Zinedine Zidane biography
French football player
Soccer player
lonympics biography
Full name: Zinedine Yazid Zidane
Career
Club
App (Gls)
Cannes 61 (6)
Bordeaux 135 (28)
Juventus 151 (24)
Real
Madrid 155 (37)
502 (95)
France 108 (31)
Zinedine Yazid Zidane
born 23 June 1972
nicknamed Zizou,
French former football midfielder who played for four European clubs, including Juventus FC and Real Madrid, and was a member and later captain of the French national team in which he participated two World Cup finals, winning in 1998, and three European Championship tournaments, winning in 2000.
Having gained fame in Europe as a playmaker for Juventus, Zidane attracted worldwide attention in the 1998 World Cup final with headed goals against Brazil which won his nation its first FIFA World Cup. He also contributed to France's victory in the Euro 2000, and at the club level went on to win domestic championships in Italy and Spain with Juventus and Real Madrid respectively, and the 2001-02 UEFA Champions League with the latter, scoring the winning goal in the tournament's final. At the 2006 FIFA World Cup, he played an inspiring role in his team's advancement to the final and was named, Most Outstanding Player, of the tournament, receiving the Golden Ball. Zidane's career ended in disgrace as he was ejected in the extra time of the 2006 Final for headbutting Italian defender Marco Materazzi on the chest. The red card he received in the 2006 World Cup Final brought him to equal two negative disciplinary records: most cautions for a player in World Cup games (six), and most sending-offs (two).
Zidane was elected FIFA World Player of the Year a record equalling three times (1998, 2000, 2003), finished in the top three an additional three times (1997, 2002, 2006), and was named European Footballer of the Year in 1998. The world-record fee of €66 million ($87 million) for his transfer to Real Madrid in 2001 remains unequalled as of 2007. In 2004, he topped the UEFA Golden Jubilee Poll as the "Best European football player of the past 50 years", and was included in the FIFA 100, Pelé's list of the 125 greatest living footballers.
As originally announced on 25 April
2006, Zidane retired from professional football after the 2006 FIFA World Cup.
Date
of birth June 23, 1972 (1972-06-23)
Place of birth Marseille, France
Height
1.85 m (6 ft 1 in)
Playing position Attacking midfielder
Personal
life
Zidane was born in Marseille on 23 June, 1972 into a family of Kabyle
ethnicity, as the youngest of five children, and was raised in La Castellane,
a government sponsored housing project in the city's northern suburbs (the Quartier
Nord). His parents, Ismail and Malika were originally from the village of Aguemone,
Algeria, from where they had immigrated to France. In 1993, Zidane married Véronique
Zidane (born Lentisco), a former French dancer and model of Spanish origin whose
parents live in Rodez, Aveyron, France. They have four sons: Enzo (born 24 March
1995 and named after the Uruguyan Football player Enzo Francescoli, Zidane's childhood
hero), Luca (born 13 May 1998), Théo (born 18 May 2002), and Élyaz
(born 26 December 2005).
Name and heritage
Zidane's name is of Arabic
origin (Algerian Arabic: Zin ad-Din Yazid Zidan, Arabic: , transliteration: Zayn-u-Din
Yazid Zaydan). Zinédine translates to "the beauty of the religion"
(Arabic Zayn-u-Dinfrom zayn, "beauty", and din, "religion;
faith"). Yazid is a boy's name, sometimes spelled Yazeed (Arabic Yazid, "one
who increases, becoming greater"). Zidane is expressing an overabundance
of something the bearer of name is said to possess, such as talent (Arabic Zaydanfrom
zayd, "overabundant", and an, "two"). The nickname Zizou was
given to Zidane by coach Rolland Courbis while Zidane played for Girondins de
Bordeaux. Yaz is the nickname given to him by his brothers and used by his family
and close friends.
Allegations by members of controversial French right wing party Front National that Zidane's father was a Harki, Algerian, who fought for the French during the Algerian War of Independence, have been strongly denied by Zidane. He is said to be very proud of his family and his heritage, identifying himself as "first, a Kabyle from La Castellane, then an Algerian from Marseille, and then a Frenchman."
