Carlos Roa
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Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Carlos Ángel Roa | ||
Date of birth | 15 August 1969 | ||
Place of birth | Santa Fe, Argentina | ||
Height | Script error: No such module "person height". | ||
Position(s) | Goalkeeper | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1988–1993 | Racing Club | 109 | (0) |
1994–1997 | Lanús | 107 | (0) |
1997–2002 | Mallorca | 75 | (0) |
2002–2004 | Albacete | 53 | (0) |
2005–2006 | Olimpo | 27 | (0) |
Total | 371 | (0) | |
International career | |||
1992 | Argentina U23 | ||
1997–1999 | Argentina | 16 | (0) |
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Carlos Ángel Roa (born 15 August 1969) is an Argentine retired footballer who played as a goalkeeper.
Most of his professional career was spent with Racing Avellaneda and in Spain with Mallorca, winning one major trophy with the latter. During his career, he was a practising Seventh-day Adventist and followed a vegan (strictly vegetarian) diet.
Roa was first-choice for the Argentine national team at the 1998 World Cup.
Contents
Club career
Born in Santa Fe, Roa started playing professionally for Racing Club de Avellaneda, making his Primera División debut on 6 November 1988 at the age of 19. During a summer tour of Africa with the club he contracted malaria, but fully recovered. In 1994 he moved to Club Atlético Lanús, rarely missing a match with the Buenos Aires Province side as it achieved three consecutive third-place league finishes (one in 1995, two in 1996),[1] and adding the Copa CONMEBOL in 1996.
Roa then signed with Spain's RCD Mallorca, alongside Lanús teammate Óscar Mena, playing 25 La Liga matches as the Balearic Islands club finished fifth straight out of Segunda División and also reached the final in the Copa del Rey, lost against FC Barcelona on penalties.[2]
In the 1999 summer, after helping Mallorca win the domestic Supercup and reach the final of the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup (already accompanied in the team by former Lanús teammates Ariel Ibagaza and Gustavo Siviero), 30-year-old Roa retired from football in order to take a religious retreat. After a year of charitable and religious work spent as a member of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, his convictions led to his refusal to discuss a new contract with his team, because he believed the world was going to end in the near future.[3][4]
Less than one year later Lechuga (lettuce, a nickname coming from his eating preferences) Roa returned to Mallorca, forced to play out the remaining two years of his contract. Never being able to reproduce his previous form, he was relegated to the bench by compatriot Leo Franco.
Subsequently, Roa moved to another Spanish team, second division's Albacete Balompié, appearing in 39 league games as the Castile-La Mancha side returned to the top division after a seven-year absence. Midway through the following season, he was diagnosed with testicular cancer and was forced to stop playing; after an operation, he spent an entire year between chemotherapy and rehabilitation.[5]
After keeping his fitness with amateurs CD Constancia and CD Atlético Baleares, both in the Majorca area, Roa returned to professional football and his country, joining Olimpo de Bahía Blanca and retiring after one top division season. In 2008 he joined amateurs Club Atlético Brown as goalkeeper coach and, two years later, he was appointed assistant manager at Club Sportivo Ben Hur.
International career
In 1992 Roa appeared for Argentina at the 1992 CONMEBOL Pre-Olympic Tournament in Paraguay, which saw the country fail to qualify for the 1992 Summer Olympics.[6]
He was selected by the full side for the 1998 FIFA World Cup in France. After not conceding any goals during the group stage, he saved the decisive penalty in the shootout against England in the round-of-16, denying Newcastle United's David Batty.[7] The national team was eventually defeated in the following match by Netherlands (1–2).
Honours
Club
- Racing
- Lanús
- Copa CONMEBOL: 1996
- Mallorca
- Supercopa de España: 1998
- UEFA Cup Winners' Cup: Runner-up 1998–99
- Copa del Rey: Runner-up 1997–98
Individual
- Zamora Trophy: 1997–98
References
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External links
- Carlos Roa profile at BDFutbol
- Carlos Roa at National-Football-Teams.comLua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
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- ↑ Carlos Roa – FIFA competition record
- Pages with reference errors
- Use dmy dates from July 2013
- Pages using infobox football biography with height issues
- No local image but image on Wikidata
- 1969 births
- Living people
- People from Santa Fe, Argentina
- Argentine footballers
- Association football goalkeepers
- Argentine Primera División players
- Racing Club de Avellaneda footballers
- Club Atlético Lanús footballers
- Olimpo footballers
- La Liga players
- Segunda División players
- RCD Mallorca players
- Albacete Balompié players
- Argentina international footballers
- 1998 FIFA World Cup players
- 1997 Copa América players
- Argentine expatriate footballers
- Expatriate footballers in Spain
- Argentine expatriates in Spain
- Testicular cancer survivors
- Argentine Seventh-day Adventists