Graziano Pellè

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Graziano Pellè (Script error: No such module "IPA".; born 15 July 1985) is an Italian former professional footballer who played as a striker.

Pellè began his career at local Serie A club Lecce, and was loaned to three lower-division sides before moving to the Dutch club AZ in 2007. He won the Eredivisie title in his second of four seasons at the club. After brief spells back in Italy with Parma and Sampdoria, he returned to the Dutch top flight, where his consistent scoring for Feyenoord earned Pellè an £8 million transfer to Southampton in July 2014. In July 2016, after two seasons in the Premier League, Pellè moved to Shandong Luneng for an estimated transfer fee of £12 million.[1]

Pellè represented Italy at under-20 and under-21 level. He also played for the nation's Olympic team in 2008, but was not selected for the tournament. He scored on his senior international debut in 2014 and was part of the Italian squad at UEFA Euro 2016, where he scored two goals before being eliminated in the quarter-final.

Club career

Lecce

Born in San Cesario di Lecce, Province of Lecce, Pellè is from Monteroni di Lecce.[2] He could have chosen ballroom dancing as his profession after becoming national under-12s champion in partnership with his sister Fabiana.[2] He started playing for local club Lecce's youth teams; his father Roberto was a striker for Lecce in Serie C.[2] Graziano won two Campionato Primavera titles and the 2002 Coppa Italia Primavera. He made his Serie A debut on 11 January 2004 in 1–2 home defeat against Bologna, making a total of two appearances in the season.

In January 2005, Pellè was loaned out to Catania in Serie B, being regularly used but failing to find the net. In the summer, he participated in the 2005 FIFA World Youth Championship with the under-20 team, scoring four goals in an eventual quarter-final exit,[3] and returned to Lecce for the 2005–06 campaign, only to be loaned again in the winter transfer window, again to the second division, now to Crotone.

In 2006–07 Pellè was yet again loaned to a level two club, this time to Cesena, where he had a breakthrough year with ten goals.

AZ

In July 2007, Pellè lost all ties to Lecce and signed for Eredivisie outfit AZ. He stated in an interview that he had a choice of staying at Lecce, who would loan him to Palermo, but chose the Alkmaar club instead because of its willingness to give chances to young players. His debut season, however, was largely unfruitful, as he struggled to replace PSV-bound Danny Koevermans, and finished his first season with just 3 goals in 27 games (16 starts).[4]

On 28 December 2008, Pellè scored the winning goal in a 1–0 win against NEC.[5] In February of the following year, he netted twice in a 3–0 home success over Groningen,[6] but was overall sparingly used by the North Holland side over the course of four Eredivisie seasons, being released in June 2011.

File:Huldiging AZ kampioen 2009.jpg
Pellè (far left) among the AZ players celebrating their Eredivisie win in 2009

Parma

In early July 2011, Parma confirmed through its official website that Pellè had signed a multi-year contract with the club.[7] He scored one goal during his time at Parma, netting its second goal in a come from behind 3–3 draw with his former club Lecce on 18 December 2011; this was his first goal in Serie A.[8] On 31 January 2012, Pellè joined Sampdoria on loan in the second division, scoring 4 goals in 16 appearances for the club to help it earn promotion back to Serie A for 2012–13.[9]

Feyenoord

For the 2012–13 season, still owned by Parma, Pellè returned to the Netherlands, joining Feyenoord to become the first Italian to play for the club.[10] He scored 11 goals in his first ten games, including a last-minute strike in a 2–2 home draw against Ajax[11] and both goals in a 2–0 success over RKC Waalwijk, also at De Kuip.[12] On 23 December, he scored twice more as Feyenoord beat Groningen 2–1 in the last game of the Eredivisie season before the winter break.[13]

File:Graziano Pellè portret.jpg
Pellè in training with Feyenoord in 2013

On 5 January 2013, Pellè signed a four-year contract with the Rotterdam club, to be effective 1 July.[14] His first goal since securing a permanent move to Feyenoord came on 30 January, scoring on a pass from Jean-Paul Boëtius as Feyenoord eventually fell to a 2–1 defeat to PSV.[15] On 28 April, he scored a first-half brace as Feyenoord notched an impressive 6–0 victory over Heracles.[16] At the end of the campaign, he had netted 27 league goals, ranking second in the domestic charts[17] and also surpassing the recent records of Italian scorers in a foreign league – Luca Toni (Bayern Munich) and Christian Vieri (Atlético Madrid) – in the process.[18]

