Bixente Lizarazu

Bixente Lizarazu
Bixente Lizarazu in Australia for Audi.jpg
Personal information
Date of birth December 9, 1969 (1969-12-09) (age 39)
Place of birth    Saint-Jean-de-Luz (Pays Basque), France
Height 1.69 m (5 ft 6+12 in)
Playing position Left-Back
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
1988-1996
1996-1997
1997-2004
2004-2005
2005-2006
Girondins de Bordeaux
Athletic Bilbao
Bayern Munich
Olympique Marseille
Bayern Munich
Total
272 (23)
016 0(0)
205 0(9)
014 0(0)
035 0(0)
542 (32)   
National team
1992-2004 France 097 0(2)

1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only.
* Appearances (Goals)

Bixente Lizarazu (Basque: /bi'ʃente lisa'rasu/; French: /bi'gzɑ̃t lizaʀa'zy/) (born Vicente Lizarazu on December 9, 1969 in Saint-Jean-de-Luz, Pays Basque, France) is a former football left defender for Bayern Munich and three other professional teams, as well as the French national team. Being such a successful French player he is now a footballing legend in France and is widely considered as one of the greatest left backs of all time.

Contents

Career

Lizarazu (also known as "Liza"), a Basque, has been capped 97 times for France (for the first time on November 14 1992 against Finland), scoring two goals, and helped them win the 1998 FIFA World Cup and Euro 2000. He has won six Bundesliga championships with Bayern Munich, as well as five German Cups, the Champions League, and the Intercontinental Cup. During his second spell with Bayern Munich in 2005 and 2006, Lizarazu wore the shirt number 69. Clarifying that it wasn't a lewd gesture, he said this was because he was born in 1969, his height is 1.69m and he weighed 69kg.[1]

Before moving to Germany, Lizarazu played for Girondins de Bordeaux, where he played in the 1996 UEFA Cup final against Bayern; and Athletic Bilbao, where he was the club's first non-Spanish basque player since World War I. He said he would leave Bayern in the 2004 offseason, and eventually signed with Olympique Marseille. However, six months after signing with Marseille, he returned to Bayern Munich in January 2005.

He has been threatened by the Basque terrorist group, ETA, alleged for not giving money to the organization, what the terrorists called the "revolutionary tax". He also has a stadium named after him in the French Basque country, the "Stade Bixente-Lizarazu" (former "Belcenia Stadium"). His fiancée was French singer and actress Elsa Lunghini for seven years and he has a son named Tximista with his ex-wife Stéphanie.

Lizarazu announced his retirement from football on April 30, 2006 four days after former teammate Zinedine Zidane. He ends his career with the distinction of the most 'titled' French player in history.

Career statistics

[2]

Club performance League Cup League Cup Continental Total
Season Club League Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
France League Coupe de France Coupe de la Ligue Europe Total
1988-89 Girondins de Bordeaux Division 1 16 0
1989-90 38 2
1990-91 35 2
1991-92 33 0
1992-93 35 4
1993-94 32 9
1994-95 32 2
1995-96 23 3
Spain League Copa del Rey Copa de la Liga Europe Total
1996-97 Athletic Bilbao La Liga 16 0
Germany League DFB-Pokal Premiere Ligapokal Europe Total
1997-98 Bayern Munich Bundesliga 11 0
1998-99 18 2
1999-00 22 1
2000-01 15 0
2001-02 25 1
2002-03 26 2
2003-04 26 1
France League Coupe de France Coupe de la Ligue Europe Total
2004-05 Olympique Marseille Ligue 1 14 0
Germany League DFB-Pokal Premiere Ligapokal Europe Total
2004-05 Bayern Munich Bundesliga 13 0
2005-06 18 0
Total France 258 22
Spain 16 0
Germany 174 7
Career Total 448 29

Honours

Record

After winning the Intercontinental Cup in late 2001 with Bayern, Lizarazu was European Champion and World Champion on both club-level (with Bayern) and national level (with the national squad). This was the first time in history one player held such a record.

References

  1. Bandini, Paolo; Bass, Ian and Dart, James (2006-09-27). "Have any footballers ever admitted moving for the money?", The Guardian. Retrieved on 2006-09-27. 
  2. LIZARAZU (Bixente Lizarazu) - Retired football (soccer) player from France

External links