Argentine footballer
In this
Spanish name , the first or paternal
surname is
Montenegro and the second or maternal family name is
Casella .
Daniel Gastón Montenegro Casella (born 28 March 1979) is an Argentine former footballer who played mainly as an attacking midfielder .
He spent most of his professional career with Huracán and Independiente , having several spells with both clubs over 21 years. He appeared three times for Argentina , in the 2000s.
Club career
Born in Buenos Aires , Montenegro began his professional career at Club Atlético Huracán in 1997. He subsequently signed for Club Atlético Independiente , going on to represent the club on three different spells and teaming up with sibling Ariel in the first.[ 1]
In the 1999 January transfer window , Montenegro moved to France with Olympique de Marseille , being loaned several times by the Ligue 1 side for the duration of his contract, mostly to teams in Spain (Real Zaragoza – where he contributed four matches to their conquest of the Copa del Rey – and CA Osasuna , both in La Liga ). He then played in quick succession for Independiente and Club Atlético River Plate , before spending parts of two seasons in the Russian Premier League with FC Saturn Ramenskoye .[ 2]
Montenegro returned to his main club for the 2006–07 season , going on to often act as captain and scoring in double digits in three of his first four years, including a career-best 15 goals in 2008–09 . He moved abroad again in 2009, signing with Mexico 's Club América for $ 3.5 million after lengthy negotiations.[ 3] He made his Liga MX debut for his new team on 2 August, in a 1–2 home loss to Monarcas Morelia .[ 4] Late in the same month, he scored from his own half in a 7–2 rout of Deportivo Toluca F.C. also at the Estadio Azteca .[ 5]
On 22 December 2012, free agent Montenegro rejoined Independiente for a fourth spell, agreeing to a one-and-a-half-year contract.[ 6] In early 2015, he was ousted from the squad after a run-in with manager Jorge Almirón and forced to train alone.[ 7] [ 8]
Aged 36, Montenegro returned to Huracán after 13 years having rejected an offer from Club Atlético Nueva Chicago .[ 9] He remained on the bench for the final of the Supercopa Argentina , won against Club Atlético River Plate shortly after his arrival.[ 10]
At the end of the 2017–18 campaign , in which he helped the Parque Patricios -based side qualify to the Copa Libertadores after a fourth-place league finish, Montenegro announced his retirement.[ 11] [ 12]
International career
Montenegro represented the Argentina under-20 team at the 1999 FIFA World Youth Championship ,[ 13] and made his debut with the full side on 18 April 2007, against Chile .[ 14] He won the second of his three caps on 1 April 2009, appearing as a late substitute in the Albiceleste' s 6–1 defeat in Bolivia for the 2010 FIFA World Cup qualifiers .[ 15]
Personal life
Montenegro's older brother, Ariel , was also a footballer and a midfielder. They shared teams at Independiente, and he spent most of his career in Spain.[ 16]
Honours
Zaragoza
Independiente
River Plate
Huracán
References
^ Montenegro hermanos (Montenegro brothers) ; Clarín , 8 February 2000 (in Spanish)
^ Los 10 jugadores latinoamericanos que fracasaron en Europa (The 10 Latin American players who did not make it in Europe) ; Be Soccer, 29 September 2016 (in Spanish)
^ El América de México ficha al argentino Daniel Montenegro (América de México sign Argentine Daniel Montenegro) Archived 29 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine ; La Información, 17 July 2009 (in Spanish)
^ América 1–2 Morelia... Las Águilas volaron a ras de pasto en el Azteca (América 1–2 Morelia... The Eagles flew too close to ground at the Azteca) ; Medio Tiempo, 2 August 2009 (in Spanish)
