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Gabriel Heinze
Argentine footballer

Gabriel Heinze

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Gabriel Heinze
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Biography

Gabriel Iván Heinze (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈeinse]; born 19 April 1978) is an Argentine former footballer who operated as either a left back or a central defender, and the current manager of Argentinos Juniors.
Nicknamed Gringo ("Blonde" in Argentine-Spanish slang), he made a name for himself at Paris Saint-Germain, moving in 2004 to Manchester United and subsequently to Real Madrid, winning four trophies with the latter two clubs. He started and finished his 18-year professional career with Newell's Old Boys.
Heinze played 72 times with Argentina, representing the nation at two World Cups and as many Copa América tournaments.

Club career

Early career

Heinze was born in Crespo, Entre Ríos to a Volga German father and an Italian mother, thus holding both nationalities. He began his career in his home country with Newell's Old Boys and, following attention from various European clubs, the 19-year-old signed for Real Valladolid in Spain, not managing one single La Liga appearance in his first season and also being loaned to Sporting Clube de Portugal in the 1998 summer.

After the 2000–01 campaign, where he appeared in 36 league games to help the Castile and León side narrowly avoid top flight relegation, Heinze moved to Paris Saint-Germain, where he amassed over 100 overall appearances in three years, helping to the 2004 conquest of the Coupe de France.

Manchester United

In June 2004, Heinze joined Manchester United for a fee of £6.9 million. He marked his debut on 11 September with a goal in a 2–2 away draw against Bolton Wanderers, and immediately established himself as first-choice left back, being regularly lauded by fans with the chant of "Ar-gen-tina!" and eventually voted the club's best player for the 2004–05 season.

On 14 September 2005, Heinze was injured in a UEFA Champions League match with Villarreal and was ruled out of first-team action for the rest of the campaign. Previously, he had scored two goals in the same competition, the 3–0 second-leg qualifier away win over Debreceni. He made a comeback with the reserve team in April 2006, but a minor injury picked up in his third game back prevented him from making a first-team appearance before the end of the season. The consequence of this injury was the signing of Patrice Evra, who went on to become the club's first-choice left-back in the following years.

Heinze returned to action for United in 2006–07, and eventually won a place in the side back as a central defender, due to an injury crisis. After the team had sealed the Premier League title, he was named captain for the last two games of the season, away to Chelsea and at home to West Ham United.

After becoming disillusioned with manager Alex Ferguson by his lack of regular first-team action, Heinze demanded a transfer to Liverpool during the close season. United rejected the bid, believed to be in the region of £6.8 million.

Real Madrid

Heinze playing with Real Madrid against Valencia in 2009

On 22 August 2007, Heinze joined Real Madrid on a four-year deal, becoming the third United player to join the Spaniards (after David Beckham and Ruud van Nistelrooy), for a reported £8 million fee. He made his debut on 2 September against Villarreal, coming on as a substitute for Raúl. On 30 March 2008 he netted his first goal for the Merengues, in a 3–1 home win against Sevilla, and finished his debut season with 20 appearances to help win the league.

In his second year with Real Madrid, Heinze was more regularly used, but the club came out empty in silverware, with the exception of the that year's Supercopa de España.

Marseille

Heinze in action for Marseille

On 30 July 2009 Heinze joined Olympique de Marseille on a two-year deal, for an undisclosed fee, reuniting at the Ligue 1 club with countryman Lucho González. In his first year he scored a career-best four league goals in 27 matches, as L'OM won both the national championship and the season's Coupe de la Ligue. On 27 March 2010 he was a starter as his team defeated Bordeaux in the latter competition's final, for Marseille's first major title since 1993; on 5 May, he netted the opener in a 3–1 home win against Rennes, which clinched the league. Manager Didier Deschamps later described the season's events as an "extraordinary human adventure".

In the 2010–11 season, Heinze was again a defensive stalwart. On 20 March 2011 he scored from a free kick to help defeat his former club PSG 2–1 at home, in the Clasico.

On 1 June 2011, it was announced on Marseille's website that 33-year-old Heinze would leave the club at the end of the season.

Later years

On 22 July 2011, Heinze joined Serie A side A.S. Roma, after being released by Marseille at the end of June. He made his competitive debut on 11 September, against Cagliari.

