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Gabriel Batistuta

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Gabriel Batistuta

Gabriel Batistuta in 2014

Personal information

Full name Gabriel Omar Batistuta

Date of birth 1 February 1969 (age 52)

Place of birth Avellaneda, Santa Fe, Argentina

Height 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in)

Position(s) Striker

Youth career

1987–1988 Newell's Old Boys


Senior career*

Years Team Apps (Gls)

1988–1989 Newell's Old Boys 16 (4)

1989–1990 River Plate 19 (3)

1990–1991 Boca Juniors 30 (13)

1991–2000 Fiorentina 269 (167)

2000–2003 Roma 63 (30)

2003 → Inter Milan (loan) 12 (2)

2003–2005 Al-Arabi 21 (25)

Total 430 (244)

National team

1991–2002 Argentina 77 (54[a])

show

Honours

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league
only

Gabriel Omar Batistuta (Spanish pronunciation: [ɡaˈβɾjel oˈmaɾ βatisˈtuta];[b] born 1 February


1969) is an Argentine former professional footballer. During his playing career, Batistuta
was nicknamed Batigol ([batiˈɣol])[2] as well as El Ángel Gabriel ([el ˌaŋxel ɣaˈβɾjel];
Spanish for Angel Gabriel). Regarded as one of the greatest strikers of all time, noted in
particular for powerful strikes from volleys or from distance while on the run, in 1999,
Batistuta placed third for the FIFA World Player of the Year award.[3][4] In 2004, he was
named by Pelé in the FIFA 100 list of the world's greatest living players.[5]
After beginning his career in Argentina in 1988 with Newell's Old Boys, followed
by River Plate and Boca Juniors where he won titles, the prolific striker played most of
his club football with Serie A club Fiorentina in Italy; he is their all-time top scorer in
Serie A with 152 goals.[6] When Fiorentina was relegated to Serie B in 1993, Batistuta
stayed with the club and helped them return to the top-flight league a year later. He
became an icon in Florence; the Fiorentina fans erected a life-size bronze statue of him
in 1996, in recognition of his performances for the club. [3] Despite winning the Coppa
Italia and the Supercoppa Italiana with the club in 1996, he never won the Serie A title
with Fiorentina, but when he moved to Roma in 2000 for €36 million – then the highest
fee ever paid for a player over the age of 30 – he won the 2000-01 Serie A title.[7] After a
brief loan spell with Inter Milan in 2003, he played his last two seasons in Qatar with Al-
Arabi before he retired in 2005.[8]
At international level, Batistuta was Argentina's all-time leading goalscorer with 54 goals
in 77 official matches,[a] a record he held until 21 June 2016, when he was surpassed
by Lionel Messi.[9] He participated in three FIFA World Cups, scoring 10 goals, making
him Argentina's all-time top scorer in the competition, and the joint eighth-highest World
Cup goalscorer of all time.[10] Batistuta is the only player in football history to score two
hat-tricks in different World Cups. With the Argentina national team he won two
consecutive Copa América titles (1991 and 1993), the 1993 Artemio Franchi Trophy,
and the 1992 FIFA Confederations Cup.

Contents

 1Early and personal life


 2Club career
o 2.1Early career
o 2.2Newell's Old Boys
o 2.3River Plate
o 2.4Boca Juniors
o 2.5Fiorentina
o 2.6Roma
 2.6.1Loan to Inter Milan
o 2.7Al-Arabi
 3International career
 4Style of play
 5Filmography
 6Career statistics
o 6.1Club
o 6.2International
o 6.3International goals
 7Honours
o 7.1Club
o 7.2International
o 7.3Individual
 8See also
 9Notes
 10References
 11Further reading
 12External links

Early and personal life[edit]


Batistuta was born on 1 February 1969 to slaughterhouse worker Omar Batistuta and
school secretary Gloria Zilli, in the town of Avellaneda, province of Santa Fe, Argentina,
but grew up in the nearby city of Reconquista. He has three younger sisters, Elisa,
Alejandra, and Gabriela.[11] Batistuta is a Roman Catholic. At the age of 16, he met Irina
Fernández, his future wife, at her quinceañera, a rite of passage on her 15th birthday.
On 28 December 1990, they were married at Saint Roque Church. [12]

Batistuta was given the freedom of Florence (home of Fiorentina where he played for nine years) in 2016.

