Alessandro Livi

Alessandro Livi
Personal information
Date of birth13 January 1982
Place of birthMilan, Italy
Height1.70 m (5 ft 7 in)
Playing positionMidfielder
Youth career
Internazionale
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
2001–2003Internazionale0(0)
2001–2002Fiorenzuola (loan)19(1)
2002–2003Meda (loan)12(0)
2003–2005A.C. Milan0(0)
2003–2005→ Legnano (loan)47(2)
2005–2006Lecco1(0)
2006–2008Rovigo13(0)
Total92(3)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).

Alessandro Livi (born 13 January 1982) is an Italian footballer.

Biography

Livi started his career at Internazionale. He played for Primavera Team (U20 Youth Team) at 2001 Torneo di Viareggio.[1] He then left for Fiorenzuola and Meda on loan.

In summer 2003, he was involved a swap deal with A.C. Milan, which Livi, Salvatore Ferraro, Giuseppe Ticli and Marco Varaldi moved to AC Milan (Livi for €1.725M, 3 others for €1.75M each); Matteo Giordano, Ronny Diuk Toma, Simone Brunelli and Matteo Deinite moved to Inter (€1.5M each). Later the deal was criticized by press as made false profit to balance sheet, as the transfer fees was paid via player exchange, but in balance sheet, the nominal value could be adjusted by two clubs. The tactics is commonly used to made the transfer fees larger in Italian football.[2][3]

Livi was loaned to Legnano for two seasons. In June 2005, AC Milan bought all the remain registration rights (with retired Brunelli moved to Inter outright for free[4]), and sent Livi to Lecco. In summer 2006, he moved to Rovigo and ended his professional career there.

In 2012 he entered in Gran Hermano 12+1 (Spain) 'Big Brother', getting the fourth place. And the winner of "La Revuelta".

References

  1. "VIAREGGIO, I NUMERI DELLA ROSA DELL'INTER" (in Italian). inter.it. 12 February 2001. Retrieved 25 January 2010.
  2. "Inter and AC Milan chiefs face new probe". ESPN Soccernet. Reuters. 17 January 2007. Retrieved 25 January 2010.
  3. "L'insulto: "Sei una plusvalenza"" (in Italian). La Gazzetta dello Sport. 20 January 2007. Retrieved 25 January 2010.
  4. FC Internazionale Milano SpA Report and Accounts on 30 June 2006 (Italian)

External links