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Marcelo Zalayeta

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Name
  
Marcelo Zalayeta

Years
  
Team

Weight
  
89 kg

Number
  
17

Height
  
1.88 m

Playing position
  
Striker

Role
  
Football player


Marcelo Zalayeta e1365dmcom0709800x600MarceloZalayeta571356

Full name
  
Marcelo Danubio Zalayeta

Date of birth
  
(1978-12-05) 5 December 1978 (age 37)

Similar People
  
Antonio Pacheco D'Agosti, Diego Forlan, Alvaro Recoba, Sebastian Abreu

Place of birth
  
Montevideo, Uruguay

Current team
  
Penarol (#17 / Forward)

Marcelo zalayeta puts pe arol uru in the next copa sudamericana stage


Marcelo Danubio Zalayeta ([marˈselo salaˈʃeta]; born 5 December 1978) is a retired Uruguayan footballer who played as a striker.

Contents

Marcelo Zalayeta Tenfieldcom Marcelo Zalayeta

Zalayeta began his club career with Danubio before moving to Peñarol for a season in 1997, where he won the Uruguayan Primera División and the Uruguayan Liguilla Cup. Later that year, he was acquired by Italian club Juventus, where he remained for ten seasons, winning three Serie A titles and reaching the 2003 UEFA Champions League Final, although he was sent on several loan spells with Empoli, Spanish side Sevilla and Perugia during his time at the Turin club, due to heavy competition from other strikers in the team's line-up. He moved to Napoli in 2007, where he remained for three more seasons, aside from a loan spell with Bologna during the 2009–10 season. After his time in Italy, he later spent a season with Turkish side Kayserispor, before returning to his home nation to play for Peñarol once again, winning the Uruguayan Primera División for a second time in 2013, before retiring in 2016.

Marcelo Zalayeta Tenfieldcom Marcelo Zalayeta

At international level, Zalayeta represented the Uruguay national team on 47 occasions between 1997 and 2005, scoring ten goals. At youth level, he was a member of the team that finished second in the 1997 FIFA World Youth Championship, and at senior level, he helped Uruguay reach the 1999 Copa América Final.

Marcelo Zalayeta Marcelo Zalayeta Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Marcelo zalayeta grazie panteron napoli 2007 2009


Club career

Marcelo Zalayeta 2581jpg

Zalayeta started his career with Danubio and then moving to Peñarol in Uruguay in 1997, where he made a name for himself, winning the Uruguayan Primera División and the Uruguayan Liguilla Cup. He moved to Juventus later that year, but although he was considered a promising young player at the time, he was not given much of a chance to prove himself due to heavy competition from several other prominent forwards at the club. He spent a season on loan with Empoli, and he also starred in Uruguay's surge for the Copa América in 1999, who lost in the final to Brazil. Two more years away from the club followed, and he played for Spanish side Sevilla until 2001. At last, when it seemed Juve lacked forwards, he was brought back to Italy at the start of the 2001–02 season, but he was loaned out to Perugia in 2004 before returning to Juventus in the same year.

Although he did not play many matches with Juventus, he performed well when given a chance, winning three Serie A titles (1998, 2002, 2003), two Supercoppa Italiana medals (2002 and 2003), and a Serie B title in 2007, also helping the club to the 2002 Coppa Italia Final. During his time at the club, he was given the nickname "Panteron". He scored two very important extra time winners against Spanish opposition upon his return to Juventus. One came in 2003 in the quarter-finals of UEFA Champions League against Barcelona, the other against Real Madrid in the 2005 round of 16. In the 2003 UEFA Champions League Final, Zalayeta was one of the three Juventus players to have their penalty saved by Milan keeper Dida in the shootout after a 0–0 draw, as Milan won the title.

After a decade with Juventus, he moved to Napoli in the summer of 2007. Napoli paid €1.4 million for half of the rights (co-ownership). He played 49 Serie A matches and scored 12 goals in 2 seasons, but at the start of 2009–10 season he became surplus to the team and was not offered a shirt number.

On 21 August 2009, Zalayeta joined Bologna on loan from Napoli for the 2009–10 season.

On 1 July 2010, Zalayeta returned to Napoli but failed to enter first team. On 25 August 2010, he left for Turkish side Kayserispor on a two-year contract.

On 17 July 2011, Zalayeta joined his former Uruguayan side Peñarol as a free agent; he won the Uruguayan Primera División for a second time in 2013 before retiring in 2016.

International career

Zalayeta was called up for the 1997 FIFA World Youth Championship in Malaysia with the Uruguay national under-20 team, scoring four goals throughout the tournament as his team reached the final, and was defeated by Argentina.

With the senior Uruguay national team, he took part at the 1997 FIFA Confederations Cup, in which Uruguay managed a fourth-place finish, and the 1999 Copa América, scoring three goals in five appearances in the latter tournament, as they reached the final of the competition, only to be defeated by Brazil.

Zalayeta represented Uruguay during his country's campaign to qualify for the 2006 FIFA World Cup, notably scoring a hat-trick in a 3–2 home win over Colombia on 4 September 2005. He was selected in a 23-man squad for Uruguay's World Cup intercontinental playoff against Australia on 16 November. Zalayeta was one of two penalty kick takers whose shots were saved by Australian goalkeeper Mark Schwarzer. Zalayeta's failure to convert culminated in Australia winning the play-off 4–2 on penalties, qualifying for the 2006 FIFA World Cup finals in Germany, and eliminating Uruguay in the process. This was his final appearance for Uruguay. In total, he made 47 appearances for the national team between 1997 and 2005, scoring ten goals.

Club

Juventus
  • Serie A: 1997–98, 2001–02, 2002–03
  • Serie B: 2006–07
  • Supercoppa Italiana: 2002
  • Peñarol
  • Uruguayan First Division Championship: 1997, 2012–13
  • Uruguayan Liguilla Cup: 1997
  • International

    Uruguay
  • FIFA World Youth Championship: 1997 (2nd place)
  • Copa América: 1999 (2nd place)
  • References

    Marcelo Zalayeta Wikipedia