Andrés Fleurquin

Andrés José Fleurquin Rubio (born 8 February 1975) is a Uruguayan retired footballer who played as a defensive midfielder.

Andrés Fleurquin
Fleurquin playing for Cádiz
Personal information
Full name Andrés José Fleurquin Rubio
Date of birth (1975-02-08) 8 February 1975
Place of birth Montevideo, Uruguay
Height 1.86 m (6 ft 1 in)
Position(s) Midfielder
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1996–1999 Defensor 88 (15)
1999–2001 Sturm Graz 46 (2)
2002 Galatasaray 17 (2)
2002–2003 Rennes 11 (0)
2003–2004 Córdoba 27 (1)
2004–2010 Cádiz 175 (10)
2010–2015 Defensor 84 (1)
Total 448 (31)
National team
1997–2002 Uruguay 11 (0)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Club career

Born in Montevideo, Fleurquin started playing football with local Defensor Sporting. In 1999 he moved abroad for the first time, joining SK Sturm Graz in Austria and being regularly used by the club during two and a half Bundesliga seasons, with two runner-up league finishes.

In January 2002, Fleurquin signed for Galatasaray SK in Turkey, being a very important first-team unit as the side won another Süper Lig championship. After one year in France with Stade Rennais F.C. he moved to Spain, where he would remain for the following seven years.

Fleurquin started in Segunda División with Córdoba CF. For 2004–05 he continued in that level and Andalusia, but eventually attained La Liga promotion with Cádiz CF, being immediately relegated back with the player appearing in 30 matches and scoring once – on 2 October 2005, in a 1–1 home draw against RC Celta de Vigo.[1]

From 2007 to 2010, Fleurquin obtained one second division promotion with Cádiz, but was also relegated twice from that tier while collecting a combined 33 yellow cards. In July 2010, aged nearly 35, he returned to first club Defensor after 11 years.[2]

International career

Fleurquin earned 11 caps for Uruguay during five years, his debut coming in 1997. He was selected for two Copa América tournaments, being regularly used during the 1999 edition in Paraguay as the national team finished second to Brazil.[3]

Honours

Club

Sturm Graz

Galatasaray

Cádiz

International

Uruguay

References

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