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Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Football News: The First Hattrick in English Premiership 2010/2011 from Didier Drogba

Didier Drogba Chelsea Football Player Photos Didier Drogba Chelsea Football Player Photos

Date of Birth: 11 March 1978
Height: 180 cm
Shirt number: 11
Position: Forward
Current club: Chelsea (ENG)
International Caps: 71
International Goals: 42
First international: Côte d'Ivoire - South Africa (8 September 2002)

Didier Drogba Chelsea Football Player Pictures<br /> Didier Drogba Chelsea Football Player Pictures

Didier Drogba Chelsea Football Player Wallpapers<br />Didier Drogba Chelsea Football Player Wallpapers

Injuries blighted his maiden campaign at the Stade He struck seven goals in 30 matches in 1999/2000 but despite failing to build on that showing the following season, he was lured back to Brittany by Gunigamp coach Guy Lacombe. It was there that he was spotted by Ligue 2 outfit Le Mans, and two years after joining the Stade Leon-Bollee side he signed his first professional contract. The youngster got started in the game at Vannes but then left Brittany to move to the suburbs of Paris, where he spent four years playing for Levallois. ‘Tito’, as he is known by those close to him, was barely five years old when he left Côte d'Ivoire for the French town of Brest to join up with his uncle and tutor Abraham Tebily, a professional footballer.

Didier Drogba Chelsea Football Player Images<br />Didier Drogba Chelsea Football Player Images

Now, having taken the long route to the top, he is the icon and undisputed leader of the national team, his frustration at lacking the international trophies to go with his standing only matched by the extent to which he is scapegoated by the Ivorian press whenever the Elephants fall short. When the emblematic Côte d'Ivoire captain ended the 2001/02 season having hit three goals in just 11 Ligue 1 outings for Guingamp, nothing suggested he would go on to become a global superstar, two-time CAF African Player of the Year (2006 and 2009), Chelsea’s most prolific ever marksman in Europe and a respected UNICEF ambassador. The Elephants’ all-time leading scorer was not being facetious when he entitled his autobiography C’était pas gagné (It wasn’t easy).