Fernando Sanz Explained

Fernando Sanz should not be confused with Fernand Sanz.

Fernando Sanz
Fullname:Fernando Sanz Durán[1]
Birth Date:4 January 1974
Birth Place:Madrid, Spain
Height:1.83 m
Position:Centre-back
Youthclubs1:Real Madrid
Years1:1993–1994
Caps1:22
Goals1:0
Years2:1994–1996
Caps2:47
Goals2:0
Years3:1993
Clubs3:Unión Española (loan)
Caps3:20
Goals3:0
Years4:1996–1999
Caps4:35
Goals4:0
Years5:1999–2006
Caps5:205
Goals5:5
Totalcaps:329
Totalgoals:5
Nationalyears1:1990–1991
Nationalcaps1:2
Nationalgoals1:0
Nationalyears2:1991
Nationalcaps2:1
Nationalgoals2:0

Fernando Sanz Durán (born 4 January 1974) is a Spanish former footballer who played as a central defender.

He spent seven years of his professional career with Málaga – after starting out at Real Madrid – appearing in 228 official games. Subsequently, he worked for four years as the club's president.

Club career

Real Madrid

Born in Madrid, Sanz was a product of Real Madrid's youth system and, after a quick loan stint with Unión Española in Chile,[2] first appeared with the main squad on 2 March 1996, playing nine minutes of a 5–0 home win against UD Salamanca (José García Calvo, another centre back from the academy, also played his first La Liga game that day).[3] He finished the season with 13 appearances, playing a further six matches in the following as the team were crowned league champions.

Sanz was also part of their UEFA Champions League victory in 1997–98. However, despite being the son of Lorenzo Sanz, the president of the club at the time, he never really managed to hold up a regular first team spot at Real.[4]

Málaga

For the start of 1999–2000, Sanz signed with Málaga CF. On 8 September 2001 he scored his first goal as a professional, in a 1–1 draw at his former employers.[5] That season, the Andalusia side finished tenth and he helped it win the subsequent Intertoto Cup, which eventually led to a UEFA Cup quarter-final run, with the player appearing in eight complete games.

Sanz retired from football in 2006 after Málaga's relegation, with 240 matches and five goals in the top level to his credit, immediately becoming its president after his father bought 97% of the shares.[6] After four years, he resigned on 27 July 2010 as the club was sold earlier in the summer to a Qatari investor.[7]

Personal life

Sanz was the brother-in-law of another Real Madrid player, Míchel Salgado – the two were never teammates, as Salgado arrived the year Sanz left the club – who married his sister Malula.[8]

His older brother Francisco and his nephew, also named Francisco, were also footballers.[9]

Honours

Real Madrid

1996–97

1997–98

1998

Málaga

2002

Notes and References

  1. News: FERNANDO SANZ Durán. El Mundo. Spanish. 4 November 2009.
  2. News: Paco Sanz, el hijo del presidente que se sabía peor que los demás. Paco Sanz, the president's son who knew he was worse than everybody else. Marca. Pablo. Díaz. Spanish. 8 November 2012. 10 April 2020.
  3. News: Goles de oficio y a la contra. Know-how and counterattack goals. Mundo Deportivo. Carlos E.. Carbajosa. Spanish. 3 March 1996. 12 November 2015.
  4. News: Sanz returns to haunt Madrid. The Guardian. Sid. Lowe. 10 September 2001. 3 November 2017.
  5. News: El Málaga saca los colores al Madrid. Málaga unsettle Madrid. El País. Santiago. Segurola. Spanish. 9 September 2001. 6 June 2018.
  6. Web site: "El Real Madrid forma parte del pasado". "Real Madrid is now in the past". Defensa Central. Belén. Mejías. Spanish. 3 April 2009. 4 November 2009. 9 October 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20111009115654/http://www.defensacentral.com/real_madrid/26223/El-Real-Madrid-forma-parte-del-pasado-fernando-sanz. dead.
  7. News: Un jeque de Qatar compra el Málaga. Qatari sheikh buys Málaga. El Mundo. Jesús. Ortiz García. Spanish. 12 June 2010. 14 October 2011.
  8. Web site: Míchel Salgado and Malula Sanz esperan su tercer hijo. Míchel Salgado and Malula Sanz await third child. ¡Hola!. Spanish. 15 April 2009. 4 November 2009. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20090830191312/http://www.hola.com/famosos/2009/04/15/michel-salgado/. 30 August 2009.
  9. News: Las confesiones de Paco Sanz. The confessions of Paco Sanz. El País. José. Miguelez. Spanish. 7 June 1999. 23 April 2012.