Pantaloncini firmati a mano di ZLATAN IBRAHIMOVIC, MAN UTD FC, FOOTBALL autografo

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A hand signed ZLATAN IBRAHIMOVIC Man Utd shorts



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Zlatan Ibrahimović (Swedish pronunciation: [ ˈ sl ǎː tan ɪ bra ˈ h ǐː m ʊ v ɪ t ɕ ] , Bosnian pronunciation: [zl ǎ tan ibrax ǐː mo ʋ it ɕ ] ; born 3 October 1981) is a Swedish professional footballer who plays as a striker for Serie A club AC Milan and the Sweden national team. Ibrahimović is renowned for his acrobatic strikes and volleys,

powerful long-range shots, and excellent technique and ball control. He

is regarded as one of the greatest strikers of all time and is one of

the most decorated active footballers in the world,[a] having won 34 trophies in his career. He has scored over 570 career goals, including more than 500 club goals, and has scored in each of the last four decades.


Ibrahimović began his career at Malmö FF in 1999, and signed for Ajax

two years later, where he gained a reputation as one of the most

promising forwards in Europe. He departed two years later to sign for Juventus before joining domestic rivals Inter Milan in 2006, where he won three consecutive Serie A titles. In the summer of 2009, he moved to Barcelona in one of the world's most expensive transfers. After just one season, he returned to Italy having signed for Inter's rival Milan. With them, he won the Serie A title in his debut season. In 2012, Ibrahimović joined Paris Saint-Germain, leading them to their first Ligue 1 title in 19 years and soon establishing himself as a leading figure in their dominance of French football. During his four-season stay in France, he won four consecutive Ligue 1 titles, was the top scorer in Ligue 1 for three seasons and became PSG's all-time leading goalscorer at the time. In 2016, he joined Manchester United on a free transfer and won his first European honour in his debut season. Ibrahimović joined American club LA Galaxy in 2018 and rejoined Milan in 2020, winning his fifth Serie A title in 2022.


Ibrahimović is one of eleven players to have made 100 or more appearances for the Swedish national team, over a 20-year international career. He is the country's all-time leading goalscorer with 62 goals. He represented Sweden at the 2002 and 2006 FIFA World Cups, as well as the 2004, 2008, 2012, and 2016 UEFA European Championships. He has been awarded Guldbollen (the Golden Ball),

given to the Swedish player of the year, a record 12 times, including

10 consecutive times from 2007 to 2016. Ibrahimović's 35-yard bicycle kick goal for Sweden against England won the 2013 FIFA Puskás Award, and is often considered one of the best goals of all time.


Ibrahimović was named in the FIFA FIFPro World XI in 2013 and the UEFA Team of the Year in 2007, 2009, 2013 and 2014. He finished at a peak of fourth for the FIFA Ballon d'Or in 2013.[5] In 2015, UEFA included him as one of the best players that have not won the UEFA Champions League,[6] while in 2019, FourFourTwo magazine named him the third-greatest player never to win the competition.[7] In December 2014, Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter ranked him the second-greatest Swedish sportsperson ever, after tennis player Björn Borg.[8] Off the field, Ibrahimović is known for his brash persona and outspoken comments, in addition to referring to himself in the third person.




Early life



"I put up photos of Ronaldo

in my room. Ronaldo was the man. He was what I wanted to be, a guy who

made a difference. [...] Ronaldo was my hero and I studied him online

and tried to take in his movements, and I thought I was getting to be an

awesome player."




