Marco Delvecchio, or Serie A players of the past

R.N7

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With his wavy, unkempt running style and unpredictable hair, he often lit up the Stadio Olimpico, especially against local rivals Lazio.
 
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R.N7

Such tagline. Wow!
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Julio Cruz. Did he exist or did Javier Zanetti just mess up his characteristic inch perfect haircut from time to time and with that fooling everyone into thinking he was another person?
 

Natener

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Simone Inzaghi. The Inzaghi that was born onside and wrong side of the goal scoring scale.
 

harms

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Fearsome Paolo Montero - Uruguayan was a mainstay in the great Juventus team of the 90's and the early 00's, and one of the biggest characters in the league, the Beast to Zidane's "Beauty". He is widely regarded as the toughest and dirtiest player in Serie A history, which is quite a challenge. He also holds the record for the most red cards received by a player in Serie A history.

Complimentary youtube video:
 

JonDahl

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Pavel Nedved - One of the finest midfielders of his generation. A Ballon d'Or winner in 2003, fantastic and deserved if only for the fact he stopped Thierry Henry from winning it.
 

facund

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Formed a great partnership with Roberto Baggio at Brescia and is the only player to have finished top scorer in Serie A, B and C.
 

facund

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Zvonimir Boban, I was unduly obsessed with this chap when I was a boy. Often injured but a wonderful player when he was fit.
 

Moby

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One of my favourite players from back in the day, and an absolute joy to watch.

Enrico Chiesa


Enrico Chiesa was a Serie A icon throughout the ‘glory days’ of Calcio. In a career that spanned over 20-years, he played for 10 different clubs and most importantly, Chiesa found the net where ever he starred.

At 5’9” Chiesa wasn’t the tallest or most physical of strikers but he sure was exciting, with his blistering pace and thunderbolt of a shot. He was once described by Fabio Capello as a “Complete forward” and “a cross between Gianni Riva and Paolo Rossi.” Such praise from one of Italy’s most revered coaches merely emphasises how good Enrico Chiesa really was.

After spending his teenage years at amateur side Pontedecimo, in 1988 Chiesa was snapped up at just 18-years-old by local side Sampdoria. The young Chiesa struggled to make an impact during his early days with i Blucerchiati, making just one league appearance in a 1-0 to Roma. The following season, in order to kick start his career, Chiesa dropped down to play in Serie C2 with Teramo. After a frustrating debut year at Samp, Chiesa was finally getting some playing time, managing to score five goals in just over 30 appearances. A year later, the young forward was on the move again, this time signing for Serie C1 side Chieti. Again the youngster made progress, as he struck six times in close to 25 games.

After two valuable seasons in the lower leagues Chiesa, now 22, decided the time was right to return home to Sampdoria. Yet he failed to impress once again, managing just one goal all season. In the summer of 1993 the unsettled striker was on the move once again, this time joining Serie B outfit Modena. It was a make or break moment for Chiesa and one that proved to be career defining. The 1993/94 season was a success, as the Ligurian scored 15 times. He continued his fine form a year later, finding the net 14 times while playing for Cremonese in Serie A. This alerted Sampdoria who swiftly recalled the youngster. Enrico Chiesa’s career was up and running.

Chiesa had a new team mate on his return to Doria, one Roberto Mancini. The duo gelled perfectly, forming a devastating partnership in which Chiesa scored 22 goals in 27 games.

This kind of form didn’t go unnoticed, and one of his admirers was Parma coach, Carlo Ancelotti. At the time, the Ducali were being bankrolled by the Tanzi family and President Calisto Tanzi had Chiesa on his shopping list along with Hernan Crespo and Lilian Thuram. Ancelotti and Tanzi were building a squad to win Serie A and the project proved too tempting for Chiesa, who joined the Gialloblu in 1996. He would spend three years at the Stadio Tardini, easily one of his best spells as a professional footballer. In his first season he fired Parma into the Champions League and narrowly missed out on the Scudetto after Parma lost out to Juventus by two points.

But Chiesa wouldn’t have to wait long for his first taste of silverware with the Emiliani. Having played an integral part in Parma’s European run, Chiesa capped a magnificent season by scoring the third and final goal in his sides 3-0 UEFA Cup final triumph over Marseille in 1999. He also helped Parma to a Coppa Italia triumph and a Supercoppa Italiana. The Genoan was now one of the most sought after strikers on the peninsula and at the end of his most successful season to date; he was on the move again.

