The Legend of Trezegol Continues…

By: alessio | November 10th, 2009

Yesterday, we celebrated a milestone as our captain, Alessandro Del Piero, turned 35. There was another milestone of course this Saturday, when poacher-extraordinaire David Trezeguet banged in his 167th goal in all competitions to equal Omar Sivori as the 4th top scorer of Juventus, and the top foreign scorer of all time. A record well deserved for Trezegol.

trezcamo
It’s an Argentine thing…

When Trezeguet arrived in the peninsula in 2000, he wasn’t exactly welcomed with open arms. A very talented young player, though not necessarily a superstar, he had just knocked Italy out of the Euro2000 final with a splendid volley in overtime to give France the golden goal it needed to win the cup. That season he was coached by Ancelotti, who ironically would prefer him later in the season to Inzaghi, which forced him out for a large transfer fee to Milan.

Speaking of Milan, that’s where Trezeguet started his account, in an exciting 2-2 comeback, where Conte finish the comeback in the 90th minute. Zidane dribbled up the field, avoiding a slide tackle from a young Rino Gattuso, and crossed the ball. It was poorly headed by a Milan defender right into Trezeguet’s path, who headed it into the net. It was a classic Trezeguet goal, along his most recent goal, in which De Ceglie got a touch on it, and Trez just buried it with an offbalance volley.

trez1

Trezeguet is a classic poacher, and quite possibly the best in the world at his position, but because he does little off-the-ball work doesn’t quite get the appreciation from Juventini he deserves. He can go missing for 90 minutes, and then pop up out of nowhere with the winner. For that reason, sometimes it’s hard to tell if he’s having a bad game or a typical Trez-style game, and I’d hate to be a coach deciding whether to sub him off or not.

Personally, I have always been a huge fan of Trezegol. He’s underappreciated by Juve fans and by the media in general, his scoring rate for France and Juventus is stunning, and he has many qualities people ignore, chiefly, his consistency. He does not bang in 5 goals a game and go 2 months without scoring. For a player with as many goals as he does, he does not have that many hat-tricks, a testament to his league consistency. Second, there is the consistency in his years. A lot of players take a while to get their career started, and some wane earlier than others. Last season is the only one in his entire Juve career where he failed to score 10+ goals, an amazing statistic when you think about it. And lastly, his consistency applies to all clubs- he’s scored plenty against Inter, Milan, Real Madrid, etc, but also against Empoli, Vicenza, and relegation-battling teams. Don’t let his penalty miss in 2006 fool you, he is not a choker by any means.

trez2

Last season really disappointed me. After double-knee surgery, he started to get back into form before his ill-fated outburst against Ranieri. I’m a huge fan of Trez, but that was a bad idea and a bad time to do it. Because of that, he was benched for the rest of the season and I really thought even with a new coach that Trezeguet would be packing his bags, a reoccurring nightmare it seems. Thankfully, Ferrara seems to convinced him to stay, though the season didn’t start out great. Trez was seemingly ignored, and some Juventini said he was past it. I’m going to pull a “I told you so moment” now- I always said he was not past it, poaching is an instinct that requires some continuity in games, and it’s not dulled by injury or age. His announcement that he planned to leave Juventus at the end of the season seemed like a cry for help. When other players sit on the bench, the media talks about it, but he had almost been forgotten.

SOCCER-ITALY/

Ferrara went about this the right way- he could have disciplined him, but he chose to give Trezeguet a chance to prove himself again. And he has. With Iaquinta and Amauri in varying form, Trez has quietly reestablished himself as our first striker on the sheet. Both were wasteful with chances, and some claimed with Amauri’s goals against Siena and Sampdoria that he was reborn. But Trez was. It may come as a surprise to you, but Trezeguet is currently Juve’s league capocannoniere, with 6 goals in 12 games, tied with Eto’o and Totti in 3rd place behind Milito, Pazzini, and Hamisk in 2nd (with 7 goals) and behind Di Natale in 1st, with 9. And that is a great record, considering he was initially sitting on the bench and Amauri has still been preferred over him in some recent games.

DV600722

This post is a tribute to the great Trezegol, in his 10th season at the club. He is only 11 goals behind 3rd place in Roberto Bettega and 15 goals from Giampiero Boniperti. Let’s start talking about him in the same way of these legends. May you continue to make us dream!

The below video I uploaded shows his first 100 goals in Serie A, and the 15 in Serie B. Unfortunately I don’t have a more recent one, so we are missing his Coppa goals, his Champion’s League goals, and the ones in Serie A since September 2007.

trez5



Juventus Serie A Match ScheduleBet on Juventus games Travel to soccer games Discount Travel to Turin
Juventus ResultsBuy Juventus TicketsStadio Olimpico information & hotels


Category Category: Team News

Subscribe
 

rss_icon The Offside RSS Feeds

Print
Print article
Share
del.icio.us:The Legend of Trezegol Continues... digg:The Legend of Trezegol Continues... reddit:The Legend of Trezegol Continues... fark:The Legend of Trezegol Continues... Y!:The Legend of Trezegol Continues... stumbleupon:The Legend of Trezegol Continues...

Comments   |  Add your comment

    Displaying the most recent 25 comments from a total of 47 comments.
    Read the rest of the comments

  • Anthony |  November 10th, 2009 at 11:55 pm

    cornercorner

    What I love about him is that even when he gets old he can still be just as incredible. He doesn’t rely on pace or dribbling or beating his opponents. He relies on his excellent positional sense and his incredible finishing ability. He can play easily into his late 30s.

    Posted from United States

    cornercorner
  • Robee |  November 11th, 2009 at 3:12 am

    cornercorner

    Trezeguet is the kind of striker everyone loves or hates, but it surprises me that many Juventus supporters speak so badly of him… He has been our main striker over more than a decade and has continued to score goals for us. Amauri and Iaquinta can do whatever they like without being criticised, but Trez just has to have one game without a goal and he’s been spit out ??

    Well, I guess we all demand more from our top players.

    It’s true he doesn’t run like he used to, and in his younger years he would’ve coped better with Diego, but he still has a nose for goals. And the most difficult thing in the game is to score goals. Let him just be a master at that… Six goals with his playing time, do I need to say more ?

    With Giovinco, Alex, Camo, Diego, Marchisio there will ALWAYS be goal scoring opportunities, so I vote to make Trez our first choice once again. And we will be on fire.

    Btw: Alex and Marchisio are training with the group, and with 4 really important matches coming up, this is great news !

    3 matches in the league, where we meet Udinese, Cagliari and inter. While inter meets Bologna, Fiorentina and us. The Champions League match against Bordeaux is unmatched. SO WE NEED TO STEP UP THE GEAR NOW !

    Posted from United States

    cornercorner
  • Juve Shirts |  November 11th, 2009 at 3:13 am

    cornercorner

    Great player who is a natural goalscorer, I can’t belie he gets left out for France

    Posted from United States

    cornercorner
  • mohd |  November 11th, 2009 at 4:35 am

    cornercorner

    yes thank you allesio for the blog i was really waiting for it and i thought it will be after trezegol scores his 168th goal anyhoo to all juventini who are questioning tregoal you are a disgrace if you are true juventini you would close your mouth not only for the goals that tre bangs but for the year that tre stayed with us in seria b not like a merda named ibrahimobitch

    Posted from United States

    cornercorner
  • georg |  November 11th, 2009 at 4:58 am

    cornercorner

    great article but there is 1 thing though i do not agree with about what you say about his consistency. i quote:

    “He does not bang in 5 goals a game and go 2 months without scoring”

    2 seasons ago, he finished second with 20 goals after ADP

    i remember 17 of them were BEFORE christmas,… and he did play 36(!!) league games that year,…; still nice numbers but that means that he was pretty inconsistent for half A season if you ask me,…

    don’t get me wrong I absolutely like him, if it comes to finishing he second to none when in form, but the thing is he is way to dependant of the teams performance, if the teams plays bad, he will be invisible, and not a danger at all, if the teams performs well and provide him many assists, in form he will score like an animal, with his eyes closed.

    those who say he doesn’t have a good first touch, are you kidding me?? often his first touch IS the goal:-) all the other times he uses MAX 2 touches, wich is incredible!

    hopefully he can hold his current form , and i hope can become second juve top scorer of all time after adp would be nice!

    Posted from United States

    cornercorner
  • Robee |  November 11th, 2009 at 5:06 am

    cornercorner

    Why are you all saying he is TOO dependent on the delivery… While for instance Cristiano Ronaldo has to get about 25 balls to his feet to score, Trezeguet only needs about 2 or 3 to produce a goal…
    Every strikers depends on the delivery of it’s team. Producing goals is the most important thing in soccer and if you have that skill, you don’t need anything else. Trezeguet is worth gold for this team.
    Just wait when Alex comes back, the 4-3-1-2 will also start working with those two up front.

