Casillas was born in Mostoles (Madrid) on 20 May 1981, and the 25-year-old has already acquired a medal collection the envy of many an older man. Casillas claims that he only became a goalkeeper under duress, stuck between the goalposts while his football-mad father peppered him with shots. The practice certainly came in handy as the eight-year-old Casillas was soon snapped up by Spanish giants Real Madrid following a successful trial at the Bernabeu.
Focused, cool under pressure, agile, and blessed with lightning reflexes, Casillas is solidity personified, a defender’s dream. Fearless and quick off his line, Casillas specialises in one-on-one situations and is not afraid to give his senior defensive colleagues a good ear-bashing, should the situation arise.
At the age of 17, Casillas was pulled out of his high-school art class with the news that he was in the squad for Madrid’s upcoming UEFA Champions League game. He may have been an unused substitute on that occasion, but within a year he would be an established member of the first-team squad. Casillas continued to impress the Madrid coaching staff, gradually gaining the edge in the battle for a starting role as Los Blancos won the Primera Liga title. Having started the 2001/02 UEFA Champions League Final in Glasgow as a substitute, Casillas leapt off the bench to replace his injured colleague and almost single-handedly kept Madrid in the game, pulling off a series of incredible saves to deny a rampant Bayer Leverkusen side.
Youth success
His talent did not go unnoticed by the national team coaching staff, who were quick to select him for Spain’s youth categories. Casillas was part of a Spanish squad that took gold at the FIFA World Youth Championship Nigeria 1999, although he was not the first-choice goalkeeper.
Casillas made his debut for the senior side on 3 June 2000 in a friendly match prior to UEFA Euro 2000, although he would remain second in line behind Valencia’s Santiago Canizares at the finals. He made the Spanish number one jersey his own in qualifying for the 2002 FIFA World Cup Korea/Japan™, playing in nearly every game for La Furia Roja (The Red Fury). At the tournament, he became a key figure in the Spanish line-up as they reached the quarter-finals by defeating the Republic of Ireland on penalties. However, there was little Casillas could do when Spain went out against hosts Korea Republic in the last eight.
Having won the hearts and minds of followers of Spanish football, it would be his performances during the 2004/05 campaign that earned him the nickname ‘Saint Iker’. Casillas conceded just 30 goals in 36 appearances for Real Madrid that season, and has become something of a life insurance policy in recent years for a Madrid side not known for its defensive solidity. At national team level, he continues to be Spain’s undisputed first-choice, despite fierce competition from the likes of Pepe Reina, Víctor Valdes and Santiago Canizares.