Robbie Keane
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{{Football player infobox
| playername = Robbie Keane
| image =
| fullname = Robert Keane
| nickname =Keano
| height = 5'9" / 1.76 m
| dateofbirth = 8 July, 1980
| cityofbirth = Tallaght, Dublin
| countryofbirth = Ireland
| currentclub = Tottenham Hotspur
| clubnumber = 10
| position = Striker
| youthyears =
| youthclubs = Crumlin United
| years =1997-99
1999-00
1999-00
2000-01
2000-03
2003- present
| clubs = Wolves
Coventry
Wolves
Inter Milan
Leeds
Tottenham Hotspur
| caps(goals) =88 (29)
34 (12)
2 (2)
6 (0)
46 (13)
129 (52)
| nationalyears = 1998-present
| nationalteam = Ireland
International Captain
| nationalcaps(goals) = 53 (21)
| pcupdate = April 13, 2006
| ntupdate = April 13, 2006
}}
Robbie Keane (born 8 July, 1980, in Tallaght, Dublin, Republic of Ireland) is an Irish football player, who currently plays as a striker for Tottenham Hotspur F.C. and the Republic of Ireland.
Contents |
Club career
Keane started his football with South Dublin schoolboy side, Crumlin United F.C. where his talent was recognised at an early age. As an U-10 schoolboy he was paid 50p a goal, and was soon being watched by scouts from a number of English professional clubs, including Premier League side Liverpool F.C..
However, he turned down Liverpool to join Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C., reasoning that he had a greater chance of breaking into the first team at the First Division side. He made his first professional appearance in 1997, and played at Molineux for two seasons, making 88 appearances and scoring 29 goals, before a £6m transfer to Coventry City F.C. in 1999, a then British record for a teenager.
After a successful season at Coventry, where he scored 12 goals in 34 games, he had become one of the hottest properties in English football, and was being courted by many of the biggest clubs in football.
In the end, he was signed by Marcello Lippi of Internazionale for £13m, where he teamed up with the likes of Ronaldo, Christian Vieri and Alvaro Recoba.
However his dream move to Italy soured when Lippi was sacked soon after Keane arrived, and Lippi's successor, Marco Tardelli deemed Keane surplus to requirements. Keane's ambition refused to let him stagnate in Italy, and, in December 2000, he was loaned out to Leeds United F.C..
His Leeds career got off to a cracking start, scoring 9 goals in 14 starts before the Leeds manager, David O'Leary, made his loan deal permanent in May 2001 at a cost of £12m. The following season was not so bright, and he found himself dropping down the pecking order. His form suffered and he only managed 10 goals in 36 appearances. Meanwhile, Leeds' financial troubles were forcing the club to sell many of its players, and Keane joined the exodus when he was sold to Tottenham Hotspur F.C. just before the 2002/2003 transfer deadline for a fee of £7m, where he still plays.
Image:Robbie Keane Penalty.jpg
Upon signing for Tottenham, the Spurs manager Glenn Hoddle said Keane was ideally suited to Tottenham and could make White Hart Lane his "spiritual home" for years to come. He repaid this faith with some outstanding displays, earning the club's Player of the Year awards in his first two seasons at Tottenham. He bagged 13 and 16 goals respectively in those first two seasons for Spurs.
His third season, 2004/2005, was more frustrating. Despite finishing with his highest return of goals in a season for Tottenham, 17, he played second-fiddle to Jermaine Defoe for much of the season. The frustration culminated in Keane storming from the dugout towards the end of a game against Birmingham City in April 2005 after all the substitutes had been used, meaning he would not get a chance to appear. He was fined £10,000 and forced to train with the reserves after the outburst and his future at the club was thrown into doubt. Article
He knuckled down after this incident but the 2005/2006 season started as the previous one had ended, with Defoe being preferred to partner Mido in Tottenham's strikeforce. However, Defoe's strikerate continued to disappoint and Keane's persistence paid off in November when manager Martin Jol eventually gave Keane a chance to replace Defoe and stake his claim.
