Maximiliano Rubén Rodríguez (Spanish pronunciation:[ˈmaksiroˈðɾiɣes]; born 2 January 1981), is an Argentine former professional footballer. Nicknamed La Fiera (The Beast in English),[4] he was commonly used as a winger on both flanks but could also operate as an attacking midfielder.[5][6]
Rodríguez arrived in Spain aged 21, and went on to spend the bulk of his professional career there, playing for Espanyol and Atlético Madrid and amassing La Liga totals of 232 matches and 58 goals over eight seasons. He also spent two years with Liverpool in England, and began and ended his career at Newell's Old Boys.
In March 2002, Rodríguez agreed to a four-year deal with the option of a fifth at RCD Espanyol in La Liga.[8] The transfer was frozen in May – after the player's presentation – by a court in Argentina who alleged irregularities in the actions of Newell's president Eduardo López;[9] on 26 June the deal was concluded, for a €5 million fee in three instalments and with a buyout clause of €24 million.[10] He made his debut on 2 September by featuring the full 90 minutes in a 2–0 loss away to Real Madrid, and scored his first goal on 27 October to decide a 4–3 comeback at Málaga CF in his team's first away victory for over a year.[11]
On 13 January 2010, Rodríguez completed a free transfer to Liverpool, signing a three-and-a-half-year deal; after securing his signature, Rafael Benítez described him as "comfortable on the ball, can pass and keep possession. He is good at getting into the box and scoring goals and a good finisher",[22] and the player was given the number 17 shirt,[23] making his debut for the club as a second-half substitute in a Premier League match against Stoke City on the 16th.[24] His first full start came a week and a half later, in a 0–0 away draw to Wolverhampton Wanderers.[25]
Rodríguez picked up two league assists in his first games, both of which were for former Atlético teammate Torres. He scored his first competitive goal in a 4–0 win over Burnley at Turf Moor on 25 April 2010, playing the full 90 minutes.[26]
2010–11 was a good individual season for Rodríguez, who netted ten league goals for the team, including hat-tricks against Birmingham City (5–0 home victory)[27] and Fulham (5–2 at Craven Cottage). In the latter match, he scored twice in the opening seven minutes – the first being just after 32 seconds – and completed his exhibition with a 25-yard strike.[28]
On 8 July 2011, Rodríguez switched his jersey number to 11,[29] and he scored two goals in a pre-season friendly with Malaysia shortly after, which finished with a 6–3 win.[30] On 24 August, he was given his first start of the season in a League Cuptie against Exeter City, and netted the second in an eventual 3–1 away victory.[31]
On 20 November 2011, Rodríguez scored against Chelsea following a build-up with teammate Craig Bellamy, with Liverpool winning it 2–1 at Stamford Bridge.[32] Nine days later, against the same opponent, in the same venue and again with the decisive pass being made by the Welshman, he found the net in a 2–0 League Cup win,[33] and his team went on to win the latter competition.[34]
On 26 December 2011, Rodríguez scored just his second league goal of the season in a 1–1 draw at Anfield against Blackburn Rovers.[35] He netted his last two on 10 April 2012, for a 3–2 away defeat of the same adversary.[36]
Return to South America
On 13 July 2012, after 73 official games and 17 goals scored, Rodríguez left Liverpool and returned to his first professional club Newell's Old Boys.[37] He wrote an open letter to the Reds fans before his departure, thanking them for their support in his two-and-a-half-year stint.[38]
Rodríguez played his first match for the club since leaving on 5 August 2012, in a 0–0 draw against Club Atlético Independiente. According to him, football in his country was now "worse than ten years ago".[39] In June 2013, he helped the team win the Torneo Final, being awarded the Alumni by directors and former directors of Argentinian football late in the year.[40]
In July 2017, the 36-year-old Rodríguez moved to Uruguayan club Peñarol.[41] After winning the league in both of his seasons in Montevideo, he returned to Newell's on an 18-month contract in the last days of 2018.[42]
On 27 November 2021, Rodríguez confirmed his retirement at the age of 40, having been substituted to a standing ovation at home to Club Atlético Banfield in his final match.[43] The following January, however, he joined Hughes Foot Ball Club in the Liga Venadense de Fútbol (a regional football league in Santa Fe Province) along with his childhood friend and Newell's teammate Ignacio Scocco, president of said club.[44]
Rodríguez was given a farewell match at the Estadio Marcelo Bielsa on 24 June 2023, which pitted historic players of Newell's Old Boys against their counterparts of the Argentina national team, such as captain Lionel Messi who was celebrating his 36th birthday. He scored for both sides as the latter won 7–5, and both his daughters, Alma and Aitana, did the same once each in the second half.[45]
After Argentina lost the quarter-final game against Germany on 30 June 2006, Rodríguez punched opponent Bastian Schweinsteiger in the back. FIFA fined him CHF5,000 and suspended him from two matches in the 2007 Copa América for violent conduct.[51] However, after a serious knee injury in a friendly with Spain in October 2006, he missed the continental competition as national team manager Alfio Basile, whom initially intended to select the player, eventually rested him for precaution.[52]
Rodríguez scored in Diego Maradona's first game in charge of Argentina, a 1–0 friendly win in Scotland.[53] On 19 May 2010 he was named in the squad of 23 for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa[54] and, in the last home game before the finals five days later, scored twice against Canada, netting from a free kick from a sharp angle and after receiving a pass from Carlos Tevez in an eventual 5–0 rout.[55]
In June 2014, Rodríguez made Argentina's list for the 2014 World Cup.[56] He started in his side's opening game, a 2–1 defeat of Bosnia and Herzegovina at the Estádio do Maracanã, playing the first half before being substituted for Gonzalo Higuaín at half-time.[57] He was only fielded again in the semi-finals against the Netherlands, converting the decisive penalty shootout attempt (0–0 after 120 minutes) to send his country to the final for the first time in 24 years.[58]
Personal life
Rodríguez was raised by his mother Claudia in his grandparents' home and never met his father.[59] He is the cousin of fellow footballers Alexis Rodríguez and Denis Rodríguez, and all three played for Newell's at the same time.[60][61]
Other ventures
In 2009, Rodríguez appeared in a music video for Coti, starring alongside Atlético teammate Diego Forlán.[62]
Career statistics
Club
Appearances and goals by club, season and competition[63][64]
^Guasch, Tomás (28 October 2002). "La gran remontada de Iván y Tamudo" [Iván and Tamudo's great comeback]. Diario AS (in Spanish). Retrieved 13 June 2023.
^Juárez, Mari Carmen (8 November 2004). "Espanyol fulminante" [Overwhelming Espanyol]. Mundo Deportivo (in Spanish). Retrieved 10 July 2014.
^"En busca del gol perdido" [In search of the lost goal] (in Spanish). Fuerza Perica. 10 March 2016. Archived from the original on 15 March 2016. Retrieved 14 March 2016.