Club career
Early career, Cannes
and Bordeaux (1988 1996)
Zidane got his start in football in a young
age when he joined a junior team of US Saint-Henri, his local club in the La Castellane
district of Marseille. At the age of 14, Zidane left Septemes and participated
in the first year junior selection for the league championship, where Jean Varraud,
AS Cannes recruiter, took notice of him. Zidane went to Cannes for what was intended
to be a six week stay, but remained at the club for four years to play with professionals.
Showing determination of an athlete who wanted to exceed expectations, Zidane
played his first game in First Division at 17, and it was from then that football
went from an ambition to a passion. The Cannes midfielder scored his first goal
on February 8th, 1991 (he received a Clio as a promise from the Cannes President,
who promised him a car when he scored his first goal as a professional), and his
first season with the club was marked by a qualification for the UEFA Cup. Zidane's
second season with Cannes was not as promising, but on the non - professional
front he met his future wife Veronique, a Spanish dancer. Afterwards, Zidane spent
four years with FC Girondins de Bordeaux, leading them to victory in the 1995
Intertoto Cup and to a 2nd place in the 1995/96 UEFA Cup tournament. In Bordeaux,
he met Bixente Lizarazu and Christophe Dugarry, with whom he played a set of midfield
combinations to become a trademark of both Bordeaux and the 1998 French national
team. In 1996, he was transferred to Italy's Juventus F.C. for a fee of £
3 million.
Turin and Madrid (19962006)
At Juventus, Zidane was one of the top players and playmaker of Marcello Lippi's team, along with Didier Deschamps, Alessandro Del Piero, and Edgar Davids. His team won two Serie A titles and reached two consecutive UEFA Champions League finals, in 1997 and 1998, losing both, the latter to the Spanish club Real Madrid.
In 2001, Zidane was transferred to Real Madrid on a four-year contract. The transfer fee was €66m, around £45.6m, the highest in football history. His fellow Galacticos at Madrid included Raúl, Luís Figo, Roberto Carlos, and later Ronaldo and David Beckham. He scored a spectacular winning volley in a 2-1 win over the German team Bayer Leverkusen in the 2001-2002 Champions League final at Glasgow's Hampden Park.
On 7 May 2006, Zidane played a last home game for Real Madrid at the Santiago Bernabéu stadium. His team mates wore special jerseys that had ZIDANE 20012006 written on the bottom of the club logo. Real Madrid fans gave him a warm reception and kept cheering him through the game. The opposing team was Villarreal CF, and the game ended in a 3 - 3 draw, where he scored a second goal for Real Madrid. After the game, Zidane swapped jerseys with Juan Román Riquelme, the Villarreal CF and Argentinean midfielder. Zidane was given an ovation by spectators chanting "merci", which left him in tears.
International career
Zidane holds dual citizenship
of both France and Algeria, and therefore could have played for Algeria. However,
coach Abdelhamid Kermali denied him a position on the team, arguing the young
midfielder was not fast enough.
He earned his first cap with the French national football team on 17 August 1994, coming on as a substitute in the 63rd minute of a friendly match against the Czech Republic. France was behind 0-2 when Zidane came on and scored two goals for a 2-2 draw. At that time, manager Aimé Jacquet had planned to field the team around Man Utd star Éric Cantona, but after Cantona earned a year long suspension in January of 1995 (he launched a 'kung-fu' style kick against an allegedly abusive Crystal Palace fan, Matthew Simmons), Jacquet rearranged the team and positioned Zidane as playmaker. Despite criticism from fans and pundits regarding the choice of players, France made it to the semi finals of the Euro 1996, where the Czechs beat France on 6-5 on penalties, (0-0 after extra time.
In 1995 Zinedine Zidane may have become another high profile signing for Blackburn Rovers during the Jack Walker era. Kenny Dalglish wanted to sign both Zidane and Christophe Dugarry who were playing in France for FC Girondins de Bordeaux, however Walker reportedly said to Dalglish: "Why do you want to sign Zidane when we have Tim Sherwood?"
