Delio Onnis

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Delio Onnis (1970)

Delio Onnis (born March 24, 1948 in Giuliano di Roma , Italy ) is a retired Argentine football player . To date, with 299 goals, he is the most successful goalscorer in the top French league, Division 1 (now Ligue 1) .

Player career

Delio Onnis' family, like many of their countrymen, immigrated to Argentina when he was a child; there he acquired the Argentine citizenship, but also kept the Italian. The 1.80 m wide and kg to 80 best times vast Striker whose characteristics were always hanging neck, came during the 1971/72 season to Stade de Reims and scored 22 goals for the straightaway French club that his best years to this point in time and finished 15th at the end of the season. After another year in Champagne , Onnis moved to AS Monaco , where he played until 1980 - and hit the opposing goal with the regularity of clockwork. In 1976 he was relegated to the second division with the Monegasque, and after the immediate resurgence he could celebrate his only championship title in 15 years in France and also contribute 29 goals. In 1975 and 1980 he won the national top scorer's crown in the D1 , 1977 in the D2, and in his last season at Monaco he also won the French Cup .

Nevertheless, the goalscorer, who played at Gimnasia y Esgrima de La Plata in Argentina when he was young, was ignored by national coach Menotti for the 1978 World Cup in Argentina , as was Carlos Bianchi, who was also highly successful in France .

In 1980 Tours FC signed him for a record fee at the time, and Delio Onnis was twice top scorer again in the three years. After his relegation he moved to the Côte d'Azur to SC Toulon , was once again top scorer and ended his playing career in 1986. 1987/88 he looked after his last team for one season as an assistant coach .

From 1992 to 1994 Onnis worked as a coach at Paris FC .

Stations and gates

Onnis' career by season:

season society Table

space

Hit Square gate

hunter list

Remarks
1971/72 Stade de Reims 15th 22nd 4th
1972/73 Stade de Reims 8th. 17th 6th
1973/74 AS Monaco 16. 26th 4th
1974/75 AS Monaco 10. 30th 1.
1975/76 AS Monaco 18th 29 2. behind his compatriot Carlos Bianchi (Reims)
1976/77 AS Monaco (1.) (30) (1.) in D2 (second division)
1977/78 AS Monaco 1. 29 2. again behind Bianchi (now PSG)
1978/79 AS Monaco 4th 22nd 2. behind Bianchi (PSG)
1979/80 AS Monaco 4th 21st 1. together with Erwin Kostedde (Laval)
1980/81 Tours FC 18th 24 1.
1981/82 Tours FC 11. 29 1.
1982/83 Tours FC 18th 11 20th
1983/84 SC Toulon 16. 21st 1. together with Patrice Garande (Auxerre)
1984/85 SC Toulon 6th 17th 4th
1985/86 SC Toulon 16. 1 --- only completed 8 games

Palmarès

literature

  • Marc Barreaud: Dictionnaire des footballeurs étrangers du championnat professionnel français (1932-1997). L'Harmattan, Paris 1998, ISBN 2-7384-6608-7
  • Marc Barreaud / Alain Colzy: Les géants du Stade de Reims. Euromedia, Douzy 2012, ISBN 979-10-90217-07-2
  • Pascal Grégoire-Boutreau / Tony Verbicaro: Stade de Reims - une histoire sans fin. Cahiers intempestifs, Saint-Étienne 2001, ISBN 2-911698-21-5

Notes and evidence

  1. after Stéphane Boisson / Raoul Vian: Il était une fois le Championnat de France de Football. Tous les joueurs de la première division de 1948/49 à 2003/04. Neofoot, Saint-Thibault o. J., o. S., and Sophie Guillet / François Laforge: Le guide français et international du football éd. 2009. Vecchi, Paris 2008, ISBN 978-2-7328-9295-5 , pp. 171-191