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Alexander Zickler

Alexander Zickler
Alexander Zickler.JPG
Zickler with RB Salzburg (charity match, 2009)
Personal information
Full name Alexander Zickler
Date of birth (1974-02-28) 28 February 1974 (age 43)
Place of birth Bad Salzungen, East Germany
Height 1.88 m (6 ft 2 in)
Playing position Striker
Club information
Current team
Red Bull Salzburg (youth)
Youth career
1980–1992 Dynamo Dresden
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1992–1993 Dynamo Dresden 18 (3)
1993–1995 Bayern Munich (A) 21 (6)
1993–2005 Bayern Munich 214 (51)
2005–2010 Red Bull Salzburg 137 (56)
2010–2011 LASK Linz 15 (1)
2012 ASV Taxham 0 (0)
Total 405 (117)
National team
1993–1996 Germany U21 17 (7)
1998–2002 Germany 12 (2)
Teams managed
2012–2014 Red Bull Salzburg (assistant youth)
2014– Red Bull Salzburg (youth)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.

Alexander Zickler (born 28 February 1974) is a German retired footballer who played as a striker.

He spent 12 years of his professional career with Bayern Munich, appearing in more than 300 official games and winning 19 major titles, notably seven Bundesliga championships and the 2001 Champions League. Additionally, he also played six years in Austria with two clubs.

Zickler was a German international for four years, but did not attend any major international tournament.

Born in Bad Salzungen, East Germany, Zickler began his career with Dynamo Dresden, having joined the club's youth system in 1980 as a six-year-old.

In the 1992–93 season, he played with the first team in the Bundesliga, making his debut in the competition on 23 October 1992 in a 1–2 home loss against 1. FC Nürnberg and eventually helping them narrowly avoid relegation.

In July 1993, Zickler transferred to FC Bayern Munich for 1,187,300, initially playing with the reserves. From his second season onwards he became a first-team regular, helping the Bavarians capture seven German championships and four German cups, adding the 1996 UEFA Europa League (eight games and two assists from the player during the campaign).

Zickler played in 24 league games – scoring three goals – in 2000–01 as Bayern won the league. In the campaign's UEFA Champions League final, against Valencia CF, he entered the game as a substitute and successfully converted his penalty kick in the shootout, which ended in win. During his time in the top flight, he broke the record as the highest goal-scoring substitute of all-time, scoring 18 times in 102 appearances off the bench; however, his career was often hampered by injuries and medical conditions: in 2002, he had surgery to remove a tumor from his right shin bone which caused him to miss out on participation in the 2002 FIFA World Cup. One year later, he was again hospitalized with a break in his previously operated leg, followed by another shin break only a few days before the start of 2003–04.


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Wikipedia

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