Pellè was also famous for his "retro" haircut among Feyenoord fans. In home games, many fans showed the same haircut as Pellè and there are still some tutorials on YouTube that teach how to arrange his hairstyle.[19]

Pellè netted all three goals for Feyenoord on 25 August 2013, notching a 3–1 win over NAC Breda, and securing the club's first points of the new Eredivisie season.[20] He opened the scoring for Feyenoord in the seventh minute of their UEFA Europa League second leg play-off match against Kuban Krasnodar to bring the sides level at 1–1 on aggregate, but the Dutch side conceded twice and fell to a 3–1 aggregate defeat.[21] He scored another hat-trick for Feyenoord on 29 September 2013, scoring with each foot and from the penalty spot as the Rotterdam side defeated ADO Den Haag 4–2.[22] He scored twice more on 1 December, netting in either half as Feyenoord defeated rivals PSV 3–1.[23]

On 8 February 2014, Pellè scored twice and also missed a penalty as Feyenoord came from a goal down to defeat NEC 5–1.[24] On 2 March, he opened the scoring with a header from a Bruno Martins Indi cross, but retrospectively received a red card for an elbow to the face of Joël Veltman and a four-match ban as Feyenoord fell 2–1 to rivals Ajax.[25][26] After sitting out the ban, Pellè returned to the team on 6 April and scored a brace in Feyenoord's 2–0 win over RKC Waalwijk.[27] His 15th and last league goal for Feyenoord came on 27 April, nodding in a Ruud Vormer corner as Feyenoord defeated Cambuur 5–1.[28]

Southampton

2014–15 season

Pellè signed a three-year deal for £8 million with Premier League side Southampton in July 2014, reuniting him with his former AZ and Feyenoord coach Ronald Koeman.[29][30] Pellè made his competitive debut for the club on 17 August in its first game of the new league season, playing the full 90 minutes of a 2–1 defeat at Liverpool.[31] On 26 August, he scored his first competitive goal for the club in a 2–0 victory over Millwall in the Second Round of the League Cup.[32] His first league goal for the club came four days later in a 3–1 away win over West Ham United.[33] He scored twice more in Southampton's next match, a 4–0 home win over Newcastle United on 13 September, to secure its second league win in as many games.[34] On 27 September, Pellè won a match for Southampton against Queens Park Rangers with an overhead kick, which was later deemed "world class" by opposing manager Harry Redknapp.[35]

Pellè won the Premier League Player of the Month award for September, with Koeman named the Manager of the Month,[36] and he followed this up with two goals in an 8–0 victory over Sunderland on 18 October.[37] He scored another brace in a League Cup victory over Stoke City on 29 October, helping his side reach the quarter-finals of the competition for the first time in ten years. These were his 8th and 9th goals in his last 12 games.[38]

On 11 April 2015, Pellè scored his first Premier League goal of the year in a 2–0 win over Hull City at St. Mary's Stadium, ending a run of 15 league matches without scoring.[39] Two weeks later, in a 2–2 draw against Tottenham Hotspur, Pellè scored both goals for his team; a strike after overpowering Ben Davies, and a header from a cross by Shane Long.[40]

2015–16 season

Pellè scored Southampton's first goal in a European competition since 2003 when he opened a 3–0 Europa League third qualifying round home leg win over Vitesse on 30 July 2015.[41] A week later, it took him four minutes to open a 2–0 win in the away leg.[42] In Southampton's first match of the league season, away to Newcastle, he headed in right-back Cédric's cross to open a 2–2 draw.[43] He scored twice against Manchester United on 20 September, albeit in a 2–3 home loss.[44] Pellè then scored his fifth of the season against Chelsea in a 3–1 win at Stamford Bridge, scoring Southampton's third goal of the match from a tight angle.[45]

Shandong Luneng

Pellè left Southampton for Chinese club Shandong Luneng on 11 July 2016,[46] for an estimated fee of £12 million.[1] He became the world's seventh-highest paid footballer, earning £350,000 per week.[47] Pellè made his debut for the club in a 1–1 draw with Liaoning Whowin on 16 July 2016. Four days later, he scored his first goal in a 4–1 victory over Hangzhou Greentown.[48]

Return to Parma

On 5 February 2021, Pellè agreed to a return to Parma on a six-month deal.[49] On 19 March, almost 10 years since his last goal in Serie A, Pellé scored with an overhead kick in Parma's match against Genoa.[50]

International career

File:Azerbaijan-Italy, 10 October 2015 - Graziano Pellè.jpg
Pellè playing for Italy against Azerbaijan in 2015.

