Luca Toni | ||
Personal information | ||
---|---|---|
Full name | Luca Toni Varchetta Delle Cave | |
Date of birth | 26 May 1977 | |
Place of birth | Pavullo nel Frignano, Italy | |
Height | 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in) | |
Playing position | Striker | |
Club information | ||
Current club | Bayern Munich | |
Number | 9 | |
Youth clubs | ||
1990–1994 | Modena | |
Senior clubs1 | ||
Years | Club | App (Gls)* |
1994–1996 1996–1997 1997–1998 1998–1999 1999–2000 2000–2001 2001–2003 2003–2005 2005–2007 2007– |
Modena Empoli Fiorenzuola Lodigiani Treviso Vicenza Brescia Palermo Fiorentina Bayern Munich |
3 (1) 26 (2) 31 (15) 35 (15) 31 (9) 44 (15) 80 (50) 67 (47) 43 (32) |
32 (7)
National team2 | ||
2004– | Italy | 42 (16) |
1 Senior club appearances and goals |
Luca Toni Varchetta Delle Cave, Cavaliere Ufficiale OMRI[1] (born 26 May 1977 in Pavullo nel Frignano, Modena) is an Italian World Cup-winning footballer who plays for German Bundesliga club FC Bayern Munich. He has played for ten clubs to date.
Contents |
Toni started his professional career at Modena. This was followed by a number of seasons spent around Serie B and Serie C1 with teams such as Empoli, Fiorenzuola and Lodigiani. After a Serie B season with Treviso in 1999, he moved to Vicenza Calcio, playing in Serie A for the first time. He then moved to Brescia Calcio, playing for two seasons alongside Roberto Baggio.
In 2003 he agreed to join ambitious Serie B club Palermo, being one of the main factors behind the winning team campaign that brought the rosanero back to Serie A after over 30 years, thanks to a record 30 goals scored during the season. He consequently gained his first cap for the Italian national team in a friendly match 18 August 2004 lost 2–0 to Iceland in Reykjavík which also marked Marcello Lippi's debut at the helm of the azzurri.[2]
In the following season, Toni confirmed his prolificity by scoring an impressive 20 goals in Palermo's first Serie A campaign, leading the Sicilian club to a historical first qualification to the UEFA Cup.
In July 2005, Luca Toni was transferred by Palermo owner, Maurizio Zamparini, to Fiorentina for €10 million in a very controversial move which also caused a massive breakup between the player and the team supporters.
He helped Fiorentina qualify for the UEFA Champions League when his team ended the 2005–06 season with a fourth place finish, although this was later revoked (with a massive 15-point deduction assigned for 2006–07) due to Fiorentina's involvement in the Calciopoli match-fixing scandal.
On 27 May 2006, Toni scored his 31st goal of the season and in doing so, secured the 2005-06 Capocannonieri. Toni also became the first player to score 30 goals or more in Serie A since the 1958–59 season, and the first time since 1933–34 an Italian has done such a feat. Despite only finishing third top scorer in European football with 31 goals in Serie A with Fiorentina, behind Klaas-Jan Huntelaar of Ajax Amsterdam and Kris Boyd of Rangers and Kilmarnock, Toni collected the European Golden Boot, due to multipliers based on the quality of the league. Toni's goal tally eclipsed the previous club record of 26 in one season in the top flight, held by Fiorentina legends Gabriel Batistuta and Kurt Hamrin.
Toni announced he would stay loyal to Fiorentina and stay at Florence for at least another season despite Fiorentina's Calciopoli penalty. He scored 16 goals for Fiorentina, helping them to secure a UEFA Cup spot. However, his season was short lived after suffering a metatarsal injury.
On 30 May 2007, Bayern Munich chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge confirmed that Toni had signed a four year contract with the club after agreeing to a deal worth €11 million with Fiorentina. On 7 June Toni was presented at a Bayern Munich press conference along with fellow new signing Franck Ribéry.[3] Toni was given the jersey number nine.
Toni scored four goals in a 19 December 6–0 home win against Aris Thessaloniki to help Bayern win their UEFA Cup group. On 17 February 2008, he scored his first Bundesliga hat-trick (a "perfect hat-trick", with a goal with each foot and a header) against Hannover 96. Bayern won the away fixture 3-0.
In a quarter-final second leg match in the UEFA Cup, Toni scored two dramatic goals on 115th and 120th minutes of extra time, in a game which finished 3-3 and lifted Bayern Munich past Getafe CF on away goals. Eventually Bayern lost to Zenit Saint Petersburg in the semi final. At the UEFA Cup 2007-08 he shared the first place with Pavel Pogrebnyak from Zenit Saint Petersburg at the top scorers list with 10 goals.
He scored two goals in the German Cup final against Borussia Dortmund in a 2-1 win, his second goal was the winner in extra time to give Bayern Munich another cup. Toni finished as top scorer in the 2007–08 Bundesliga season with 24 goals. Overall, Toni finished the season with 39 goals and 12 assists in 46 matches.
Toni made his debut for the Italian national team as a substitute on 18 August 2004 in a friendly match against Iceland. He scored his first international goal in a World Cup Qualifying match against Norway on 4 September 2004.
On 17 November , Toni made his international start in a friendly match against Finland. On 11 June 2005, he captained the Italian squad for the first time in his career in a friendly match against Ecuador because of the absence of current captain Fabio Cannavaro and other experienced players. On 7 September, Toni scored his first international hat-trick in a 4–1 victory against Belarus in a 2006 World Cup qualifying match.
Toni was selected to Italy's 2006 World Cup squad, and scored two goals in the quarter-finals against Ukraine on 30 June, his only goals of the tournament. In the final against France, he hit the crossbar with a powerful header and later netted another header although the goal was disallowed as the attempt was ruled offside.
Toni scored two goals in Italy's 2–0 win over Scotland in a Euro 2008 qualifier. Due to the aforementioned foot surgery, he missed Italy's next two qualifiers against the Faroe Islands and Lithuania. He returned to the qualification games against Georgia, and assisted Fabio Grosso, who scored the final result (2–0). On 17 November 2007, Toni struck in the first minute of a 2–1 qualifier win over Scotland at Hampden Park, which secured Italy's place at the final stages. Four days later, he scored the second goal against the Faroe Islands, as Italy closed with a 3–1 win.
He was called up to the Italian Squad for Euro 2008, but his form in the tournament was disappointing, with his only goal against Romania being disallowed for offside. Toni's main contribution for the team was winning a penalty kick against France, which ended 2-0. Italy then bowed out of the tournament on penalty kicks to Spain in the quarter-final.
Despite the Euro 2008 disappointment, Toni has been called up by coach Marcello Lippi for Italy's first two 2010 World Cup qualifers.
In a November International Friendly match against Greece, Toni scored a header to come from behind and level the score at 1-1, the same score the game later finished in.
|
|
Persondata | |
---|---|
NAME | Varchetta, Luca Toni |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Toni, Luca |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | footballer |
DATE OF BIRTH | 1977-5-26 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Pavullo nel Frignano, Italy |
DATE OF DEATH | |
PLACE OF DEATH |