Roberto Rojas

For the Spanish footballer, see Roberto Rojas (Spanish footballer). For the Peruvian footballer, see Roberto Rojas (Peruvian footballer).
This name uses Spanish naming customs: the first or paternal family name is Rojas and the second or maternal family name is Saavedra.
Roberto Rojas
Personal information
Full name Roberto Antonio Rojas Saavedra
Date of birth (1957-08-08) August 8, 1957
Place of birth Santiago, Chile
Height 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Playing position Goalkeeper
Youth career
Aviación
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1976–1982 Aviación
1983–1987 Colo-Colo 136 (0)
1987–1989 São Paulo 17 (0)
National team
1983–1989 Chile 49 (0)
Teams managed
2003 São Paulo

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.


Roberto Antonio "Cóndor" Rojas Saavedra (born August 8, 1957, in Santiago) is a retired Chilean football goalkeeper. In 1989 he deliberately injured himself during a World Cup qualifying match in an attempt to avoid a loss by the Chilean national team. The incident resulted in a lifetime ban for Rojas and one World Cup ban for Chile. His ban was subsequently lifted in 2001.

Career

Rojas was born and raised in Chile. He began his career in 1976 with the Chilean club Aviación. Rojas went on to play for Colo-Colo from 1983 until 1987. With Colo-Colo, Rojas won national titles in 1983 and 1986. In 1987, after a successful performance in the Copa América 1987 championship, he transferred to Brazil's São Paulo where he remained until 1989. After his retirement he returned to São Paulo to serve as a goalkeeper coach, training Rogério Ceni. In 2003, Rojas served as interim coach and took the team to the Copa Libertadores for the first time since 1994. He is currently a goalkeeper coach for Brazilian side Sport Club do Recife.

1989 World Cup qualifying incident

In 1989, Rojas was in goal for Chile's 1990 FIFA World Cup qualifying match against Brazil at Rio Janeiro's Maracanã stadium. Chile, down 1-0, would be eliminated from the upcoming World Cup if they lost. Around the 70-minute mark of the match, Rojas fell to the pitch writhing and holding his forehead. A firework, thrown from the stands by a Brazilian fan named Rosenery Mello do Nascimento, was smoldering on the pitch about a yard away. It seemed that Rojas had been hit by the firework, an incident that could've had the match nullified and possibly even have had Brazil penalized by FIFA. Rojas, his head bloodied, was carried off the field; his teammates then refused to return claiming that conditions were unsafe. The match was unfinished.

Video evidence later showed that Rojas had not been hit by the firework. His head injury was discovered to have been self-inflicted with a razor blade he had hidden in his glove. FIFA awarded Brazil a 2-0 win, effectively eliminating Chile from the 1990 World Cup. As a consequence, Chile was banned from the 1994 FIFA World Cup and Rojas was banned for life, along with the coach Orlando Aravena and the team doctor Daniel Rodriguez.[1]

A Chilean inquiry found that Aravena had ordered Rojas and Rodriguez by walkie-talkie to remain on the ground and that Rojas was to leave the field on a stretcher.[1] The team's co-captain, Fernando Astengo, was banned from football for the next five years for deciding to remove the team from the field.[1]

In 2001, following a request for a pardon, Rojas' ban was lifted by FIFA.[1]

Patricio Yáñez

During the Rojas incident, his teammate, Patricio Yáñez, under the frustration of believing his team was subject to unfairness, performed a gesture to the Brazilian fans by holding his penis with both of his hands and his middle body slightly bent towards the front in an act of sexual intercourse. The moment was captured by Chilean national television, and as years have passed, the offensive gesture, when repeated or remembered, is known as "Pato Yáñez".

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "FIFA lifts Rojas lifetime ban". CBC Sports. 30 April 2001. Retrieved 9 April 2010.
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