— From his autobiography, I Am Zlatan Ibrahimović.[9]




Ibrahimović was born in Malmö, Sweden, on 3 October 1981.[10] He was born to a Muslim Bosniak father, Šefik Ibrahimović, who emigrated to Sweden in 1977,[11] and a Catholic Croat mother, Jurka Gravić, who also emigrated to Sweden where the couple first met.[12] Ibrahimović identifies with his mother's faith and considers himself a devout Catholic Christian.[13] He began playing football at the age of six, after receiving a pair of football boots. He alternated between FBK Balkan, a Malmö club founded by Yugoslav immigrants, Malmö BI and briefly BK Flagg football clubs.[14][15]


As a child, his mother sometimes hit him on the head with a

wooden spoon, which would often break. After she was arrested for

handling stolen goods, social services intervened. Concerned with his

divorced mother's ability to cope with five children, one of whom,

Ibrahimović's half-sister, had a drug problem, at age nine he was sent

to live with his father.[12]

With food scarce at his father's home where the fridge was packed with

beer, Ibrahimović often went hungry so he would run to his mother's for

dinner. He also shoplifted and stole bikes.[12] On the tough upbringing that shaped his character, author David Lagercrantz, who co-wrote I Am Zlatan, states:



Complex is the best word to

describe Zlatan. On the one hand he's a strong, warrior type who knew he

had to be very tough to survive. So he takes on fights all the time

because he's always had to. But another part of him is vulnerable. He's a

guy wounded by his upbringing, who uses all that to create strength for

himself. In his position, 99 guys out of 100 would have gone under, but

he used his anger to make himself better. He told me, ‘David, I need to

be angry to play well’. When he played with middle-class kids he felt

inferior because he wore the wrong clothes and had no money, so he said

to himself ‘One day I'll show them!’ That became his motivation.[12]


While in his early teens, Ibrahimović was a regular for his hometown club Malmö FF.[14] At the age of 15, he was close to quitting his football career, in favour of working at the docks in Malmö, but his manager convinced him to continue playing.[16] As a boy, his hero was Brazilian forward Ronaldo.[17] An avid viewer of Italian football, another player he admired was prolific striker Gabriel Batistuta – a player with similar characteristics to himself.[18]



Club career

Malmö FF



"Arsène Wenger asked me to have a trial with Arsenal when I was 17. I turned it down. Zlatan doesn't do auditions."




— Ibrahimović on turning down Arsenal[19]




Ibrahimović signed his first contract with Malmö in 1996, and moved up to the senior side for the 1999 season of Allsvenskan,

Sweden's top-flight league. That season, Malmö finished 13th in the

league and were relegated to the second division, but returned to the

top flight the next season. Arsène Wenger unsuccessfully tried to persuade Ibrahimović to join Arsenal, while Leo Beenhakker (the technical director of Ajax) also expressed interest in the player after watching him in a friendly against Norwegian side Moss FK.[20]

On 22 March 2001, a deal between Ajax and Malmö regarding Ibrahimović's

transfer to Amsterdam was announced, and in July, Ibrahimović

officially joined Ajax for 80 million Swedish kronor (€8.7 million).[21]



Ajax

Ibrahimović received little playing time under manager Co Adriaanse, but when Adriaanse was sacked on 29 November 2001, new coach Ronald Koeman

inserted Ibrahimović into the starting lineup as Ajax won the 2001–02

Eredivisie title. The next season, Ibrahimović scored twice in a 2–1

victory over French champions Lyon in his Champions League debut on 17 September 2002. He scored five Champions League goals overall as Ajax fell to Milan in the quarter-finals.[22][23]


Ibrahimović's profile rose when he scored an individual goal against NAC Breda on 22 August 2004 – a slaloming run past five opposition players which the commentator compared with Diego Maradona and Zinedine Zidane – that was eventually voted the Goal of the Year by Eurosport viewers.[24] On 18 August 2004, during an international match against the Netherlands, Ibrahimović injured Ajax teammate Rafael van der Vaart, who later accused Ibrahimović of hurting him intentionally.[25]



Juventus

Ibrahimović moved from Ajax to Juventus for €16 million.[26] He was promptly inserted into the starting eleven due in part to top scorer David Trezeguet's injury problems, and scored 16 goals. The club finished top of the Serie A, and in the Champions League they reached the quarter-finals before being knocked out by eventual champions Liverpool.[27] Near the end of the season, Juventus reportedly rejected a €70 million bid for him from Real Madrid, which was later revealed to be a publicity stunt initiated by Ibrahimović's agent, Mino Raiola, in order to increase his market value.[24] At the end of his first season in Italy Ibrahimović was named Serie A Foreign Footballer of the Year, and in November 2005, he was awarded the Guldbollen, a prize awarded to the best Swedish footballer of the year.[28][29]


