Player Focus: Iturbe Proving European Pedigree on Second Chance
Juan Manuel Iturbe was born in Buenos Aires in 1993. He grew up in Villa 21, a slum in the Barracas barrio. His father, also called Juan, was a bricklayer. His mother Miriam helped out in a local pharmacy. They were from Paraguay and had moved to Argentina for a better life.
These were hard times. The Iturbes had swapped one economic crisis for another. “[Villa 21] was a very dangerous quarter, just like Fuerte Apache, the place where Carlos Tevez is from,” Iturbe recalled in La Gazzetta dello Sport. “There was poverty, misery and what do they bring? Violence.”
Still, kids did what they do. They found ways to have fun despite their surroundings. Reflecting on that time, Iturbe describes himself as “an earthquake,” leaving you with the impression of a modern day ‘Bam Bam’ from the Flintstones. “I played football everywhere,” he told the pink paper. “It’s the only thing I know how to do… I liked maths at school but often fell asleep in class.”
Iturbe didn’t get to finish his education in Argentina. When his parents returned to Paraguay, he followed. It meant that when his talent for football really began to emerge while coming through the ranks at Cerro Porteño, the club with whom he made his professional debut at only 16, the choice he made as to which country he’d represent - Argentina or Paraguay - almost provoked a diplomatic incident. Iturbe had played for Paraguay at youth level, but his formative years in Argentina had made an impression on him. He felt Argentine. So he accepted a call up to play for them at youth level too.
At the airport ready to fly to Buenos Aires, Iturbe was stopped at the gate by a pair of policemen. They showed him a fax from the Paraguayan Football Federation. He was forbidden from leaving the country. Iturbe turned around and went home. Three days later another fax arrived at casa Iturbe. It granted him permission to go to Argentina. There was quite the hoohah. Iturbe, though, isn’t a persona non grata in Paraguay. “But if I ever had to play in Asuncion, I’d perhaps need a helmet.”
He must have been some prospect for Argentina and Paraguay to be squabbling over him. There was a lot of hype. Iturbe was arguably the first ‘new Messi’. It’s a tag that has followed him throughout his young career much to his annoyance. “I don’t like how every time people talk to me or about me, we end up talking about Leo,” he says. “I am Iturbe. I’m not looking to copy Messi.”
The comparisons inevitably led to high expectations. Meeting them was nigh on impossible. His €4m move to Porto three years ago was a disappointment. Loaning him to River Plate at this stage last season led to the assumption that he wasn’t ready for Europe, perhaps it was all too much, too soon. It looked like Porto were ready to give up on him. The signing of Juan Quintero from Pescara this summer seemed to spell the end for Iturbe. He was sent on loan again, this time to promoted Hellas in Serie A.
Though still only 20, Iturbe was received as an unfulfilled promise. It was a low risk gamble [remember there was no fee to pay] with a high potential upside. How it has paid off. Is there any wonder Barbara Berlusconi wanted - but so far didn’t get - Hellas’ director of sport Sean Sogliano to oversee Milan’s player recruitment?
Iturbe scored and was named Man of the Match both by Gazzetta and WhoScored with a rating of 8.87 on his first start in Serie A against Livorno. A week later, he showed it was no flash in the pan. His performance at Bologna received a 10 from WhoScored. Running from the half-way line, Iturbe scored again, once more from outside the box before setting up Luca Toni in a 4-1 win, Hellas’ first at the Renato Dall’Ara since 1978. He had Serie A’s attention. If Hellas don’t take up their option to sign Iturbe for €15m at the end of this season, someone else will be calling Porto, with Roma apparently on hold. The only player aged 20 or under than him (7.50) with a better average WhoScored rating in Serie A this season is Paul Pogba (7.73).
Making the headlines again before and after the Christmas break with another couple of goals in wins against Lazio and Udinese, where Iturbe has really impressed is in the unpredictability and sense of invention the cheeky chappy brings to Hellas’ attack. Only Fiorentina’s Juan Cuadrado [4.3 per game] and Inter’s Ricky Alvarez [3.8] have made more successful dribbles than he has [3.1] in Serie A this season.
There’s an end product to his game too. He doesn’t just score goals [5], he sets up chances as well. Iturbe has found a teammate with all 3 of his through ball attempts this season. Only one Serie A player has a 100% success rate with more through ball attempts and that’s Milan’s Ricky Kaká. So if you’re wondering how veteran striker Luca Toni is turning back the years this season with 9 goals, look no further than Iturbe. He’s the player putting the bullets in the chamber for the coolhand to fire.
If Toni is a .44 Magnum, Iturbe, as the goal against Bologna demonstrated is, has proven himself more a sniper. Along with Fiorentina’s Giuseppe Rossi, he has scored more goals from outside the box than anyone else [4]. Monday’s strike against Udinese was his first from inside the area, while only Andrea Pirlo and Daniele Conti [3] have had more success from direct free-kicks than he has [2].