The couple moved to Florence, Italy, in 1991, and a year later their first son, Thiago,
was born.[13] Thanks to good performances in the Italian championship and with the
Argentina national team, Batistuta gained fame and respect. He filmed several
commercials and was invited onto numerous TV shows, but in spite of this, Batistuta
always remained a low-profile family man.[12] In 1997, Batistuta's second son, Lucas, was
born, and a third son, Joaquín, followed in 1999. He now has a fourth son Shamel. In
2000, Batistuta and his family moved to Rome, where he played for Roma. Two years
after Shamel was born, Batistuta was loaned to Inter. In 2003, after 12 years in Italy, the
family moved to Qatar where Batistuta had accepted a lucrative celebrity playing
contract with a local team, Al-Arabi, ending his career there in 2005.[14] He moved back
to Argentina in 2007.[15]
Despite having completed his coaching badges in Argentina, he currently has no
involvement with football, instead (primarily as he has difficulty walking) he prefers to
play polo and golf, he was quoted saying 'I don't like football, it's only my job'. [16][17] In later
interviews with FIFA he expanded, “I lived and breathed football”, adding, “when I was
playing football I never enjoyed it that much, I was never happy ... if I scored two goals, I
wanted a third, I always wanted more. Now it's all over I can look back with satisfaction,
but I never felt that way when I was playing.” [18][19] In 2006 he expressed an interest in
coaching Australia's national team and Argentina's team.[20] During the 2006 FIFA World
Cup he worked as a commentator for Televisa Deportes. Batistuta currently runs his
own construction company in Argentina. He also worked as technical secretary in the
professional football club Colón, joining the club's staff in January 2012, and leaving at
the end of the 2012–13 season. [21]
Speaking in a television interview in Argentina in 2014, Batistuta said the pain suffered
in his ankles after retiring in 2005 became so intense that he "urinated in bed with the
toilet only a few steps away. I couldn't move." He visited a doctor he knew asking his
legs be amputated, but the doctor turned down his request. [22] Although he later
underwent surgery to relieve the pressure on his cartilage and tendons, and his
condition improved slightly, in a 2017 interview he stated that he still had difficulty
walking and faced mobility issues as a result of the stresses and injuries he faced
throughout his football career due to overexerting himself. [23] He has however still been
able to take part in charity football games, and in 2014 he scored twice – one a
trademark finish with a powerful 35 yard strike into the roof of the net – in a game in
Italy.[24][25]

Club career[edit]
Early career[edit]

Batistuta at Newell's Old Boys, 1988, where he was coached by Marcelo Bielsa

As a child, Batistuta preferred other sports to football. Because of his height he played
basketball, but after Argentina's victory in the 1978 FIFA World Cup, in which he was
particularly impressed by the skills of Mario Kempes, he devoted himself to football.
[26]
 After playing with friends on the streets and in the small Grupo Alegria club, Batistuta
joined the local Platense junior team. While with Platense he was selected for the
Reconquista team that won the provincial championship following victory over Newell's
Old Boys. Batistuta's two goals drew the attention of the opposition team’s
coach Marcelo Bielsa, and he signed a professional contract with Newell’s in 1988. [27]
Newell's Old Boys[edit]
At Newell's Old Boys under Bielsa, who would later become Batistuta's national coach
with the Argentina national team, things did not come easily for him during his first year
with the club. He was away from home, his family, and his girlfriend Irina, sleeping in a
room at the stadium, and had a weight problem that slowed his progress. [27] At the end of
that year, Batistuta was loaned to a smaller team, Deportivo Italiano, with whom he
participated in the Carnevale Cup in Italy, ending as top scorer with three goals. Under
the guidance of Bielsa, whom Batistuta described in his autobiography as the most
important coach he has ever had, and “the one who taught me how to train on rainy
days, he taught me everything”, he was physically transformed, fed encouragement,
and was set on the path into the player he was to become. [27][28]
River Plate[edit]
In mid-1989, Batistuta made the leap to one of Argentina's biggest clubs, River Plate,
where he scored 17 goals. He was drawn out of the team by the new manager Daniel
Passarella in the mid-season, apparently with no specific reason. According to
Batistuta, they never had a dispute. [29] Passarella declared at that time "when Batistuta
finds a team that be able to play to him he will be lethal" and highlighted his
professionalism.[30]
Boca Juniors[edit]

Batistuta with Diego Latorre in Boca Juniors, 1991

In 1990, Batistuta joined River Plate's arch rivals, Boca Juniors. He initially found it hard
to find his best form, in part not playing in his position. However, at the beginning of
1991, Óscar Tabárez became Boca Juniors' new manager and he gave Batistuta the
support and put him into his best place in the field, the centre of attack, rather than as
an outside forward. Batistuta finished the season as the league's top scorer as Boca
Juniors won the championship.[29][31]
Fiorentina[edit]
While playing for Argentina in the 1991 Copa América, the vice-president
of Fiorentina was impressed by Batistuta's skills and signed him. He had a fine start
in Serie A, scoring 13 goals in his debut season. However, the following season,
in 1992–93, Fiorentina lost in the relegation battle and were demoted to Serie B, despite
Batistuta's 16 league goals. The club returned to Serie A after one season in Serie B,
with the contribution of 16 goals from Batistuta and the management of Claudio Ranieri,
as Fiorentina captured the 1993–94 Serie B title.[32]
Batistuta holding his old number 9 Fiorentina jersey at a 2014 ceremony inducting him into the club’s hall of
fame