Pellè scored four goals for Italy under-20 at the 2005 FIFA World Youth Championship in the Netherlands, including a brace in their 4–1 group stage win over Canada.[51] He also netted an extra-time equaliser for a 2–2 draw with Morocco in the quarter-finals, and converted in the penalty shootout which his team lost nonetheless.[52]

After a successful loan spell with Cesena, Pellè earned a call-up to the Italian under-21 side at the 2007 UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship, where he collected three appearances, all as a substitute. In the fifth-place playoff match against Portugal, he scored the first penalty kick in the shootout win, with a Panenka-style penalty.[53] The win secured Italy the final European spot at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing.[53] He was part of the preparation for the tournament but was ultimately not selected to the final 22-man squad for the Olympics.[54]

On 4 October 2014, Pellè received his first call up to the Italy senior side for the Azzurri's UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying matches against Azerbaijan and Malta.[55] He made his debut as a starter away to Malta on 13 October 2014, scoring the only goal of the game from close range after a corner in the 29th minute.[56] He netted a second goal in the 29th minute on his third appearance on 31 March 2015, heading Italy into the lead in a 1–1 friendly draw against England at Juventus Stadium in Turin.[57] On 3 September 2015, he finished Antonio Candreva's cross for the only goal of the home qualifier against Malta in Florence.[58] He scored the match-winning goal in Italy's 2–1 home win over Norway on 13 October, which allowed Italy to top their Euro 2016 qualifying group and extended their unbeaten run in European qualifying to 50 matches; Pellè was also Italy's top scorer during the qualifying campaign, with three goals.[59]

On 31 May 2016, Pellè was included in Italy manager Antonio Conte's 23-man squad for Euro 2016.[60] In Italy's opening game, on 13 June against Europe's top-ranked team Belgium in Lyon, Pellè played the full match and volleyed a strike into the back of the net in added time for a 2–0 win.[61] In the round of 16 at Stade de France in Paris on 27 June, he struck a volley in the 91st minute to give the Azzurri a 2–0 win over defending champions Spain.[62] On 2 July, he missed a penalty in a 6–5 shoot-out defeat to defending World Cup champions Germany in the tournament quarter-finals.[63] In the events after the match, Pellè issued an apology to the fans of the national team stating, "Do my Euros remain positive? I couldn't care less right now, I am just sad and want to apologise to all Italians. If I had scored that penalty, I'd have become a phenomenon, but instead... I arrived here as a nobody and I leave as a nobody." He also denied provoking Germany goalkeeper Manuel Neuer by making the "chip" gesture.[64]

Although moving his football career to China over the summer, new coach Gian Piero Ventura called Pellè back for international duty for a friendly against France and a 2018 FIFA World Cup qualifier against Israel on 1 and 5 September 2016,[65] scoring in both matches, as Italy suffered a 3–1 home defeat to France but defeated Israel away, 3–1.[66] He was called again for World Cup qualifying matches against Spain and Macedonia on 6 and 9 October, however he was later excluded from the Macedonia match after being substituted in the 59th minute during the Spain game and refusing to shake the hand of coach Ventura.[67]

Style of play

Described as a traditional "target-man" with an eye for goal,[68] Pellè is a large, strong and hard-working striker who excels in the air due to his height and physical attributes.[69] As a centre-forward, he is known for his powerful and accurate finishing ability with his head and feet, as well as his accurate volleys and penalty-kick taking; he is also capable of using his strength and solid first touch to hold up the ball with his back to goal, and either link-up with other players or create chances for teammates.[69][70][71] Labelled as a "late bloomer" by sportswriter James Horncastle,[72] Pellè's playing style and characteristics have led him to be compared to compatriot Luca Toni in the Italian media.[73] Pellè has also drawn praise in the media for his work-rate off the ball, and has been described as a mobile forward, who chases down and presses his opponents.[74]

Personal life

In the summer of 2022, he married Hungarian fashion model Viktória Varga, his partner for several years. On 3 December 2024, the couple separated after two years of marriage and ten years of engagement.Template:Fact

