Giovanni Savarese
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Giovanni Savarese | ||
Personal information | ||
---|---|---|
Full name | Giovanni Savarese | |
Date of birth | July 14, 1970 | |
Place of birth | Caracas, Venezuela | |
Height | 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) | |
Playing position | Forward | |
Club information | ||
Current club | retired | |
Youth clubs | ||
1987-1989 1990-1993 |
Deportivo Italia Long Island University |
|
Senior clubs1 | ||
Years | Club | App (Gls)* |
1987-1989 1994-1995 1996-1998 1998 1999 1999 2000 2000 2000 2000-2001 2001 2002-2003 2003 2004 2007 |
Deportivo Italia Long Island Rough Riders NY/NJ MetroStars Caracas FC New England Revolution Deportivo Táchira Perugia → Viterbese (loan) San Jose Clash → Swansea City (loan) Millwall Deportivo Italchacao Sassari Torres 1903 Long Island Rough Riders Long Island Academy |
? (7) 37 (27) 85 (41) ? (?) 27 (10) 5 (3) 0 (0) 1 (0) 4 (0) 31 (11) 1 (0) ? (?) 1 (0) 10 (5) |
National team | ||
Venezuela | 23 (4) | |
1 Senior club appearances and goals |
Giovanni Savarese (born July 14, 1970 in Caracas) is a former Venezuelan football (soccer) player of Italian descent who is best known for his stay with New York/New Jersey MetroStars of Major League Soccer.
[edit] Club career
After moving to the United States to play college soccer at Long Island University, Savarese joined the Long Island Rough Riders of the USISL and combined with future MLS stars Tony Meola and Chris Armas to lead the team to the 1995 USISL Championship. He was drafted by the MetroStars in the 9th round of the MLS Inaugural Player Draft and scored the team's lone goal in its first-ever game, a 2:1 loss to the Los Angeles Galaxy on April 13, 1996. Savarese would go on to score the first eight goals in team history (not counting an own goal by a Tampa Bay Mutiny player in the same game that Gio scored from a bicycle kick).
Savarese spent three seasons with the MetroStars, scoring a then-team record 41 goals and 94 points in league play and 44 goals, also a record, and 101 points in all competitions (his all-time team goalscoring record stood until 2007, when it was broken by Clint Mathis). He became a huge fan favorite, despite coming off the bench for long stretches of time. He was traded to the New England Revolution amid large fan outcry before the 1999 season and scored 10 goals for the Revs that year. He left MLS to sign for Italian club Perugia in 2000, but never played for the Serie A team as they loaned him out to Serie C1 club Viterbese.
Gio returned to MLS later in 2000, signing with the San Jose Earthquakes in mid-season but went scoreless with them the rest of the year. Savarese then departed for Europe once again, this time signing with Welsh club Swansea City of England's Football League Second Division. He would go on to score 13 goals for the Swans in all competitions.
Savarese's vagabond career continued, as he played one game for English club Millwall and then went back to his native Venezuela to play for Deportivo Italchacao. After becoming an assistant coach at St. John's University, he tried out with the MetroStars in 2003, but failed to make the team. He would play one game for Italian Serie C club Sassari Torres, and then re-sign with the Rough Riders (then in the USL Pro Soccer League) in 2004, scoring five goals with the team that first put him on the US soccer map. In 2005, he returned to the MetroStars as the head of their youth development, a position he served in with re-branded Red Bull New York through 2007.
[edit] National team
Savarese scored four goals in 23 caps for the Venezuela national team.