At Fiorentina, Batistuta found his best form. He was the top scorer of the 1994–95 Serie
A season with 26 goals, and he broke Ezio Pascutti's 32-year-old record by scoring in
all of the first 11 matches of the season.[33][34] In the 1995–96 season, Batistuta,
alongside Rui Costa and Francesco Baiano, helped the club to go on a 15-match
unbeaten run, as they eventually ended the season with a fourth-place league finish.
Fiorentina also won the Coppa Italia and Supercoppa Italiana over A.C. Milan; in the
two-legged Coppa Italia final against Atalanta, Batistuta scored a goal in each fixture as
Fiorentina won 3–0 on aggregate.[32][35] The next season was less successful, as
Fiorentina finished in a disappointing ninth place in the league, although the team
managed to reach the semi-finals of the 1996–97 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, losing out to
eventual champions Barcelona,[36] despite scoring a goal in a 1–1 away draw in the first
leg.[37] Scoring over 20 league goals in each of the next three seasons – made all the
more impressive given Serie A was the strongest league in the world and the hardest to
score in with the best defences – as well as spectacular powerful strikes
against Arsenal and Manchester United in the UEFA Champions League, Batistuta
came third for FIFA World Player of the Year in 1999.[4][38] Batistuta and Ronaldo were the
two best strikers in Serie A, with their duels the most anticipated in Italy. [39]
After his failure to win the Italian championship with Fiorentina, Batistuta started
considering a transfer to a bigger team. In an effort to keep Batistuta, Fiorentina
hired Giovanni Trapattoni as coach and promised to do everything to win the Scudetto.
After an excellent start to the season, Batistuta suffered an injury that kept him out of
action for more than a month. Losing momentum, Fiorentina lost the lead and finished
the season in third place, although the result enabled them to participate in the
Champions League the following season.[40]
In addition to the fans erecting a life-size bronze statue of him in Florence, Bastituta was
inducted into the club’s hall of fame in 2014. An emotional Batistuta told the audience at
the ceremony: “From the moment I arrived at Fiorentina I wanted a place in the history
of the club – and now I can say I have succeeded.” [41]
Roma[edit]
"I played the whole match with these conflicting thoughts in my head - I am sorry for Fiorentina. It was important,
though, because I want to win for Roma so I was trying hard but I can not forget my past. Certainly I cannot say that I
am happy to have scored against my former team-mates, but Roma wanted the win."
—Batistuta on his conflicting emotions playing for Roma against Fiorentina in November 2000.[42]

Batistuta stayed at Fiorentina for the 1999–2000 season, tempted by the chance of


winning both the Scudetto and the Champions League. After a promising start in both
competitions, the team only reached seventh in the league and were eliminated in the
second round group phase of the European tournament. The following season, he was
transferred to Roma in a deal worth 70 billion lire (€36.2 million)[43] and signed a three-
year contract, which earned 14.8 billion Italian lire (€7.6 million) per year before tax.
[44]
 The fee paid for Batistuta became the highest fee ever paid for a player over the age
of 30.[45] The record was broken in 2017 when Leonardo Bonucci was signed by A.C.
Milan on a five-year contract for a €42 million fee.[46][47]
During the 2000–01 season, Batistuta finally garnered a Serie A winners' medal, scoring
20 league goals, as Roma clinched the Scudetto for the first time since 1983,[48] including
a goal in the 3–1 title-deciding victory over Parma on 17 June 2001 at the Stadio
Olimpico in Rome.[49] On 26 November 2000 Batistuta scored an 83rd-minute winner with
a right-foot volley from 30 yards in a league game against Fiorentina in Rome – visibly
upset having done so he refused to celebrate with his Roma teammates.[42] Before the
match he ran over to the 3,000 Fiorentina fans and saluted them, and did the same at
full time, receiving adoration in return, before he left the stadium in tears. [42] Sean Ingle,
match reporter for The Guardian, wrote, “Batistuta breaks Florentine hearts, and his
own.”[50] The following season with Roma, he changed his shirt number from 18 to 20 in
reference to the number of goals he had scored during the Scudetto winning campaign.
[51]
 He also wore his age on the back of his Roma shirt in 2002, number 33. [51]
Loan to Inter Milan[edit]
Now aged 34, Batistuta failed to find form with Roma and was loaned out to Inter Milan,
scoring two goals in twelve matches, although he did provide assists for Christian Vieri.
[52]
 Batistuta sought a move to England to play with Fulham, but the deal never
transpired.[53][54]
Al-Arabi[edit]
He departed Italy for Qatar in 2003, joining Al-Arabi on a free transfer in a deal worth $8
million. Batistuta ended the season by netting 25 goals, thus surpassing the record for
most goals scored, which was previously held by Qatari legend Mansour Muftah.
[14]
 Batistuta announced his retirement in 2005.[55]

