Fabio Cannavaro,
Ufficiale OMRI (
Italian pronunciation: [ˈfabjo kannaˈvaro]; born 13 September 1973) is an Italian
football coach and former player who is currently the head coach of Chinese club
Guangzhou Evergrande. He is considered to be one of the greatest defenders of all time and was given the name
"Muro di Berlino" ("The Berlin Wall") by Italian supporters. He spent the majority of his career in Italy. He started his career at
Napoli, before spending seven years at
Parma, with whom he won two
Coppa Italia and the
1999 UEFA Cup. After spells at
Internazionale and
Juventus, he transferred along with manager
Fabio Capello from Juventus to
Real Madrid, with whom he won consecutive
La Liga titles in 2007 and 2008. After returning to Juventus for one season in 2009–10, he joined
Al-Ahli in
Dubai, where he retired from football in 2011 after an injury-troubled season. After his retirement, he became a coaching staff of
Al-Ahli,
notably as global ambassador and technical director from 2011 to 2013
and assistant coach from 2013 to 2014. In November 2014, he was
appointed as head coach of
Guangzhou Evergrande.
Cannavaro has also achieved success with the
Italian national team. He was part of the Italy team that won consecutive
Under-21 European Championships in 1994 and 1996. After earning his first senior
cap in 1997, he eventually became captain. Cannavaro led Italy to victory in the
2006 FIFA World Cup, and in 2009 overtook
Paolo Maldini
as the most capped player in the country's history. He retired from
international football on 25 June 2010 following Italy's failure to
qualify for the knock-out stages of the
2010 World Cup, having amassed 136 caps and scored two goals for the senior national team.
[3]
He was named the 2006
FIFA World Player of the Year, and won the
Ballon d'Or award in
2006 which made him the only defender to win the award in a decade and only the third of all time after
Franz Beckenbauer and
Matthias Sammer, both of Germany.
[4][5] In 2007 he was in the six man shortlist for the
Laureus World Sportsman of the Year.
[6] His younger brother
Paolo is also a professional footballer, playing for Italian side
Sassuolo.
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