Ivica Olić

Ivica Olić
Ivica Olić
Ivica Olić.jpg
Personal information
Full name Ivica Olić
Date of birth 14 September 1979 (1979-09-14) (age 32)
Place of birth Davor, SFR Yugoslavia
Height 1.82 m (6 ft 0 in)[1]
Playing position Forward
Club information
Current club Bayern Munich
Number 11
Youth career
Posavac Davor
Marsonia
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
19961998 Marsonia 42 (17)
19982000 Hertha BSC 2 (0)
20002001 Marsonia 42 (21)
20012002 NK Zagreb 29 (21)
20022003 Dinamo Zagreb 27 (16)
20032007 CSKA Moscow 78 (35)
20072009 Hamburger SV 78 (29)
2009 Bayern Munich 40 (12)
National team
1996 Croatia U17 3 (0)
1997 Croatia U18 1 (0)
19971998 Croatia U19 9 (1)
1998 Croatia U20 1 (0)
20002001 Croatia U21 6 (2)
2002 Croatia 73 (14)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 29 October 2011.

Appearances (Goals).

National team caps and goals correct as of 30 October 2010

Ivica Olić (Croatian pronunciation: [ˈiʋitsa ˈɔːlitɕ]; born 14 September 1979) is a Croatian professional footballer who plays for Bayern Munich in Germany and internationally for the Croatian national team.

Contents

Club career

Early career

Olić was born and raised in the village of Davor near Nova Gradiška, Croatia, Yugoslavia. He started playing football for the local club NK Marsonia in 1996, and spent two good seasons there before he was acquired by Hertha BSC in 1998. He did not see much play there and returned to Marsonia the following year.

After another successful season at Marsoniain the 200001 season, he scored 17 goals in 29 gamesin 2001, he moved to NK Zagreb where he scored 21 goals in 28 appearances and helped his team win the league. The following season, he moved to Dinamo Zagreb, where he scored 16 goals in 27 games, and became the best striker of the Croatian First League.

CSKA Moscow

In 2003, Olić was acquired by CSKA Moscow. His form rose gradually, and in the 2005 season, he contributed 10 goals in twice as many games. With CSKA Moscow, he won the UEFA Cup in 2005, the Russian Premier League three times (in 2003, 2005 and 2006), the Russian Cup twice (in 2005 and 2006), and twice the Russian Super Cup (2004 and 2006).

Hamburg

In January 2007, Olić moved to Hamburger SV, playing his first Bundesliga game with them against Energie Cottbus on 31 January.[2] He was signed because Hamburg were in deep trouble, finishing in the relegation zone before the winter break. It worked out in the end, and Hamburg finished seventh, which even acquired them an Intertoto Cup place, which they eventually won. He scored two goals in the last match in the 200607 Bundesliga season against Alemannia Aachen in a 40 win. In October 2007, Olić scored a hat-trick in the Bundesliga match against VfB Stuttgart, which Hamburg won 41. He was the first player in the club's history to score three successive goals in one half.

Olić effectively won the 2008 Emirates Cup for Hamburg, with two injury time goals against Juventus increasing the team's points tally to an unassailable level (due to the points-for-goals system). He endeared himself to Hamburg fans for his commitment and consistent work rate on the pitch. In his last game for the north German club, he sported a t-shirt with the words, "Danke fans" ("Thank you, fans") written on it as he bid farewell to the fans.

Olić with Bayern.

Bayern Munich

On 3 January 2009, Olić signed a three year contract with Bundesliga rivals Bayern Munich. He joined the club on a free transfer on 1 July 2009.[3] Initially, he was supposed to be back-up to the likes of Miroslav Klose and Mario Gómez, but due to injury and fitness issues, he began to be preferred as first choice. On 8 August, his Bayern debut, he scored the opening goal against TSG Hoffenheim in a 11 draw and soon became a favourite with the Bayern fans. He reached new heights upon scoring a crucial goal in the 2010 Champions League quarter-final (first leg) against Manchester United in injury time, to give Bayern a slender 21 lead. He also scored the first goal in the second leg for his team, but they trailed 31. The game ended 32. Bayern, however, won on away goals. This knocked Manchester United out of the Champions League.[4] He scored his first hat-trick for the Bavarians against Olympique Lyonnais scoring with his left foot, right foot and his head a first in the champions league in the second leg of the semi-finals on 27 April 2010. The victory against Lyon secured his team a place in the UEFA Champion's League final, against Inter Milan which they eventually lost 2-0.[5]

International career

Olić was part of the Croatian national team at the 2002 FIFA World Cup where he played in two games and scored one goal, but an important one against Italy which ended 21 for Croatia. Shortly after scoring, Olić revealed a picture of his newly born child at the time under his jersey. He was remembered as being unable to put his jersey back on, as the material became tangled in the excitement during his celebration. Olić also played three games for Croatia in Euro 2004, and two games in 2006 FIFA World Cup.

