Roberto Baggio - Individual Honours

Individual Honours

  • U-23 European Footballer of the Year: 1990
  • UEFA Cup Winners' Cup top scorer: 1990–91
  • European Footballer of the Year (Ballon d'Or/Golden Ball): 1993
  • FIFA World Player of the Year: 1993
  • Platinum Football award by TV Sorrisi and Canzoni: 1992
  • Onze D'Or by French Magazine 'Onze Mondial': 1993
  • FIFA World Cup Silver Ball: 1994
  • FIFA World Cup Silver/ bronze Shoe: 1994/5
  • FIFA World Cup All-Star Team: 1994
  • Bravo award with Fiorentina: 1990
  • Golden Guerin with Vicenza: 1985
  • Golden Guerin with AC Milan: 1996
  • Golden Guerin with Brescia: 2001
  • Guerin d'Oro: 2001
  • Azzuri Team of The Century: 2000
  • FIFA Dream Team of All-Time: 2002
  • 'Most Loved Player' Award via Internet Polls: 2001
  • 'Most Loved Player' Award at the Italian Oscars: 2002
  • FIFA 100: 2004
  • World Soccer Awards 100 Greatest Players of the 20th Century #16
  • Giuseppe Prisco award: 2004
  • The Champions Promenade – Golden Foot 2003
  • Guerin's Sportivo 150 Grandi del Secolo
  • Placar's 100 Craques do Seculo
  • Planète Foot's 50 Meilleurs Joueurs du Monde
  • Italy All-time XI by Football Italia
  • Juventus All-time XI by Football Italia
  • Brescia All-time XI by Football Italia

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Famous quotes containing the words individual and/or honours:

    The concept of a person is logically prior to that of an individual consciousness. The concept of a person is not to be analysed as that of an animated body or an embodied anima.
    Sir Peter Frederick Strawson (b. 1919)

    Vain men delight in telling what Honours have been done them, what great Company they have kept, and the like; by which they plainly confess, that these Honours were more than their Due, and such as their Friends would not believe if they had not been told: Whereas a Man truly proud, thinks the greatest Honours below his Merit, and consequently scorns to boast. I therefore deliver it as a Maxim that whoever desires the Character of a proud Man, ought to conceal his Vanity.
    Jonathan Swift (1667–1745)