1998 World
Cup
Zidane was a member of the French national football team who won the 1998
FIFA World Cup. During France's second match of the first round, he received a
red card and a two game suspension in a 4-0 win over Saudi Arabia for stomping
on Saudi Arabia's team captain Fuad Amin. Reports from people close to Zidane
stated that Amin had provoked him verbally. This incident was much like the incident
to follow, in the 2006 FIFA World Cup. After scoring in the penalty shootout in
the quarter final against Italy, he scored his only other goals of the tournament
in the final against Brazil, both goals were headers off corner kicks during the
first half. France won the match 3-0 and obtained a first and only World Cup title.
2000 European Championship
In the Euro 2000 tournament, Zidane helped his team
reach the final with play and important goals. He scored a direct free kick in
the quarter final against Spain and a golden goal penalty in the semi final against
Portugal. France went on to win the tournament by defeating Italy in the final,
making it the first team in 26 years to hold both the World Cup and European Cup
(since Germany held both titles in 1974). Subsequently, his team was ranked 1st
in the world.
Injuries, retirement, and comeback (20022006)
A
thigh injury prevented Zidane from playing in France's first two matches of the
2002 FIFA World Cup. He rushed back from injury to play in a third game, but could
not perform at his usual level. France was eliminated in the first round without
scoring a goal, and the attempt at defending the World Cup title was unsuccessful.
In the Euro 2004 tournament, Zidane and his team started strongly, and he scored a free kick and a penalty in a come from behind victory against England in the group stage. On 12 August 2004, after France was upset in the quarter finals to eventual winners, the Greek national football team, Zidane retired from international football.
After France experienced problems in qualifying for the 2006 FIFA World Cup, Zidane announced on 3 August 2005 he was coming back to play for France and was reinstated as captain of the national team. He made his competitive return in the 3-0 FIFA World Cup qualifier win against the Faroe Islands on 3 September 2005, and France went on to win their qualifying group.[16]
On 25 April 2006, after an injury plagued season at Real Madrid, Zidane announced he would retire from pro football following the 2006 FIFA World Cup finals in Germany.
On 27 May 2006, Zidane earned a 100th cap for France in a 1 - 0 victory over Mexico at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis on the outskirts of Paris. It was his last match in the stadium, and he became the fourth French player after Marcel Desailly, Didier Deschamps and Lilian Thuram to earn a hundred national caps. He was substituted early in the second half.
2006 World Cup
In
the closing minutes of France's second match of the 2006 FIFA World Cup, against
South Korea, Zidane received a yellow card for pushing a Korean defender, his
second booking of the tournament. As a result, he was suspended from the third
and final match of the group stage. France nonetheless beat Togo 2-0, allowing
Zidane to play in the knockout stage, from which he would score or assist in every
match afterwards. He scored a wonderful goal against Spain in the 91st minute
after going down the left wing then firing the ball past Casillas. He returned
to the pitch in the Round of the 16th match against Spain. Zidane set up Patrick
Vieira for the second goal by sending a free kick into the penalty area. During
stoppage time, he scored the final goal of the match for a 3-1 victory.
The win sent France into a quarter final against defending champ Brazil, in a rematch of the 1998 final. Zidane's set piece free kick led to a goal by Thierry Henry, giving France a 1 - 0 win over the Seleção. He was named Man of the Match by FIFA's Technical Study Group. In the semi final against Portugal four days later, Zidane scored a penalty kick against Ricardo for a only goal of the match and saw France through to the final against Italy.
On 9 July, Zidane played his second World Cup final, his final game, and scored in the 7th minute from the penalty spot with a chip shot that hit the crossbar before narrowly bouncing behind the goal line. He became one of four footballers to achieve the feat of scoring in two different World Cup finals, sharing the honour with Pelé, Paul Breitner, and Vavá. This goal also made him one of the top goalscorers in World Cup final matches, with 3 goals, tied for first place with Vavá, Geoff Hurst and Pelé. He was sent off in the 110th minute, and thus did not participate in the penalty shootout which Italy won 5-3. Despite the subsequent controversy over his offence in the final, Zidane was awarded the Golden Ball as Best Player in the 2006 World Cup.
Out of retirement to Los Angeles?
On
April 16, 2007, Los Angeles Galaxy General Manager Alexi Lalas stated to the world
media that he had made an offer to sign Zidane to the MLS giants.
