|
Rubén Baraja Vegas (born 11 July 1975) is a Spanish retired footballer, and the current coach of Elche CF. A complete central midfielder with good tackling and offensive qualities together with accurate passing and goalscoring ability,〔(Players to watch – Rubén Baraja ); BBC Sport, 25 May 2004〕 he played mostly for Valencia during a 17-year professional career, being an essential figure in five of the club's major titles, which included two La Liga championships. For five years Baraja was also a consistent part of the Spanish national team, appearing in one World Cup and one European Championship and gaining nearly 50 caps. ==Club career== Born in Valladolid, Castile and León, Baraja started his career at local club Real Valladolid before moving to Atlético Madrid, where he would spend two and a half seasons with the B-side, first appearing with the main squad on 7 February 1999 by playing the second half of a 1–2 defeat at UD Salamanca. In the 1998–99 campaign, with the B's in the second division, he scored a career-best 11 goals. When Atlético was relegated at the end of 1999–2000, Baraja left the club in a 2,000 million ''pesetas'' transfer to that year's UEFA Champions League finalists Valencia CF,〔(Valencia break club transfer record ); The Namibian, 2 August 2000〕 who were looking to strengthen their central midfield following the sale of first-team players Gerard and Javier Farinós. In his first season he was a key element in the ''Ches Champions League campaign, as the club was beaten in the final for the second year running, this time losing in a penalty shootout to FC Bayern Munich, with the player scoring on his attempt. The 2001–02 season would see Baraja's first trophy win, where his goals late in the campaign helped Valencia to their first La Liga title in 31 years – he finished as the club's top scorer in the league, netting seven in only seventeen league games. 2003–04 was another big year, winning both the domestic championship (with eight league goals from him) as well as the UEFA Cup, beating Olympique de Marseille 2–0 in the final. In 2006–07 Baraja only appeared in 14 league contests as Valencia finished fourth, and continued to be constantly bothered by physical problems in the following years. After two respectable seasons, often partnering longtime central midfield partner David Albelda, he was again greatly troubled with physical problems in the 2009–10 season, appearing in only 18 matches (two complete); on 16 May 2010 he closed his Valencia chapter after one full decade, receiving homages before and after the 1–0 home win against CD Tenerife and being replaced to a standing ovation in the 89th minute. Shortly after the 35-year-old announced his retirement, having appeared in 338 first division games over the course of 15 seasons and scoring 47 goals. In June 2011 Baraja returned to former team Atlético Madrid, as part of newly appointed manager Gregorio Manzano's coaching staff.〔(Vizcaíno y Baraja, ayudantes de Gregorio Manzano (Vizcaíno and Baraja, Gregorio Manzano's assistants) ); Marca, 9 June 2011 〕 In the 2013 summer he returned to main club Valencia, first coaching the youths then the reserves. On 12 July 2015, Baraja was appointed manager of Elche CF, newly relegated to the second tier.〔(Rubén Baraja, nuevo entrenador del Elche C.F. (Rubén Baraja. new manager of Elche C.F.) ); Elche's official website, 12 July 2015 〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Rubén Baraja」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|