Every player to wear the number 7 shirt at Real Madrid

Vinicius Junior has inherited the number seven shirt from Eden Hazard
Vinicius Junior has inherited the number seven shirt from Eden Hazard / Soccrates Images/GettyImages
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When Mariano Diaz inherited the most famous shirt at Real Madrid in the summer of 2018, he tried to play down its significance.

"It's just a number," he insisted, without much conviction.

The number in question and never far from the lips of anyone in the Spanish capital was seven. Since Real Madrid started doling out squad numbers on a semi-consistent basis after the Second World War, some of the club's greatest players have worn the lucky digit.

There have been goalscorers and creators, Ballon d'Or winners and cult figures. And one or two underwhelming anomalies. Here is the full role call of Real Madrid players that have had the honour of wearing a squad number like no other.


Every player to wear the number seven shirt at Real Madrid

Player

Years in number seven shirt

Macala

1948-51

Sabino Barinaga

1948-49

Jose Montalvo

1948-51

Francisco Juanco

1949-50

Toni

1949-50

Joaquin Navarro

1949-52

Rafa Verdu

1949-50

Pablo Olmedo

1949-53

Gyorgy Nemes

1950-51

Pedro Arsuaga

1950-51

Alfonso Navarro

1950-51

Mario Imbelloni

1950-51

Joseito

1951-59

Jose Maria Zarraga

1951-52

Antonio Gausi

1951-52

Luis Molowny

1951-52

Raymond Kopa

1956-59

Jesus Herrera

1959-60

Canario

1959-60

Justo Tejada

1961-62

Amancio Amaro

1963-73

Fernando Serena

1965-67

Ico Aguilar

1971-72

Henning Jensen

1976-77

Juanito

1980-86

Ito

1981-82

Francisco Pineda

1981-85

Manolo Sanchis

1984-85

Angel

1984-85

Rafa Martin Vazquez

1984-95

Emilio Butragueno

1984-95

Chucho Solana

1986-87

Adolfo Aldana

1987-88

Paco Llorente

1988-90

Luis Milla

1992-93

Alfonso

1993-95

Luis Enrique

1993-95

Peter Dubovsky

1994-95

Jose Amavisca

1994-95

Raul

1995-2010

Juan Esnaider

1995-96

Cristiano Ronaldo

2010-18

Mariano Diaz

2018-19

Eden Hazard

2019-23

Vinicius Junior

2023-

Data via Transfermarkt


Ever the willing pioneers, Real Madrid were the first Spanish club to wear numbers on the back their shirts in November 1947. The digitised Real lost 5-0 to city rivals Atletico Madrid.

The Barcelona-born Macala lined up on the right wing for Madrid in that heavy defeat.

While some in Catalonia may wish that Barcelona was not part of Spain, the Hungarian Gyorgy Nemes became the first foreign player to wear the famous digit - which wasn't quite so feted yet - in 1950. However, Nemes only made one appearance for Real Madrid - a 6-2 thrashing at the hands of Real Sociedad - before surgery on a stomach ulcer and a broken leg curtailed his stay in the capital.

By 1956, Raymond Kopa escaped the misfortune lingering over the digit to become the first star seven in the club's history. Within weeks of impressing in defeat to Real Madrid for Reims in the European Cup final, the Frenchman was wearing white.

Kopa's Real Madrid teammate Juan Santisteban remembered how he "did magic, amazing things that you didn't think possible". In 1958, Kopa became the first number seven at the club to win the Ballon d'Or. He would not be the last.


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By the time Real Madrid completed an unprecedented set of five consecutive European Cups, Kopa had vacated the number seven. Brazilian winger Canario filled the void on arguably the greatest night in the history of the club.

Eintracht Frankfurt started the 1960 European Cup final at Hampden Park well, racing into a 1-0 lead and hitting the crossbar.

"We were looking at each other thinking: 'Can this really be happening?'" Canario remembered. "But once we got into our stride, I remember the Scottish fans applauding us." Fittingly, Madrid scored seven that night.

The shirt Amancio Amaro put on at his first Real Madrid training session didn't have the club badge on it, let alone the number seven after he arrived from second-tier Deportivo La Coruna. When Amancio pointed this out, the legendary Alfredo Di Stefano snapped back: "You've got to sweat [to earn] it first, sunshine."

After a decade among the Spanish elite, Di Stefano would be the first to concede that Amancio earned a badge and the number seven.

As early as November 1983, the Spanish publication El Pais commissioned a piece entitled 'Amancio and the Quinta del Buitre'. The former Madrid star had taken charge of the youth team and was in charge of the next golden generation, with another great number seven as its figurehead.

Emilio Butragueno, a nippy striker that Amancio described as "electric and very cool" and was forever known by the nickname El Buitre - the Vulture - was the central piece of the side that won five consecutive league titles between 1986 and 1990, although no European Cups.

In the seventh minute of every Real Madrid home game, the Santiago Bernabeu is enveloped by a round of applause in honour of Juanito. The iconic cult hero draped the number seven shirt in the 1980s but died at the tender age of 37 in a car crash.

Fernando Hierro once opined that Raul "was not a ten out of ten in anything in anything but he was an eight and a half in everything."

The former Atletico Madrid youth product was a number seven for 15 trophy-laden years with Los Blancos, finishing his career as the club's all-time top scorer before handing over his legendary digit to the man that would surpass his record.

Cristiano Ronaldo was reluctant to take the number seven shirt when he joined Manchester United as a teenager but was made to play his first season at Real as a nine before Raul departed in 2010. Ronaldo averaged a goal every 83 minutes across eight years as Real Madrid's number seven.

By comparison, Eden Hazard scored seven goals in four years after Mariano's brief flirtation with the digit. The Belgian disappointment was hardly diverting his energies to create goals for others; Hazard mustered a total of seven La Liga assists for Madrid - the division's goalkeepers boasted a combined eight in the same time period.

Once Hazard's purgatory was mercifully ended in the summer of 2023, Vinicius Junior took up the weighty mantle of Real Madrid's number seven, following in the footsteps of his idol Ronaldo. After the missteps of Mariano and Hazard, the Brazilian offers Madrid's clearest hope of its next magnificent seven.