Career statistics

Club

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition[75]
Club Season League Cup[nb 1] League Cup Continental Total
Division Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
Lecce 2003–04 Serie A 2 0 0 0 2 0
2005–06 Serie A 10 0 1 0 11 0
Total 12 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 13 0
Catania (loan) 2004–05 Serie B 15 0 0 0 15 0
Crotone (loan) 2005–06 Serie B 17 6 17 6
Cesena (loan) 2006–07 Serie B 38 10 2 1 40 11
AZ 2007–08 Eredivisie 27 3 1 0 4[lower-alpha 1] 1 32 4
2008–09 Eredivisie 20 3 3 1 23 4
2009–10 Eredivisie 13 2 1 0 5[lower-alpha 2] 0 19 2
2010–11 Eredivisie 18 6 2 0 0 0 20 6
Total 78 14 7 1 0 0 9 1 94 16
Parma 2011–12 Serie A 11 1 2 1 13 2
2012–13 Serie A 1 0 0 0 1 0
Total 12 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 14 2
Sampdoria (loan) 2011–12 Serie B 16 4 0 0 16 4
Feyenoord (loan) 2012–13 Eredivisie 29 27 4 2 33 29
Feyenoord 2013–14 Eredivisie 28 23 3 2 2[lower-alpha 3] 1 33 26
Total 57 50 7 4 0 0 2 1 66 55
Southampton 2014–15 Premier League 38 12 3 1 3 3 44 16
2015–16[76] Premier League 30 11 0 0 2 1 4[lower-alpha 4] 2 37 14
Total 68 23 3 1 5 4 4 2 81 30
Shandong Luneng 2016 Chinese Super League 13 5 0 0 2[lower-alpha 5] 0 15 5
2017 Chinese Super League 24 6 2 0 26 6
2018 Chinese Super League 26 16 6 0 32 16
2019 Chinese Super League 25 17 5 3 8[lower-alpha 5] 7 40 27
2020 Chinese Super League 18 8 4 1 22 9
Total 106 52 17 4 0 0 10 7 133 63
Parma 2020–21 Serie A 13 1 0 0 13 1
Career total 432 161 39 11 5 4 27 11 500 188

<templatestyles src="Reflist/styles.css" />

  1. All appearances in UEFA Cup
  2. All appearances in UEFA Champions League
  3. All appearances in Europa League
  4. All appearances in UEFA Europa League
  5. a b All appearances in AFC Champions League

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Template:Notelist

International

Appearances and goals by national team and year[77]
National team Year Apps Goals
Italy
2014 2 1
2015 8 3
2016 10 5
Total 20 9

International goals

Italy score listed first, score column indicates score after each Pellè goal.[75]
International goals by date, venue, opponent, score, result and competition
No. Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition
1 13 October 2014 Ta' Qali National Stadium, Mdina, Malta {{ Template:Yesno alias = Malta flag alias = Flag of Malta.svg flag alias-1875 = Flag of Malta (1875–1898).svg flag alias-1898 = Flag of Malta (1898–1923).svg flag alias-1923 = Flag of Malta (1923–1943).svg flag alias-1943 = Flag of Malta (1943–1964).svg flag alias-unofficial-1943 = Flag of Malta (1943).svg flag alias-colonial = Flag of Malta (1943-1964).svg flag alias-civil = Civil Ensign of Malta.svg link alias-naval = Maritime Squadron of the Armed Forces of Malta link alias-navy = Maritime Squadron of the Armed Forces of Malta flag alias-navy =Naval Jack of Malta.svg flag alias-1814 = 19th Century Flag of Malta.svg size = name = altlink = national football team variant =

}}||align=center|1–0||align=center|1–0||UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying

2 31 March 2015 Juventus Stadium, Turin, Italy {{ Template:Yesno alias = England flag alias = Flag of England.svg flag alias-naval = English White Ensign 1620.svg link alias-naval = Royal Navy flag alias-navy = English White Ensign 1620.svg link alias-navy = Royal Navy link alias-cricket = England cricket team empty = England Saxons size = name = variant = altlink = national football team altvar = football

