David trezeguet arsenal
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David Trezeguet
French footballer (born 1977)
For other people with the same name, see Trezeguet.
David Sergio Trezeguet (French:[davidsɛʁʒjotʁezəɡɛ], Spanish:[daˈβiðˈseɾxjotɾeseˈɣe(t)]; born 15 October 1977) is a French former professional footballer who played as a striker.
Trezeguet began his career in Argentina with Club Atlético Platense at the age of eight, progressing through their youth system to their first team, where he made his debut in the Primera División in 1994. After one season, he transferred to Division 1 side Monaco, where he would form a striking partnership with international teammate Thierry Henry, winning the league in the 1996–97 season. He left the club in 2000, having scored 52 goals in 93 Division 1 appearances and having claimed two Division 1 championships and the 1997 Trophée des champions.
In 2000, Trezeguet signed for Serie A club Juventus for a transfer fee of £20 million. With 24 goals, he was the joint recipient of the Capocannoniere award for top scorer as his team won the 2001–02 Serie A title; Trezeguet also
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From Ligue 1 to Superstardom: David Trezeguet
Both were thumping volleys, struck off what was supposed to be his ‘wrong foot’.
David Trezeguet wrote himself into history twice. The two standout moments of a remarkable career arriving 11 years apart, forever cherished on different hemispheres.
Born in France to Argentinian parents, Trezeguet would go on to embody the best of the both worlds. A glittering career was bookended by adventures back home, as one of game’s great marksmen was schooled in South America before graduating in Ligue 1.
David’s father, Jorge, was a professional footballer who had left Buenos Aires for the north of France in the late 1970’s to enjoy a stint with FC Rouen. His two-year spell with the club coinciding with the birth of little David, the boy who would go on to achieve the biggest of goals.
Trezeguet - MonacoJorge returned home to join Chacarita Juniors in Northern Buenos Aires, providing his newborn son the opportunity to being his own footballing story by joining humble Platense as an eight-year old.
“At 15-years-old he was already 1.80m. He
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A highlight reel of David Trezeguet’s career would no doubt be dominated by his golden goal for France at Euro 2000, a strike that won the tournament for Les Bleus in extra-time and proved their home-soil World Cup victory in 1998 was no fluke.
Despite his international achievements and a plethora of major club honours, a remarkable element about Trezeguet’s career is the fact that he spent two seasons operating in the second tier, featuring for giant clubs fallen on hard times, when he could have easily found a more lucrative or prestigious option. If one’s character is forged on the anvil of adversity then the honourable Frenchman twice proved that he has that attribute in abundance.
Trezeguet was born in 1977 in Rouen, a French port city on the banks of the River Seine. His Argentine parents found themselves in Normandy as his father, Jorge, was a professional footballer in the midst of a three-year spell with FC Rouen. When his time with the modest outfit was over, when David was only two-years-old, Jorge and his family returned to Buenos Aires.
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