Spanish former footballer (born 1984)
In this
Spanish name , the first or paternal
surname is
García and the second or maternal family name is
Badías .
Carlos García Badías (born 29 April 1984) is a Spanish former footballer who played as a central defender , currently an assistant coach for Major League Soccer club Chicago Fire .
He spent most of his professional career with Almería , playing 208 competitive matches for the club and appearing in three La Liga seasons. Additionally, he had a four-year spell with Maccabi Tel Aviv in the Israeli Premier League .
Club career
Espanyol and Almería
Born in Barcelona , Catalonia , García was a product of local RCD Espanyol 's youth ranks. He would only appear for the first team on three occasions, during the 2003–04 season (three defeats),[ 1] [ 2] [ 3] also serving a loan stint with Polideportivo Ejido in the Segunda División the following campaign .[ 4]
García stayed in Andalusia in 2005, being sold by Espanyol to second-division UD Almería .[ 5] He was a starter from the beginning, being instrumental in their first-ever La Liga promotion in the 2006–07 campaign .[ 6]
Deemed surplus to requirements by manager Hugo Sánchez , García was loaned to neighbours Real Betis for 2009–10's second-tier season .[ 7] After not being able to help the Verdiblancos return to the top flight he rejoined Almería,[ 8] being first-choice under new manager Juan Manuel Lillo and both his successors José Luis Oltra and Roberto Olabe , scoring once[ 9] in 33 games as they were eventually relegated after a four-year stay.[ 10]
Maccabi Tel Aviv and coaching
García moved abroad for the first time in his career in June 2012, signing a three-year contract with Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. in the Israeli Premier League .[ 11] In his first season he was teamed up in the centre of defence with Eitan Tibi , with the pair performing solidly as the club won the national championship after a ten-year drought.[ 12]
Aged 29, García made his debut in European competition in the 2013–14 campaign , featuring in both the UEFA Champions League qualification matches[ 13] [ 14] and the UEFA Europa League group stage.[ 15] [ 16] In the domestic front he was part of the squad that set a new league record for minutes without conceding a goal, surpassing Hapoel Haifa FC 's 585 from 1999.[ 17]
García retired in 2017 at the age of 33, after one season in the Turkish Süper Lig with Alanyaspor .[ 18] Immediately after, he returned to Maccabi as assistant to his compatriot Jordi Cruyff ;[ 19] the pair worked together again in the Chinese Super League , at Chongqing Dangdai Lifan F.C. and Shenzhen FC .[ 20] [ 21]
In January 2022, García became manager of Liga Leumit side Beitar Tel Aviv Bat Yam FC .[ 22]
In January 2024, García joined Frank Klopas ' coaching staff at Major League Soccer club Chicago Fire .[ 23]
International career
García was part of the Spain under-16 squad at the 2001 UEFA European Under-16 Championship in England, winning the tournament alongside top scorer Fernando Torres .[ 24] Two years later , he contributed seven starts for the under-20s as they finished runners-up to Brazil in the FIFA World Cup .[ 25] [ 26]
García reunited again with Cruyff for a brief period in 2020, when the latter was appointed at the Ecuador national team .[ 27]
Honours
Maccabi Tel Aviv
Spain U16
Spain U23
Spain U20
References
^ Clemente propone y Ronaldo dispone (Clemente proposes and Ronaldo disposes) ; El País , 6 October 2003 (in Spanish)
^ El Valencia arrolla al Espanyol (Valencia crush Espanyol) ; El País, 20 October 2003 (in Spanish)
^ El Madrid se dispara en Montjuïc (Madrid shoot for the sky at Montjuïc) ; El País, 22 February 2004 (in Spanish)
^ El Almería pretende quitarle al Poli Ejido a Carlos García (Almería want to rob Poli Ejido of Carlos García) ; ABC , 12 July 2005 (in Spanish)
^ El central Carlos García nuevo jugador de la U. D Almería (Stopper Carlos García new player of U.D Almería) ; ABC, 19 July 2005 (in Spanish)
^ Carlos García, al club de los '100' de la UD Almería (Carlos García, to UD Almería's '100' club) Archived 12 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine ; Ideal , 25 March 2008 (in Spanish)
^ Carlos García pasa el reconocimiento previo a su cesión al Betis (Carlos García undergoes medical prior to Betis loan) ; Marca , 25 June 2009 (in Spanish)
^ El Almería confirma la vuelta de Carlos García (Almería confirm return of Carlos García) ; Marca, 1 July 2010 (in Spanish)
^ L'Almeria aconsegueix el primer triomf com a local de la temporada davant l'Osasuna (3–2) (Almeria get first home win of season against Osasuna (3–2)) ; Ara , 23 January 2011 (in Catalan)
^ Carlos García: "Bajar es fracasar en lo personal y en lo colectivo" (Carlos García: "To be relegated is a personal and collective failure") ; Marca, 5 May 2011 (in Spanish)
^ Carlos García pasa el reconocimiento del Maccabi Tel-Aviv y firma tres años (Carlos García passes medical at Maccabi Tel-Aviv and signs for three years) ; Almería 360, 13 June 2012 (in Spanish)
^ Maccabi Tel Aviv ends 10-year drought, wins Israeli soccer championship ; Haaretz , 22 April 2013
^ Slick Stocker gives Basel slender lead ; UEFA, 30 July 2013
^ Maccabi revival comes too late to halt Basel ; UEFA, 6 August 2013
^ Maccabi Tel-Aviv battle back to beat Bordeaux ; UEFA, 3 October 2013
^ Eintracht cruise to Maccabi Tel-Aviv success ; UEFA, 24 October 2013
^ Juan Pablo: "I came for the championship" , Walla! , 29 October 2013 (in Hebrew)
^ Oficial: El Alanyaspor ficha a Carlos García (Official: Alanyaspor sign Carlos García) ; Nuevo Fútbol, 4 July 2016 (in Spanish)
^ Carlos appointed as assistant coach ; Maccabi Tel Aviv FC, 29 December 2017
^ La Superliga china arranca con mucho acento español (Chinese Superleague gets started with heavy Spanish accent) ; Diario AS , 27 February 2019 (in Spanish)
^ Pleno español en el 'play-out' de la Superliga china (Spaniards win it all in Chinese Superleague play-out) ; Diario AS, 3 November 2020 (in Spanish)
^ Carlos Garcia has been appointed coach of Betar Tel Aviv / Bat Yam ; Time News, 7 January 2022
^ "Head Coach Frank Klopas Names Coaching Staff for 2024 Season" . ChicagoFireFC.com . Chicago Fire . Retrieved 19 January 2024 .
^ a b La cantera vuelve a coronarse (Youth system crowned again) ; Última Hora , 7 May 2001 (in Spanish)
^ España en los mundiales sub’20: Emiratos Árabes Unidos 2003 (Spain in under'20 World Cups: United Arab Emirates 2003) ; Cuadernos de Fútbol, April 2015 (in Spanish)
^ a b Spain denied at final hurdle ; UEFA, 19 December 2003
^ Cruyff y la FEF acuerdan reducción salarial (Cruyff and EFF agree on pay cut) ; El Telégrafo , 30 March 2020 (in Spanish)
^ "Mediterranean Games 2005 (Spain)" . RSSSF . Retrieved 27 September 2016 .
External links