Zlatan Ibrahimovic Popular Books

Zlatan Ibrahimovic Biography & Facts

Zlatan Ibrahimović (Swedish: [ˈslǎːtan ɪbraˈhǐːmʊvɪtɕ] , Bosnian: [zlǎtan ibraxǐːmoʋitɕ]; born 3 October 1981) is a Swedish former professional footballer who played as a striker. Ibrahimović is known for his acrobatic strikes and volleys, technique and ball control, as well as his physical dominance. He is regarded as one of the greatest strikers of all time and is one of the most decorated footballers in the world, having won 34 trophies in his career. He has scored over 570 career goals, including more than 500 club goals, and has scored in each of the last four decades. Ibrahimović began his career at Malmö FF in 1999, and signed for Ajax two years later, where he gained a reputation as one of the most promising forwards in Europe. He departed two years later to sign for Juventus before joining domestic rivals Inter Milan in 2006. At Inter Milan, he won three consecutive Serie A titles and his popularity experienced a significant increase. In the summer of 2009, he moved to Barcelona in one of the world's most expensive transfers. After just one season, he returned to Italy having signed for Inter's rival Milan. With them, he won the Serie A title in his debut season. In 2012, Ibrahimović joined Paris Saint-Germain, leading them to their first Ligue 1 title in 19 years and soon establishing himself as a leading figure in their dominance of French football. During his four-season stay in France, he won four consecutive Ligue 1 titles, was the top scorer in Ligue 1 for three seasons and became PSG's all-time leading goalscorer at the time. In 2016, he joined Manchester United on a free transfer and won his first European honour in his debut season. Ibrahimović joined American club LA Galaxy in 2018 and rejoined Milan in 2020, winning his fifth Serie A title in 2022. Ibrahimović is one of eleven players to have made 100 or more appearances for the Swedish national team, over a 20-year international career. He is the country's all-time leading goalscorer with 62 goals. He represented Sweden at the 2002 and 2006 FIFA World Cups, as well as the 2004, 2008, 2012, and 2016 UEFA European Championships. He has been awarded Guldbollen (the Golden Ball), given to the Swedish player of the year, a record 12 times, including 10 consecutive times from 2007 to 2016. Ibrahimović's 35-yard bicycle kick goal for Sweden against England won the 2013 FIFA Puskás Award, and is often considered one of the best goals of all time. He has scored other memorable goals, most notably in the European Championships. Ibrahimović was named in the FIFA FIFPro World XI in 2013 and the UEFA Team of the Year in 2007, 2009, 2013 and 2014. He finished at a peak of fourth for the FIFA Ballon d'Or in 2013. In 2015, UEFA included him as one of the best players that have not won the UEFA Champions League, while in 2019, FourFourTwo magazine named him the third-greatest player never to win the competition. In December 2014, Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter ranked him the second-greatest Swedish sportsperson ever, after tennis player Björn Borg. Off the field, Ibrahimović is known for his brash persona and outspoken comments, in addition to referring to himself in the third person. Early life Ibrahimović was born in Malmö, Sweden, on 3 October 1981. He was born to a Muslim Bosniak father, Šefik Ibrahimović, who emigrated to Sweden in 1977, and a Catholic Croat mother, Jurka Gravić, who also emigrated to Sweden where the couple first met. Ibrahimović identifies with his mother's faith and considers himself a devout Catholic Christian. He began playing football at the age of six, after receiving a pair of football boots. He alternated between FBK Balkan, a Malmö club founded by Yugoslav immigrants, Malmö BI and briefly BK Flagg football clubs. As a child, his mother sometimes hit him on the head with a wooden spoon, which would often break. After she was arrested for handling stolen goods, social services intervened. Concerned with his divorced mother's ability to cope with five children, one of whom, Ibrahimović's half-sister, had a drug problem, at age nine he was sent to live with his father. With food scarce at his father's home where the fridge was packed with beer, Ibrahimović often went hungry so he would run to his mother's for dinner. He also shoplifted and stole bikes. On the tough upbringing that shaped his character, author David Lagercrantz, who co-wrote I Am Zlatan, states: Complex is the best word to describe Zlatan. On the one hand he's a strong, warrior type who knew he had to be very tough to survive. So he takes on fights all the time because he's always had to. But another part of him is vulnerable. He's a guy wounded by his upbringing, who uses all that to create strength for himself. In his position, 99 guys out of 100 would have gone under, but he used his anger to make himself better. He told me, ‘David, I need to be angry to play well’. When he played with middle-class kids he felt inferior because he wore the wrong clothes and had no money, so he said to himself ‘One day I'll show them!’ That became his motivation. While in his early teens, Ibrahimović was a regular for his hometown club Malmö FF. At the age of 15, he was close to quitting his football career, in favour of working at the docks in Malmö, but his manager convinced him to continue playing. As a boy, his hero was Brazilian forward Ronaldo. An avid viewer of Italian football, another player he admired was prolific striker Gabriel Batistuta – a player with similar characteristics to himself. Club career Malmö FF Ibrahimović signed his first contract with Malmö in 1996, and moved up to the senior side for the 1999 season of Allsvenskan, Sweden's top-flight league. That season, Malmö finished 13th in the league and were relegated to the second division, but returned to the top flight the next season. Arsène Wenger unsuccessfully tried to persuade Ibrahimović to join Arsenal, while Leo Beenhakker (the technical director of Ajax) also expressed interest in the player after watching him in a friendly against Norwegian side Moss FK. On 22 March 2001, a deal between Ajax and Malmö regarding Ibrahimović's transfer to Amsterdam was announced, and in July, Ibrahimović officially joined Ajax for 80 million Swedish kronor (€8.7 million). Ajax Ibrahimović received little playing time under manager Co Adriaanse, but when Adriaanse was sacked on 29 November 2001, new coach Ronald Koeman inserted Ibrahimović into the starting lineup as Ajax won the 2001–02 Eredivisie title. The next season, Ibrahimović scored twice in a 2–1 victory over French champions Lyon in his Champions League debut on 17 September 2002. He scored five Champions League goals overall as Ajax fell to Milan in the quarter-finals. Ibrahimović's profile rose when he scored an individual goal against NAC Breda on 22 August 2004 – a slaloming run past five opposition players which the commentator compared with Diego Maradona and Zinedine Zidane – that was eventual.... Discover the Zlatan Ibrahimovic popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Zlatan Ibrahimovic books.