}}||align=center|1–0||align=center|1–1||Friendly

3 3 September 2015 Stadio Artemio Franchi, Florence, Italy {{ Template:Yesno alias = Malta flag alias = Flag of Malta.svg flag alias-1875 = Flag of Malta (1875–1898).svg flag alias-1898 = Flag of Malta (1898–1923).svg flag alias-1923 = Flag of Malta (1923–1943).svg flag alias-1943 = Flag of Malta (1943–1964).svg flag alias-unofficial-1943 = Flag of Malta (1943).svg flag alias-colonial = Flag of Malta (1943-1964).svg flag alias-civil = Civil Ensign of Malta.svg link alias-naval = Maritime Squadron of the Armed Forces of Malta link alias-navy = Maritime Squadron of the Armed Forces of Malta flag alias-navy =Naval Jack of Malta.svg flag alias-1814 = 19th Century Flag of Malta.svg size = name = altlink = national football team variant =

}}||align=center|1–0||align=center|1–0||rowspan=2|UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying

4 13 October 2015 Stadio Olimpico, Rome, Italy {{safesubst: Template:Yesno alias = Norway flag alias = Flag of Norway.svg flag alias-old kingdom = Royal Standard of Norway.svg flag alias-1814 = Flag of Norway (1814–1821).svg flag alias-1818 = Swedish and Norwegian merchant flag 1818-1844.svg flag alias-1844 = Norge-Unionsflagg-1844.svg flag alias-state = Flag of Norway, state.svg border-state = flag alias-army = Flag of the Norwegian Army.svg border-army = link alias-army = Norwegian Army flag alias-war = Flag of Norway, state.svg link alias-war = Norwegian Armed Forces border-war = flag alias-naval = Naval Jack of Norway.svg border-naval = link alias-naval = Royal Norwegian Navy flag alias-air force = Royal Norwegian Air Force Flag.svg border-air force = link alias-air force = Royal Norwegian Air Force flag alias-navy = Flag of Norway, state.svg border-navy = link alias-navy = Royal Norwegian Navy flag alias-coast guard = Norwegian Coast Guard Racing Stripe.svg link alias-coast guard = Norwegian Coast Guard border-coast guard = size = name = altlink = national football team variant =

}}||align=center|2–1||align=center|2–1

5 29 May 2016 Ta' Qali National Stadium, Mdina, Malta {{ Template:Yesno alias = Scotland flag alias = Flag of Scotland.svg flag alias-1542 = Flag of Scotland (traditional).svg link alias-football = Scotland men's national football team size = name = altlink = national football team variant =

}}||align=center|1–0||align=center|1–0||Friendly

6 13 June 2016 Parc Olympique Lyonnais, Lyon, France {{ Template:Yesno alias = Belgium flag alias = Flag of Belgium (civil).svg flag alias-government = Government Ensign of Belgium.svg flag alias-state = Flag of Belgium.svg flag alias-1830 = Flag of Belgium (1830).svg flag alias-1858 = Royal ensign of Belgium (1858).svg flag alias-army = Flag of the Belgian Land Component.svg link alias-army = Belgian Land Component flag alias-naval = Naval Ensign of Belgium.svg link alias-naval = Belgian Navy flag alias-air force = Air Force Ensign of Belgium.svg link alias-air force = Belgian Air Component flag alias-navy = Naval Ensign of Belgium.svg link alias-navy = Belgian Navy size = name = altlink = national football team variant =

}}||align=center|2–0||align=center|2–0||UEFA Euro 2016

7 27 June 2016 Stade de France, Saint-Denis, France {{ Template:Yesno alias = Spain flag alias = Flag of Spain.svg flag alias-1506 = Flag of Cross of Burgundy.svg flag alias-1701 = Bandera de España 1701-1748.svg flag alias-1748 = Bandera de España 1748-1785.svg flag alias-1760 = Bandera de España 1760-1785.svg flag alias-1785 = Flag of Spain (1785–1873, 1875–1931).svg flag alias-1873 = Flag of the First Spanish Republic.svg flag alias-1874 = Flag of Spain (1785–1873, 1875–1931).svg flag alias-1931 = Flag of Spain (1931–1939).svg flag alias-civil-1931 = Flag of the Second Spanish Republic (plain).svg flag alias-1936 = Flag of the Bando Nacional (1936–1938).svg flag alias-1938 = Flag of Spain (1938–1945).svg flag alias-1945 = Flag of Spain (1945–1977).svg flag alias-1977 = Flag of Spain (1977–1981).svg flag alias-civil = Flag of Spain (civil).svg flag alias-civil-1785 = BandMercante1785.svg flag alias-navy = Flag of Spain.svg link alias-navy = Spanish Navy flag alias-marines = Flag of Spain.svg link alias-marines = Spanish Marine Infantry flag alias-army = Flag of Spain.svg link alias-army = Spanish Army flag alias-naval = Naval Jack of Spain.svg link alias-naval = Spanish Navy flag alias-air force = Flag of Spain.svg link alias-air force = Spanish Air and Space Force size = name = altlink = national football team variant =

