Dino Baggio

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dino Baggio
Personnel
birthday July 24, 1971
place of birth CamposampieroItaly
size 188 cm
position Defensive Midfield
Juniors
Years station
0000-1990 Torino Calcio
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1990-1991 Torino Calcio 28 0(2)
1991-1992 Inter Milan 27 0(1)
1992-1994 Juventus Turin 49 0(1)
1994-2000 AC Parma 172 (20)
2000-2005 Lazio Rome 44 0(1)
2003 →  Blackburn Rovers  (loan) 9 0(1)
2004 →  Ancona Calcio  (loan) 13 0(0)
2005 US Triestina 3 0(0)
2008 Raffle 1 0(0)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1990-1992 Italy U-21 18 0(1)
1992 Italy Olympia 5 0(0)
1991-1999 Italy 60 0(7)
1 Only league games are given.

Dino Baggio (born July 24, 1971 in Camposampiero ) is a former Italian football player .

Career

In the club

Dino Baggio is neither related nor related by marriage to Roberto Baggio . He comes from the youth department of Torino Calcio . He made his Serie A debut at the age of 19 on September 9, 1990 in the match between Torino and Lazio ; at that time he was considered one of the greatest talents in Italy. After a year in the professional team of Torino Calcio, Baggio moved to Inter Milan in 1991 , where he played for a year. In 1992 he went to Juventus Turin and was initially not particularly popular with the fans because of his past with local rivals; however, he spent two seasons under Giovanni Trapattoni winning the 1992/93 UEFA Cup . Baggio scored a total of three goals in the two finals against Borussia Dortmund .

In the summer of 1994 Baggio moved to AC Parma , for which he played from 1994 to 2000. In 1995 , under coach Nevio Scala , he won the UEFA Cup again. He scored one goal each in the two legs of the game against Juventus, making it the decisive goalscorer. In 1994/95 and 1996/97 Baggio reached the club's best Serie A placements with the Emilian club in second place. In 1999 he won the UEFA Cup for the third time. In that competition, Baggio was hit in the head by a metal object in the second round match at the Polish club Wisła Kraków . Baggio stated that it was a knife, which the club denied. Wisła Kraków was suspended from the European Cup.

In October 2000, Baggio moved to Lazio for five years . In the summer of 2003 he was loaned to the English club Blackburn Rovers for half a year . He spent the back series of the 2003/04 season on loan at Ancona Calcio . Until 2005 Baggio was mostly reserve player at Lazio.

In summer 2005, he moved to the US Triestina in Serie B . After only three appearances for the club, he decided in October 2005 to terminate his contract and end his active career due to personal problems with the then coach Pietro Vierchowod .

In total, Baggio completed 333 Serie A games in which he scored 25 goals.

In 2008 Baggio played a game for the small amateur club Tombolo from Padua , which was coached by its first coach, Cesare Crivellaro.

In the national team

Dino Baggio played for the Italian national team 60 times and scored seven goals. He took part with Italy in the 1994 World Cup, where he was one of the top performers of the Azzurri and was runner-up in the world championship. He also took part in the 1996 European Championship and the 1998 World Cup with Italy .

successes

Web links

Commons : Dino Baggio  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ "Football: Baggio needs stitches after knife is thrown", The Independent, October 21, 1998 (English)
  2. "Football: Club deny Baggio's knife claims", The Independent, October 22, 1998 (English)
  3. "Dino Baggio torna a giocare L'ex Juve, Toro, Inter e Parma in terza categoria", calciomercato.com, February 15, 2008 ( Memento of the original from February 12, 2008 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (Italian)  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.calciomercato.com