Best Seller Zlatan Ibrahimovic Books of 2024

  • Football Fanatic synopsis, comments

    Football Fanatic

    Ken Ferris

    This is the book which landed the author in the Guinness Book of Records for his recordbreaking 20,000mile tour of every Football League Ground in England. The first edition was hu...

  • Jeg er Zlatan Ibrahimovic synopsis, comments

    Jeg er Zlatan Ibrahimovic

    David Lagercrantz

    I " Jeg er Zlatan Ibrahimovic" fortæller Zlatan med egne ord om en barsk opvækst i Rosengårdkvarteret uden for Malmø. Om fædrene fra de fine dele af byen, der forsøger at få ham sm...

  • West Ham synopsis, comments

    West Ham

    Pete May

    Many feared that West Ham would fade and die during the 20012002 season. Former gaffer Harry Redknapp had been sacked in mysterious circumstances and would never again exclaim that...

  • 32 Programmes synopsis, comments

    32 Programmes

    Dave Roberts

    When Dave Roberts relocates to the USA, his wife informs him that they can only take what is 'absolutely essential'. Packing his collection of football programmes (1,134 of them f...

  • The Goalie synopsis, comments

    The Goalie

    Andy Goram & Iain King

    This is the story of a genius with flaws. Lots of them. On the field, Andy Goram was a defiant figure between the sticks who, in many ways, defined the historymaking nineinarow tea...

  • Dog Days synopsis, comments

    Dog Days

    Aidan Higgins

    'Tired of walking in the dream I have returned to the country where I was born half a century ago' The Higgins family is now dispersed; the third son of four brothers is h...

  • Bring Me the Head of Trevor Brooking synopsis, comments

    Bring Me the Head of Trevor Brooking

    Ben Sharratt & Kirk Blows

    West Ham United last won a major trophy in 1980, but the rollercoaster ride of the past three decades has produced enough twists and turns, heroes and villains and contrasting emot...

  • Jock Stein synopsis, comments

    Jock Stein

    David Potter & Tom Campbell

    'I am proud to say that I knew Jock Stein as a football manager, as a colleague and as a friend . . . he was the greatest manager in British football . . . men like Jock will live ...

  • Build a Bonfire synopsis, comments

    Build a Bonfire

    Paul Hodson & Stephen North

    How would you feel if your football club was bought by a businessman who saw your ground as real estate? And what if your ground was demolished leaving you with nowhere to play nex...

  • The Greatest Footballer You Never Saw synopsis, comments

    The Greatest Footballer You Never Saw

    Paolo Hewitt & Paul McGuigan

    Robin Friday was an exceptional footballer who should have played for England. He never did. Robin Friday was a brilliant player who could have played in the top flight. He never d...

  • The Wright Stuff synopsis, comments

    The Wright Stuff

    Rick Glanvill

    Ian Wright is one of the English game's great football heroes. He is an England international and the leading marksman and trophywinner for Arsenal. Yet he also regularly collects ...

  • Deadfall synopsis, comments

    Deadfall

    Lyndon Stacey

    Bay Tremayne, heir to a viscountcy and manager of his father's Dorset estate, has one burning ambition to be selected to ride on the British Olympic threeday eventing team. But hi...

  • The Toon synopsis, comments

    The Toon

    R Hutchinson & Roger Hutchinson

    This is the full story, unofficial and uncensored, of one of the greatest football clubs in the country. From its birth in the 1890s to its rebirth in the 1990s and up to season 20...