    Posted from United States

    cornercorner
  • georg |  November 11th, 2009 at 5:12 am

    cornercorner

    of course every striker is depended of his supply, but if you see other world class strikers like rooney, torres , drogba ibrahimovic,… even when their team plays like crap, if those guys are in form they still can be an horrible menice for defence, with their power, dribble, duel strenth etc, this is not the case with trez, if he doesn’t get supplied he will be invisible, and not dangerous, even in great form

    Posted from United States

    cornercorner
  • Robee |  November 11th, 2009 at 5:31 am

    cornercorner

    Well, I disagree with that… I’ve seen dozens of matches where Juventus has been crap for about 89 minutes, cracking the defence only once as a team with Trezeguet at the cannon.
    He’s a pure killer, not compareable with the strikers you named george, but then again; he scores more goals… And if you surround him with players like Camo, Diego, Gio, Alex, etc. etc. you can combine technique with his killer instinct.
    If he’s surrounded well, he is worth gold. You can’t combine him with for instance Iaquinta, but the years with Del Piero upfront were magic.
    It’s just a way of looking at it: But you could say he carried the finishing on its own. Whereas an attack with Ibra, Rooney, Drogba,… would always need another goal scorer.
    It’s a skill like another. And he’s one of the best there are. Players like Pele, Maradona and Ronaldo are another class. But right beneath that is a Trezeguet with confidence.
    It’s like alessio said: No matter what game: scoring’s what he does.
    If you look up some videos of our best seasons and you look at the movement of Trezeguet, things will get a bit more clear.

    Posted from United States

    cornercorner
  • j |  November 11th, 2009 at 6:02 am

    cornercorner

    well i m a big fan of trezgol, it’s always his name that appear in those score updates, and trezgol is class, no matter what. 167 goals?? are you kidding me? and in the most tactical league in the world? centaccio? enoguh said, we are actually link with a few strikers, but i hope trezgol and juve dont part ways, but with our dear secco, we will never know, i mean here’s a guy who deliever flops and offload players to rivals for peanuts

    To 168 trez! forza trezgol, juve!

    Posted from Singapore Singapore

    cornercorner
  • j |  November 11th, 2009 at 6:17 am

    cornercorner

    o and i have no words to describe domenach, i thought he’s 100% to be fired after the euros, but well after 2010 or 2009 should france fail to qualify

    Posted from Singapore Singapore

    cornercorner
  • georg |  November 11th, 2009 at 6:42 am

    cornercorner

    i quote: “I’ve seen dozens of matches where Juventus has been crap for about 89 minutes, cracking the defence only once as a team with Trezeguet at the cannon.”

    well does that mean trez was a constant menace for the opponents defense?terrorising them whenever he had the ball?, creating multiple opportunities, while his teammates were sucking? i don’t think so, the example you give is just saying what we’re all agree on, he doesn’t need much to score and is a great finisher,…

    and then you actually contradict yourself and prove my point :”If he’s surrounded well, he is worth gold”
    indeed, if he’s not he will be invisible and not dangerous at all, which is not the case with an in form ibra, rooney drogba torres

    and you don’t need to lecture me about trez’ skill, I’m aware of them.and i have never seen him claiming the ball all the time, poaching forward, muscling defenders into the ground and dribble them mentally insane(which the others can even if teammates are sucking).every single goal of trez is a result of a good pass or cross by teammates or excellent rebounds and his excellent positioning, maybe you should check his vids again

    trez not well supplied and surrounded, invisible undangerous trez,…(second half 2007-2008 season anyone?)
    well supplied and surrounded trez, biggest bad-ass killer in the universe

    Posted from United States

    cornercorner
  • george |  November 11th, 2009 at 8:21 am

    cornercorner

    from corriere dello sport:

    Sogno Mascherano Ranocchia per giugno .

    E’ chiaro che più che a gennaio, la Juve pensi al mercato estivo. Sicuramente verrà ingaggia­to un centrale giovane. Gli osserva­tori bianconeri sono ospiti fissi del­lo stadio San Nicola. Nel mirino c’è Ranocchia, «visionato» anche negli allenamenti. Il cartellino del gioca­tore è di proprietà del Genoa, cioè di un club con il quale la Juventus ha da tempo ottime relazioni «com­merciali ».

    Posted from United States United States

    cornercorner
  • Oliviero |  November 11th, 2009 at 9:21 am

    cornercorner

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cCO_TCBoVGI&translated=1
    one of my favorite goals

    Posted from United States United States

    cornercorner
  • Jorid |  November 11th, 2009 at 9:47 am

    cornercorner

    I like the Ranocchia idea and highly doubt mascherano is going to join Juve. They have been talking about that even before Momo joined us and still nothing. Georg: I think there’s a difference between the type of player Trezeguet is and the type of strikers like The Gypsy, Rooney, Drogba and Torres. First off: if you think Trez is inconsistent and disappears at times then Ibrahimovic is even worse. In his prime Ibra was barely getting 20 goals in Serie A, Trez got 24 his first season and was Top Goalscorer. Ibra is and has been shit in Europe. Never been able to perform very well, never scored in the big matches. Trez? Look at his 2002-2003 CL campaign and when he scored his goals. I’ve never been too crazy about Rooney, and I honestly don’t think that he has been able to reach the levels Trez has previously been at. Drogba is a good striker, he has played less competitive matches and scored less goals than David, and he’s pretty much the same age. El Nino is a stud and I love him as a player. I even have his jersey lol. He’s great and will only become better since he’s only like 25-26. So out of all of the guys you mentioned, only Torres comes close to Trez IMO. But don’t forget also, that Rooney’s history shows that he can be a ticking bomb about to explode and fuck his team over, while Drogba and the Gypsy are known to be bickering little bitches on the field. Trezeguet argues once in a while with the officials, but not as much as Ibra and does not dive like Didier. Long story short, I would MUCH rather have an Inzaghi, Van Nistelrooy or Trezeguet at his prime on my team, than any of the guys you mentioned. The game is about putting the ball in the net, and Trez, Superpippo continue to do this with ease at 32+.

    Posted from United States

    cornercorner
  • Robee |  November 11th, 2009 at 9:53 am

    cornercorner

    well does that mean trez was a constant menace for the opponents defense?terrorising them whenever he had the ball?, creating multiple opportunities, while his teammates were sucking?

    Is that necessary ? As far as I know I’m not denying this, I’m just saying that it doesn’t count at all. All that matters all goals. And I’d rather have an invisible Trez who locks the game with 1 strike than an incredibly dangerous Torres not scoring.

    Then Trezeguet is also useful in the game, he lifts the game up in tempo where Iaquinta or Amauri constantly slow it down. I prefer Trezeguet in almost every aspect.

    And I don’t contradict myself, because I said those other players also need to be surrounded (with players who know how to score goals).
    They can make teams win games, but I’d love to compare their percentages of game-opening-touches game against those of Trez. I wouldn’t be stunned if Trez was on top all the way.

    Posted from United States

    cornercorner
  • alessio |  November 11th, 2009 at 10:02 am

    cornercorner

    I agree with Robee. Trez doesn’t really depend on the team for service…I mean look at the 1-0 win over Torino in Fall ‘07. Starved of service, it was a very physical game without many opportunities. Trez had a few touches at best, but you know what, a Torino defender did a crappy backpass and he was there to pound it in. He scores.

    As for consistency in 07-08, yes, he fell off the 2nd half of the season but the first half of the season he was as consistent as you can get. My point was he’s not a striker who will bang 2 in in one game and then take a month off, and get a .5 goal:game ratio, he’s normally one that scores every other week instead.

    Posted from United States

    cornercorner
  • alessio |  November 11th, 2009 at 10:30 am

    cornercorner

    Also RIP Robert Enke, a very sad story. I remember Buffon talking about how he struggled badly with depression about 6-7 years ago and even thought about quitting. It’s striking because even if they are millionaires, athletes and icons, they are human.

    Posted from United States

    cornercorner
  • Jack |  November 11th, 2009 at 11:45 am

    cornercorner

    Are we getting a new shirt sponser?

    http://www.tuttosport.com/foto/Calcio/Serie%20A/Juventus/2009/11/11-9301_3/Juve+e+Iveco%2C+che+partnership

    Alex with Richie McCaw (All Black Captain)

    I’m from NZ even if it says US at the bottom

    Posted from United States

    cornercorner
  • Vercingetorix |  November 11th, 2009 at 1:29 pm

    cornercorner

    I have a lot of respect for Trez and for what he’s done for the past nine years for Juve. Lately however, I don’t rate him very highly. Trez is a great poacher, like Inzaghi, but at least Inzaghi some initiative at getting the 50-50s, and confusing the hell out of defenders standing on the back line and pouncing on through balls. Pre Serie B I would say that Trez was a vital part of our team, but now with Amauri and Iaquinta I just dont know. They work their asses off for the team while Trez is up there mulling around waiting for some defender to mess up. His attitude last year was pathetic to boot. He is consistent, he is a great goalscorer, thank you Trez for your contributions but I won’t be sad when you leave (like I was when Nedved retired).

    Iveco….well I guess it goes along with the whole Fiat and industrial and commercial machinery theme….looks sharp though!

    Posted from United States

    cornercorner
  • o_man |  November 11th, 2009 at 2:41 pm

    cornercorner

    Papai,
    I didn’t say it was a bad thing

    ooBia,
    I think ibramerda also does the arrogant “i’m that good” celebration.He will always be a big game choker though

    Posted from Canada Canada

    cornercorner
  • Vinod |  November 11th, 2009 at 4:07 pm

    cornercorner

    Wow, looks like this international week is quickly turning into emo week. At the Inter Offside, we’re all getting warm and fuzzy over Julio Cesar’s contract extension, and its nice to see that out here, a lot of people appreciate Trezeguet.

    I do kinda agree with Vercingetorix’s view on Trezeguet though, which is why I said in the beginning that he’s not my favourite player the world. In today’s game, it is really useful for the team when a striker puts in that extra effort to harry defenders, and makes those unnecessary runs to draw defenders out. But what I don’t agree is that ‘Trez is up there mulling around waiting for some defender to mess up‘. Not really, he moves when he needs to, and with the team’s flow. He’s not an Eto’o or a Rooney, but he gets the job done, and in large, consistent numbers. Strikers like Eto’o might make defenders wet themselves with his movement, but he also wastes thrice as many chances as Trezeguet does.

    And about the Balotelli/Ibra ‘I’m that good’ celebration, its funny, but I’ve been celebrating the same way for almost 8 years now. :D But I play as a central midfielder, and when I score, its usually a special enough shot to warrant it.

    Posted from United States United States

    cornercorner
  • alessio |  November 11th, 2009 at 5:15 pm

    cornercorner

    Jack, I think that is just a one-off thing. You might remember when we were in China all our lettering was in Chinese, part of FIAT China’s sponsorship deal.

    Posted from United States

    cornercorner
  • Anthony |  November 12th, 2009 at 12:46 am

    cornercorner

    Trez may not harry the opposition like other players, but he does alright. Not as much as Amauri or Iaquinta, but I remember even just a few years ago he used to do a lot more. With age he does it less now I guess. When strikers like Rooney or Torres get older we’ll see how they cope. My guess is not a well as Trezeguet. Those strikers will lose their pace and strength, and they don’t have nearly as good finishing ability as Trez. So strikers like Trez have more longevity.

    I can admit that if Trez was playing on a crappy team that got him no quality service that he probably wouldn’t do well. A striker like Rooney or Torres would do better in that scenario because you could just give them the ball and they have a better chance of being able to do something with it. But on a team that should be able to create opportunities, Trez is gold and much better than someone like Rooney. Not that Rooney would be bad, but its not necessary that a striker get involved and “be dangerous” in that case. Its more important to just put the ball in the net.

    There are different scenarios where you might want someone like a Drogba up front, but in my opinion I would rather have a pure finisher as long as my team is able to create enough opportunities. Trez already has more goals than Iaquinta and Amauri. And as involved as Amauri and Iaquinta get, it doesn’t matter if they don’t get the goals.

    Posted from United States

    cornercorner
  • sally |  November 16th, 2009 at 8:09 am

    cornercorner

    love you trezegol never lost faith in you

    Posted from Australia Australia

    cornercorner
  • dagoes |  November 17th, 2009 at 7:32 pm

    cornercorner

    I’m a fan of david too
    He was a great fighter
    go trezegooool

    Posted from Australia Australia

    cornercorner

Leave a Reply

If you have not commented here before, please take a moment to peruse our
Commenting Guidelines.


Italy National Team News

Tickets to upcoming games


Offside RSS Feeds

Search The Offside


 

rounded_corners









Categories


rounded_corners

Send Your Tips!

Found a great story, photo or video that's perfect for The Offside?
Email juventus[at]theoffside[dot]com

Related Links


Write for The Offside

LATEST COMMENTS


Archives