On 19 March 2012, after appearing in his 25th official game, Heinze had his contract automatically renewed for another year. However, just five months later, it was announced on Roma's official website that he was being released from his contract with immediate effect; the day after his release he joined his original club, Newell's Old Boys, on a two-year deal.

Coaching

Even though he still did not possess the proper license, Heinze began working as a manager in June 2015, being appointed at Godoy Cruz in the Argentine Primera División. He was sacked on 27 September, following two wins, two draws and six defeats.

International career

Heinze first represented Argentina on 30 April 2003, in a friendly away win with Libya. The following year, he won a gold medal in the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, scoring in a 6–0 group stage win against Serbia and Montenegro.

Despite missing most of 2005–06 with Manchester United due to injury, Heinze was called up for the 2006 FIFA World Cup finals in Germany. In the quarter-final clash against the hosts, he started as Argentina lost on penalties.

Heinze participated in the 2007 Copa América, scoring with his head from a Juan Román Riquelme free kick in the semifinals against Mexico, a 3–0 win for the eventual runners-up. In the 2010 FIFA World Cup he played in four of Argentina's five matches in South Africa, netting the game's only goal – his third international – in a group stage win against Nigeria.

International goals

GoalDateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetitionRef.
117 August 2005Ferenc Puskás, Budapest, Hungary Hungary1–21–2Friendly
211 July 2007Polideportivo Cachamay, Puerto Ordaz, Venezuela Mexico0–10–32007 Copa América
312 June 2010Ellis Park, Johannesburg, South Africa Nigeria1–01–02010 FIFA World Cup

Personal life

Heinze was named in the Panama Papers, a 2016 leak of offshore accounts used for tax evasion. In 2005, he signed an endorsement with Puma AG in which at least a million dollars was paid to him over a period of five years through an account in his mother's name in the British Virgin Islands.

Honours

Club

Paris Saint-Germain
  • Coupe de France: 2003–04
Manchester United
  • Premier League: 2006–07
  • Football League Cup: 2005–06
Real Madrid
  • La Liga: 2007–08
  • Supercopa de España: 2008
Marseille
  • Ligue 1: 2009–10
  • Coupe de la Ligue: 2009–10, 2010–11
Newell's Old Boys
  • Argentine Primera División: 2013 Final

International

Argentina
  • Copa América: Runner-up 2004, 2007
  • FIFA Confederations Cup: Runner-up 2005
  • Summer Olympic Games: 2004

Individual

  • Sir Matt Busby Player of the Year: 2004–05

Career statistics

Club

Club performanceLeagueCupLeague CupContinentalTotal
SeasonClubLeagueAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
ArgentinaLeagueCupLeague CupSouth AmericaTotal
1997–98Newell's Old BoysPrimera División800080
SpainLeagueCopa del ReySupercopa de EspañaEuropeTotal
1997–98ValladolidLa Liga0000000000
PortugalLeagueTaça de PortugalTaça da LigaEuropeTotal
1998–99SportingPrimeira Liga5110000061
SpainLeagueCopa del ReySupercopa de EspañaEuropeTotal
1999–00ValladolidLa Liga180000000180
2000–01361000000361
FranceLeagueCoupe de FranceCoupe de la LigueEuropeTotal
2001–02Paris Saint-GermainLigue 1310000020330
2002–03352000040392
2003–04332000000332
EnglandLeagueFA CupLeague CupEuropeTotal
2004–05Manchester UnitedPremier League261402070391
2005–064000002262
2006–07220612080381
SpainLeagueCopa del ReySupercopa de EspañaEuropeTotal
2007–08Real MadridLa Liga201200040261
2008–09242100070322
FranceLeagueCoupe de FranceCoupe de la LigueEuropeTotal
2009–10MarseilleLigue 1274002072366
2010–11313000081394
ItalyLeagueCoppa ItaliaLeague CupEuropeTotal
2011–12RomaSerie A300200000320
TotalArgentina800080
Spain98430001101124
Portugal5110000061
France15711002021318014
England52110140172834
Italy300200000320
Career total350171616049542123

International

Argentina
YearAppsGoals
200340
2004140
2005101
200650
200791
200890
2009110
201091
Total713

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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