The following season was poor compared to his first season; his

role in Juventus' attack changed, as he became less of a goalscorer and

moved more to the sidelines, taking much part in the build-up play,

especially as a target player, and his assist

numbers increased. In the 2005–06 season, Juventus fans often got

frustrated with him due to his anonymous presence in certain important

games such as the Champions League defeat to Arsenal. Juventus were

stripped of their last two Scudetti as part of the verdict from the Calciopoli scandal, and were relegated to Serie B.

The new staff tried to persuade Ibrahimović and other top players to

stay with Juventus, but the player and his agent were adamant to move

on, with Raiola threatening legal action in order to extricate

Ibrahimović from his contract.[30]



Inter Milan

Ibrahimović playing for Inter Milan in 2007

On 10 August 2006, Ibrahimović completed a €24.8 million move to Inter Milan, signing a four-year-deal.[31] Ibrahimović said that he had supported Inter when he was young.[32]


Ibrahimović made his debut for Inter on 26 August 2006 against Roma in the 2006 Supercoppa Italiana, playing the full 90 minutes as Inter won after extra time.[33] He scored in his Serie A debut against Fiorentina on 9 September as Inter commenced the league with a 3–2 win at Stadio Artemio Franchi.[34] Three days later, in his first Champions League appearance for Inter, Ibrahimović was not able to avoid the 1–0 away defeat to Sporting CP as Inter began their European campaign in the wrong way.[35] Later, on 28 October, in his first "Derby della Madonnina"

match against cross-town rivals Milan, Ibrahimović scored the third

Inter goal of the match and also his third league goal of the season in a

4–3 thriller win.[36] In his first season at the club, Ibrahimović top scored for Inter in Serie A with 15 goals, as the team won the Scudetto with a record 97 points.[37]


Ibrahimović played his 100th Serie A match on 16 September 2007 at the San Siro against Catania, where he appeared as a second-half substitute for Hernán Crespo in an eventual 2–0 win.[38] In 2007, he signed a new contract until June 2013;[39] it was reported that this contract had made him the world's highest paid footballer.[40] On 18 May 2008, Ibrahimović scored both goals in a 2–0 defeat of Parma on the final day of the 2007–08 Serie A season to give Inter a second consecutive Scudetto.[41] Overall, he scored 17 goals in 26 league matches, and was named both Serie A Footballer of the Year and Serie A Foreign Footballer of the Year.[41]



Ibrahimović and Mario Balotelli playing against Palermo in 2009

Ibrahimović started his third Inter season by winning the Supercoppa Italiana against Roma. After the regular and extra time had finished in a draw, the match went to a penalty shootout where he successfully converted his penalty attempt.[42] He scored his team's only goal in the 2008–09 Serie A opening match against Sampdoria, which finished in a 1–1 draw.[43] On 4 October, during the match against Bologna at home which Inter won 2–1, Ibrahimović scored a sensational goal, stunning Francesco Antonioli with an irresistible backheeled shot from Adriano's left-wing cross. The goal was later voted Goal of the Year in Serie A.[44]

On 19 October 2008, Ibrahimović continued with his solid performances

by scoring twice in an impressive 4–0 win at Roma, taking his tally up

to five league goals.[45] He then scored another double in the Matchday 12 win against Palermo to help Inter take the lead in the Serie A table by one point.[46] In the next fixture, Ibrahimović provided the assist on the only goal in the Derby d'Italia match against Juventus at home, helping Inter to extend their league lead.[47]


Ibrahimović ended the 2008–09 Serie A season as the league's top goalscorer with 25 goals,[48]

helping Inter to another league title. He was also named both

Footballer of the Year and Foreign Footballer of the Year for the second

consecutive season.[49]



Barcelona

2009–10 season



"I was probably with the best team in history. Their football was

beautiful. When I prepared for a game, I knew I had won even before we

started. I looked at the players around me and saw Messi and Iniesta and Xavi and Puyol and Piqué and Dani Alves and Busquets. Unbelievable! It was football from another planet and I loved it. It was technically perfect."