^ América 7–2 Toluca... Las Águilas tocaron el cielo (América 7–2 Toluca... The Eagles touched the sky) ; Medio Tiempo, 30 August 2009 (in Spanish)
^ El "Rolfi" Montenegro es el primer refuerzo de Independiente ("Rolfi" Montenegro is Independiente's first addition) ; Minuto Uno, 22 December 2012 (in Spanish)
^ En un clima convulsionado, Independiente hizo fútbol y Montenegro lo mira desde afuera (In rocky atmosphere, Independiente played football and Montenegro looked from the outside) ; Infobae , 9 January 2015 (in Spanish)
^ "La gente es el termómetro de lo que yo hice por Independiente" ("People are the thermometer of what I did for Independiente") ; Infobae, 9 February 2015 (in Spanish)
^ Cambio de planes: Rolfi Montenegro jugará en Huracán, tras descartar a Nueva Chicago (Change of plans: Rolfi Montenegro will play in Huracán, after discarding Nueva Chicago) ; La Nación , 19 February 2015 (in Spanish)
^ a b Huracán sorprendió a River, se quedó con la Supercopa Argentina y lo dejó 'herido' para los 'Superclásicos' ante Boca (Huracán surprised River, took the Argentine Supercup and left them 'wounded' for the 'Superclásicos' against Boca) ; Infobae, 25 April 2015 (in Spanish)
^ El Rolfi Montenegro se retiró del fútbol profesional (Rolfi Montenegro retired from professional football) Archived 6 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine ; Fox Sports , 12 May 2018 (in Spanish)
^ Latinoamérica, a examen: Cristal ya es campeón y el Rolfi deja a Huracán en Libertadores (Latin America, through the magnifying glass: Cristal are already champions and Rolfi leaves Huracán in Libertadores) ; Marca , 14 May 2018 (in Spanish)
^ Daniel Montenegro – FIFA competition record (archived)
^ Chile aprueba con empate amistoso frente a Argentina (Chile pass the test with friendly draw against Argentina) ; El Mercurio , 18 April 2007 (in Spanish)
^ Bolivia humilla a Argentina (Bolivia humiliate Argentina) ; Marca, 1 April 2009 (in Spanish)
^ Los Montenegro gritaron goles en dos direcciones (The Montenegros shouted goal in two directions) ; Clarín, 14 March 2009 (in Spanish)
^ Llegó el Frente y se fue el Atlético (The Front arrived and Atlético left) ; ABC , 21 June 2001 (in Spanish)
External links
1960 : Spencer
1961 : Panzutto
1962 : Coutinho , Raymondi & Spencer
1963 : Sanfilippo
1964 : Rodríguez
1965 : Pelé
1966 : Onega
1967 : Raffo
1968 : Tupãzinho
1969 : Ferrero
1970 : Bertocchi & Más
1971 : Artime & Castronovo
1972 : Cubillas , Ramírez , Rojas & Toninho Guerreiro
1973 : Caszely
1974 : Morena , Rocha & Terto
1975 : Morena & Ramírez
1976 : Palhinha
1977 : Scotta
1978 : La Rosa & Scotta
1979 : Miltão & Oré
1980 : Victorino
1981 : Zico
1982 : Morena
1983 : Luzardo
1984 : Tita
1985 : Sánchez
1986 : de Lima
1987 : Gareca
1988 : Iguarán
1989 : Aguilera & Amarilla
1990 : Samaniego
1991 : Gaúcho
1992 : Palhinha
1993 : Almada
1994 : Rivas
1995 : Jardel
1996 : de Ávila
1997 : Acosta
1998 : Sérgio João
1999 : Bonilla , Fernando Baiano , Gauchinho , Morán & Sosa
2000 : Luizão
2001 : Lopes
2002 : Rodrigo Mendes
2003 : M. Delgado & Ricardo Oliveira
2004 : Luís Fabiano
2005 : Salcedo
2006 : Aloísio , F. Borja , Calderón , A. Delgado , Ereros , Farías , Fernandão , Marcinho , Nilmar , Montenegro , Pavone , Quinteros , Urrutia & Washington
2007 : Cabañas
2008 : Cabañas & Moreno
2009 : Boselli
2010 : Thiago Ribeiro
2011 : Nanni & Wallyson
2012 : Alustiza & Neymar
2013 : Jô
2014 : Dos Santos & Olivera
2015 : Bou
2016 : Calleri
2017 : Sand
2018 : M. Borja & Morelo
2019 : Gabriel
2020 : Martínez
2021 : Gabriel
2022 : Pedro
2023 : Cano
2024 : Jr. Santos