Seeing
red
Zidane is known to be modest, quiet and shy. He has occasionally shown
a quick temper on the pitch. On top of his World Cup send-offs ( 1998 and 2006),
he headbutted Jochen Kientz in a 2000/2001 Champions League match between Juventus
and Hamburger SV, for which he was also sent off. Overall, he was sent off 14
times in his career.
He is one of four players to have been sent off in a World Cup final, one of two players to have been sent off during two different World Cup tournaments (the other player Cameroon's Rigobert Song) and the only player ever to be sent off during extra time of a World Cup final.
Confrontation
with Marco Materazzi
In the 110th minute of the 2006 World Cup final against
Italy, Zidane was sent off for headbutting Marco Materazzi in the chest in an
off the ball incident. The two players exchanged words before Zidane began to
walk away from him. Materazzi then said something to Zidane, who turned, made
a run up and head butted Materazzi in the chest, sending him to the ground. Although
play was halted, referee Horacio Elizondo did not appear to have seen the confrontation.
According to match officials' reports, Fourth official Luis Medina Cantalejo informed
Elizondo of the incident through his earphones. After consulting his assistant
referees, Elizondo showed Zidane the red card and sent him off.
Provocation
Since
video footage suggested that Materazzi had provoked Zidane, newspapers had lip
readers try to determine what Materazzi had said, coming up with a variety of
insults. In his first, highly awaited comments since the World Cup final, the
French football star only partly explained what caused him to react in fury and
head-butt an Italian opponent: repeated harsh insults about his mother and sister.
According to sources, The Italian was repeatedly tugging Zidane's jersey. Zidane
got agitated and said to Materazzi, 'If you want my shirt so much, you can have
it after the match.' To this the Italian replied, 'I'd prefer your sister instead.'
Materazzi admitted insulting Zidane, but said that Zidane's behaviour had been
very arrogant. He stressed that the insults had been trivial. He also insisted
he did not insult Zidane's mother, who was ill at the time, claiming that "I
didn't talk about his mother, either. I lost my mother when I was 15, and even
now I still get emotional talking about her," (World Soccer Magazine, August
2006). Zidane later stated that Materazzi had seriously and repeatedly insulted
his mother and his sister and that he would "rather have taken a blow to
the face than hear that". He also apologized to viewers, particularly children
and educators, but said that he did not regret his offence because he felt that
this would condone Materazzi's actions. Two months later, in continuing to assert
that his comments had been trivial, Materazzi refused to apologize to Zidane,
but stated his desire for reconciliation. He also offered his version of events,
claiming that after he had grabbed Zidane's jersey, Zidane offered it to him sarcastically,
and that he replied to Zidane that he would prefer his sister.Materazzi later
said in an interview with World Soccer Magazine that he had taunted Zidane about
the Frenchman's sister, but did not know he had one.
Reactions
After
the final, President of France Jacques Chirac hailed Zidane as a national hero
and called him a "man of heart and conviction". Chirac later added that
he found the offence to be unacceptable, but that he understood that Zidane had
been provoked. President Abdelaziz Bouteflika of Algeria expressed his solidarity
with Zidane in a letter of support. French newspaper Le Figaro called the headbutt
"odious" and "unacceptable". The editor-in-chief of French
sports daily L'Équipe compared Zidane's greatness to Muhammad Ali's, but
added that Ali, Jesse Owens, and Pelé had never "broken the most elementary
rules of sport" as Zidane had. He questioned how Zidane could explain the
offence to "millions of children around the world", but apologized the
following day. A commentator for TIME magazine regarded the incident as a symbol
for Europe's "grappling with multi-culturalism". Zidane's sponsors announced
that they would stick with him. The incident was extensively lampooned on the
Internet and in popular culture; "Coup de Boule", a novelty song written
about the incident, reached the top of the French charts. The incident was also
parodied in the popular TV series Family Guy, in which Stewie compares Brian being
assaulted with the butt of a rifle to receiving a birthday greeting from Zidane.
