Oleguer Presas Renom (born 2 February 1980), known simply as Oleguer, is a Spanish former professional footballer. Primarily a centre-back, he could also operate as a defensive right-back.
During his career, he was mostly associated with FC Barcelona, with which he won two La Liga championships and the 2006 Champions League, appearing in 175 competitive matches. He signed for AFC Ajax in 2008, where he remained until his retirement.
Oleguer was also known for his political approach; he supported left-wing causes and Catalan nationalism, which caused some controversy and led to one sponsor dropping him.
On 17 May 2006, Barça beat Arsenal to win the Champions League for the second time in its history. Oleguer started the match, but on the day he appeared tense and slow, struggling to neutralise Freddie Ljungberg's runs down the wing and more importantly not being able to stop Sol Campbell scoring the opening goal. In the 71st minute he was substituted in favour of Juliano Belletti by manager Frank Rijkaard, and the Brazilian went on to score the decider with less than ten minutes to go.
Oleguer signed a contract extension in July 2006, keeping him with the club until 2010. He had the honor of captaining the team for the first time in their initial pre-season game of the 2006–07 campaign, in recognition of his work over the last few seasons. With the arrival of Gianluca Zambrotta and Lilian Thuram, he found himself coming on from the bench in the first few matches of the season. On 29 November 2006, he was awarded the President Companys award for his efforts in promoting the official recognition of Catalan sports at an international level.
2007–08 started positively in sporting terms, as Oleguer became a fixture in Rijkaard's starting eleven. However, he was accused of assaulting a policeman during an incident in a bar in Sabadell which occurred in 2003. He also spoke out against the banning of the Catalan national team by the Royal Spanish Football Federation, when the former was scheduled to play a Exhibition game against the United States in conjunction with FIFA-recognised international fixtures in that same week.
On 9 February 2008, in a La Liga match against Sevilla FC, Oleguer broke a bone in his left hand. He was operated on but he spent six weeks on the sidelines, and he took almost no part in the team's campaign overall; Barcelona finished third, and his only competitive goal took place on 24 April 2005 when he opened the 4–0 away defeat of Málaga CF.
Oleguer scored a rare goal on 18 October 2008, the game's only in a home win over FC Groningen. He had an extended run during his first season due to injuries to teammates, but played mostly as backup to Belgian youngsters Toby Alderweireld and Jan Vertonghen.
After only appearing in seven official games for the Amsterdam team in 2010–11, the 31-year-old Oleguer was released.
Though injured just before the end of the 2005–06 season in a Champions League match and forced to miss the league-winning match against RC Celta de Vigo, Oleguer was able to return to the pitch to play in the next match at the Camp Nou when the trophy was presented to the team. True to form, he celebrated wrapped in the colors of the estelada, the Catalan independence flag.
Oleguer had sympathies with left wing and Catalan nationalist causes (La Bressola) and Escola Valenciana, and was asked by Subcomandante Marcos of the Zapatista Army of National Liberation to play a charity match in Chiapas, Mexico, during the summer of 2005. Later that year, he was invited to take part in a meeting of shortlisted players for the Spain national team, an invitation that he accepted only to tell manager Luis Aragonés he did not feel motivated enough to be selected.
On 7 February 2007, in an article written for Basque language newspaper Berria, Oleguer questioned the validity and independence of legal and judicial processes in the Spanish state, using the example of convicted ETA member Iñaki de Juana and his hunger strike to question those processes. His decision to write the article brought veiled criticism at Barcelona, both from coach Rijkaard and president Joan Laporta, as well as earning him disrespectful remarks from fellow professional Salva Ballesta, known for his Francoist Spain views.
As a direct result of the article, Oleguer lost his boot sponsorship with sports firm Kelme, and he subsequently signed for Diadora. He also became the subject of a strong public backlash among some elements in Spain, and was regularly heckled and booed in some of the country's football stadiums due to the article and his pro-Catalan independence stance. When asked about whether he felt that he should not have written the piece, he replied, "The consequences I suffer are nothing compared to what many people go through. What did sadden me, though, was that most people didn't actually read the piece. If people engaged in dialogue with intelligence and still disagreed, then fine, but they didn't".
Oleguer later took Kelme to court, winning the case and being awarded €49.608 in compensation plus interests. The company appealed, however, managing to overturn the original ruling in January 2009.
In 2010, Oleguer appeared at a protest in Amsterdam against the Dutch ban on squatting. His club Ajax had no problems with his presence, because he only participated in the peaceful sections of the protest.
Oleguer was chosen as the eighty-third candidate on the CUP-Alternativa d'Esquerres list for the Barcelona electoral district in the 2012 Catalan Parliament elections, with the aim of closing the list alongside writer Julià de Jòdar and lawyer August Gil Matamala, who were placed eighty-fourth and eighty-fifth respectively. One example of this support was shown by the publication of the article "Ho volem tot" (We want it all).
In 2015, Oleguer joined the list for Crida per Sabadell in the twenty-third position, the same number he wore during his time at Barcelona. On 23 March 2018, the book La història de John Carlos, written by John Carlos himself and Dave Zirin and edited by Sembra Llibres, was published, for which he wrote the foreword.
Ajax
Ajax
Personal life and politics
Career statistics
UDA Gramenet 1999–2000 Segunda División B 0 2000–01 Segunda División B 2 Barcelona B 2001–02 Segunda División B 0 2002–03 Segunda División B 2 2003–04 Segunda División B 0 FC Barcelona 2002–03 La Liga 0 2003–04 La Liga 0 2004–05 La Liga 1 2005–06 La Liga 0 2006–07 La Liga 0 2007–08 La Liga 0 AFC Ajax 2008–09 Eredivisie 1 2009–10 Eredivisie 0 2010–11 Eredivisie 1
Honours
External links
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