The opportunity to play alongside Gabriel Batistuta, one of the world’s best forwards at the time, was a deal breaker for Chiesa. Similarly to Parma, Fiorentina were looking to expand, improve, and mount a title challenge, but most importantly they wanted to keep hold of star man Batistuta and find him an effective strike partner. Initially however, things didn’t go to plan and Chiesa’s debut and only season with Batistuta was a frustrating one. In 2000 the Argentine was sold to Roma. This was probably the best thing that could have happened to Chiesa as he became the Viola’s main man in front of goal, hitting an impressive 22 goals in 30 matches.

Despite a successful spell in Tuscany, Chiesa was forced to find pastures new in 2002 due to La Viola’sfinancial meltdown. Chiesa had a brief spell at Lazio before joining Siena in the summer of 2003. By this time, the 33-year-old was a veteran of the Italian game and he became an instant fan favourite and focal point of the team. Chiesa continued to rattle in the goals, hitting double figures in his first three seasons with the Bianconeri. In total he amassed 32 goals in 129 appearances for La Robur and Chiesa was such a hit with the Siena faithful that there is a supporters club named in his honour -Siena Club Enrico Chiesa.

Chiesa would finish his journey with Lega Pro side Figline where he spent three years. His glittering career eventually came to an end in 2010 aged 40. His prolific goal-scoring saw him become one of Europe’s most feared forwards. It was also a career that saw him score seven goals in 22 caps for his country.

Chiesa briefly tried his hand at coaching in 2010 with Figline however the clubs expulsion from the Italian professional leagues abruptly put a halt to this venture. Who knows however, maybe one day we’ll see one of Italy’s finest become as masterful a tactician as he was a goal-scorer.

By Giovanni Dougall

 

FC Ronaldo

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Gianluca Pessotto



Alessio Tacchinardi



Angelo Di Livio

 

Enigma_87

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Alen Boksic - not the most prolific forwards around but quite a right peg. Excellent technique as well.
 

Gio

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Some time in the late 1980s, Internazionale were losing an away match by several goals when in the last minute they were awarded a meaningless penalty.

The fearsome Argentine centre-back Daniel Passarella began galloping forward to take it, but before he could get there Alessandro Altobelli, reasoning like any striker that a goal is a goal, stepped up and hit the ball into the net.

A former Inter star who played in that game tells the story that in the changing-room, Passarella threw a fit. "It's always the same!" he screamed. "At 0-0 no-one dares take a penalty, but when it doesn't matter anymore they all do."

Grabbing his genitals, he added: "You are cowards! You have no balls, no cojones."

This went on for some time. Most of the Inter players were used to Passarella and paid no attention, but after a while Altobelli could take no more. Striding up to the Argentine, he asked: "You talking about me?"

Passarella knocked him out with a single punch, stripped, and wandered off to the showers.

A few minutes later Altobelli came to. He stared about him enraged and then, spotting the fruit bowl customary in Italian changing-rooms of the era, grabbed a little knife meant for peeling oranges.

In the shower stalls he found a naked Passarella calmly shampooing his hair. "Come on then!" Passarella cooed at his knife-wielding colleague.

Altobelli didn't know what to do. He didn't really want to stab his team-mate to death like Norman Bates in Psycho. He would probably have been fined, or even transfer-listed.

So he just stood in front of Passarella waving the knife for a while until, to his relief, other players dragged him away and he could pretend this was happening against his will. All the while Passarella continued washing his hair.
 

FC Ronaldo

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Cristiano Doni



Aldair



Vincent Candela

 

FC Ronaldo

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Sebastian Frey



Gianluca Pagliuca



 

Gio

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Continuing the Samp theme, and the man rated the hardest opponent of any attacker worth their salt in the late 1980s...

 

FC Ronaldo

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Angelo Peruzzi



Michelangelo Rampulla

 

Gio

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Very tidy central midfielder and scorer of the most onside offside goal in the history of football at Italia '90.
 

Enigma_87

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who can forget the white feather. Top goalscorer at the time most fondly remembered scoring the opener in the CL tie against Ajax.
 

Šjor Bepo

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few lazio players:

Diego Fuser



Lucas Castroman



Claudio Lopez :drool:
 

Mainoldo

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What a thread....

David Trezeguet. Finishing technique was incredible.