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Roberto Ayala

Argentine footballer (born 1973)


Argentine footballer (born 1973)

FieldValue
nameRoberto Ayala
image018 Summer Youth Olympics (30382602628) (cropped).jpg
captionAyala in 2018
fullnameRoberto Fabián Ayala
height1.77 m
birth_date
birth_placeParaná, Argentina
currentclubArgentina (field assistant)
positionCentre-back
youthclubs1Ferro Carril Oeste
years11991–1993
clubs1Ferro Carril Oeste
caps173
goals11
years21993–1995
clubs2River Plate
caps241
goals20
years31995–1998
clubs3Napoli
caps387
goals31
years41998–2000
clubs4Milan
caps424
goals40
years52000–2007
clubs5Valencia
caps5187
goals59
years62007–2010
clubs6Real Zaragoza
caps674
goals64
years72010–2011
clubs7Racing Club
caps715
goals70
totalcaps501
totalgoals15
nationalyears11996
nationalteam1Argentina U23
nationalcaps16
nationalgoals10
nationalyears22004
nationalteam2Argentina Olympic (O.P.)
nationalcaps26
nationalgoals20
nationalyears31994–2007
nationalteam3Argentina
nationalcaps3116
nationalgoals37
medaltemplates
managerclubs1Argentina (assistant)
manageryears12019-

Roberto Fabián Ayala (; born 14 April 1973), nicknamed El Ratón ("The Mouse"), is an Argentine former footballer who played as a centre back for the Argentina national football team, as well as Valencia and Real Zaragoza in Spain, Milan and Napoli in Italy, and Ferro Carril, River Plate and Racing Club in his native Argentina.

Regarded as one of the best defenders of his generation, he stood out for his leadership and ability in the air throughout his career in spite of his small stature as a centre back. Ayala captained Argentina in a record 63 matches. He played in three FIFA World Cups and made a total of 115 international appearances.

Club career

Early career in Argentina

Ayala began his career in his native Argentina, playing for Ferro Carril Oeste. After three seasons, he moved to River Plate where his good form attracted the attention of clubs in Europe.

Move to Europe

Parma, Napoli and Milan

Italian side Parma brought the Argentine defender to Europe. However, the club, having already used their quota of three non-EU players, loaned him to Napoli, who purchased 50% of his rights on a co-ownership deal. Ayala was bought by Milan at the end of the 1997–98 season and played there for two seasons until Valencia purchased him for £6.25 million.

Valencia

After signing with Valencia in the summer of 2000, Ayala made 275 appearances during a seven-year spell at the club. On 24 September 2000, Ayala made his debut for Valencia in a 3–0 La Liga win over Numancia. He soon established himself as a first choice central defender for Los Che and started alongside compatriot Mauricio Pellegrino in the 2001 UEFA Champions League final, where Valencia lost 5–4 to Bayern Munich after a penalty shootout. He was later named best defender for the 2000–01 tournament. The following season, Ayala was part of the Valencia team that won the 2001–02 La Liga title. He scored the opening goal of a 2–0 defeat of Málaga which secured the championship on 5 May 2002. In 2003–04, Valencia again won the La Liga title and beat Marseille 2–0 in Gothenburg to win the UEFA Cup. During the 2004–05 season, injuries kept Ayala from much of the La Liga campaign as well as the UEFA Super Cup victory over Porto. During his time with Valencia, he was widely regarded as one of the finest central defenders in the world and is considered to be one of the club's all-time legends.

Villarreal and Real Zaragoza

In August 2006, Ayala was not offered a new contract by sporting director Amedeo Carboni. On 7 February 2007, he announced he would join regional rivals Villarreal at the end of the season, however before having played for Villarreal, he joined Real Zaragoza on a three-year deal on 14 July 2007. The buy-out clause in his contract with Villarreal was €6 million (£4.8 million) which was paid in full by Real Zaragoza.

On 3 May 2008, Ayala scored his first goal for Real Zaragoza in the 94th minute against Deportivo de La Coruña to lead Zaragoza to a 1–0 victory. Zaragoza, however, were relegated to the Segunda División. On 22 November 2008, Ayala scored his second goal for Zaragoza, in the 73rd of a 3–0 win over Eibar. On 29 February 2009, he scored his third goal coming in the 54th minute against Real Murcia as Zaragoza won the match 4–1.

