
Cavani’s Boca Juniors exit confirmed as injuries cut short Argentine adventure
Uruguayan striker Edinson Cavani announced his departure from Boca Juniors via an Instagram video from La Bombonera, ending a three-year spell marred by chronic back problems and zero titles.
The end came not with a final match, but with a solitary figure on the turf of La Bombonera, speaking directly to a phone camera. Edinson Cavani’s farewell video, posted on Wednesday, confirmed what Argentine football circles had anticipated for days: the 39-year-old had rescinded his contract six months early, his time at Boca Juniors over. “I will never regret the decision to come here in 2023,” the Uruguayan said, his words echoing across an empty stadium that once roared his name. The immediate trigger was a meeting with new head coach Rodolfo Arruabarrena, who made clear the striker did not feature in his plans for the squad overhaul already underway at the Buenos Aires club.
Cavani’s body had betrayed him long before that conversation. A fractured L3 vertebra suffered in early 2025 developed into a chronic herniated disc with nerve compression. He played through pain with injections, but by February 2026 he had managed only two substitute appearances before a lumbar crisis sidelined him permanently. The numbers tell a stark story: 81 matches, 28 goals, but only 27 full ninety-minute outings across nearly three years. His final act in a Boca shirt, a goalless draw against Racing on 15 February, was met with whistles from a fanbase that had once unfurled banners in his honour. South American analysts note that the missed chance against Peru’s Alianza Lima in a 2025 Copa Libertadores playoff, and a 161-day goal drought at home, had already eroded the goodwill generated by his 2024 winner at River Plate’s Monumental.
When Cavani arrived from Valencia in July 2023, the reception was euphoric. Club president Juan Román Riquelme called him “the best player in the history of Argentine football,” and the stadium filled for his presentation alone. The former Napoli, Paris Saint-Germain and Manchester United forward brought a glittering CV: six Ligue 1 titles, a Copa Italia, and 58 international goals for Uruguay, second only to Luis Suárez. Yet the fairytale never materialised. Viewed from Montevideo, the move was a homecoming to the club where his idol Sergio “Manteca” Martínez had starred, but the physical toll of a 17-year European career proved insurmountable. Argentine press reports highlight that Cavani’s salary was among the highest in the squad, a financial weight the club was eager to shed as it reshapes under Arruabarrena.
The departure is part of a wider clear-out. On the same day, local outlets reported that winger Exequiel Zeballos had been separated from first-team training after failing to agree a contract renewal, with the club open to a transfer. For Cavani, the immediate future points to a possible return to Uruguay, where his boyhood club Danubio has publicly opened the door. Boca, meanwhile, will continue to trim a squad that has underperformed relative to its wage bill, with the next competitive fixture now the focus for a fanbase that has grown accustomed to farewells rather than silverware.
| Latin American press | 0.00 | neutral |
|---|---|---|
| Sub-Saharan African press | 0.00 | neutral |
The Latin American bloc ignores the Cavani story, prioritizing other news.
The absence of coverage is an editorial choice that marginalizes the event, suggesting a different hierarchy of priorities.
There is no mention of Cavani or his departure from Boca, while other blocs might have covered it.
The Sub-Saharan African bloc does not pay attention to the Cavani story, focusing on regional news.
The absence of coverage reflects a different geographic and thematic focus, where the news is not considered relevant.
There is no trace of Cavani's departure, while other blocs might have covered it.
Broaden your view
Trump Opens US 250th Anniversary with Mount Rushmore Speech Warning of ‘Communist Menace’
6 languages · 25 outlets
From Economy & MarketsSamsung profit surges 19-fold on AI boom, but Asian markets retreat
5 languages · 11 outlets
From TechnologyAI’s Industrial Tipping Point: Humanoid Robots Hit Factory Floors as Creative Sectors Grapple with Copyright
2 languages · 4 outlets