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Oliver Bierhoff

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Full name
  
Oliver Bierhoff

Role
  
Footballer

Playing position
  
Striker

Height
  
1.91 m


Years
  
Team

Weight
  
90 kg

Name
  
Oliver Bierhoff

Spouse
  
Klara Szalantzy (m. 2001)

Oliver Bierhoff httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsdd

Date of birth
  
(1968-05-01) 1 May 1968 (age 47)

Place of birth
  
Karlsruhe, West Germany

Current team
  
Germany (Business manager)

Number
  
20 (AS Monaco FC / Forward)

Parents
  
Silvie Bierhoff, Rolf Bierhoff

Similar People
  
Joachim Low, Jurgen Klinsmann, Andreas Kopke, Wolfgang Niersbach, Hans‑Dieter Flick

Oliver Bierhoff on Football and Technology


Oliver Bierhoff ( [ˈɔlɪvɐ̯ ˈbiːɐ̯hɔf]; born 1 May 1968) is a retired German former footballer who scored the first golden goal in the history of major international football, for Germany in the Euro 96 final, a career-defining performance that vaulted him into the international limelight.

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Oliver Bierhoff Oliver Bierhoff Germany play like Arsenal far too

A tall, strong and prolific goalscorer, he was mostly renowned for his excellent abilities in the air, and as a target man, being able to deliver pin-point headers towards goal.

Oliver Bierhoff 58834jpg

Italian serie a top scorers 1997 1998 oliver bierhoff udinese 27 goals


Club career

Oliver Bierhoff Oliver Bierhoff Wikipedia

The son of a German utility magnate, Bierhoff played for nine different clubs, in four different leagues. He scored a total of 103 goals in Serie A, one of the highest totals for a non-Italian in the league's history. In the 1997–98 season, he was the Serie A top scorer with 27 goals for Udinese.

Oliver Bierhoff BIERHOFFOLIVERjpgjpg

Bierhoff, however, was never a success in the Bundesliga. After failing to shine in Germany, he got his chance in the Austrian Bundesliga. That gave him the chance at Ascoli in Italy. But it was at Udinese, under Alberto Zaccheroni, that Bierhoff found success and won his place in fame and in the German national team. He then transferred to Milan in 1998, winning the Serie A title in his first season with the club, scoring 19 goals in the league and 21 in all competitions, including the match-winning goal in the final, title-deciding match of the season, a 2–1 away win over Perugia. After three seasons there, he moved to French Ligue 1 side Monaco in 2001 for one year, before moving back to Serie A to play for Chievo Verona, where he retired at the end of the 2002–03 season. In his last ever game, he scored a hat-trick for Chievo Verona in a 3–4 defeat to Juventus.

International career

Bierhoff made his debut for the German national team in a friendly against Portugal on 21 February 1996. In his second appearance on 27 March 1996, he managed to score his first two international goals in his country's 2–0 win over Denmark. Altogether Bierhoff scored 37 goals in 70 caps, including both goals in the 2–1 win over the Czech Republic in the Euro 1996 final after having come on as a substitute.

In an important qualification match on 20 August 1997, Germany trailed Northern Ireland, 0–1, with 20 minutes left when the manager of the national team, Berti Vogts, decided to send in Thomas Häßler and Oliver Bierhoff. Within seven minutes the former provided the latter with three assists, meaning Bierhoff had scored the fastest hat-trick in the history of the German national team.

In 1998, he was appointed captain of the national team after the retirement of Jürgen Klinsmann.

Bierhoff also played in Euro 2000, and both the 1998 and 2002 FIFA World Cups. He made his last appearance for his country when he was brought on during the second half of the 2002 FIFA World Cup Final against Brazil, but was unable to help the Germans score in the 0–2 loss.

Style of play

A large and prolific striker, Bierhoff was a strong, physical, and powerful player, who played mainly as a target man in the centre-forward role. Known in particular for his aerial ability, he was able to execute headers with extreme precision, having scored several critical goals in the air throughout his career, for both club and country.

Managerial career

Bierhoff's current involvement with football is as the manager of the German men's national team, a new position created as part of Jürgen Klinsmann's acceptance of the coaching job. Essentially the duties revolve around the public relations aspect of the team as opposed to the coaching responsibilities.

Education

Bierhoff took a correspondence course and graduated in 2002 with a degree in Business Economics from the University of Hagen.

Personal life

Bierhoff married Klara Szalantzy on 22 June 2001, Klara was a model from Munich and former girlfriend of basketball player Dražen Petrović. She was behind the wheel in the fatal car crash that claimed Petrović's life. Bierhoff and his wife had a daughter on 27 January 2007. Bierhoff is a Roman Catholic.

Bierhoff features in EA Sports' FIFA video game series; he features in the FIFA 14 Ultimate-Team Legends. Bierhoff is a member of the A.C. Milan Hall of Fame. Bierhoff was one of several celebrities in 2015 who endorsed the tabloid newspaper Bild's petition against anti-Islamisation group PEGIDA.

Club

Milan
  • Serie A: 1998–99
  • International

    Germany
  • UEFA European Football Championship: 1996
  • FIFA World Cup: Runner-up 2002
  • Individual

  • Serie A Top Scorer: 1997–98
  • Serie B Top Scorer: 1992–93
  • German Footballer of the Year: 1998
  • FIFA XI (Reserve): 1998
  • A.C. Milan Hall of Fame
  • References

    Oliver Bierhoff Wikipedia


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