Iker Casillas Fernلndez (
Spanish pronunciation: [ˈikeɾ kaˈsiʎas feɾˈnandeθ]; born 20 May 1981) is a Spanish football goalkeeper who plays for the Spanish La Liga club Real Madrid and the Spanish national team, being the captain of both. In 2008 he led the Spanish national team to their first European Championship in 44 years, and in 2010, to win the World Cup, being also named the tournament's best goalkeeper.
Since his early professional years as a teenager, Casillas has been recognised as one of the best goalkeepers in Europe, being nominated for the
European Footballer of the Year award twice, ranking fourth overall in 2008 and continuing to be the highest-ranked goalkeeper again in 2009.
[2] At the end of 2009 he was voted into the UEFA Team of the Year for the third consecutive time. As of 2011 Casillas is one of a very select group of players who have won all major club and national championship titles. In 2010, he was awarded with the Sports Prince of Asturias Award. On 19 October 2010, Casillas became the most capped goalkeeper of all time in the UEFA Champions League and in November 2011, he became the most capped player of all time for the Spanish national team
[edit] Early lifeCasillas was born on 20 May 1981 in
Mَstoles,
Community of Madrid to José Luis Casillas, a civil servant in the
Ministry of Education, and Marيa del Carmen Fernلndez Gonzلlez, a hairdresser.
[4] Both his parents had emigrated from their home town of
Navalacruz,
ءvila.
[4] When Iker was a child, he lived for some years in the Basque Country, but he has always considered Madrid to be his hometown.
[citation needed] Casillas has a brother, seven years younger, named Unai, who currently plays as a central midfielder for
CD Mَstoles.
[5]As a young child, one weekend Casillas forgot to post his father’s football predictions on the weekend his father had correctly predicted all 14 results. The family lost out on an estimated €1m.
[6][edit] Real MadridCasillas had started in the junior squad of Real Madrid's youth system during the 1990–91 season. On 27 November 1997 at age 16 he was first called up to the first team to face
Rosenborg in
Champions League, but it wasn't until the 1998–99 season that he debuted in the senior side, substituting
Bodo Illgner. By the next season, he relegated Illgner to the bench and became first-choice.
[7] In 2000, he became the youngest ever goalkeeper to play in a Champions League final when Real Madrid defeated
Valencia 3–0, just four days after his nineteenth birthday.
[8] Casillas at the
Estadio Santiago BernabéuCasillas lost his place in the side to backup
César Sلnchez after a + of bad form during the 2001–02 campaign, but redeemed himself when Sلnchez suffered an injury in the last minutes of
2002 Champions League final match. Casillas came on and pulled off several brilliant saves to deny a rampant
Bayer Leverkusen the Champions League crown. Real Madrid won 2–1 and Casillas has maintained the number 1 shirt ever since.
The 2007–08 season was a fruitful season for Casillas as he helped Real Madrid reclaim their 31st
La Liga title and conceded only 32 goals in 36 matches to claim the
Zamora Trophy. On 14 February 2008, he and then club captain
Raْl Gonzلlez were awarded a contract for life. Casillas signed a contract extension that will keep him at the club until 2017, with an automatic extension if he plays 30 competitive matches during the final season of the contract and a buy-out clause of £113 million.
[9][10] His performances earned him a spot in the
UEFA Team of the Year for the second time.
In February 2009, Casillas equalled
Paco Buyo's record of 454 matches played (for a goalkeeper) and has since surpassed it to become Real Madrid's most-capped goalkeeper of all time at only twenty-seven years old.
[11] During the 2009 summer transfer window, some Spanish media reported that
Manchester City had launched a record £129 million bid for the goalkeeper. However the club denied the allegations saying that no such offer had been made.
Manchester United had been rumoured to have enquired about him, but no price was announced.
[12] He had been linked with other
Premier League clubs before
[13] but Casillas himself stated that he "had no intention of leaving" his boyhood club.
During the
2009–10 season on 4 October in a game against
Sevilla, Casillas made an extraordinary save; he ran from one side of his goal to the other and denied
Diego Perotti in a one-on-one close range encounter. After the match, he received praise from fellow Spanish goalkeepers and
England goalkeeper
Gordon Banks, who stated "Casillas' reflexes are incredible. If he continues to play this well he will become one of the best goalkeepers in the history of the game."
[14] Europa Press reported that Casillas was the 2nd most popular Spanish sportsman on the internet throughout 2010. The study performed by company Vipnet360 examined the web presence on platforms like
Facebook,
Twitter and
YouTube.
[15]During the
2011–12 season, Casillas won IFFHS Best Goalkeeper award, making him the only and first goalkeeper to win it 4 times.