Tactically Iturbe seems to have a clear understanding of what’s expected of him. “I’m free to go where I want when we develop the play ourselves. I start from the right, but then, if I see some space, I move into the middle of the pitch to take advantage of Toni’s movement - he can take two defenders with him - and go for goal or give him an assist like against Bologna.”
It may come as a surprise to those who followed Iturbe at Porto, but he has turned into a team player. “I am learning many new things,” he explains. “I wasn’t used to tracking back to help the team. For me it’s fulfilling. I like scoring goals, but the team comes first: helping Toni score is my principal objective.”
Maintain that attitude and keep playing the way he is - his off-the-bench performance on Monday was remarkable considering he was involved in a car crash back in Paraguay over Christmas - and, you never know, he might be an outside bet for a place in Argentina’s squad for the World Cup in Brazil. Expect to see Alejandro Sabella in the stands at the Bentegodi at some stage between now and the end of the season.
Can Iturbe fulfil his potential? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below
Very interesting, I knew this player 2 years ago, nice to read he is doing well at Serie A.
I think Pastore has the potential to be the best trequartista since ronaldinho, he's pure genius. He makes extremely difficult things simple as kaka did, but with an infinite class. He did a bad choice going to PSG and can rise. That's not valid for Alvarez and lamela, seen them in other teams, in Argentina (Velez and river), in the youth national teams and they are about always the same, they not impressed me, the media and the fan in short time always push up and tend to overrate normal players in good form. Series A now is poor of real #10 or very talented wingers, it's easy for Alvarez & co. to look good but, but the truth is that lamela gomez alvarez moralez lavezzi are simply all overrated, each of those is less than for example jovetic, and jovetic in BPL is one of many, not one of the best. Just for make a comparison. Diamanti and candreva now are two of the best talented players in series A, 4-5 years ago they were almost unknown, serie A level has simply been lowering.
@Mattia As for Lamela he is not given proper chances by Tottenham instead favoring over-ratted and flash for useless reason Andros Townsend. Well Lamela is more out-out winger like CR7 he is not mature enough to be winger. But he had Two good seasons at As Roma fro reason and I feel u know this fact better than me as ur proper follower of Serie A.
@Mattia It really unfair that consider Ricky Alvarez as only good player. According to me he is closest to Kaka. He had good season Inter even when first signed for them, even without Thiago Motta who largely responsible for Schneider form and he manage impress there without Thiago Motta replaced Schneider. Unfortunately Ricky Alvarez had an injury combined with favouring sometimes Schneider, sometimes Coutinho and most of the times Cassano really created bad imprssion about even after that he was super-sub for Inter Milan at various occasion. He is what Sabella would expecting Pastore to be but I believe Pastore will comeback as well. The point is Ricky Alvarez is one the best cam in Serie A and can help Argentina who lacking this king of player since Riqeuelme and Maradona had to bring aged Seb Veron for that matter. I do belive he and Pastore can solve this positional problem Albescite.
Nice write-up @James Horncastle1. Ur notorious for writing more article for Epl than other league but u know its good as anything I have seen recently so keep up good work mate. The back-ground of Juan Manuel Itubre was interesting not even for minute did took my from this epic piece. But somehow I feel JM Itubre development alot to do with Luca Toni opening spaces for him but scoring 4 goal outside box proves that he more than capable to take challenge himself.
Good article. Nice write-up.
The only true talent coming from Argentina in the latest years. He's got the potential, not like Alvarez and Lamela, good players but nothing more. Followed him since cerro porteño, I don't know why he hasn't been provided him a chance at Porto, at Verona he's shining and I hope juve can afford him in June before other club notice and make him become too expensive. Now Cuadrado, Di Maria are unreachable, Iturbe not (yet).
"There’s an end product to his game too. He doesn’t just score goals [5], he sets up chances as well. Iturbe has found a teammate with all 3 of his through ball attempts this season. Only one Serie A player has a 100% success rate with more through ball attempts and that’s Milan’s Ricky Kaká. So if you’re wondering how veteran striker Luca Toni is turning back the years this season with 9 goals, look no further than Iturbe. He’s the player putting the bullets in the chamber for the coolhand to fire. " This paragraph doesn't really add up.
P.s. Lamela has been really a quite bad deal for Tottenham. Thanks to baldini, an highly incompetent manager, you'll see... Everyone here in italy knows Zeman, everyone remembers his super offensive teams, bunch of goals (both scored and conceded), entertaining football and... 0 titles. In his 433 the wingers and the FW were scoring plenty of goals, but after he left they all returned to be normal players with normal figures. The only exception is Totti. Lamela has benefitted the zeman effect scoring a lot, but when zeman was sacked, he instantly stopped scoring. Under Andreazzoli his performances has fallen and he has been insufficient from then on. Lamela had only one good season, the first with Roma, a bad season for the team but enough good for a serie A novice. With him river got to relegation, I watched a lots of game when river were in trouble to see him and he did nothing in any of them. It's unbelievable someone paid him 30M£, unbelievable.