Enrique Macaya Márquez


Enrique Macaya Márquez is an Argentine sports journalist. He worked on Fútbol de Primera from 1985 to 2009. He has also worked for magazines Ten Points and El Campeón, and for the newspapers Noticias Gráficas, Convicción and La Nación. He has been declared a noteworthy personality of sport journalism by the legislature of Buenos Aires, on July 15, 2007.

Early life

At the age of 8 Márquez distributed newspapers in the neighborhood of Flores, and at 15 he was a cadet at the Radio El Mundo, where he became a commercial manager. He also created the subsidiary station in the province of Jujuy.
Enrique Macaya Márquez lives in Floresta. His wife Noemí died in 2016. They have two children: Andrea and Gabriel, and three grandchildren.

Career

Enrique Macaya Márquez started his television career in 1966, commenting football and Formula One on Channel 7. During the 1966 World Cup in England he provided radio broadcasts on El Mundo radio for Argentina. In 1966 he published the book “Mi visión del fútbol". In the late 1970s he commented football matches on ATC.
In 2000s he was a TV presenter of the Fútbol de Primera program and Sunday's classic commentator along with Marcelo Araujo and then Sebastián Vignolo. During the 2010 World Cup, he was a commentator on Fox Sports and wrote articles to Diario Clarín. Between 2013 and 2016 he was a part of TyC Sports as TV presenter of the Indirecto show. During the World Cup 2014 he commented Argentina matches along with Walter Nelson.
As a journalist he covered 16 Football World Cups, with the first one in Sweden in 1958. FIFA confirmed him to be the journalist who covered the most Football World Cups in history. On this occasion the organization awarded him a special recognition. In 2018 he presented his new book "Mis Mundiales", in which he described the coverages of the World Cups, naming the Netherlands national football team of 1974 the best among all the world champions.
During his career he worked as a sports commentator for various broadcasters such as Colonia, Belgrano, Province, Rivadavia, Miter, La Red and Radio del Plata.

Publications