[人物] Classic Football Players-R.Baggio
這是FIFA官網的一個專題,專門在介紹一些經典球星
(http://0rz.tw/X5UFX)
Roberto BAGGIO
Divine by moniker, divine by magic
Few players have contributed as much to the Italian and world game as
Roberto Baggio. Sublimely gifted and fiercely driven with it,
Il Divino Codino (The Divine Ponytail) enjoyed an exceptional career on
both the domestic and international stage, a career he came agonisingly
close to capping with the ultimate prize.
Troubled throughout his playing days by recurring problems with his right
knee, Baggio lacked nothing in courage in attempting to overcome his injury
curse, and made up for a relative lack of stature with flawless technique
and an instinctive ability to read the game.
Though he spent his entire club career in Italy, starting with Vicenza
in the third tier in 1982 and ending with Brescia - 204 Serie A goals
later - in 2004, Baggio had legions of admirers around the world,
among them current UEFA President Michel Platini, one of his predecessors
as a lethal creator and taker of chances for Juventus. "Baggio is neither
a typical No9, nor a typical No10," explained the Frenchman. "He’s more
of a No9 and a half."
A country at his feet
Born in the small town of Caldogno, near Venice, Baggio learned his trade
in the youth ranks at Vicenza, scoring a hugely impressive 110 goals in
120 matches to earn a place in the first team at the age of only 15.
In the final game of the 1984/85 season, against a Rimini side coached
by one Arrigo Sacchi, disaster struck when he suffered a serious injury
to his right knee. It caused the first of many lay-offs that would dog
him for the rest of his career.
Plunged into a deep spiritual crisis during those first 18 months
on the sidelines, he decided to convert to Buddhism. “It helps me gather
my thoughts better,” said Baggio, who would prepare for every game
with a bout of solitary meditation.
Baggio had signed for Fiorentina prior to picking up that initial injury,
and would always be grateful that the club did not go back on the deal.
He went on to score 39 goals in 94 appearances for La Viola over five
seasons before leaving in controversial circumstances for Juventus.
Such was his depth of feeling for the Florence club and its passionate
fans, however, that when he returned with Juve for a league game in
April 1991, he refused to take a penalty and turned to the stands to
salute the tifosi who once idolised him.
It was in Turin that he reached the pinnacle of his club career,
inspiring I Bianconeri to the Serie A, Coppa Italia and UEFA Cup
trophies in a five-year stay in which he also made the captain's armband
his own, collected the FIFA World Player award and scored 78 goals.
Baggio is neither a typical No9, nor a typical No10. He's more of a No9
and a half.
Michel Platini
However, misfortune would befall him once more after the 1994 FIFA
World Cup USA™, Baggio succumbing to his injury problems yet again
in scoring a wonder goal against Padova. Out of action for five months,
he looked on helplessly as new Juve coach Marcello Lippi promoted rising
star Alessandro del Piero into the first team at his expense.
Sold on to rivals AC Milan in 1995, to the immense displeasure of
the Juventus fans, Baggio dovetailed to perfection with the likes of
George Weah and Dejan Savicevic to win the Scudetto for the second year
in a row. While the goals kept on coming and his technique remained as
flawless as ever, the playmaking genius continued to battle against
his unreliable right knee and the lack of understanding of his coaches.
“There is no place for poets in modern football,” observed Oscar Tabarez
when Baggio complained about a lack of first-team action at the start of
the 1996/97 season.
Leaving Milan behind, he enjoyed a fruitful, season-long stay at Bologna,
scoring a career-high 23 goals for I Rossoblu in 1997/98, before returning
to the San Siro for a stint with Inter Milan. In 2000 he made one last move,
seeing out his last four years as a professional footballer with Brescia,
helping the unfashionable outfit maintain their top-flight status with
a handsome return of 45 goals in 95 games. Making his final league
appearance in the fitting surroundings of the San Siro against AC Milan
on 16 May 2004, he was substituted five minutes from time and left the
field to a rousing standing ovation.
Penalty curse
Like some of his club relationships, Baggio’s long-running liaison with
the national team was a love-hate affair. After making his debut for
La Nazionale in a 1-0 defeat of the Netherlands in November 1988, he
scored the first of many trademark free-kicks six months later against
Uruguay.
Sitting out the hosts’ opening two matches at the 1990 FIFA World Cup
Italy™, he was given a starting place for the third and final group
game against Czechoslovakia. He made an instant impact, slaloming past
a string of Czech defenders to score the goal of the tournament and
one of the finest in FIFA World Cup history.
Disappointment was to follow in the semi-final against Argentina, with
Baggio once again relegated to the bench and only coming on 17 minutes
from time in a match Gli Azzurri lost on penalties. “[Italy coach Azeglio]
Vicini said to me that I looked tired but I was only 23,” he later
recalled. “I’d have given anything to have started that match.”
Some consolation would come his way when he scored in Italy’s 2-1 win
over England in the match for third place.
The man with the most distinctive ponytail in football reached the peak
of his art in the USA four years later, his goals against Nigeria and
Spain and a match-winning brace against Bulgaria sweeping the Italians
into the Final against Brazil. Baggio’s injury problems were resurfacing
once more, however. He needed a painkilling injection prior to the game
and failed to shine on a gruelling afternoon in the heat of Pasadena.
After two hours of largely uneventful football, he lined up to take Italy's
fifth spot-kick in the penalty decider, with the Brazilians 3-2 ahead.
A fatigued Baggio could not afford to miss, but miss he did, sending
the ball soaring over the crossbar. “I knew what I had to do and my
concentration was perfect,” he said afterwards. “But I was so tired
that I tried to hit the ball too hard.”
He would enjoy better luck from the spot in a 2-2 draw with Chile in
the group phase at France 1998, having earlier set up Christian Vieri
for the opening goal. Yet, in a repeat of the Sandro Mazzola-Gianni Rivera
selection conundrum that undermined Italy’s hopes at Mexico 1970,
Nazionale coach Cesare Maldini decided Baggio and Alessandro del Piero
were incompatible on the pitch and opted to rotate them instead.
Baggio nevertheless scored his ninth FIFA World Cup goal against Austria
and went on to convert his penalty in the quarter-final shoot-out against
hosts France. Sadly for him, team-mates Demetrio Albertini and
Luigi di Biagio fared less well as Italy’s spot-kick curse continued.
I knew what I had to do and my concentration was perfect. But I was so tired
that I tried to hit the ball too hard.
Roberto Baggio on his penalty shoot-out miss in the USA 1994 Final
On the back of his prolific form with Brescia, Italy’s comeback king
almost earned a fourth FIFA World Cup appearance at Korea/Japan 2002,
only for coach Giovanni Trapattoni to ignore public opinion and exclude
him from the squad. In Baggio's absence, the three-time global kings
bowed out to Korea Republic in the Round of 16.
Appointed FAO (Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations)
Goodwill Ambassador following his retirement, the Italian legend now
travels the world in support of a number of humanitarian causes.
It was in recognition of this work that Baggio travelled to Hiroshima
in November 2010 to collect the prestigious World Peace Award, presented
by the Nobel Peace Prize laureates. “My personal and professional
achievements pale in comparison to this award,” he said at the time.
Nevertheless, his links with the game he graced remain strong,
and following La Nazionale’s early exit at South Africa 2010 he accepted
the Italian Football Association’s invitation to become their
Technical Director, a post with a special emphasis on the development
of young players.
For once, the whole of the Italian footballing community was in agreement
with Baggio’s appointment, an indication of the high esteem in which
this diminutive giant of the game is still held.
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實在太長了,恕我無力翻譯 XD
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