The Uruguay international has come a long way from his humble beginnings
to become one of football's most expensive players of all-time
He's the second most expensive footballer of all-time after completing a €64 million move from Napoli to Paris Saint-Germain this summer, but Edinson Cavani's rise to stardom is every inch a roots to riches tale.
The
explosive forward is set to make his full debut for Laurent Blanc's
side in front of a partisan Parisian support against Ajaccio on Sunday,
despite missing Uruguay's international friendly against Japan with a
minor injury.
But way before Cavani first laced up a pair of
boots or became the subject of a transfer saga that threatened to run
longer than his shoulder length hair, it was very much a case of green
fingers for the Salto-born star.
The Uruguay international was at
one with nature from an early age and would earn extra money by helping
neighbours with their gardening.
“Since he was little we went
fishing together and camping in the mountains, and there he always felt
happy fishing, hunting and sleeping on the floor," his father Luis
remembers.
“He asked me to lend him the tools and he had his
customers. Although there weren’t so many customers, it was enough to
enable him to make some money and feel comfortable.”
It was Luis’
influence that first saw Edinson set out on the path to becoming a
footballer, while Edinson’s elder half-brother, Walter Guglielmone, also
plays the game in China for Beijing BIT.
Luis, who was known as
“El Gringo” because of his Italian surname, played for Nacional and
Salto Uruguay and later coached both teams. Edinson first played the
game at the age of three and soon began playing for various junior teams
in his native city of Salto, where he quickly began to show his talent.
Luis
recalls: “Edinson always wanted to play with a ball on any ground near
home with other kids and they’d set up a goal and have fun with it as
long as they could.
“He joined Salto Uruguay at the age of 12 and
when he was 13 I took over coaching the team and put him in the youth
first team, not because he was my son but because he had the ability and
I saw him as a footballer.
“With him being a kid when I was in
charge of the Salto team, he accompanied me and with his thin little
legs he’d practise shooting at goalkeepers and in warm-ups and the same
when I coached a Colonias Agrarias team, he’d get involved and play.”
But Edinson was not allowed to neglect his studies because of football.
Luis,
who is the father to two sons and three daughters, explained: “We’ve
always tried to give the children the best for their education and I’ve
always told them, especially Edinson, that before playing football they
would have to develop as people to succeed in life and he’s clear about
that, because otherwise there’s no point being a star on the pitch and
an example of nothing away from it.
“An example of his devotion
to football is the fact that as an adolescent he wasn’t bothered about
night parties and always wanted to go to bed early so that the next
morning he could have all his energy to give to the ball. Football was
his life," he added.
When Edinson moved to the capital Montevideo
to join Uruguayan outfit Liverpool at the age of 17, he missed his
native Salto and didn’t enjoy the atmosphere with his team-mates.
He
asked Walter for advice. Walter, who has the same mother but a
different father, was a player with Danubio at the time and told him to
try his luck with the side.
Former Danubio head Anibal Rey
recalls: “At Danubio we received Edinson Cavani with open arms. Besides,
he came recommended by his half-brother Walter Guglielmone and he
adapted quickly.
“In February 2006, we went with Danubio youth
team to play in the Coppa Carnevale in Viareggio (Italy) and he was in
the team. He put in two great performances, and it led to (Italian team)
Chievo de Verona setting eyes on him and they invited him to stay for a
week, training, but then the transfer didn’t happen.”
Edinson was promoted to Danubio’s first team and scored his first goal for the side in May 2006, ironically against Liverpool.
To
begin with, Cavani was far from a prolific goalscorer and tended to
miss a lot of chances, but intensive work with his coach, Matosas,
helped to transform him into one of Europe's most feared hitmen.
He
joined Italian club Palermo in a €4.4 million deal back in 2007 before
moving to Napoli three years later, where he found the back of the net
104 times in 138 games in all competitions, including an incredible 38 goals last season.
Such
is his popularity in Naples, they even named a pizza and a brand of
biscuits after him. Cavani subsequently attracted attention from
Europe's biggest clubs, with Real Madrid, Chelsea and Manchester City
all credited with an interest in the player, but in the end it was PSG -
with the backing of their mega-rich owners - who were able to secure
the deal.
Throughout the saga, he endured a painful split from
his wife, Soldead Cabris. The pair separated in March this year, with
Cavani's father Luis keen for the matter to remain a private one.
“I
won’t talk about Edinson’s marital split with Soledad because there are
two beautiful grandchildren involved," he added. "The parents are
grown-up enough and all I’ve asked them is to think about the children
so that they don’t suffer with this separation.”
His life away
from football may well be far from perfect, but as he prepares to pull
on a Paris Saint-Germain jersey and begin a new chapter in his career on
Sunday, the shoots of success show no signs of slowing anytime soon.
Friday, August 16, 2013
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» But Villas-boas maintains that the club do not want to sell their prize asset and are not willing to negotiate a transfer with Real and says the PFA and FWA player of the year remains tight-lipped about his future. “His mental state nobody knows because the player doesn’t speak,” the Portuguese told reporters. “The only thing that we are able to see or you [media] are able to see is the player arriving in and out of the training ground. “We are aware that Real Madrid are interested in the player. It doesn’t mean that we are willing to negotiate on him. Our idea is to count on Gareth. "We can speak to the players regarding their ambitions and we can explain to them that at certain stages players are under contract and have the responsibility towards their clubs and we as the club, or the chairman as the person who controls the club, has to defend their own interest.” Villas-Boas this week ruled Bale out of Spurs’ Premier League curtain-raiser with Crystal Palace as the forward continues to struggle with a foot injury and the former Chelsea and Porto boss has warned he may not be ready to feature until September. “Obviously he is very far off regarding his fitness compared to the others,” the 35-year-old added. “So it will take some time to bring him back to the level that the others are after six weeks. But the player is a super athlete. For Palace, for Dinamo Tbilisi, for Swansea, he will not be in line to threaten to come back.”
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