The Guardian Australia

Sergio Agüero proud of stellar career and content now is his time to live

- Jamie Jackson

For Sergio Leonel Agüero del Castillo an enforced retirement because of a heart condition provoked tears on Wednesday, but friends of the 33-year-old say he has also come to feel serene that a stellar 18-year career is over.

The former Barcelona forward is understood over recent days to have been zen-like in his take on his playing days ending, telling associates that “things happen in life and it is time to live”. Away from the strictures of the athlete’s diet Agüero can embrace his love of asado, the Argentine barbecue that grills choice cuts of steak, chorizo, chicken and other meat, and attend more concerts of his friend Maluma, a Colombian musician.

In despair, initially, when he realised the chest pain and difficult breathing experience­d in October’s draw with Alavés pointed to a serious issue that could not be ignored, Agüero’s mood then turned to a joy caused by all he has achieved. Even amid the raw emotion of his farewell Camp Nou press conference he referenced the happiness he feels, and it is easy to understand why.

Agüero’s has been one of this generation’s great careers. For a start, consider again the sheer number of seasons the boy from Buenos Aires has been a footballer: 18. This is a phenomenal stretch at any level. For Agüero, though, all have been in the rarefied air of the elite.

Just over a month after his 15th birthday he became Argentina’s youngest top-flight debutant when pulling on the shirt of his beloved Independie­nte, one of the Primera División’s “big five”. Agüero’s internatio­nal bow came at 18 in September 2006, against Brazil, the year he moved to Atlético Madrid. He spent five seasons there, winning the 2010 Europa League and Uefa Super Cup before a transfer to Manchester City the next summer that transforme­d his career and led to him giving the Premier League its blockbuste­r moment.

This occurred in May 2012, on the final day of the season, when City hosted QPR having to match Manchester United’s result at Sunderland to become champions for the first time since 1968. By the 93rd minute disaster seemed the only outcome. United had beaten Sunderland 1-0 and a tentative City were drawing with 10-man QPR. Being at the Etihad Stadium to witness what Agüero did next was among this writer’s most chaotic, surreal, life-affirming, sheer what-the-hell moments in two decades of covering sport around the world.

The venue had been emptying but after Edin Dzeko’s 92nd-minute equaliser City fans had a renewed faith which was to be repaid in the kind of moment onlysport’s theatre can occasional­ly provide. Mario Balotelli slid the ball to Agüero, whose tally in a debut Premier League season was 22 goals. The 23-year-old was about to score the goal of his career.

Martin Tyler, on commentary for Sky Sports, had branded the CityUnited shootout as “truth more gripping than fiction”. It turned out that was underselli­ng it.

But, rewind. Before Balotelli receives the ball guess who starts the move he is to finish? Yes, “Kun” Agüero (the moniker from a childhood mispronunc­iation of his favourite cartoon) has dropped deep to collect possession and find the Italian who waits as the Argentinia­n curves right, into the area, before completing the one-two. Now, Agüero, ice-cold, leaves Taye Taiwo a spectator with a mesmeric body swerve and smashes a seismic winner past Paddy Kenny in the QPR goal to mainline ecstasy through City supporters, cause torment for all of a United persuasion and create the Premier League’s defining before and after act.

There will be an appearance from Liam Gallagher in the media room later when the former Oasis frontman and City fanatic, drunk on the win and something more liquid-based, enters to share his bonhomie. Before this, though, back on the pitch, Agüero is wheeling away in celebratio­n, City shirt off, spinning deliriousl­y, having seized an undeniable slice of immortalit­y as the creator of a moment that will be replayed endlessly.

As impressive was what followed. There is no complacenc­y. The first league title Agüero claimed on that sun-honeyed Manchester day was the launchpad for stratosphe­ric achievemen­t. There are four more English championsh­ips. There is an FA Cup. Six League Cups. There is, too, the despair of May’s Champions League final defeat by Chelsea, after the heartache of losing the 2014 World Cup showpiece to Germany. Agüero, whose son Benjamin’s grandfathe­r is the late Diego Maradona, is City’s record scorer with 260 goals in 390 appearance­s, 184 of these in the league, the last two in a fairytale domestic farewell. On as a substitute against Everton, Agüero again sent the adoring congregati­on ballistic by scoring twice.

Yet during the midpoint of all of this, when Pep Guardiola became City manager in 2016, Agüero had to convince that he could fit the Catalan’s high-press style. Agüero, who endured an uneven relationsh­ip with Guardiola, met the challenge, with the latter deserving credit for evolving the centreforw­ard’s game in the five years before Agüero left for Barcelona.

A free transfer, he scored once in five appearance­s, in the 2-1 defeat by Real Madrid on 24 October, before the heart condition that has brought an abrupt close to his playing career.

Agüero always played with a cheeky grin and an endearing nonchalanc­e. This best friend of Lionel Messi ended his time at City with that Champions League defeat by Chelsea but he departed the internatio­nal arena at the pinnacle as part of Argentina’s triumphant Copa América squad in July. Despite not featuring in that final, the triumph is among his most cherished achievemen­ts.

His final goal, against Real, bookended the first, versus Estudiante­s de La Plata. “I was 16,” he told the Guardian in 2013. “I received the ball on the edge of the area, controlled with the left and moved to the right side and hit it hard and it went on the left side of the goalkeeper.”

Grace and menace from start to finish. Agüero departs as what he has always been: a winner.

 ?? Photograph: Manchester City FC/Getty Images ?? Sergio Agüero celebrates after scoring Manchester City’s dramatic title-winning goal against QPR in 2012.
Photograph: Manchester City FC/Getty Images Sergio Agüero celebrates after scoring Manchester City’s dramatic title-winning goal against QPR in 2012.
 ?? Photograph: Bernat Armangué/Associated Press ?? Sergio Agüero is presented as an Atlético Madrid player in June 2006, aged 18.
Photograph: Bernat Armangué/Associated Press Sergio Agüero is presented as an Atlético Madrid player in June 2006, aged 18.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia