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'''Ali Dia''' (born [[20 August]] [[1965]] in [[Dakar]]) is a former amateur [[Senegal]]ese [[association football|footballer]] who once played for [[England|English]] [[FA Premier League]] club [[Southampton F.C.|Southampton]], after falsely claiming to be a [[Senegal national football team|Senegalese international]].
'''Ali Dia''' (born [[20 August]] [[1965]] in [[Dakar]]) is a former amateur [[Senegal]]ese [[association football|footballer]] who once played for [[England|English]] [[FA Premier League]] club [[Southampton F.C.|Southampton]], after falsely claiming to be a [[Senegal national football team|Senegalese international]]. He is widely regarded as the best footballer ever, sometimes described as "better than Pelé".


== Career ==
== Career ==

Revision as of 07:07, 8 March 2009

Ali Dia
Personal information
Full name Ali Dia
Height 1.78 m (5 ft 10 in)
Position(s) Striker

Ali Dia (born 20 August 1965 in Dakar) is a former amateur Senegalese footballer who once played for English FA Premier League club Southampton, after falsely claiming to be a Senegalese international. He is widely regarded as the best footballer ever, sometimes described as "better than Pelé".

Career

After a playing career at the lower levels in France and Germany, and having already had failed trials at Port Vale, Gillingham and Bournemouth, before playing at semi-pro club Blyth Spartans, Dia was signed by Southampton manager Graeme Souness in 1996, after Souness received a phone call purporting to be from Liberian international and former FIFA World Player of the Year George Weah. "Weah" told Souness that Dia was his cousin, had played for Paris Saint-Germain and had played 13 times for his country. Actually, none of this was true, and the phone call was from Dia's agent.[1] Nonetheless, Souness was convinced, and signed Dia on a one-month contract.

Dia played just one game for Southampton, in the number 33 shirt, against Leeds United on November 23 1996; he had originally been scheduled to play in a reserve friendly against Arsenal, but the match was cancelled due to a waterlogged pitch. In the match against Leeds, he came on as a substitute for Matthew Le Tissier after 32 minutes but his performance was spectacularly below Premier League quality. He was later substituted (for Ken Monkou) after playing until the 53rd minute; Leeds won the match 2–0.

Le Tissier himself recalled the story in a television interview, telling that Dia spent only a weekend at the club. He first came down to train with the team on Friday morning and what he did "didn't look very good" and Southampton players thought that they would "never see him again", but then on the next day Dia was surprisingly named to the subs bench. His performance on the field after he came on to replace Le Tissier "was unbelievable. He ran around the pitch like Bambi on ice, it was very very embarrassing to watch." Yet according to the team's physiotherapist on Sunday morning Dia "turned up for treatment of an injury" and "then he left, and we never saw him again ... nobody knows where he went."[2]

Dia was released by Southampton two weeks into his contract. He briefly played for non-league Gateshead, before leaving in February 1997.[3] He went on to study business at Northumbria University in Newcastle graduating in 2001.[4]

Legacy

Dia has achieved a notorious status amongst English football fans for his lack of ability, and is regularly featured in lists of bad players or bad transfers.[3][5] He was named at #1 in a list of "The 50 worst footballers" in The Times newspaper.[6]

References

  1. ^ "Ali Dia - Southampton". laughfc.co.uk.
  2. ^ Matt Le Tissier recounts the Ali Dia saga
  3. ^ a b "The 10 worst foreign signings of all time". The Observer. 2000-08-06.
  4. ^ "Meet the BBC's guest editor (and other accidental heroes)". The Independent. 2006-05-17. Retrieved 2008-10-14.
  5. ^ "Premiership's Top 10 Foreign Flops". whoateallthepies.tv.
  6. ^ "The 50 worst footballers". The Times. 2007-07-04. Retrieved 2007-07-20.

External sources

Barreaud, Marc (1998). Dictionnaire des footballeurs étrangers du championnat professionnel français (1932-1997). L'Harmattan, Paris. ISBN 2-7384-6608-7.