[edit] International careerCasillas debuted for the national team in the U–17 level. At age 16, he was the youngest player in the Spanish squad that placed third at the
1997 FIFA U-17 World Championship in Egypt. He was later made captain of the U-17's. Two years later, he went on to win the
FIFA World Youth Championship and the
UEFA-CAF Meridian Cup that same year. Initially second-choice, he soon worked his way up to first-choice and eventually earned his first senior cap following some brilliant performances at club level.
Iker Casillas playing for Spain
Casillas is currently the most capped player in the history of the Spanish national team. Following his full international debut at the senior level on 3 June 2000 against
Sweden (at 19 years and 14 days), Casillas was an unused substitute at
Euro 2000. He was part of the roster for the
2002 World Cup, initially as the understudy to
Santiago Caٌizares. Coincidentally, Casillas became the first-choice goalkeeper when Caٌizares had to withdraw from the tournament due to injury from a freak accident. At 21, he was one of the youngest first-choice goalkeepers in the tournament. He played an instrumental role in Spanish progression when he saved two penalties in the shoot-out during the round of 16 match against the
Republic of Ireland, earning him the nickname "The Saint". One of his saves during the quarterfinals versus South Korea during the
2002 FIFA World Cup was rated by FIFA as one of the top 10 saves of all time.
[16]Casillas played in all eight Group six fixtures during
Euro 2004 qualifying, conceding just four goals. He kept a clean sheet in the second leg victory of the playoff against
Norway which ended 3–0 in Oslo, and started all of Spain's Euro 2004 matches. He was the first choice for the
2006 FIFA World Cup, captaining the team twice, but could not prevent
La Roja from losing 3–1 to a Zidane-inspired France in the Round of 16.
With the exclusion of his
Real Madrid teammate
Raْl from the squad for
Euro 2008, Casillas was given the captain's armband. He started the first two
Group D games against
Russia and Sweden before being rested in place of second-choice goalkeeper
Pepe Reina for Spain's group stage elimination of
Greece. Casillas saved two penalties from
Antonio Di Natale and
Daniele De Rossi as Spain eliminated
Italy in the quarterfinals with a 4–2 shootout win following a goalless draw on 22 June.
[17] Spain later went on to win the competition with a 1–0 win over Germany in the
final on 29 June; Casillas kept clean sheets for the quarterfinal, semifinal, and final matches, with Sweden's first round goal by
Zlatan Ibrahimović being the last one scored against him. On 29 June 2008 Casillas became the first goalkeeper-captain to lift the
UEFA European Championship trophy when Spain beat Germany 1–0 in the final.
[18] Casillas was the captain of Spain in the 2010 FIFA World Cup finals.
In October 2008, Casillas and deputy in goal
Pepe Reina broke the national record for the longest time spent without conceding a goal. The pair went unbeaten for 710 minutes, longer than Spain's longest-serving goalkeeper
Andoni Zubizarreta and
Paco Buyo.
[19] Wesley Sonck of Belgium ended their goalless streak when he scored against them a 2010 World Cup qualifying match.
Casillas was the highest ranked goalkeeper (4th place) in the 2008
Ballon d'Or behind
Cristiano Ronaldo,
Lionel Messi and national teammate
Fernando Torres. Also in 2008 Casillas was named the world's best goalkeeperby the
IFFHS.
[20] He also came in third place in the best goalkeepers of all time ranking; beating
Oliver Kahn.
[20]On 5 September 2009, after a 5–0 win over Belgium in a qualifying match for the World Cup, Casillas equalled Andoni Zubizarreta's national record of 56 clean sheets,
[21] and during the Spanish team's next match against Estonia on 9 September 2009, he surpassed
Zubizarreta as the record holder for the most Spanish international clean sheets (this being achieved in Casillas' 98th appearance for the national team, while Zubizarreta made 126 before his retirement).
[21] Two months later, Casillas made his 100th appearance for the Spanish squad in the friendly win over
Argentina, making him only the third player in history of Spanish football to ever reach this far internationally.
[22] Only
Andoni Zubizarreta, on 126, now stands ahead of him.
[23]On 11 July 2010, he captained Spain to
their first ever World Cup title with a 1–0 win against the
Netherlands.
[24] In doing so he became the third ever goalkeeper to captain a World Cup winning side (along with
Gianpiero Combi in
1934 and
Dino Zoff in
1982). He was voted the tournament's best goalkeeper and awarded the
Golden Glove.
[25] In the course of the finals in South Africa he kept five clean sheets, conceded two goals, and saved a penalty in the quarter final against
Paraguay. In the
final, he made two crucial stops from Netherlands'
Arjen Robben with the score at 0–0 after the Dutchman had passed all the defenders.
On 15 November 2011, Casillas became Spain's most capped player, breaking
Andoni Zubizarreta's record after starting for Spain in their 2–2 draw against Costa Rica.