Andrés Iniesta Lujan
Andrés Iniesta joined
Barca as a twelve-year-old in
1996 after scouts had spotted him at the Brunette
Tournament playing for
Albacete.
From the start he progressed rapidly through the club's various youth teams and was promoted to the
Barca B team for the 2000-01 season, where he almost immediately became the team's main playmaker under coach Josep
Maria Gonzalvo.
Andrés' dream of making the first team finally came true in
October 2002 when he was picked to play in the
Champions League game against Bruges in
Belgium.
Van Gaal's Barca won that evening and Andrés made an excellent impression.
Now an recognised squad member, Iniesta has established a place for himself through hard work allied to his undoubted natural skills
. In the shadow of some of the team's bigger names,
Andres became a key piece of the
League winning 2004-5 team, winding up as
Rijkaard's most used player, figuring in 35 of the 38 league games. Iniesta also played 8 Champions League matches, scoring twice.
But he really established himself as a first team player in the 2005-06 season.
Playing in central midfield in place of
Xavi, who was sidelined for a long time with injury, Iniesta became one of the key players in the
Barça side that won the League and the Champions League. He played in 33 League fixtures and 11 in the Champions League.
Iniesta continued to develop in the 2006-07 season and was one of the players most used by
Frank Rijkaard in that campaign. He played in 37 out of 38 League games scoring 6 goals, his best return to date. In the 2007-08 season, and by now in the number 8 shirt, the midfielder continued to be an ever present in the side until the last few games when he picked up a knee injury
.
In the 2008/09 season, Iniesta had an even better season than ever. Playing in a central or wide role he delighted the whole world with his amazing dribbling skills. He grew into one of the essential components of the Barça engine, and took the team to the
Champions League final with an injury time goal at
Stamford Bridge.
Injury affected his contribution in the 2009-10 season when he was already one of the leading players in the team. He played 29 matches in the league, 9 in the Champions League and 3 in the Cup.
Plus Andrés Iniesta is one of the key players in the
Spanish national side, playing in the
2006 and
2010 World Cup and
Euro 2008, when he was one of the players most used by
Luis Aragonés as
Spain lifted the trophy.
Without a doubt Iniesta will never forget 11th July
2010 and his winning goal in the dying minutes of extra time in the
World Cup final against
Holland.
Despite his youth, Iniesta has now won every title the game offers.
PROFILE
Intuitive, vertical, fast and intelligent, Andrés Iniesta is a man of many virtues. The midfielder started out in defence for
Barça B and before that the club's youth teams. But as he gained in first team experience, he was also moved into a more attacking role. He is now a full-on striker, and is also able to play as a midfielder or on either of the flanks of the Barça forward line.
Iniesta is not only versatile, but also a true professional, being talented yet modest. Especially talented. The player from
Fuentealbilla has set standards for other attacking midfielders to follow. Practical and intelligent, he reads the game to perfection and is a constant threat to opposing defences.
The Barça number eight is getting better with every year.
Always learning, his shooting has come on in leaps and bounds, and he can use either foot, as he showed us so dramatically with his last-gasp winner at Stamford Bridge.
HONOURS
FC Barcelona
2010/11
Spanish Super Cup
2009/10
Liga
2009/10
World Club Cup
2009/10
European Super Cup
2009/10 Spanish Super Cup
2008/09
Champions League
2008/09 Liga
2008/09 Copa del Rey
2006/07 Spanish Super Cup
2005/06 Champions League
2005/06 Liga
2005/06 Spanish Super Cup
2004/05 Liga
Spanish national team
2010 World Cup
2008 European Championship
CAREER
2010-11 FC Barcelona
2009-10 FC Barcelona
2008-09 FC Barcelona
2007-08 FC Barcelona
2006-07 FC Barcelona
2005-06 FC Barcelona
2004-05 FC Barcelona
2003-04 FC Barcelona
2002-03 FC Barcelona
- published: 24 Sep 2010
- views: 546