Pietro Vierchowod
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pietro Vierchowod | ||
Personal information | ||
---|---|---|
Full name | Pietro Vierchowod | |
Date of birth | April 6, 1959 (age 47) | |
Place of birth | Calcinate, Italy | |
Nickname | The Russian, The Zar | |
Playing position | Defender | |
Club information | ||
Current club | none | |
Youth clubs | ||
1973-1976 | Romanese | |
Senior clubs1 | ||
Years | Club | App (Gls)* |
1976-1981 1981-1982 1982-1983 1983-1995 1995-1996 1996-1997 1997-2000 |
Como Fiorentina Roma Sampdoria Juventus Milan Piacenza |
115 (6) 28 (2) 30 (0) 358 (25) 21 (2) 16 (1) 79 (6) |
National team2 | ||
1982-1993 | Italy | 45 (2) |
Teams managed | ||
2001 2002 2005 |
Catania Florentia Viola Triestina |
|
1 Senior club appearances and goals |
Pietro Vierchowod (born April 6, 1959 in Calcinate) is an Italian former footballer turned coach.
An old-style defender, Vierchowod was nicknamed the zar because he was the son of a Ukrainian Red Army soldier. Vierchowod was a world-class man-marker, and a great tactical reader of the game. He also possessed lightning pace and acceleration, attributes he held even in the last year of his career at the age of 41. It is often said that Vierchowod was never outsprinted on the football pitch during his long and distinguished career.
Vierchowod started his professional football career for Como, before moving to Fiorentina. However, his first successes came when he moved to AS Roma, winning a Serie A scudetto in 1983. Then, he moved to Sampdoria, with whom he won four Italian Cups, one Cup Winners' Cup and another scudetto, in 1991.
In 1995 he signed for Juventus, where he acted as an experienced defender and won his only UEFA Champions League in 1996 at the age of 37. However even at this late stage of his career Vierchowod was still very much world-class. He is particularly remembered for his superb performance in the final in Rome against Ajax Amsterdam which Juve won on penalties. He then moved on to AC Milan and Piacenza Calcio, for whom he continued to play regularly despite being 41 years of age. He eventually retired in 2000.
Vierchowod played 562 Serie A matches, being fourth only to Paolo Maldini, Gianluca Pagliuca and Dino Zoff. He also performed 45 times with the Italy national football team, and scored 2 goals. He was one of the players who participated, but without playing any game, to the Italian victory in the Football World Cup 1982. He is also the oldest goalscorer in history of the Italy national team: he scored in a qualification match against Malta played in March 24, 1993 and ended to a 6-1 win for the azzurri. As with many Italian defenders of his era, Vierchowod would have gained many more caps had it not been for the abundance of world-class defenders Italy boasted during this time-period. Nevertheless there is no doubting that Vierchowod was just another in a long-line of world-class Italian defenders.
As coach, Vierchowod had experiences with Catania of Serie C1, Florentia Viola (now Fiorentina) of Serie C2 and Triestina of Serie B. In all these cases, he had been fired before the end of the season.
[edit] Palmarés
- 1 Football World Cup: Italy, 1982
- 1 Champions' League: Juventus, 1996
- 1 Cup Winners' Cup: Sampdoria, 1990
- 2 Serie A leagues (scudetti): AS Roma, 1983; Sampdoria, 1991
- 4 Italian Cups: Sampdoria, 1985, 1988, 1989, 1994
- 2 Italian Supercups: Sampdoria, 1991; Juventus, 1995
Italy squad - 1982 FIFA World Cup Champions (3rd Title) | ||
---|---|---|
1 Zoff | 2 Baresi | 3 Bergomi | 4 Cabrini | 5 Collovati | 6 Gentile | 7 Scirea | 8 Vierchowod | 9 Antognoni | 10 Dossena | 11 Marini | 12 Bordon | 13 Oriali | 14 Tardelli | 15 Causio | 16 Conti | 17 Massaro | 18 Altobelli | 19 Graziani | 20 Rossi | 21 Selvaggi | 22 Galli | Coach: Bearzot |
Italy squad - 1986 FIFA World Cup | ||
---|---|---|
1 Galli | 2 Bergomi | 3 Cabrini | 4 Collovati | 5 Nela | 6 Scirea | 7 Tricella | 8 Vierchowod | 9 Ancelotti | 10 Bagni | 11 Baresi | 12 Tancredi | 13 De Napoli | 14 Di Gennaro | 15 Tardelli | 16 Conti | 17 Vialli | 18 Altobelli | 19 Galderisi | 20 Rossi | 21 Serena | 22 Zenga | Coach: Bearzot |
Italy squad - 1990 FIFA World Cup Third Place | ||
---|---|---|
1 Zenga | 2 Baresi | 3 Bergomi | 4 De Agostini | 5 Ferrara | 6 Ferri | 7 Maldini | 8 Vierchowod | 9 Ancelotti | 10 Berti | 11 De Napoli | 12 Tacconi | 13 Giannini | 14 Marocchi | 15 Baggio | 16 Carnevale | 17 Donadoni | 18 Mancini | 19 Schillaci | 20 Serena | 21 Vialli | 22 Pagliuca | Coach: Vicini |
Categories: 1959 births | Living people | People from Lombardy | Italian footballers | Italy international footballers | Italian football managers | A.S. Roma players | Serie A players | Calcio Catania managers | Fiorentina managers | U.S. Triestina Calcio managers | FIFA World Cup 1982 players | FIFA World Cup 1986 players | FIFA World Cup 1990 players | Olympic footballers of Italy | Footballers at the 1984 Summer Olympics | FIFA World Cup-winning players | Ukrainian Italians