In January 2010, Ayala's contract with Zaragoza was terminated by mutual consent.

Racing Avellaneda

On 2 February 2010, Argentine side Racing Club signed Ayala on a free transfer.

International career

Ayala made his debut for Argentina on 16 November 1994 against Chile under coach Daniel Passarella.

Ayala played for Argentina U23 at the 1996 Summer Olympics, winning the silver medal. He played for Argentina in the 1998 FIFA World Cup and was a non-playing squad member in the 2002 competition due to a last-minute injury moments before their first match against Nigeria. He was selected as one of the three overage players then Argentina U23 won the gold medal at the 2004 Summer Olympics. Ayala played an integral part in the Argentine squad for the 2006 World Cup in Germany. He played brilliantly throughout the tournament and was picked as a member of the All Star Team. In the quarter-final against Germany, he scored a header that gave Argentina the 1–0 lead, although his side lost the penalty shootout after a 1–1 draw, with Ayala's spot kick being saved by Jens Lehmann.

On 30 May 2006, In a friendly match against Angola, Ayala earned his 100th cap for Argentina.

One of the best defenders in Argentina's history, on 7 February 2007 Ayala became the most capped player of the national team (most as captain), beating his friend Diego Simeone, in a friendly victory 1–0 against France played in the Stade de France in Paris.

On 5 June 2007, in a friendly against Algeria, Ayala captained Argentina for a record 58th international, having equalled Diego Maradona's mark of 57 in the 1–1 draw against Switzerland in Basel on 2 June.

On 17 July 2007, two days after playing in the 2007 Copa América final, which ended in a 3–0 defeat to Brazil, and during which he scored an own goal, Ayala announced his retirement from international football. Ayala stated, "it has nothing to do with what happened in the final of the Copa América." Javier Zanetti took over from him as captain.

After retiring

Racing Club

On 30 December, Ayala retired from professional football. On 21 December 2011, Ayala was hired as a football coordinator at Racing Club. In September 2013, a new management arrived, and Ayala was released on 19 September 2013.

Valencia CF

In December 2013, Ayala was hired as a technical director / sport director for Valencia, where he was going to be the responsible for the whole South American area. The role also involved him scouting in that area to find young talents. He left the club in the middle of 2015.

Argentina

On 10 January 2019, Ayala joined the technical staff of the Argentina national football team as a field assistant of manager Lionel Scaloni.

Style of play

Regarded as one of the best and most accomplished defenders of his generation, Ayala was mainly known for his ability in the air and tenacious tackling, and also stood out for his leadership and consistency throughout his career. A complete defender, he was also noted for his speed, ability on the ball, and passing accuracy as a centre-back.

Personal life

Ayala is married to Veronica, and has four children: Francisco, Sofía, Pilar and Martina.

Career statistics

Club

ClubSeasonLeagueCupContinentalOtherTotalDivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsTotal731000030761Total4100012100531Total871900000961Total240506000350Total18791405232025312Total744502000814Career total501153407245060919
Ferro Carril Oeste1991–92Primera División190190
1992–93361360
1993–941813Appearances in the Copa Centenario de la AFA.0211
River Plate1993–94Primera División160160
1994–95250121371
Napoli1995–96Serie A29010301
1996–9730160361
1997–9828020300
Milan1998–99Serie A11020130
1999–20001303060220
Valencia2000–01La Liga2812092393
2001–022921070372
2002–033111202Appearances in the Supercopa de España.0451
2003–0430150100451
2004–05170170
2005–062326Appearances in the Intertoto Cup.0292
2006–072924081413
Villarreal2006–07La Liga000000
Zaragoza2007–08La Liga3314020391
2008–09Segunda División283283
2009–10La Liga13010140
Racing2009–10Primera División150150

International

National teamYearAppsGoalsTotal1157
Argentina199430
1995140
199660
199770
1998131
1999121
2000111
200180
200210
200360
2004101
200582
200671
200790

:Scores and results list Argentina's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Ayala goal.