He grabbed the chance with both hands, started playing some of the best football of his career and by March had overtaken Mido as the top goalscorer at the club, with 14 goals as at April 1, 2006. He had also been made the stand-in captain, taking the captaincy on those occasions when Ledley King was not available.
He is a firm fans favourite, and is regarded as a great professional. Hoddle once said of Keane's personality, "He's such a bubbly lad that anyone who meets him loves him, he is great for team spirit".
Edgar Davids and Keane were involved in a training ground fight in December 2005, but since then the pair have publicly made up and can be seen encouraging each other on the pitch. Davids has claimed that this incident has inspired Tottenham into a new togetherness, firing their push for European qualification.
In February 2006, Inter's owner and president, Massimo Moratti, admitted his regret at letting Keane go some five years earlier, saying Keane was now playing "perfect" football. Article
On the March 3, 2006, it was publicly released that Keane had signed a new four year contract, keeping him at the club until 2010.
International career
For such a young man, Robbie Keane has already achieved much in the international arena.
He was part of the "golden generation" of Irish youth football of the late 1990s. Under the guidance of Brian Kerr, the unfancied Irish won the UEFA U-17 and U-19 European championships in 1998, and Robbie was part of the victorious U-19 side. In 1999, he played at the World Youth Cup in Nigeria, where the Irish reached the quarter-finals before going out on penalties to the hosts.
He made his first senior appearance for the Republic of Ireland against the Czech Republic in Olomouc in March 1998, scoring his first senior goal against Malta in October that year. As of March 2006, he has 65 international caps.
Keane is now the Republic's top goalscorer at international level; his 26 goals in 65 games (his most recent against Sweden in a friendly in March 2006) surpass Niall Quinn's record of 21.
He had a brilliant 2002 World Cup campaign in Japan and South Korea, scoring three goals in Ireland's four games. His most famous goal to date is arguably the injury-time equaliser against Germany in the 2002 World Cup, although his last-minute equaliser against Spain from the penalty spot was equally as dramatic.
Although Ireland failed to qualify for the 2006 World Cup, Keane scored four goals in Ireland's eight matches and remains their most prolific goalscorer.
Following his appointment as the new manager of the Republic of Ireland, Steve Staunton has made Keane his new international captain. This has undoubtadly fuelled Keanes already growing confidence. In Ireland's first game under Staunton, Keane scored the second goal in the 3-0 victory against Sweden at Lansdowne Road.
Miscellaneous
Robbie Keane is not related to Roy Keane, the Celtic F.C. footballer and former Irish international captain.
He has one of the more distinctive goal celebrations in the modern game, running to one side of the field to perform a round-off to a front somersault on the pitch, ending on one knee, and then miming the shooting of an arrow with his crossbow or to quick-fire pistols rapidly with his hands.
He also takes no enjoyment out of scoring against his former clubs, and doesn't perform the same celebrations out of respect.
He is the cousin of Shelbourne FC striker, Jason Byrne.
Clubs
- Tottenham Hotspur F.C. (2002 - )
- Leeds United F.C. (Loan; 2000 - 2001)
- Leeds United F.C. (2001 - 2002)
- Internazionale Milano F.C. (2000 - 2001)
- Coventry City F.C. (1999 - 2000)
- Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. (Trainee; 1997 - 1999)de:Robbie Keane
fr:Robbie Keane he:רובי קין nl:Robbie Keane no:Robbie Keane ja:ロビー・キーン pl:Robbie Keane fi:Robbie Keane sv:Robbie Keane
Categories: 1980 births | Living people | Roman Catholic sportspeople | Natives of County Dublin | Football (soccer) strikers | Republic of Ireland footballers | Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. players | Coventry City F.C. players | Internazionale players | Leeds United F.C. players | Tottenham Hotspur F.C. players | English Premiership players | Current English Premiership players