Fabio Quagliarella

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Fabio Quagliarella
Zenit-Torino (7) .jpg
Quagliarella, 2015
Personnel
birthday January 31, 1983
place of birth Castellammare di StabiaItaly
size 180 cm
position Storm
Juniors
Years station
1993-1999 Torino FC
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1999-2005 Torino FC 39 0(7)
2002-2003 →  Fiorentina  (loan) 12 0(1)
2003-2004 →  Calcio Chieti  (loan) 43 (19)
2005-2009 Udinese Calcio 73 (25)
2005-2006 Ascoli Calcio 33 0(3)
2006-2007 Sampdoria Genoa 35 (13)
2009-2010 SSC Naples 34 (11)
2010-2014 Juventus Turin 84 (23)
2014-2016 Torino FC 50 (18)
2016– Sampdoria Genoa 125 (60)
National team
Years selection Games (goals) 2
2000-2001 Italy U17 8 0(1)
2001 Italy U19 9 0(1)
2002-2004 Italy U20 8 0(2)
2004 Italy U21 1 0(0)
2007– Italy 27 0(9)
1 Only league games are given.
As of May 27, 2019

2 As of March 26, 2019

Fabio Quagliarella [ ˈfabjo kwaʎʎaˈrɛlla ] (born January 31, 1983 in Castellammare di Stabia , Naples ) is an Italian football player .

Career

In the club

Quagliarella started his career at Torino Calcio . After three seasons he was loaned first to the forced relegated club Florentia Viola and later to Calcio Chieti in Serie C1 . For the 2004/05 season he returned to his home club in Turin. A year later it was sold to Udinese Calcio , who parked it with Serie A promoted Ascoli Calcio in 2005/06 .

The 2006/07 season played Quagliarella at Sampdoria Genoa , who bought 50% of his transfer rights for one year. He made his final breakthrough in Genoa. Quagliarella played 35 Serie A games and scored 13 goals. After the season he moved back to Udinese Calcio , for whom he played from July 2007 to June 2009. The 2008/09 season was particularly successful for Quagliarella : He scored 13 goals in the league and another eight in the UEFA Cup , in which he advanced to the quarter-finals with Udinese. On January 31, 2009, the striker scored a volley against SSC Napoli to make it 2-2. This goal was voted Goal of the Year 2009 in Italy . At the beginning of July 2009, the striker moved to SSC Napoli.

In August 2010 Quagliarella was awarded to Juventus Turin for the 2010/11 season for the sum of 4.5 million euros . A purchase option was agreed as part of this deal. At Juventus, Quagliarella fitted in well with the team straight away, scoring nine goals in their first 17 league games. On January 6, 2011, he tore a cruciate ligament in his right knee in the Serie A game against Parma FC , which put him out of action for the rest of the season. In June 2011 Juventus Turin signed him firmly. The striker signed a three-year contract and cost 10.5 million euros transfer fee. For the 2014/15 season , Quagliarella moved to local rivals FC Turin after winning the third Italian championship title in a row with Juventus .

In February 2016 it was awarded again to Sampdoria Genoa . After his loan with Sampdoria Genoa ended in the summer of the same year, Quagliarella was signed by Sampdoria Genoa for a fixed transfer of EUR 2.70 million.

In the national team

Quagliarella went through from 2000 to 2004 the U-17 , U-19 , U-20 and U-21 national teams of Italy , for which he completed a total of 26 games and scored four goals.

For the Italian national team Quagliarella made his debut under Roberto Donadoni on March 28, 2007 in the European Championship qualifier against Scotland . In the course of the year Quagliarella came to further missions for the Squadra Azzurra , where he made on June 6 in the European Championship qualification against Lithuania with a brace for the final score and scored his first goals in the national jersey. Since Quagliarella was henceforth regularly part of the Azzurri squad , he also took part in the 2008 European Championship . In this he was substituted on in the second group game against Romania , remained until the quarter-finals , in which Spain was defeated, but without further use.

Even under Marcello Lippi , successor to Donadoni, who resigned after the European Championship, Quagliarella was still part of the Italian squad. In addition to friendly games and qualifying for the World Cup , Quagliarella was also part of the 2009 Confederations Cup squad . In this he was used in the game against Egypt , but Italy lost this and the following game against Brazil , which meant they were eliminated in the group stage .

Also in the 2010 World Cup in South Africa he was in the squad of Italy . After watching the first two games from the bench, he came on as a substitute for the last group game against Slovakia . Although he scored his first goal in a major tournament shortly before the end of the game, the 3-2 defeat ensured that Italy were eliminated again after the preliminary round.

After the World Cup, Quagliarella initially remained part of the line-up, but was no longer considered by Cesare Prandelli after his last game against Romania in November 2010 . In September 2014 and October 2015 he was nominated again for the national team by Prandelli's successor Antonio Conte , but remained without further use.

In March 2019, the 36-year-old Quagliarella was nominated again for the national team by Roberto Mancini after more than three years. In the first game of the European Championship qualification against Finland he celebrated his comeback for Italy. In the second game against Liechtenstein Quagliarella scored two goals, replacing Christian Panucci as the oldest goalscorer in the Italian national team.

successes

References

Web links

Commons : Fabio Quagliarella  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. 27 August 2010 - Accordo con la Società SSC Napoli per l'acquisto a titolo temporaneo del calciatore Fabio Quagliarella. (No longer available online.) Juventus.com, August 27, 2010, archived from the original on November 27, 2010 ; Retrieved August 28, 2010 (Italian).
  2. Jump up ↑ Juventus Turin - an interim conclusion. goal.com, January 26, 2011, accessed January 26, 2011 .
  3. https://www.t-online.de/sport/fussball/international/id_48297506/si_12/das-sind-die-top-transfers-europas.html
  4. Ufficiale: Quagliarella si riveste di blucerchiato sampdoria.it, accessed on February 18, 2016 (Italian)
  5. [1] transfermarkt.de, accessed on February 20, 2019 (German)
  6. ^ Tiziana Höll: Quagliarella oldest goalscorer in Italy. In: onefootball.com. Onefootball GmbH, March 26, 2019, accessed on March 26, 2019 .
  7. [2]