Néstor Fabbri
Néstor Fabbri | ||
Personnel | ||
---|---|---|
Surname | Néstor Ariel Fabbri Tiscornia | |
birthday | April 29, 1968 | |
place of birth | Buenos Aires , Argentina | |
size | 181 cm | |
position | Central defender | |
Juniors | ||
Years | station | |
All boys | ||
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
1986-1992 | Racing Club | 169 | (6)
1992-1993 | CA Lanus | 16 | (0)
1993 | America de Cali | 29 | (1)
1993-1994 | CA Lanus | 30 | (3)
1994-1998 | Boca Juniors | 117 (13) |
1998-2002 | FC Nantes | 116 | (9)
2002-2003 | EA Guingamp | 33 | (1)
2003-2004 | Estudiantes de La Plata | 25 | (1)
2004-2005 | All boys | 18 | (3)
National team | ||
Years | selection | Games (goals) |
1989-1997 | Argentina | 21 | (1)
1 Only league games are given. |
Néstor Ariel Fabbri Tiscornia (born April 29, 1968 in Buenos Aires ) is a former Argentine football player. At club level, Fabbri was active for Racing Club Avellaneda , Boca Juniors and FC Nantes , among others . With Nantes in 2001 he won the French football championship. Fabbri also took part in the 1990 World Cup in Italy with the national team of his home country .
Career
Club career
Néstor Fabbri, born in 1968 in the Argentine capital Buenos Aires , learned football at the All Boys' youth academy in his hometown. After going through the junior teams of the All Boys, Fabbri, who acted in the position of a defender, was signed in 1986 by the Racing Club from the Bonaren suburb of Avellaneda . There he defended for six years from 1986 to 1992 and made 169 games in the league during that time, where he scored six goals. One could not celebrate great triumphs, however, since the Racing Club was not one of the leading greats in Argentine club football at the time.
In 1992 Néstor Fabbri left the Racing Club and joined CA Lanús , where he played for a year and completed sixteen league games without a goal. 1993 followed a six-month engagement in Colombia with América de Cali . After he was active for Lanús for a year from 1993 to 1994, Néstor Fabbri switched to Boca Juniors in 1994 . But he also belonged to this top Argentine club at a time when the club could not celebrate any great success. Fabbri made 117 league games in the Primera División for the club between 1994 and 1998 and scored thirteen goals, but winning the championship did not jump out. It was not until the Apertura 1998, the first half of the season after Néstor Fabbri's departure from the Estadio La Bombonera , that Boca was able to celebrate the championship again.
In the summer of 1998 Néstor Fabbri made the leap to Europe , where he joined the French first division club FC Nantes . After only positions in the midfield of Division 1 could be occupied in the first three seasons , the team of coach Raynald Denoueix , which included players such as Viorel Moldovan , Salomon Olembé and Mickaël Landreau , achieved first place in the Division 1 2000/01 winning the French football championship. They finished first by four points ahead of Olympique Lyon at the end of the season and qualified for the 2001/02 UEFA Champions League . Here came the end in the second group stage, when they only finished last in Group A behind Manchester United , Bayern Munich and Boavista Porto . In the league, however, the following season was extremely disappointing. Starting as the defending champion, they only finished tenth in the end and even missed qualifying for the next European Cup season.
In 2002 Néstor Fabbri returned to FC Nantes after four years and 116 league games with nine goals and moved within Division 1 to EA Guingamp , where he played for a year and the club with 33 games and one goal to reach seventh place in the Ligue 1 2002/03 , until today the best placement of the provincial club in the top French division, helped.
After a year in Guingamp , Fabbri returned to Argentina and played another year for Estudiantes de La Plata and finally for his hometown club All Boys. There he ended his football career in 2005 at the age of 37.
National team
Between 1989 and 1997 Néstor Fabbri made a total of 21 international matches in the Argentine national soccer team . He managed a goal. He was appointed to the South American squad for the 1990 World Cup in Italy by national coach Carlos Bilardo . In the tournament, in which Argentina started as the defending champion, Bilardo Fabbri started in the first game, the sensational 1-0 defeat against Cameroon he experienced as a defender for the entire season. After that, however, the coach renounced the services of the defender of Racing Avellaneda in the further course of the tournament. The Argentine team, however, reached the final after two penalty shoot-out victories in the quarter and semi-finals, where they lost 1-0 to Germany .
In the further course of his national team career, Fabbri also took part in two other tournaments. These were the 1995 King Fahd Cup , which ended in second place, and the 1995 Copa America , where they were eliminated in the quarter-finals.
successes
- Vice world champion 1990
- French championship : 1 ×
- 2000/01 with FC Nantes
- French cup winner : 2 ×
- French Supercup : 2 ×
- 1999 and 2001 with FC Nantes
- Supercopa Sudamericana : 1 ×
- 1988 with the Racing Club
- Supercoppa Interamericana : 1 ×
- 1988 with the Racing Club
- 1987 as a player of the Racing Club
Web links
- Néstor Fabbri in the database of weltfussball.de
- Néstor Fabbri in the database of FIFA (English)
- Néstor Fabbri in the database of National-Football-Teams.com (English)
- Néstor Fabbri in the database of footballdatabase.eu (English)
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Fabbri, Néstor |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Fabbri Tiscornia, Néstor Ariel (full name) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Argentinian soccer player |
DATE OF BIRTH | April 29, 1968 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Buenos Aires , Argentina |