  • Zidane synopsis, comments

    Zidane

    Patrick Fort, Jean Philippe & Laura Bennett

    Get inside the mind of football's most enigmatic icon‘Zidane is the master’ PeleOne of modern football’s most brilliant players and one of its most iconic and mysterious figures ...

  • The Little Book of Zlatan synopsis, comments

    The Little Book of Zlatan

    Malcolm Olivers

    The Little Book of Zlatan is a celebration of one of the most charismatic, mercurial and talismanic footballers in the game, an individual so distinct, so talented and so perfect t...

  • Goalless Draws synopsis, comments

    Goalless Draws

    David Squires

    Halfandhalf scarves? VARs? England winning penalty shootouts?Modern football can be baffling. But if you're contemplating throwing it all in for the simpler pleasures of quantum me...

  • Zlatan synopsis, comments

    Zlatan

    Matt Oldfield, Edwin Sharp & Tom Oldfield

    Zlatan Ibrahimovic est l'un des joueurs les plus charismatiques et populaires au monde. Vainqueur de tous les plus grands championnats européens, Zlatan a joué dans les plus grands...

  • Eddie Turnbull synopsis, comments

    Eddie Turnbull

    Eddie Turnbull & Martin Hannan

    As the first British player to score a goal in European club competition in 1955, Hibs hero Eddie Turnbull holds a unique place in footballing history. In Eddie Turnbull: Having a ...

  • Moi, Zlatan Ibrahimovic synopsis, comments

    Moi, Zlatan Ibrahimovic

    Zlatan Ibrahimović & David Lagercrantz

    « Pour bien jouer, il faut être fou. Pour être bon, il faut se sentir en colère. » Voilà les commentaires de Zlatan après l’un de ses premiers matches avec le PSG. Rien de surprena...

  • The River synopsis, comments

    The River

    Philippa Forrester

    When TV presenter Philippa Forrester first met Charlie, a wildlife cameraman, she thought he was a showoff and he thought she was arrogant. The second time, despite being hungry, ...

  • Reliving the Dream synopsis, comments

    Reliving the Dream

    Derick Allsop

    Manchester United are one of the biggest football clubs in the world. Their fame has spread to the most remote corners on earth. The legend grew out of one man's obsession with tak...

  • Silence Of The Heart synopsis, comments

    Silence Of The Heart

    David Frith

    Cricket has an alarming suicide rate. Among international players for England and several other countries it is far above the national average for all sports: and there have been n...

  • Totally Frank synopsis, comments

    Totally Frank

    Frank McGarvey & Ronnie Esplin

    During a glorious but controversial career, Frank McGarvey won every major trophy in Scottish football. Under Alex Ferguson at St Mirren in the 1970s, he inspired a young Saints te...

  • Zio Billy e i suoi amici. Il calcio e la bicicletta scomparsa synopsis, comments

    Zio Billy e i suoi amici. Il calcio e la bicicletta scomparsa

    Alessandro Costacurta & Marco Cattaneo

    Il calcio tutto da ridere con due punte d'eccezione!Lo sapevate che per andare agli allenamenti Ibrahimović prendeva in prestito le biciclette che trovava in giro e che il suo alle...

  • Forza Italia synopsis, comments

    Forza Italia

    Paddy Agnew

    When journalist Paddy Agnew and his girlfriend Dympna touched down in Rome in 1985 in search of adventure, sunshine and the soul of Italian football (well, Paddy was looking for th...

  • Quiet Leadership synopsis, comments

    Quiet Leadership

    Carlo Ancelotti

    Carlo Ancelotti is one of the greatest managers of all time, with five Champions League titles to his name. Yet his approach could not be further from the aggressive theatricals fa...

  • Big Mal synopsis, comments

    Big Mal

    David Tossell

    Malcolm Allison is one of the most controversial figures of the last halfcentury of English football. Leader of the famed 'West Ham Academy', his playing career was cut short by th...

  • Still Talking Blue synopsis, comments

    Still Talking Blue

    Becky Tallentire

    Do you still curse yourself over the day you met your hero; when instead of asking him the one question that's been nagging you for years, you couldn't utter a word because you wer...

  • The Worst of Friends synopsis, comments

    The Worst of Friends

    Colin Shindler

    Before the Thai millions and Abu Dhabi billions, Manchester City was always a club that attracted fierce controversy.July 1965: Manchester City are on the scrapheap, managerless an...

  • John Charles synopsis, comments

    John Charles

    Mario Risoli

    ‘Whenever I look at him, it is as though the Messiah has returned.’ That's how Jimmy Murphy, manager of Wales’ 1958 World Cup side, described John Charles. In Italy, where he playe...

  • Sir Matt Busby synopsis, comments

    Sir Matt Busby

    Patrick Barclay

    The Man Who Made A Football ClubSir Matt Busby, who took Manchester United to unprecedented glory before seeing the club through profound tragedy, created the global entity that sp...