Mahamadou Diarra

Mahamadou Diarra (born 18 May 1981) is a Malian former professional footballer who played as a defensive midfielder. He served as captain for the Mali national team.

Mahamadou Diarra
Diarra in 2007
Personal information
Date of birth (1981-05-18) 18 May 1981 (age 42)
Place of birthBamako, Mali
Height1.82 m (6 ft 0 in)
Position(s)Defensive midfielder
Youth career
1997–1998Centre Salif Keita
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1998–1999OFI21(2)
1999–2002Vitesse69(9)
2002–2006Lyon123(7)
2006–2011Real Madrid90(3)
2011Monaco9(0)
2012–2014Fulham23(1)
Total335(22)
International career
2000–2012Mali72(7)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Club career

OFI Crete

Diarra started his professional career at Greek club OFI at the age of 17, being signed after recommendation of his elder brother Harouna, who had joined the club a year earlier.[1] After a single season at Greece and being watched by clubs such as Barcelona and Milan, he decided to join Dutch club Vitesse.[2]

Vitesse

Diarra made his debut for Vitesse on 13 August 1999. During his tenure at the club, his playing style was compared to Ruud Gullit and attracted interest from Juventus, then coached by Carlo Ancelotti.[3] During the summer of 2002, after receiving offers from many European clubs, Vitesse sold Diarra to Lyon by €4 million, although the player favoured a move to Ajax to rejoin his old manager Ronald Koeman.[2] Diarra played a total of 69 league matches and scored nine times for the Arnhem-based club.[4]

Lyon

At Lyon, Diarra was a starter in each of his four seasons, playing alongside Michael Essien and Juninho Pernambucano in the midfield and helping his side to win the Ligue 1 in each of those seasons.

Real Madrid

After Real Madrid head coach Fabio Capello asked club president Ramón Calderón to sign "three players", "Diarra, Diarra and Diarra",[5] Real Madrid joined Manchester United in the race to sign the midfielder.[6] Lyon said that Diarra could not leave and put a €40 million price tag on him.[7] However, on 18 August 2006, Real Madrid agreed a fee of €26 million[8] and four days later, Diarra was unveiled at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium by Calderón and was assigned the number 6 shirt.

During the 2006–07 season, Diarra was a staple in Capello's two-defensive midfielder system. He appeared in 33 of Madrid's 38 matches, scoring three times. On 18 June 2007, with Real Madrid needing to win against Mallorca to win the Liga for the first time since 2003, Diarra scored an 81st-minute header to give Madrid a 2–1 lead. In the 84th minute, José Antonio Reyes scored a third goal to ensure Real Madrid were champions.[9]

Diarra played a pivotal role in the 2007–08 title defence under new head coach Bernd Schuster, and he established himself as the first-choice defensive midfielder, causing teammate Fernando Gago to play higher upfield. Real Madrid comfortably won the Liga, finishing eight points clear of second-placed Villarreal. Diarra had now been a league champion for six consecutive seasons, after winning Ligue 1 with Lyon between 2002–03 and 2005–06, and La Liga with Real Madrid in 2006–07 and 2007–08.[10]

Diarra (left) with Real Madrid

In October 2008, while playing an international fixture for Mali against Chad, Diarra was stretchered off the field after receiving a blow to his knee. He was rested for a month and made his next appearance in late November, but was forced to undergo surgery after aggravating his knee injury, which ruled him out for the remainder of the 2008–09 season. In his absence, Real Madrid signed Lassana Diarra from Portsmouth as a replacement defensive midfielder, who was issued Diarra's number 6 shirt.[11][12] After recovering from injury, Diarra only started 8 further matches in two seasons for Real Madrid.[13] In January 2011, it was reported that Diarra would be leaving Real Madrid, and was linked to several clubs including Málaga.[14]

Monaco

Diarra returned to French football after signing with Monaco on 27 January 2011.[15] He made his debut in a 0–0 draw against Marseille.[16][17] Diarra left Monaco after the club was relegated to Ligue 2 at the end of the 2010–11 season. After his departure, he remained without a club for the first half of the 2011–12 season and was linked with moves to the Middle East[18] and English Championship club Doncaster Rovers.[19]

Fulham

Diarra signed for Premier League side Fulham on 26 February 2012.[6] He agreed to a contract for the remainder of the 2011–12 season, with an option for the 2012–13 season.[6] He made his Fulham debut as a substitute against Wolverhampton Wanderers on 4 March, assisting the fifth goal in a 5–0 win. On 17 March, he made his first start for Fulham in a 3–0 home loss to Swansea City.[20] He scored his first goal for Fulham against Bolton Wanderers on 7 April 2012.[21]

After impressing manager Martin Jol throughout his 11 Premier League match, on 17 May, Diarra signed a new one-year contract at the club, keeping him at Craven Cottage until the end of the 2012–13 season.[22]

Diarra was one of 12 players released by Fulham at the end of the 2012–13 season.[23] Despite his release, Martin Jol remained positive on Diarra and vowed to help him over the summer to continue his rehabilitation.[24]

Diarra re-signed for Fulham on 26 March 2014 on a contract that expired at the end of the 2013–14 season in an ultimately unsuccessful attempt to help the club survive relegation.[25]

Later career

Diarra trained with Championship side Brentford throughout the 2016–17 season and made an appearance for the club's B team on 20 September 2016.[26][27][28]

Style of play

FourFourTwo magazine described Diarra's playing style with the following forwards in 2006: "Diarra provides aggression, tactical awareness, toughness and the discipline that other players simply lack."[5]

Personal life

Diarra is a practising Muslim. He observes fasting during the Islamic month of Ramadan,[29] he maintains that "every coach has respected my decision".[30]

Career statistics

Club

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition[31][32]
ClubSeasonLeagueNational cup[a]League cup[b]ContinentalOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
OFI1998–99Alpha Ethniki21210222
Vitesse1999–2000Eredivisie162101[c]0182
2000–01294302[c]0344
2001–0224340283
Total6998030809
Lyon2002–03Ligue 128120107[d]01[e]0391
2003–04271000010[f]01[e]1382
2004–0533210319[f]2465
2005–0631310109[f]21[e]0435
2006–074040
Total123740513543117013
Real Madrid2006–07La Liga3334010[f]1474
2007–08300006[f]02[g]0380
2008–0990103[f]02[g]0150
2009–10150203[f]0200
2010–1130302[f]080
Total903100241401284
Monaco2010–11Ligue 19090
Fulham2011–12Premier League111111
2012–1380000080
2013–144040
Total2310000231
Career total33522230516257143229

International

Appearances and goals by national team and year[31][33]
National teamYearAppsGoals
Mali199810
199910
200020
200130
2002112
200380
2004102
200531
200620
200771
2008101
200930
201070
201130
201210
Total727
Scores and results list Mali's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Diarra goal.
List of international goals scored by Mahamadou Diarra
No.DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
16 January 2002Ismailia Stadium, Ismailia, Egypt  Egypt1–02–1Friendly
22–0
330 January 2004Stade El Menzah, Tunis, Tunisia  Burkina Faso2–03–12004 African Cup of Nations
47 February 2004  Guinea2–12–1
55 June 2005Stade Amari Daou, Ségou, Mali  Liberia4–14–12006 FIFA World Cup qualification
66 February 2007Stade Marville, Saint-Malo, France  Lithuania2–13–1Friendly

Honours

Lyon

Real Madrid

Mali

References

External links