Marcelo Gallardo

Player

Birthday January 18, 1976

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Merlo, Buenos Aires, Argentina

Age 48 years old

Nationality Argentina

Height 1.69 m

#16079 Most Popular

1976

Marcelo Daniel Gallardo (born 18 January 1976) is an Argentine football coach and former professional player.

He is the manager of Saudi Pro League club Al-Ittihad.

During his playing career, Gallardo was an attacking midfielder and playmaker.

He was regarded for his vision, technique, class, dribbling, and especially his defence-splitting passing.

1988

After receiving offers from several First Division teams to join their junior squads, he landed a trial at River Plate and joined as a midfielder in 1988.

1990

Gallardo was scouted by European teams during the late 1990s and signed with France's Ligue 1 AS Monaco FC, bringing his initial spell with River Plate to an end with the 1998–99 season.

He had played 109 league games with the club and scored 17 goals.

1992

Gallardo made his professional debut at age 17 for the club during the 1992–93 Argentinian Torneo de Clausura in a 2–0 win against Newell's Old Boys.

1993

Gallardo began his career in the club's youth divisions, and made his debut in the Argentine Primera División at age 17 in 1993.

The team then won the 1993–94 Torneo de Apertura.

1994

Gallardo won a series of national tournaments with the team during the next few seasons (including the 1994, 1996 and 1997 Torneo de Apertura and the 1997 Torneo de Clausura), and became a starting midfielder by 1996.

He received his first international trophy (the Copa Libertadores) that year, as River Plate defeated América de Cali 2–1 in the final series.

Starting both matches on the bench, Gallardo took the field in the second half.

River Plate lost the Intercontinental Cup 0–1 to Juventus F.C. at Tokyo's National Stadium several months later.

1996

After a six-year period in which he won five local league championships, the 1996 Copa Libertadores and the 1997 Supercopa Libertadores, he transferred to France's Ligue 1 AS Monaco FC and was named French League Footballer of the Year in 2000.

Gallardo represented Argentina in two FIFA World Cups, although his performance was affected by injuries in both.

1997

River Plate won local championships under Gallardo and returned to the international scene, where they had not won a tournament from 1997 to 2014.

With the most international tournament championships in team history, he is considered River Plate's most successful coach to date.

Born in Parque San Martín in Merlo Partido in the Greater Buenos Aires area to construction worker Máximo Gallardo and nursing home employee Ana María (née Maidana), Gallardo began playing football at about age 10 in the local Once Colegiales and Nahuel clubs.

1999

Gallardo signed a five-year contract with AS Monaco FC in 1999 for US$9.36 million.

He made his European debut on the opening day of the 1999–2000 season in a 2–2 tie against AS Saint-Étienne, and scored his first goal for the team on 12 September in a 1–2 away loss to Stade Rennais F.C..

Despite an ankle injury before the season, Gallardo quickly adapted to French football and partnered with Ludovic Giuly in midfield and attackers Marco Simone and David Trezeguet.

AS Monaco won the Première Division, and Gallardo was selected French League Footballer of the Year with eight goals in 28 matches.

2000

Coach Didier Deschamps benched him midway through the 2000–01 season, and their relationship remained tense until Gallardo left the club at the end of the 2003–04 season with Christian Panucci and Marco Simone.

He scored 23 goals in 126 matches in four years with AS Monaco, winning the Coupe de la Ligue during his final season.

2004

Gallardo returned to River Plate in 2004 and was named squad captain.

The team won the Torneo de Clausura, his last championship win as a River Plate player, soon after his return.

Gallardo played a key scoring role in the 1–1 home tie against Atlético de Rafaela, which clinched the championship over long-standing rivals Boca Juniors.

That year, the team lost to Boca Juniors in the semifinals of the 2004 Copa Libertadores.

The series was tied 2–2; Boca Juniors won in the penalty shootout, eliminating River Plate from the tournament.

After a physical encounter with Raúl Alfredo Cascini in the first-leg match, both players were given the red card and were unable to participate in the second-leg match.

More players were involved in the fight, in which Gallardo scratched Roberto Abbondanzieri's face; it was one of his professional career's darkest moments.

Amid institutional and performance problems in River Plate and a bad streak since his return to the club (including ten red cards in 256 matches), Gallardo began considering offers to return to the French league.

Parisian club Paris Saint-Germain F.C. and Olympique de Marseille were interested in him, and he chose the former.

PSG had a poor season, nearly relegated to the second division and eliminated from the UEFA Cup.

After one season with the club, scoring two goals in 13 matches, Gallardo terminated his two-year contract to move to Major League Soccer in the United States.

2008

On 29 January 2008, Gallardo was presented as the newest member of D.C. United.

With a salary of $1.87 million, Gallardo was the highest-paid player in D.C. United history and its first Designated Player.

2010

After topping the 2010–11 Uruguayan Primera División season with Nacional de Montevideo, Gallardo retired as a player to coach the team.

He helped Nacional de Montevideo defend their championship the following season before transferring to River Plate.