi
Date of birth: June 24, 1987
Birthplace: Rosario, Santa Fé, Argentina
Nationality: Argentinian
2nd nationality: Spanish
EU passport: Yes
Height: 169 cms
Weight: 67 kgs

Club: FC Barcelona
Position: Forward [C]
Squad Number: 10
Contract expires: June 2014
Previous clubs: none

International debut: August 2005, v Hungary
International Caps: 18
International Goals: 10
World Cups: Germany 2006


Awards

FIFA U-20 World Cup (2005)
Olympic Games (2008)

UEFA Champions League (2006)

Spanish La Liga (2005, 2006)
Spanish Super Cup (2005, 2006)

FIFA U-20 World Cup Top Scorer (2005)
FIFA U-20 World Cup Best Player (2005)

Argentinian Footballer of the Year (2005)
FIFPro Young Footballer of the Year (2006)
World Soccer Young Player of the Year (2006, 2007)
U-21 European Footballer of the Year (2007)


Biography

1987
Born June 24 in Rosario, Santa Fe
2000
His father finds a job in Barcelona and Messi wins a place in the club's junior divisions, his height at this time is 140 cms.
2003
November: Makes his first team debut for Barcelona in a friendly match against Porto.
2004
October: Makes his professional debut for Barcelona at the age of 17 in a 1-0 win over arch-rivals Espanyol.
2005
May: Scores his first goal in La Liga (v. Albacete), becomes the youngest goal scorer in Barcelona's history (17y, 10m, 7d)
June: Helps the Argentinean team to win the U-20 FIFA World Cup, Messi named competition's Best Player and Top Scorer.
August: Comes on as a substitute to make his first appearance for Argentina's senior team, shown the red card after 2 minutes.
September: Granted EU Passport by the Spanish Government.
2006
May: Helps FC Barcelona to win its second straight Spanish league title and 18th overall.
July: Short-listed for the best young player at the 2006 FIFA World Cup award.
August 20: Helped FC Barcelona to won their first trophy of the new season as they defeated Espanyol 3-0 in the second leg of the Super Cup in Camp Nou.
October 17: Included among the 50 nominees for the European Footballer of the Year Award.
November 6: Lio Messi wins the FIFPro Young Player of the Year award.
November 12: Lionel Messi will be out of action for three months after injuring his left foot in a league game against Zaragoza.
2007
March 10: Scored a last-gasp equaliser to complete a spectacular hat-trick and earn 10-man Barcelona a thrilling 3-3 home draw with arch-rivals Real Madrid. "Scoring all our goals, it was a special game for him. He's a magnificent talent. His goals saved us," acknowledged Frank Rijkaard.
April 18: Scored two goals, including a spectacular solo effort, to help FC Barcelona beat Getafe 5-2 in the first leg of the Copa del Rey semifinals. Messi's first goal in the 29th minute was reminiscent of Diego Maradona's against England in the 1986 World Cup quarterfinals. He beat four opponents in a run from his own half before rounding Getafe goalkeeper Luis Garcia and scoring from a narrow angle.
July 15: Member of the Argentinian squad that lost the Copa America final against arch rivals Brazil 0-3 at the Jose Encarnacion Pachencho Romero Stadium in Maracaibo, Venezuela. Messi was also included in the "Dream Team" of the competition.
October 5: Included in the FIFPro Team of the Year.
December 2: Claimed 255 points to finish third after Kaka (444) and Cristiano Ronaldo (277) in the European Footballer of the Year Award.
December 13: Voted second after Kaka in the World Soccer Player of the Year award. He also won the young player of the year award for the second successive year.
2008
April 29: Member of the FC Barcelona team that lost the UEFA Champions League semifinal against Manchester United, 1-2 aggregate score.
August 24: Member of the Argentinian team that won the Gold Medal at the Beijing Olympic Games.
October 27: Included in the FIFPro World XI Team of the Year.
December 2: Claimed 281 points to finish second after Cristiano Ronaldo (446) in the European Footballer of the Year Award.

FIFA World Cup™ Germany 2006 player's profile

Lionel Messi became the toast of Argentina when, just days after his 18th birthday, he inspired his country's U-20 side to a fifth world title with a series of masterful displays at the FIFA World Youth Championship Netherlands 2005.
Such was the impression made by the prodigious midfielder that in addition to taking home a gold medal he also picked up the adidas Golden Shoe award as top scorer, and the adidas Golden Ball as best player. At the 2006 FIFA World Cup Germany™, the 18-year-old will be hoping to pick up an even more prestigious accolade – the Gillette Best Young Player Award.

