Name: Alvaro Recoba
Nationality: Uruguayan
Date of birth: March 17,1976
Height: 1.79m
Weight: 79kg
FIFA World Cup™ finals: -
Clubs: Danubio, Nacional, Inter Milan
The task of lifting Uruguay
from a second-rate football nation into a contender at the 2002 FIFA World
Cup™
finals has
fallen on the shoulders of Alvaro Recoba. For Recoba is the anointed successor
to the great Enzo
Francescoli
- and a player with magic in his left foot.
Born in Montevideo
on 17 March 1976, Recoba grew up in the professional ranks of his local
team Danubio
FC - a second-rate
side in the Uruguayan first division. His progress was so swift that one
of the country's big
two clubs,
Nacional, signed him at 17. And it was with the 'tricolores' that he scored
57 goals in 51 games,
establishing
himself as a star-in-the-making.
Italian giants
Internazionale FC were sufficiently impressed to take 'El Chino' to Milan
in 1997 - landing
Recoba in one
of the world's toughest leagues.
"When I got
here, nobody knew me," he said a month into his Serie A career. "Only a
couple of journalists
bothered to
attend my presentation. But things went well, and when I get to training,
I spend about 20 minutes
signing autographs.
People even stop me in the street."
While Recoba
was winning points and plaudits at Inter, his exquisite skills made him
a first choice at
international
level too. Still, he continued to play down comparisons with Francescoli,
Uruguay's greatest
footballing
export and one of the world's best players of the 1980s.
"I don't know
- he's up there and I'm here," he said. "Maybe some day I could reach that
standard and be a
world-class
player like him."
Recoba recovered
from the setback of a loan spell at AC Venezia by returning to the Inter
line-up and doing
well in a struggling
team. However, he faced an altogether more serious blow when the Italian
League
suspended him
for a year for his involvement in the false passport scandal. Recoba was
found to have illegal
Italian papers,
although the ban was later cut to four months on appeal.
Yet Inter's
loss was Uruguay's gain: the terms of his suspension meant he could still
play for his country during
the 2002 FIFA
World Cup™ qualifying campaign.
And Recoba
was an inspiration, both for Argentinian-born coach Daniel Passarella and
his succcessor Victor
Pua. He more
than anyone was responsible for leading the 'charruas' to fifth place in
the South American
section and
a qualifying play-off against Australia.
Now back in
the first-team fold at Inter, Recoba is eyeing a new goal: that of prolonging
Uruguay's stay in
Korea/Japan
beyond the first stage. It is something the 'celestes' have not achieved
since the 1970 tournament
in Mexico,
when they finished third.
In Alvaro Recoba, they have their best hope of doing so.
Report
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