}}||align=center|2–0||align=center|2–0||UEFA Euro 2016

8 1 September 2016 Stadio San Nicola, Bari, Italy {{ Template:Yesno alias = France flag alias = Flag of France.svg flag alias-1790 = Flag of France (1790–1794).svg flag alias-1794 = Flag of France (1794–1815, 1830–1958).svg flag alias-1814 = Flag of the Kingdom of France (1814-1830).svg flag alias-1830 = Flag of France (1794–1815, 1830–1958).svg flag alias-1848 = Drapeau france 1848.svg flag alias-1848a = Drapeau france 1848.svg flag alias-1848b = Flag of France (1794–1815, 1830–1958).svg flag alias-1974 = Flag of France (lighter variant).svg flag alias-naval = Civil and Naval Ensign of France.svg flag alias-naval-1790 = Flag of French-Navy-Revolution.svg flag alias-air force = Flag of France.svg link alias-air force = French Air and Space Force flag alias-coast guard = French Maritime Gendarmerie racing stripe.svg border-coast guard = link alias-coast guard = French Maritime Gendarmerie flag alias-army = Flag of France.svg link alias-army = French Army link alias-naval = French Navy flag alias-navy = Civil and Naval Ensign of France.svg link alias-navy = French Navy size = name = altlink = national football team variant =

}}||align=center|1–1||align=center|1–3||Friendly

9 5 September 2016 Sammy Ofer Stadium, Haifa, Israel {{ Template:Yesno alias = Israel flag alias = Flag of Israel.svg flag alias-1948 = Flag of Israel (1948).svg flag alias-civil = Civil Ensign of Israel.svg flag alias-police = Flag of Israel Police V2.svg flag alias-HFC = Flag of IDF Home Front Command.svg flag alias-army = Flag of the Israeli Army (Land Arm) Gray.svg link alias-army = Israeli Ground Forces flag alias-tsahal = Flag of the Israel Defense Forces.svg flag alias-marines = Flag givati.svg link alias-marines = Givati Brigade flag alias-military = Flag of the Israel Defense Forces.svg link alias-military = Israel Defense Forces flag alias-naval = Naval Ensign of Israel.svg link alias-naval = Israeli Navy flag alias-air force = Israel Air Force Flag.svg link alias-air force = Israeli Air Force flag alias-navy = Naval Ensign of Israel.svg link alias-navy = Israeli Navy size = name = altlink = national football team variant =

}}||align=center|1–0||align=center|3–1||2018 FIFA World Cup qualification

Honours

AZ

Shandong Luneng Taishan

Italy U21

Individual

Notes

  1. Includes cup competitions such as Coppa Italia, KNVB Cup, FA Cup and Chinese FA Cup

References

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  1. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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  3. Template:PAGENAMEBASEFIFA competition record (archived)Template:EditAtWikidataTemplate:WikidataCheck
  4. Exclusive: Graziano Pelle happy with life In Alkmaar; Goal.com, 3 March 2009
  5. AZ Alkmaar 1–0 NEC Nijmegen; ESPN Soccernet, 28 December 2008
  6. AZ Alkmaar 3–0 FC Groningen; ESPN Soccernet, 28 February 2009
  7. Ufficiale: Il Parma prende Borini, Pellè e Sansone (Official: Parma gets Borini, Pellè and Sansone); Tutto Mercato, 2 July 2011 Template:In lang
  8. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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  11. Pellè schiet Feyenoord in extra tijd naast Ajax (Pellè saves Feyenoord in injury time against Ajax); NRC, 28 October 2012 Template:In lang
  12. Feyenoord 2–0 RKC Waalwijk; ESPN FC, 1 December 2012
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  78. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  79. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  80. Graziano Pellè awarded Player of the Year prize by René van der Gijp, Voetbal International, 20 May 2013
  81. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".

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External links

Template:Sister project

Template:Italy squad UEFA Euro 2016