FIFA
investigation
In light of Zidane's statements, FIFA opened disciplinary proceedings
to investigate the incident. FIFA also affirmed the legality of Horacio Elizondo's
decision to send Zidane off, rejecting claims that fourth official Luis Medina
Cantalejo had illegally relied on video transmission before informing Elizondo
about Zidane's misconduct. As a result of its investigation, FIFA issued a CHF5000
($4,117) fine and a two match ban against Materazzi, while Zidane received a three
match ban and a CHF7500 ($6,176) fine. According to FIFA, both players had stressed
that Materazzi's comments had been defamatory, but not of a racist nature. Since
Zidane was already retired at the time, he voluntarily served three days of community
service on FIFA's behalf, as a substitute for the three-match ban.
Charity
activities
On February 24, 2007, Zidane dazzled more than 10,000 fans at a
charity match in northern Thailand for the Keuydaroon charity for children with
HIV/AIDS. Zidane scored the first goal by chipping the ball over the goalkeeper's
head in the 36th minute before setting up a second for a Malaysian team mate.
The final score was 2-2. The event raised ?260,000 ($7,750) for charity.
On March 19, 2007, Zinedine Zidane made a first appearance on a European pitch since retiring following The World Cup 2006 final in a charity game at Marseilles Stade Velodrome. Zidane who captained one team of celebrities, played against another team of famous personalities captained by his ex- Real Madrid team mate and good friend Ronaldo .The Match Against Poverty, was played under the aegis of the UN Development Programme, and was won by Zidane and his team 6-2. Zidane who is currently a good will ambassador for UNDP.
Awards, honours, and
appointments
In 2004, Forbes magazine had named him the 42nd highest paid athlete
in the world at earnings of US$15.8 million a year. Zidane is the President for
Life for Nouvelle Vague, a club in Marseille coached by his brother Farid. In
2001, Zidane was appointed as the United Nations Development Programme Goodwill
Ambassador for the fight against poverty. Since 2000, Zidane has been consistently
voted one of the most popular French personalities in newspaper polls. He was
voted most popular in 2000, 2003, 2004 and 2006, second most popular in 2005,
and fourth most popular in 2001 and in 2002.
In November 2006, Zidane toured Bangladesh as the guest of Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus.
Sponsorships
Zidane
has had sponsorship deals with companies including Adidas, Lego, Danone, Generali,
France Télécom, Orange, Audi, Ford and Christian Dior. Sponsorship
deals like these earned him €8.6 million on top of his €6.4 million
Real Madrid salary in the 2005-06 season, making him the sixth highest paid football
player.[50]
Honours
UEFA Club Football Awards, Best Midfielder- 1997/1998
World Soccer Player of the Year - 1998
FIFA World Player of the Year -
1998, 2000, 2003
FIFA Silver World Player of the Year - 2006
FIFA Bronze
World Player of the Year - 1997, 2002
European Footballer of the Year (Ballon
d'Or) - 1998
UEFA Champions League Most Valuable Player - 2001/2002
UEFA
Golden Jubilee Poll (Best European player of the past 50 years) - 2004
FIFA
World Cup Golden Ball Award - 2006
FIFPro World XI Team -2005, 2006
Onze
d'Or -1998, 2000, 2001
UEFA European Championship Player of the Tournament
-2000
FIFA All-Star Team - 1998, 2006
UEFA BEST XI- 2001, 2002, 2003
With
France
FIFA World Cup
Winner - 1998
Runner Up - 2006
Appearances
- 1998, 2002, 2006
European Championship
Winner - 2000
Appearances:
- 1996, 2000, 2004
With Girondins de Bordeaux
UEFA Cup runners up -
1995/1996
UEFA Intertoto Cup - 1995
With Juventus F.C.:
Italian
League - Serie A champions (scudetto): 1996/1997, 1997/1998
European Super
Cup - 1996
Intercontinental Cup - 1996
Italian Super Cup - 1997
UEFA
Champions League runners up - 1996/1997, 1997/1998
With Real Madrid:
Spanish
Super Cup - 2001, 2003
UEFA Champions League - 2001/2002
Intercontinental
Cup - 2002
Spanish League - La Liga champions - 2002/2003
European Super
Cup - 2002
Personal honours:
Chevalier (Knight) of the Légion
d'honneur - since 1998
Torchbearer for the 2004 Summer Olympics
Prince
of Asturias Awards nomination in the Sports category, 2006.
Misspell
Zinedin
Zidan Zinedene
Zdane Zinnedine
Zdan
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