"Zlatan Ibrahimović, the Guardian". TheGuardian.com. 6 October 2014. Interview, 6 October 2014




After Inter teammate Maxwell completed his transfer to Barcelona, Barça president Joan Laporta

confirmed that there was an agreement in principle between Barcelona

and Inter for Ibrahimović to join the club in exchange for striker Samuel Eto'o, plus a reported fee of £59 million.[50][51] Ibrahimović left Inter during their United States summer tour in the World Football Challenge on 23 July 2009 for negotiations with Barcelona, with his last match for Inter being against Chelsea.[52] After Inter agreed terms with Eto'o[53] and Barcelona with Ibrahimović,[54] Barcelona announced Ibrahimović would arrive on 26 July 2009 and undergo a medical test on 27 July 2009.[55]



Ibrahimović playing for Barcelona in a match against Sporting Gijón in 2009

Ibrahimović passed his medical and was presented to a crowd of over 60,000 at Camp Nou.[56] He signed a five-year contract,[57] for €46 million[57] and the exchange of Eto'o (valued at €20 million) and loan of Alexander Hleb (with an option to purchase for a €10 million fee),[57] with a €250 million release clause,[57]

making Ibrahimović worth €66 million. The Hleb deal, however,

collapsed. Eventually, Ibrahimović cost Barcelona €69.884 million, which

included other fees.[58]:   173   As per the Inter book, the fee was €69.5 million,[59][60][61]

but part of the Inter fee (max 5% according to FIFA regulation) were

deducted and distributed by Barcelona to youth and young professional

clubs of Ibrahimović: Malmö FF and AFC Ajax as solidarity contribution.[58][61]



Ibrahimović preparing to strike a free kick for Barcelona in the UEFA Champions League with Xavi (right)

Ibrahimović started the 2009–10 season with his competitive debut for Barcelona on 23 August 2009 by assisting a Lionel Messi goal, leading them to the Supercopa de España, beating Athletic Bilbao 5–1 on aggregate. In his next competitive match, Barcelona won the 2009 UEFA Super Cup with a 1–0 win over Shakhtar Donetsk.[62] In his third appearance, he scored his first goal in Barcelona's La Liga season opener against Sporting Gijón

in a 3–0 win. Ibrahimović scored in his next four games, thus setting a

team record as the only player ever to score in his first five league

matches.[63]


On 20 October, he scored his first Champions League goal for Barcelona in a group stage match against Rubin Kazan. Five days later, he scored twice in a 6–1 thrashing of Real Zaragoza, giving him a league-leading seven goals in seven league matches while sending Barcelona to the top of the table.[64]

On 7 November, however, he suffered a thigh injury that kept him out

for three weeks. He returned to action in week 12 of the season against

Real Madrid as a second-half substitute for Thierry Henry, and scored his eighth goal of the campaign.[65] He finished with 11 goals and 4 assists in Barcelona's first 15 league matches. Barcelona capped off 2009 by winning the 2009 FIFA Club World Cup against Estudiantes on 19 December 2009.[66]



Ibrahimović signing autographs for fans in 2010

Ibrahimović scored Barcelona's only goal in the 2009–10 Copa del Rey first leg match of the round of 16 in a 2–1 loss to Sevilla on 5 January 2010. On 20 January, he was selected in the 2009 UEFA Team of the Year.[67] His first goal of 2010 came on 14 February against Atlético Madrid. In his next appearance, Ibrahimović scored against Stuttgart in the first leg of their UEFA Champions League knockout stage fixture. He was sent off on 6 March in a league match against Almería, which Barcelona appealed to no avail, and he was suspended for one game.[68] A calf strain during warmups before the next La Liga match following his return from suspension against Athletic Bilbao ruled Ibrahimović out of the second leg 4–1 victory over Arsenal, in which he scored two goals away from home, the return leg of El Clásico against Madrid (which Barcelona won 2–0),[69] and the next league match against Deportivo de La Coruña. He made his return as a substitute in the 82nd minute in a 0–0 away draw against Espanyol on 17 April.[70]





"You bought a Ferrari, but you drive it like a Fiat."