International career[edit]
Two milestone goals by Gabriel Batistuta in Copa América finals: 1991 vs Colombia (left) and 1993 vs Mexico

In 1991, Batistuta was selected to play for Argentina in the Copa América held in Chile,


where he finished the tournament as top scorer with six goals as Argentina romped to
victory.[56] The following year, he won the FIFA Confederations Cup with Argentina,
finishing as the tournament's top-scorer. In 1993, Batistuta played in his second Copa
América, this time held in Ecuador, which Argentina won with Batistuta scoring both
goals in a 2–1 win over Mexico in the final.[57]
The 1994 World Cup, held in the United States, was a disappointment. After a
promising start Argentina were beaten by Romania in the last 16. The morale of the
team was seriously affected by Diego Maradona's doping suspension. Despite the
disappointing Argentine exit, Batistuta scored four goals in as many games, including
a hat-trick in their opening game against Greece.[58]

Batistuta with Argentina celebrating a goal v Mexico at the 1993 Copa América

During the qualification matches for the 1998 World Cup (with former River Plate
manager Daniel Passarella) Batistuta was left out of the majority of the games after
falling out with the coach over team rules. The two eventually put the dispute aside and
Batistuta was recalled for the tournament. In the game against Jamaica, he recorded
the second hat-trick of his World Cup career, becoming the fourth player to achieve this
(the others were Sándor Kocsis, Just Fontaine, and Gerd Müller) and the first to score a
hat-trick in two World Cups. Argentina were knocked out of the World Cup by
the Netherlands courtesy of a last minute Dennis Bergkamp winner after the two sides
had held out for a 1–1 draw for almost the entire match.
After a good series of performances by Argentina in the qualification matches for
the 2002 World Cup, hopes were high that the South Americans – now managed
by Marcelo Bielsa – could win the trophy, and Batistuta announced that he planned to
quit the national team at the end of the tournament, which Argentina aimed to win. But
Argentina's "group of death" saw the team fall at the first hurdle, only managing a victory
against Nigeria (Batistuta scored the match's only goal).[28] They later fell to England 1–0
and managed a mere 1–1 tie against Sweden. This meant that the team was knocked
out in the opening round for the first time since 1962. With 54 goals from 77 games,
Batistuta was the record goalscorer for Argentina, a record he held until it was
surpassed by Lionel Messi in 2016.[59] Batistuta admitted he was a little annoyed at
losing the record, stating, “You go around the world and people say, 'he's the top scorer
for the Argentina national team’, before he then added, “But the advantage I have is that
I'm second to an extraterrestrial."[59]

Style of play[edit]
"Batistuta, dubbed "Batigol" by his fans, is the most successful striker of his generation, having achieved mythic
status at Italian club Fiorentina in the 1990s before moving to AS Roma. With his shoulder-length blond hair and
soulful eyes, he looks a likely lead in Jesus Christ Superstar, but he has the instincts of a cold-blooded killer."
—Bobby Ghosh writing for Time magazine, 2002.[3]

A quick, hard-working, and powerful player, with an eye for goal and a good all-round
game, Batistuta is considered one of the most complete, feared and prolific strikers of
his generation.[3][60][61] As a forward, he was primarily known for his technique, offensive
movement off the ball, strength in the air, and powerful, clinical finishing ability with both
feet from anywhere on the pitch, despite being naturally right-footed. [10][62][63]
Batistuta struck shots with such controlled violence you’d think he had a vendetta
against balls. And nets.

— Talksport on the World Cup’s most iconic players, Batistuta, May 2018. [64]
Batistuta also possessed an excellent positional sense, as well as an ability to anticipate
defenders in the area, score acrobatic goals from volleys or bicycle kicks, and strike the
ball first time from tight angles while on the run. He was also highly regarded due to his
accurate heading and powerful free-kick taking abilities; although he was a
competent penalty taker, his conversion rate from the spot throughout his career was
less reliable, however. In addition to his skill and goalscoring abilities, Batistuta
frequently stood out on the pitch throughout his career due to his leadership and fair-
play.[65][66][67] Diego Maradona stated that Batistuta is the best striker he has ever seen play
the game.[68][69] Batistuta’s goal celebration – both arms upturned with his fists clenched –
features in his statue placed next to those of Maradona and Messi in an emblematic
square in the Recoleta district of Buenos Aires.[70] Batistuta also often celebrated a goal
by pretending he was firing a machine gun. [71] Batistuta suffered several injuries
throughout his career, which often limited his playing time and fitness, in particular in his
later career, which would eventually force him to retire

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