⑴ 鎰忓ぇ鍒╁浗瀹墮槦鍜屽挨鏂囧浘鏂淇變箰閮ㄧ殑鑻辨枃浠嬬粛
涓銆佹剰澶у埄鍥藉墮槦錛
Italy national football team
The Italian national football team is the national association football team of Italy and is governed by the Italian Football Federation (FIGC - Federazione Italiana Giuoco Calcio).
Italy is the second most successful national team in World Cup play, having won four World Cups (1934, 1938, 1982, 2006), just one less than Brazil. To this tally they can add one European championship (1968), and one Olympic Gold Medal (1936).[1]
The traditional colour of the national team (as well as of all Italian teams and athletes, except in motor sports) is sky blue[2] (azzurro, in Italian), and therefore national team members are nicknamed Azzurri.
Nickname: Azzurri
Association: Italian Football Federation
Coach: Roberto Donadoni
Captain: Fabio Cannavaro
Most caps: Paolo Maldini (126)
Top scorer: Gigi Riva (35)
2006 World Cup squad
head coach: Marcello Lippi
squad:
1 GK Gianluigi Buffon 28 January 1978 66 Juventus F.C.
2 DF Cristian Zaccardo 21 December 1981 15 Palermo
3 DF Fabio Grosso 28 November 1977 22 Internazionale
4 MF Daniele De Rossi 24 July 1983 19 A.S. Roma
5 DF Fabio Cannavaro captain 13 September 1973 100 Juventus F.C.
6 DF Andrea Barzagli 8 May 1981 10 Palermo
7 FW Alessandro Del Piero 9 November 1974 79 Juventus F.C.
8 MF Gennaro Gattuso 9 January 1978 46 A.C. Milan
9 FW Luca Toni 26 May 1977 23 ACF Fiorentina
10 MF Francesco Totti 27 September 1976 57 A.S. Roma
11 FW Alberto Gilardino 5 July 1982 20 A.C. Milan
12 GK Angelo Peruzzi 16 February 1970 31 S.S. Lazio
13 DF Alessandro Nesta 19 March 1976 77 A.C. Milan
14 GK Marco Amelia 2 April 1982 1 Livorno
15 FW Vincenzo Iaquinta 29 November 1979 16 Udinese
16 MF Mauro Camoranesi 4 October 1976 25 Juventus F.C.
17 MF Simone Barone 30 April 1978 15 Palermo
18 FW Filippo Inzaghi 9 August 1973 50 A.C. Milan
19 DF Gianluca Zambrotta 19 February 1977 57 Juventus F.C.
20 MF Simone Perrotta 17 September 1977 30 A.S. Roma
21 MF Andrea Pirlo 19 May 1979 30 A.C. Milan
22 DF Massimo Oddo 14 June 1976 21 S.S. Lazio
23 DF Marco Materazzi 19 August 1973 31 Internazionale
浜屻佸挨鏂囧浘鏂淇變箰閮
Juventus F.C.
Juventus Football Club (Latin for Youth, pronounced /ju.ˈvɛn.tus/) is one of Italy's oldest and most renowned football clubs. It is based in Turin.
With 11 official international titles in team honours (second in Europe), Juve is the 3rd best club in All-time ranking of the UEFA's European Tournaments and 4th in All-time ranking of the UEFA Champions League. It is widely regarded as one of the most supported and successful football clubs in the world.
The team typically plays in black-and-white striped shirts and white shorts (in some seasons black shorts), and is nicknamed la Vecchia Signora (the Old Lady, by the first official name), i bianconeri (black-and-whites), zebre (zebras), or depreciatively gobbi (humpbacks) by the opponents.
Full name: Juventus Football Club
Nickname(s): La Vecchia Signora (The Old Lady); La Fidanzata d'Italia (The Italy's Girlfriend); Bianconeri (White-blacks); Zebre (Zebras)
Founded: November 1, 1897
Ground: Stadio delle Alpi, Turin, Italy
Capacity: 67,229
Chairman: Giovanni Cobolli Gigli
Manager: Didier Deschamps
League: Serie A
2005-06: Serie A, 1st
Current squad:
1 GK Gianluigi Buffon
2 DF Alessandro Birindelli
3 DF Giorgio Chiellini
4 MF Patrick Vieira
5 MF Cristiano Zanetti
6 DF Robert Kovač
7 MF Marco Marchionni
8 MF Emerson
9 FW Zlatan Ibrahimović
10 FW Alessandro Del Piero (captain)
11 MF Pavel Nedv臎d
14 DF Federico Balzaretti
16 MF Mauro Camoranesi
17 FW David Tr茅z茅guet
19 MF Gianluca Zambrotta (vice-captain)
21 DF Lilian Thuram
22 GK Landry Bonnefoi
23 MF Giuliano Giannichedda
24 MF Ruben Olivera
25 FW Marcelo Zalayeta
26 DF Gladstone
27 DF Jonathan Zebina
28 DF Fabio Cannavaro
32 GK Christian Abbiati
⑵ 義大利用英語怎麼讀
「義大利」的英文是Italy,讀作:英['ɪtəlɪ]美['ɪtəlɪ]