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・ Giuseppe Scopelliti
・ Giuseppe Sculli
・ Giuseppe Scurto
・ Giuseppe Secchi
・ Giuseppe Seguenza
・ Giuseppe Sellitti
・ Giuseppe Sensi
・ Giuseppe Serembe
・ Giuseppe Sergi
・ Giuseppe Sermonti
・ Giuseppe Serpotta
・ Giuseppe Servolini
・ Giuseppe Setola
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・ Giuseppe Sigismondo Ala Ponzone
Giuseppe Signori
・ Giuseppe Silvestri
・ Giuseppe Simone Assemani
・ Giuseppe Simonelli
・ Giuseppe Simoni
・ Giuseppe Sinigaglia
・ Giuseppe Sinopoli
・ Giuseppe Siri
・ Giuseppe Sirtori
・ Giuseppe Sogni
・ Giuseppe Solenghi
・ Giuseppe Soleri
・ Giuseppe Sommaruga
・ Giuseppe Soncini
・ Giuseppe Sorge


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Giuseppe Signori : ウィキペディア英語版
Giuseppe Signori

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Giuseppe "Beppe" Signori ((:dʒuˈzɛppe siɲˈɲori); born 17 February 1968 in Alzano Lombardo, Bergamo) is a retired Italian football striker, one of the top scorers in Serie A history, although he never received a winners medal in competitive football. He was a fast, left footed striker who was a prolific goalscorer, due to his powerful, accurate shot. During the early part of his career he was used as a left winger, where his technique, accurate crossing, passing, and pace were put to good use. He was also an accurate set piece and penalty-kick taker, and was notable due to his tendency to take set pieces and penalties without taking a run-up.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://sport.sky.it/sport/calcio_italiano/2011/06/01/scandalo_scommesse_beppe_signori.html )
Signori was sponsored by Diadora and used to squeeze his feet into boots that were too small for him, claiming that this improved his touch and accuracy on the ball. At international level, Signori represented Italy at the 1994 World Cup, where they reached the final.
== Club career ==
As a youngster Signori played in the youth system of Internazionale, but was eventually released after being told by the club that he was too short to succeed as a professional. He went on to make his pro debut for Leffe (1984–86), followed by Piacenza (1986–87 and 1988–89), Trento (1987–88), Foggia (1989–92), Lazio (1992–97), Sampdoria (January–June 1998) and Bologna (1998–2004). He then spent two short periods abroad: first in Greece in 2004 with Iraklis Thessaloniki; and then in October 2005 he signed a one-year contract with Hungarian team MFC Sopron to end his professional career.
The pinnacle of Signori's career came at Lazio, where he was the top goalscorer in Serie A three times, in 1993, 1994, and 1996 (the last title shared with Igor Protti). In 1998 he was sold for an undisclosed figure to Sampdoria after being used more sparingly by the Lazio coach Sven-Göran Eriksson. At Bologna, he helped the club to qualify for the 1998-99 UEFA Cup by winning the 1998 UEFA Intertoto Cup that season. Bologna went on to reach the semi-final of the UEFA Cup that season. Overall, he scored 188 goals in Italy's top division, the eighth highest in the history of the league.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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