About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 32. Chapters: Fabio Cannavaro, Mohamed Kallon, Hani Al-Dhabit, Merouane Zemmama, Cheick Oumar Dabo, Prince Tagoe, Lamine Diarra, Kalusha Bwalya, Masoud Shojaei, Fernando Baiano, Mauricio Molina, Moussa Saib, Fabio Firmani, Frank Ongfiang, Roberto Acuna, Luis Tejada, Dodo, Carlos Villanueva, Bonaventure Kalou, Patrick Suffo, Rade Bogdanovi, Odai Al-Saify, Josiel da Rocha, Amir Sayoud, Mouloud Akloul, Obiora Odita, Denilson Martins Nascimento, Karim Kerkar, Dario Monteiro, David Nakhid, Endurance Idahor, Rachid Tiberkanine, Toufik Zerara, Mark Abboud, Bruno Fogaca, Ousman Jallow, Elie Kroupi, Baye Djiby Fall, Mehdi Meniri, Daniel Wansi, Sandro Hiroshi, Ahmed Mubarak Al Mahaijri, Olivier Boumelaha, Mickael Dogbe, Oluwasegun Abiodun, Sa a Brane ac, Mehdi Kerrouche, Luciano Xavier Cunha, Brahima Korbeogo, Gilcimar Chaves Caetano, Said Chiba, Hadj Bougueche, Brahim Arafat Mezouar, Onyekachi Nwoha, Farid Ghazi, Arthur Moses, Richard Bohomo, Carlos Eduardo Castro da Silva, Elijah Tana, Zakaria Aboub, Rachid Benmahmoud, Abdul Nafiu Idrissu, Sulaiman Said Al Shikairi, Sofiane Daoud, Elias de Oliveira Rosa. Excerpt: Fabio Cannavaro (born 13 September 1973 in Naples, Italy) is a former Italian footballer who last played as a centre back for Al Ahli. He spent the majority of his career in Italy. He started his career at Napoli, before spending seven years at Parma, with whom he won two Coppa Italias and the 1999 UEFA Cup. After spells at Internazionale and Juventus, Cannavaro transferred along with manager Fabio Capello from Juventus to Real Madrid, with whom he won consecutive La Liga titles in 2007 and 2008. After returning to Juventus for one season in 2009-10, he joined Al-Ahli. He retired from professional football in 2011 due to a injury troubled season in Al'Ahli. He also appeared in Paul Scholes testemonial match, starting in the def...