The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Renaissanc­e man who briefly lit up Dens Park

- GRAEME STRACHAN

Seemingly washed up and past his best at the age of 33, Claudio Canig gia’s career was ultimately revived during his brief spell in Dundee 20 years ago – which is the subject of our exciting new documentar­y.

Caniggia: 20 Years On will premiere online tomorrow and lifts the lid on the switch that stunned the world, with contributi­ons from former team-mates and boardroom big-hitters involved in the deal.

Caniggia would go on to achieve his dream of making the 2002 World Cup in Japan and South Korea, although he was shown a red card before playing a single minute.

Argentina manager Carlos Bilardo offered him redemption and the chance to play alongside Lionel Messi at the age of 43.

Bilardo gave him an incredible opportunit­y to return to the game after four and a half years at the World Cup in South Africa in 2010.

Caniggia was retired from football and couldn’t decide what to do and eventually turned down the offer. “We’ ll never know now, but to play 30 minutes would have been perfect,” he said. “I was in good shape and I hadn’t lost my pace. It would’ve been unbelievab­le to play at another World Cup.”

Caniggia was still fast – and Bilardo knew it.

Little wonder given Caniggia was once capable of running 100 metres in less than 11 seconds.

Before taking up football, the young Caniggia had competed in athletics at provincial level despite a strange running style.

Caniggia was developed in the famous River Plate youth academy and burst into the first team as an 18-year-old in 1985.

River Plate would make history the following year by winning the league, the Copa Libertador­es, the Copa Interameri­cana and the club’ s first Interconti­nental Cup title.

He was first capped in the Argentina squad for the Olympic Games qualifiers in early 1 9 87, before becoming an establishe­d part of the senior national team later that same year.

Caniggia made 53 league appearance­s and scored eight goals for River Plate which prompted a move to Italy where he joined Hellas Verona in 1988.

Playing as a winger at times, he managed 21 appearance­s and three goals in the No 7 shirt at a time when his internatio­nal strike partner Diego Mar a dona had almost single- handedly turned Na po li into Italy’ s outstandin­g side.

After just one season, Caniggia moved to Atalanta where he played 85 league games and scored 26 goals, but it was his performanc­es

in the national side that wou ld make h im a household name.

Caniggia started on the bench as Argentina opened their 1990 World Cup campa ign aga in s t Cameroon in Italy.

Dundee had ironically been relegated from the Premier League just weeks before Caniggia lined up against Cameroon at the San Siro in what would become known as the “Miracle of Milan”.

They were fully expected to thrash a Cameroon team who were 500-1 outsiders and largely made up of journeymen players from the French lower divisions.

Cameroon went a man down when André KanaBiyik was sent off for a late challenge on Caniggia.

Just six minutes later Cameroon took the lead

when his brother François Omam-Biyik rose to meet a deflected ball and nodded a weak header past Argentine goalkeeper Nery Pumpido.

With just two minutes to go, Caniggia picked up the ball inside his own half and drove up the right wing towards goal at blistering pace and evaded two tackles from green shirts before Benjamin Massing flew in waist-high and sent him into orbit along with Massing’s boot with the greatest foul in cup history.

The African team held on for a shock 1- 0 win but Caniggia never looked back and his goa ls took Argentina all the way to the World Cup final.

Caniggia received a yellow card in the semifinal win over Italy in Naples and was forced to sit out defeat in a dismal

and ill- tempered final against West Germany.

In 1991 Caniggia scored two goals as Argentina won the Copa America.

Two years later Caniggia joined Roma in Italy ’s Serie A for £6m and he also helped Argentina to the 1992 Confederat­ions Cup when he scored in the final against Saudi Arabia in a 3-1 win.

But Caniggia was living the high life away from the training pitch.

Hi s life was turned upside down when he was hit with a 13-month ban for taking cocaine following a random dope test after Roma’ s 1-1 draw with Napoli. Caniggia left Roma after just 15 league games and four goals and his ban expired just before the 1994 World Cup in the USA.

Caniggia returned to the

Argentina squad and scored two goals in the first round match against Nigeria.

Argentina were again among the favourites to win the tournament in the USA but it was another doping incident which turned everything upside down and also signalled the end of his great friend and team-mate Maradona’s World Cup career.

After the 1994 World Cup Caniggia spent a season with Benfica in Portugal on a year-long loan and scored eight goals in 23 league games before he returned to Argentina to sign for Boca Juniors.

Caniggia was again reunited with Maradona and he scored 32 goals in 74 league games, although there was tragedy among the triumph when his mother took her own life in September 1996 – which prompted Caniggia to shun the game for a year.

He joined Atalanta in 1999 who by now were in Serie B and left almost as quickly following 17 league games after a dispute with coach Giovanni Vavassori despite helping the club gain promotion.

Caniggia was 33 and hadn’t played football for months when he signed for Dundee in October 2000 and he left his mark during his brief stay on Tayside with a total of eight goals in 25 league and cup games before he signed for Rangers in the summer.

He scored 21 goals in 78 games at Ibrox including the opener in the League Cup final win against Celtic in 2003 and left to join Qatar SC where he won the Prince’s Cup before retiring after one last pay day.

Caniggia did return to competitiv­e action in 2012 at the age of 45.

He lined up alongside several other former internatio­nals, such as Ray Parlour and Graeme Le Saux for FC Wembley in the FA Cup which was a stunt that had been dreamed up by sponsors Budweiser.

The Claudio Caniggia documentar­y will be available on The Courier website from tomorrow.

 ??  ?? AMERICAN DREAM: Caniggia and Gabriel Batistuta celebrate at World Cup 1994 – but all was not well for Argentina.
AMERICAN DREAM: Caniggia and Gabriel Batistuta celebrate at World Cup 1994 – but all was not well for Argentina.

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