"Although he's already a great player, Lionel needs to take things slowly. What he did in this tournament was fantastic, but in order to keep developing his game and improving, he needs to continue along the same lines," said his Argentina U-20 coach Francisco Ferraro. 'Messimania' has also broken out back in Argentina with many supporters and analysts already comparing him to the young Diego Maradona.

With his extraordinary vision, darting runs and impeccable technical skills, Messi strides about midfield like it is his natural habitat, engineering openings where none appear to exist. Endowed with an explosive turn of pace and the ability to majestically dribble his way through the sturdiest of rearguards, he is a constant threat to opposing defences, who seem incapable of containing him.

But the left-footed Messi is a lot more than just an orchestrator of play and a neat passer; he has also got a keen eye for goal. His six-goal tally in the Netherlands, in particular the exquisite strike that opened the scoring in the semi-final against Brazil, have marked him out as a formidable marksman in his own right.

Messi was only 13 when his family moved from Argentina to Spain to escape the economic crisis then ravaging the South American country. After settling in Barcelona, the talented youngster was invited to trials at the Camp Nou, where the youth coach Carles Rexach immediately spotted a star in the making. "I snapped him up there and then. In fact, as a symbolic gesture, I got him to sign for FC Barcelona on the back of a serviette," Rexach later recalled.

However, at only 1.40m, the diminutive Messi was extremely small and slight for his age, and so the club also undertook to take care of the medical treatment needed to stimulate the player's dormant growth hormones.

Three years on, the Argentine made his debut in the Spanish top flight at the age of 16, and then on 1 May 2005 he became the youngest league scorer in Barcelona's history when, at just 17 years, ten months and seven days, he audaciously chipped the Catalans' winner against Albacete. Today, the player they call El Pulga (The Flea) is a key member of a star-studded Barcelona side that finished the 2005-06 season as Spanish league champions and winners of the UEFA Champions League.

Officials at the Spanish Football Federation were not slow either when it came to recognising Messi's huge potential, offering him the chance to represent his adopted country at youth level. However, the player's Argentine roots ran deep and he politely declined in the hope that one day he would get his chance with the Albiceleste.

In the end coach Jose Pekerman decided to call the prodigious teenager up the senior squad, not because of public pressure, but simply in recognition of the maturity and quality of his game. However, his full debut with the senior team, against Hungary in August 2005, was far from ideal, with Messi being shown a straight red card for raising an arm in a tackle less than a minute after coming off the bench.

Two weeks later he would play the final ten minutes of his country’s qualifying defeat by Paraguay in Asuncion, and then start his first game for the Albiceleste in another Germany 2006 qualifier against Peru on 9 September at the Monumental. He was hailed as his team’s best player by the local media after his side’s 2-0 win, but would have to wait until 1 March this year for his first senior international goal, in Argentina’s 3-2 friendly loss to Croatia.

Of course, his new status as one of the finest young player of his generation brings with it ever more media attention – something the player has yet to fully come to terms with. Asked recently how he was handling being constantly in the spotlight, Messi answered: "I'm trying to deal with it as calmly as I can, although all I really want to do is to get out on the pitch and play football."

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UEFA Champions League 2005-06 player's profile

A favourite of Diego Maradona, Lionel Messi proved when inspiring Argentina to glory at the 2005 FIFA U-20 World Cupp that he possesses many of the attributes which made his countryman one of the greatest footballers of all time.

Messi finished that tournament in the Netherlands as its six-goal leading scorer of which two, both penalties, came in the 2-1 final win against Nigeria. In August 2005 he was sent off 90 seconds into his senior debut against Hungary – a rare folly for a player who enhanced his reputation at the FIFA World Cup before being overlooked for the quarter-final defeat by Germany. He was at CA Newell's Old Boys as a child, but Messi moved to FC Barcelona aged 13 as his parents needed to pay for treatment he needed for a hormone deficiency. When he made his first-team debut on 16 October 2004 at RCD Espanyol, he became the third youngest player to represent the club, aged 17 years, three months and 23 days. Picked up a second successive title medal in 2006 but was on the sidelines as Barça defeated Arsenal FC in the UEFA Champions League final.

Did you know?
In June 2005 he agreed a five-year contract with a €150m buy-out clause.

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