In September 2006, Olić was dropped from Croatian squad for a qualifying match for one game due to a late-night partying binge together with Darijo Srna and Boško Balaban.[6]

Olić was named man of the match in the very last qualifier of their group in which Croatia defeated England 32.[7] He famously scored the second goal in the match, which gave Croatia a two goal lead and knocked England out of contention for a place at the Euro 2008.[8] England manager Steve McClaren was sacked as a result.

Olić was named in Croatia's 23-man squad for Euro 2008. On 12 June, he scored in the 62nd minute of Croatia's second Group B match against Germany to give the Croats a 21 shock win over the pre-tournament favourites.[9] He was rested for the last group match as they had already secured qualification for the knockout stages ahead of Germany. Croatia was victorious over Poland, making Croatia hold a record of 300 in the first round of Euro Cup 2008. On 15 June 2008, he was, according to Castrol Index sponsors, the fastest player at Euro 2008.

Olić was recalled to the side for the 2010 World Cup qualifiers. He contributed three goals in eight games, but Croatia missed out on a play-off spot by a point.

International goals

# Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition
01. 17 April 2002 Maksimir Stadium, Zagreb, Croatia  Bosnia and Herzegovina
10
20
Friendly
02. 8 June 2002 Kashima Soccer Stadium, Kashima, Japan  Italy
11
21
2002 World Cup
03. 30 April 2003 Råsunda Stadium, Stockholm, Sweden  Sweden
01
12
Friendly
04. 11 October 2003 Maksimir Stadium, Zagreb, Croatia  Bulgaria
10
10
2004 Euro Qualifying
05. 29 May 2004 Kantrida Stadium, Rijeka, Croatia  Slovakia
10
10
Friendly
06. 5 June 2004 Parken Stadium, Copenhagen, Denmark  Denmark
02
12
Friendly
07. 16 October 2007 Kantrida Stadium, Rijeka, Croatia  Slovakia
10
30
Friendly
08. 16 October 2007 Kantrida Stadium, Rijeka, Croatia  Slovakia
30
30
Friendly
09. 21 November 2007 Wembley Stadium, London, England  England
02
23
2008 Euro Qualifying
10. 12 June 2008 Hypo-Arena, Klagenfurt, Austria  Germany
20
21
Euro 2008
11. 15 October 2008 Maksimir Stadium, Zagreb, Croatia  Andorra
20
40
2010 World Cup Qualifying
12. 12 August 2009 Dinamo Stadium, Minsk, Belarus  Belarus
01
13
2010 World Cup Qualifying
13. 12 August 2009 Dinamo Stadium, Minsk, Belarus  Belarus
13
13
2010 World Cup Qualifying
14. 3 September 2010 Skonto Stadium, Riga, Latvia  Latvia
02
03
Euro 2012 Qualifying

Honours

Club

NK Zagreb

Dinamo Zagreb

CSKA Moscow

FC Bayern Munich

Individual

  • Croatian Football Player of the Year: 2009
  • Croatian First League Player of the Year: 2002, 2003

Career statistics

Club Season League Cup Europe Total
Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
Marsonia 199697 ? ? ? ? 0 0 ? ?
199798 ? ? ? ? 0 0 ? ?
Total 42 17 ? ? 0 0 ? ?
Hertha BSC 199899 2 0 1 0 0 0 3 0
199900 0 0 ? ? 0 0 ? ?
Total 2 0 ? ? 0 0 ? ?
Marsonia 199900 13 4 ? ? 0 0 ? ?
200001 29 17 ? ? 0 0 ? ?
Total 42 21 ? ? 0 0 ? ?
NK Zagreb 200102 29 21 ? ? 0 0 ? ?
Total 29 21 ? ? 0 0 ? ?
Dinamo Zagreb 200203 27 16 ? ? 4 3 ? ?
Total 27 16 ? ? 4 3 ? ?
CSKA Moscow 2003 10 7 2 1 0 0 12 8
2004 24 9 3 1 10 0 37 10
2005 20 10 5 1 0 0 25 11
2006 24 9 5 2 6 1 35 12
Total 78 35 15 5 16 1 109 41
Hamburg 200607 15 5 0 0 0 0 15 5
200708 32 14 4 2 10 2 46 18
200809 31 10 5 6 14 9 50 25
Total 78 29 9 8 24 11 111 48
Bayern Munich 200910 29 11 2 1 9 7 40 19
201011 6 0 1 0 2 0 9 0
201112 5 1 1 0 0 0 6 1
Total 40 12 4 1 11 7 55 20
Career total 338 151 ? ? 62 25 ? ?

Statistics accurate as of 29 October 2011[10]

Personal life

Olić has two sons named Luka and Antonio.[8] Unlike many of his counterparts, he prefers to keep a low media profile and generally lives a quiet private life.[4]

References

External links


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