— Ibrahimović disparages Guardiola on how he was used at Barcelona.[71]




Following Barcelona's semi-final defeat to Inter Milan in the Champions League, Ibrahimović spoke of how he confronted his coach Pep Guardiola

in the changing room. "I yelled: 'You haven't got any balls!' and worse

than that I added: 'You can go to hell!' I completely lost it, and you

might have expected Guardiola to say a few words in response, but he's a

spineless coward. He just [...] left, never to mention it again, not a

word."[71] He scored his final goal for Barcelona in the 2010 Supercopa de España on 14 August in a 3–1 defeat against Sevilla, and on 25 August, he played his last match for the club against Milan for the Joan Gamper Trophy,

after which he claimed to the media that his relationship with

Guardiola had started deteriorating and that Guardiola had not spoken to

him since February.[72] In his autobiography I Am Zlatan,

he states, "'It started well but then Messi started to talk. He wanted

to play in the middle, not on the wing, so the system changed from 4–3–3

to 4–5–1. I was sacrificed and no longer had the freedom on the pitch I

need to succeed."[71]



2010–11 season: Loan to Milan

On 28 August 2010, AC Milan announced via their official website that they had signed Ibrahimović for the 2010–11 season.

He was loaned out to Milan for the season, with the club having the

option to purchase him outright for €24 million at the end of the

season.[73][74] He signed a four-year deal immediately after successfully passing the medical examinations.[75]

Upon signing, Ibrahimović said, "This move gives me more adrenaline. I

have moved here to win the Champions League with Milan. I want to win

the double."[75]



Ibrahimović on the ball for Milan in the 2010–11 UEFA Champions League

Ibrahimović made his Milan debut in a 2–0 loss to Cesena on 11 September, in which he missed a penalty late in the match,[76] and scored his first goals for the club when Milan defeated Auxerre in their first Champions League match of the season on 15 September. On 14 November, Ibrahimović scored in a 1–0 victory against his former club Inter in the Derby della Madonnina.[77] On 20 November, he scored his seventh goal against Fiorentina in the 45th minute with an over-the-head bicycle kick, passing Alexandre Pato as the team's top goalscorer for the season. On 4 December 2010, in a game against Brescia, he assisted Kevin-Prince Boateng to give Milan an early lead and then scored the third goal by a powerful shot near the edge of the penalty box to give Milan a 3–0 win.[78]

On 12 December 2010, history repeated itself in the game against

Bologna after he assisted Boateng to give Milan an early lead once again

and scoring later that match to make it 3–0, leading him to 13 goals

with 8 assists in 21 matches in all competitions. Within days of the

match, he was compared to Milan legend Marco van Basten by both the media and Van Basten himself.[79][80][81]


Ibrahimović received a three-match ban after being shown a red card in a 1–1 home draw against Bari in March 2011 for punching Bari defender Marco Rossi in the stomach.[82]

An additional three-match ban was given to Ibrahimović in February 2012

in a 2–1 home defeat against Fiorentina for swearing at an assistant referee. Ibrahimović stated in his defence that he was talking to himself in frustration.[83] He won his first Scudetto with Milan after a draw against Roma. All agreements between Milan and Barcelona were confirmed on 18 June 2011.[84]


















































































































































































































  • Sub-Type: Football
  • Options: Premiership Players/ Clubs
  • Sport: Football
  • Original/Reproduction: Original
  • Object: HAND SIGNED SHORTS
  • Certification: Certified: Obtained Personally

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