Josip Šimunić

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Josip Šimunić
Personal information
Full name Josip Šimunić
Height 1.95 m (6 ft 5 in)
Position(s) Defender
Team information
Current team
Hertha Berlin
Number 14
‡ National team caps and goals, correct as of September 10 2008

Josip “Joe” Šimunić [ˈjɔsip ˈʃimunitɕ] (born February 18, 1978) is an Croatian football central defender. He plays for Hertha Berlin and the Croatian national team.

Club career

Šimunić was born in Canberra, Australian Capital Territory. His parents, of Croatian heritage, are from Kiseljak (now in Bosnia and Herzegovina). He received early football training at the Australian Institute of Sport which is funded by Australian taxpayers. As such, Simunic's later decision to play for the national team of his parents birth country,Croatia, instead of his own birth country was considered by the Australians as a treachery. The defender broke into the Melbourne Knights first team as a teenager in the 1995–96 season and ended it with a championship medal. Šimunić scored his first goals the following term, three in 14 outings, before moving to Europe to join Hamburger SV in 1998.

Šimunić moved to Hertha BSC Berlin in 2000 after falling out with Hamburg coach Frank Pagelsdorf and has since become an integral member of a team which has enjoyed occasional forays in the UEFA Cup. He expressed on The World Game on SBS television that he wishes to return to Australia to live after concluding his career in Europe. Rumours have surfaced that Simunic will be subject to harassment and abuse should he indeed return to settle in Australia.

International career

Despite his education at the Australian Institute of Sport (AIS) he decided not to play for his country of birth but instead play his international football for the country of his parents' heritage, Croatia (also the country of his parent's birth) in October 2001, making his international debut in Croatia's friendly match against Korea Republic on 10 November 2001 (this has led to calls for all players whom have been brought through the AIS to be legally obligated to play for the Australian national team). Šimunić did not play in any of Croatia's qualifiers for the 2002 World Cup but was given a place in the squad for the finals after injury forced Igor Tudor out. He played all three of Croatia's matches in Korea and Japan. He also played in the Euro 2004, the 2006 World Cup and UEFA Euro 2008, performing well in the latter tournament.

In a well-publicised incident, Šimunić was sent off in Croatia's final 2006 FIFA World Cup match against Australia. Having picked up a booking in the 61st minute, the referee Graham Poll took out a yellow card for Šimunić's tackle in the 90th minute, but did not actually send him off. However, at the conclusion of the game three minutes later, Šimunić remonstrated with Poll and received a third yellow card, this time followed by a red card. FIFA initially noted all three bookings in its match report, before later removing the 90th minute (second) booking. This prompted the removal of Poll from the knockout stages referee pool. Shortly after the World Cup, Poll retired from refereeing international games, citing this game as a direct cause. It should also be noted that Šimunić himself has faced some criticism for failing to remove himself from the pitch of play after the second card.[1]

Upon the release of his autobiography in 2007, Poll revealed that, upon booking Šimunić for the second time, he had erroneously recorded him as “Australia #3” (who was defender Craig Moore); Šimunić, a Canberra-born Australian of Bosnian Croat parentage, speaks English with an Australian accent.

He is known for having great football technique, despite being a centre-back. His national teammate Niko Kranjčar says that “on a training pitch he does feints like Ronaldinho”.[2]

References

  1. ^ "Croatia vs. Australia match report". FIFA. Retrieved 2008-08-12.
  2. ^ "Knjaz pokazao javnosti pravog Niku Kranjčara" (in Croatian). Retrieved 2008-01-12.

External links


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