No.DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
119 February 1998Mendoza, ArgentinaRomanian League2–1Unofficial FriendlyInternational Matches 1998 Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 12 March 2008.
27 September 1999Porto Alegre, Brazil2–4Friendly
326 April 2000Maracaibo, Venezuela1–04–0World Cup 2002 Qualifying
413 July 2004Piura, Peru3–24–22004 Copa América
512 November 2005Geneva, Switzerland2–3Friendly
616 November 2005Doha, Qatar3–0Friendly
730 June 2006Berlin, Germany1–01–1 (2–4 PS)2006 FIFA World Cup

Honours

Player

River Plate

Napoli

Milan

Valencia

Argentina

  • Olympic Gold Medal: 2004
  • Pan American Games: 1995
  • Copa América runner-up: 2004, 2007
  • FIFA Confederations Cup runner-up: 1995

Individual

  • South American Team of the Year: 1994
  • UEFA Club Best Defender of the Year: 2000–01
  • European Sports Media Team of the Year: 2003–04
  • Copa América Team of the Tournament: 2004
  • 2006 FIFA World Cup All-Star Team
  • IFFHS Argentina All Times Dream Team (Team B): 2021

Managerial

Argentina (as assistant manager)

  • FIFA World Cup: 2022
  • Copa América: 2021, 2024; third place: 2019
  • CONMEBOL–UEFA Cup of Champions: 2022

References

References

  1. (21 March 2014). "2006 FIFA World Cup Germany: List of Players: Argentina". FIFA.
  2. (7 February 2021). "AFA rinde homenaje a Messi y Kun Agüero por su récord de partidos".
  3. (6 June 2006). "Ultime notizie su Roberto Ayala". Il Sole 24 Ore.
  4. "Messi inspires Argentina to 4-3 win over Algeria".
  5. "Ayala".
  6. (24 September 2015). "15 years of Ayala's debut with VCF". Valencia CF.
  7. Biggs, Matt. (2001-05-23). "Bayern Munich 1 - 1 Valencia". The Guardian.
  8. (6 June 2015). "Champions League final runners-up XI: The best players never to win it". Sky Sports.
  9. Diamond, Harry. (2016-03-11). "Rafa Benítez: 10 key wins in new Newcastle United manager's career". The Guardian.
  10. (14 July 2007). "Ayala será jugador del Real Zaragoza". Real Zaragoza.
  11. (17 July 2006). "Zaragoza put an end to Ayala saga". UEFA.
  12. "Roberto Ayala llegó a Argentina para incorporarse a Racing Club".
  13. (29 June 2006). "Centurion Ayala eyes main prize". FIFA.
  14. (17 July 2007). "Ayala: "Mi ciclo en la Selección está terminado"". www.clarin.com.
  15. "Roberto Ayala se retiró del fútbol".
  16. (2011-12-21). "Roberto Ayala es el nuevo coordinador del fútbol de Racing".
  17. "Por la interna dirigencial, Roberto Ayala dejará de ser el Manager de Racing".
  18. Confidencial, El. (2013-12-23). "Roberto Ayala regresa al Valencia para 'pescar' los nuevos talentos de Sudamérica".
  19. [https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/european/gary-neville-to-valencia-spanish-fans-will-give-latest-coach-little-time-to-bed-in-a6757926.html Gary Neville to Valencia: Spanish fans will give latest coach little time to bed in], independent.co.uk, 2 December 2015
  20. Lowe, Sid. (2015-09-21). "Valencia fans turn on Nuno after running out of people to blame". The Guardian.
  21. (22 May 2002). "Roberto Ayala". BBC Sport.
  22. "Roberto Fabián Ayala – Century of International Appearances".
  23. (16 January 2009). "South American Team of the Year".
  24. (1 May 2011). "UEFA Club Football Awards". UEFA.
  25. (14 March 2007). "ESM XI".
  26. (7 July 2006). "France, Italy dominate World Cup all-star squad". CBC.
  27. (26 August 2021). "IFFHS ALL TIME ARGENTINA MEN'S DREAM TEAM".
  28. Murray, Scott. (2022-12-18). "2022 World Cup final: Argentina 3-3 France (aet, 4-2 on pens) – as it happened". the Guardian.
  29. (2021-07-09). "Lionel Messi wins first Copa America as Argentina beat Brazil in final". BBC Sport.
  30. (2019-07-06). "Argentina 2-1 Chile: Messi gets first red card in 14 years as Argentina win". BBC Sport.
  31. (2022-05-31). "Italy 0-3 Argentina: Messi and Di Maria shine in impressive Finalissima win". BBC Sport.
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