Italian footballer (born 1969)
Alessandro Melli Date of birth
(1969-12-11 ) 11 December 1969 (age 55) Place of birth
Agrigento , Italy Height
1.78 m (5 ft 10 in) Position(s)
Striker Years
Team
Apps
(Gls ) 1985–1994
Parma
199
(52) 1988–1989
→ Modena (loan)
8
(0) 1994–1995
Sampdoria
8
(1) 1995
Milan
6
(1) 1995–1997
Parma
42
(4) 1997–2000
Perugia
51
(3) 2000
Ancona
13
(4) Total
327
(65) 1988
Italy U18
2
(0) 1989–1992
Italy U21
20
(8) 1993
Italy
2
(0)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals
Alessandro "Sandro" Melli (Italian pronunciation: [(ales)ˈsandro ˈmɛlli] ; born 11 December 1969) is an Italian former footballer who played as a striker . He won five team honours in his professional career.
Club career
Melli's father was a professional footballer, playing as a centre forward for Parma AC , and the son followed in his footsteps. He made his Parma debut aged 17, and was part of the team that was promoted from the third to the top level .
After a loan spell at Modena FC that was cut short when he fell out with coach Paolo Ferrari , Melli returned to Parma, quickly establishing himself in Parma's first team in the early 1990s, in what was a golden period for the club. As part of that ducali squad, he won an Italian Cup in 1991–92 , and a UEFA Cup Winners' Cup in the following season (in the final of which he scored), being part of an attacking line-up that featured also Faustino Asprilla , Tomas Brolin and Gianfranco Zola .
Melli left Parma in 1994, spending six months each at UC Sampdoria and AC Milan (who swapped Ruud Gullit for him), before returning to the Ennio Tardini after a year away. This lasted two years, but he did not manage to recapture his old form. In total, Melli scored 56 goals in 241 games for Parma.[ 1]
He was transferred to Serie B side AC Perugia in 1997, where he immediately won promotion to the first division. He left Perugia in 2000, and ended his career with a season spell at AC Ancona .
After retiring, Melli eventually rejoined former side Parma's non-playing staff, serving as general manager .[ 2]
International career
During Parma's heyday, Melli was awarded with two caps for Italy , which came in the team's 1994 FIFA World Cup qualifiers against Malta and Estonia .
Previously, in 1992, he appeared at the Summer Olympics , netting in two group stage wins as Italy was eventually ousted by champions Spain ,[ 3] and helped the U21s win the UEFA European Championship .
Honours
Parma [ 1]
Milan [ 1]
Italy U-21 [ 1]
References
^ a b c d "Buon compleanno a Sandro Melli" [Happy birthday to Sandro Melli]. FCParma.com . Parma AC. 11 December 2012. Archived from the original on 17 November 2015. Retrieved 11 December 2012 .
^ "Organigramma" [Organigram] (in Italian). Parma FC. Archived from the original on 26 November 2010. Retrieved 7 February 2011 .
^ Alessandro Melli – FIFA competition record (archived)
External links
1922: Bonino
1936: Buscaglia
1937: Boffi
1938: Meazza
1939: Marchetti
1940: Salvadori
1941: Amadei & Ostromann
1942: Lushta
1943: Ispiro , Mazzola & Sentimenti
1958: Humberto
1959: Charles
1960: Pistacchi
1961: Petris
1962: Gilardoni & Recagni
1963: Domenghini
1964: Hamrin & Seminario
1965: Cané , Cappellaro , Menichelli , Petroni , Riva & Rizzo
1966: Hamrin
1967: Rivera
1968: Mujesan
1969: Riva
1970: Savoldi
1971: Rivera
1972: Boninsegna
1973: Riva
1974: Savoldi
1975: Anastasi & Prati
1976: Magistrelli
1977: Braglia & Calloni
1978: Savoldi
1979: Palanca
1980: Damiani & Pruzzo
1981: Graziani
1982: Altobelli
1983: Greco
1984: Schachner
1985: Francis
1986: Cecconi
1987: Giordano
1988: Maradona
1989: Vialli
1990: Baresi
1991: Rizzitelli & Völler
1992: Melli
1993: Signori
1994: Lombardo
1995: Branca & Ravanelli
1996: Batistuta
1997: Maspero & Zamorano
1998: Bokšić , Chiesa & Signori
1999: Crespo
2000: Caccia , Di Michele , Flachi & M'Boma
2001: Schwoch
2002: Amoruso
2003: Miccoli
2004: Fiore
2005: Lazzari
2006: Del Piero
2007: Bonazzoli , Burdisso , Crespo , Flachi , Greco & Perrotta
2008: Balotelli , Cruz , Iaquinta & Pazzini
2009: Pandev
2010: Baclet & Mutu
2011: Eto'o & Evacuo
2012: Cavani
2013: Destro
2014: Callejón , De Luca , Ebagua , Evacuo , Gervinho , Insigne & Sansovini
2015: Di Natale & Gómez
2016: Bizzotto
2017: Borriello , Dybala & Pandev
2018: Cerri , Di Piazza & López
2019: Piątek
2020: Scamacca & Vano
2021: Scamacca
2022: Vlahović
2023: Cheddira
2024: Milik