Álex Aguinaga
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Álex Darío Aguinaga Garzón (born June 7, 1969 in Ibarra, Ecuador) is an Ecuadorian former soccer midfielder. He is one of the all-time cap leaders for the Ecuador with 109 matches, scoring 23 goals. Renowned international sports journalists call him "El Maestro" ("The Master").[citation needed] Alex, born and raised in Ecuador, came to Mexico in 1991 to play in Mexico City with the least popular team of the capital.[citation needed] Alex became the symbol of the team, leading them to 3 championships in the 90's.
Alex was approached by many European Clubs like Inter Milan and one of the most popular soccer teams in the planet Real Madrid. But Alex was the soul of Los Rayados del Necaxa and the executives in the club said that Necaxa can lose it all except for Alex; The player was not for sale; they didn't care how much money the offer was for Álex Aguinaga.[citation needed]
On the club level, Aguinaga has played for Sociedad Deportivo Quito, Club Atlético Guayaquil, Necaxa (where he was known as "El Güero" [The blond one] and where he obtained several championships), Cruz Azul for one season after he had some problems with Raul Arias (in that time the Necaxa coach) and Liga Deportiva Universitaria, where he obtained the 2005 "Torneo Apertura" (opening tournament) championship.
Aguinaga has been a central figure in Ecuador's national team since his first appearance in the late 1980s. During the '90s, he became a national hero and a very well known player after publicly embarrassing Ronaldo by scoring a goal through his legs.[citation needed] Aguinaga was also named "Player of the Decade" of the Mexican League for the 1990s.[citation needed]
Thanks to a pass executed by Aguinaga, Iván Kaviedes (forward) scored with a header, thus taking Ecuador to their first World Cup (Korea-Japan 2002). Aguinaga was part of the squad during that World Cup; in which Ecuador lost to Italy (0-2) and Mexico (1-2), but managed to beat Croatia 1-0. He was injured in both the games that Ecuador lost in the 2002 FIFA World Cup.
Aguinaga retired from the national team after the 2002 World Cup. He announced his retirement from professional football after completing the 2005 "Torneo Clausura" (closing tournament) with Liga Deportiva Universitaria de Quito.
He lived in Quito, Ecuador until his contract ended with Liga, he returned to Aguascalientes, Mexico, where he is established with his wife and children since the time he played in Necaxa. He is currently Necaxa's Sports Director.[citation needed]
Ecuador squad - 2002 FIFA World Cup | ||
---|---|---|
1 Cevallos | 2 Porozo | 3 Hurtado | 4 de la Cruz | 5 Obregón | 6 Guerrón | 7 Asencio | 8 L. Gómez | 9 Kaviedes | 10 Aguinaga | 11 Delgado | 12 Ibarra | 13 Fernández | 14 Burbano | 15 M. Ayoví | 16 Chalá | 17 Espinoza | 18 C. Tenorio | 19 Méndez | 20 E. Tenorio | 21 Sánchez | 22 Viteri | 23 W. Ayoví | Coach: H. Gómez |
Categories: Articles lacking sources from November 2006 | All articles lacking sources | Articles with unsourced statements since February 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | 1969 births | Living people | Ecuadorian footballers | FIFA World Cup 2002 players | Footballers with 100 or more caps