Miguel Ángel Angulo

Miguel Ángel Angulo
Miguel Angel Angulo 2021.jpg
Angulo in 2021
Personal information
Full name Miguel Ángel Angulo Valderrey
Date of birth (1977-06-23) 23 June 1977 (age 45)
Place of birth Oviedo, Spain
Height 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Position(s) Midfielder, forward, defender
Club information
Current team
Valencia B (manager)
Youth career
Avilés
1994–1995 Sporting Gijón
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1995 Sporting Gijón B 14 (4)
1996 Valencia B 15 (2)
1996–2009 Valencia 313 (43)
1996–1997Villarreal (loan) 32 (9)
2009 Sporting CP 4 (0)
Total 378 (58)
National team
1994–1995 Spain U18 7 (4)
1997 Spain U20 7 (2)
1998–2000 Spain U21 14 (3)
2000 Spain U23 5 (1)
2004–2007 Spain 11 (0)
2000 Asturias 1 (0)
Teams managed
2015 Valencia (youth)
2015–2016 Valencia (assistant)
2018–2021 Valencia (youth)
2021– Valencia B
Honours
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Miguel Ángel Angulo Valderrey (Spanish pronunciation: [miˈɣel ˈaŋxel aŋˈɡulo]; born 23 June 1977) is a Spanish former professional footballer, currently manager of Valencia CF Mestalla. Predominantly an attacking midfielder, he was also able to play as a right winger and even as a right-back or a forward.

Basing his football on inexhaustible physical display, Angulo was much appreciated by trainers because of his versatility, and spent most of his career at Valencia where he won a total of seven major titles, including two La Liga championships and the 2004 UEFA Cup.

Club career

Valencia

Born in Oviedo, Asturias, Angulo began his football career with local Sporting de Gijón, joining Valencia CF in 1995 at the age of 18. After spending some time with the reserves he was loaned in the 1996–97 campaign to Segunda División club Villarreal CF, before returning to Valencia the following summer.

Angulo made 434 competitive appearances during his spell at the Mestalla Stadium, being a very important element in the Che's La Liga conquest in 2002 and 2004 (totalling six goals in 48 games), while also starting in the 2004 UEFA Cup final which they won after defeating Olympique de Marseille. Due to the ageing of the previous starter, French Jocelyn Angloma, he played several matches as an attacking right-back, as the team operated mainly in a 5–3–2 formation.

In the summer of 2004, Angulo pulled out of a transfer to Arsenal after a last minute change of heart. His agent claimed this was due to the player's anxiety at moving to London; he had already completed part of his medical. He continued to be heavily played by Valencia in the following three seasons, netting 15 times in 93 league games. On 15 December 2004, he was handed a seven-match ban by UEFA after being sent off in a UEFA Cup tie against SV Werder Bremen where he kicked Nelson Valdez and subsequently spat on Tim Borowski.

On 20 December 2007, Angulo, along with Santiago Cañizares and David Albelda, was axed from the squad by new coach Ronald Koeman. In late April of the following year, however, with Koeman's sacking, all three were reinstated by new manager Voro in a squad seriously threatened with relegation, with five remaining fixtures. On 27 April he returned to action, playing five minutes in a 3–0 home win over CA Osasuna after having come on as a substitute for David Villa. He started his first post-reinstatement match two weeks later, scoring in a 5–1 away rout of already relegated Levante UD.

Sporting CP

In August 2009, after a mediocre campaign individually, Angulo was released by Valencia, thus ending a 14-year relationship. Late in the same month he agreed to a one-year contract with Sporting CP, but after just four months, he was released by the Lisbon club, grossly unsettled, and pondered his retirement, which was confirmed the following week.

International career

Angulo made his debut for Spain on 17 November 2004, in a 1–0 friendly win against England played in Madrid. Going on to collect 11 caps, he never took part in any major tournament, however.

Angulo also represented the nation at the 1997 FIFA World Youth Championship (five appearances) and the 2000 Summer Olympics (five), helping to a runner-up finish in the latter competition.

Career statistics

Club

Source:
Club Season League Cup Continental Total
Division Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
Sporting Gijón B 1995–96 Segunda División B 14 4 14 4
Valencia B 1995–96 Segunda División B 15 2 15 2
Villarreal (loan) 1996–97 Segunda División 32 9 5 1 33 10
Valencia 1997–98 La Liga 28 3 3 3 31 6
1998–99 36 8 6 2 10 3 52 13
1999–00 29 5 3 0 18 3 50 8
2000–01 28 0 2 1 10 0 40 1
2001–02 26 4 0 0 5 2 31 6
2002–03 24 4 4 0 11 2 39 6
2003–04 22 2 5 1 9 2 36 5
2004–05 25 3 3 0 5 0 33 3
2005–06 32 6 4 0 1 0 37 6
2006–07 36 6 3 2 10 2 49 10
2007–08 16 2 0 0 4 0 20 2
2008–09 11 0 3 1 2 0 16 1
Total 313 43 36 10 85 14 434 67
Sporting CP 2009–10 Primeira Liga 4 0 2 0 3 0 9 0
Career total 378 58 43 11 86 14 505 83

International

Source:
Spain
Year Apps Goals
2004 1 0
2005 0 0
2006 3 0
2007 7 0
Total 11 0

Honours

Valencia

Spain U18

Spain U21

Spain U23


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