Mladen Petric joueur du FC Bâle a retenu un penalty il remplaçait le gardien à la volée lors d’un match contre le FC Nancy
In the final moments of
FC Basel’s UEFA Cup group-stage match versus AS Nancy-Lorraine on November 23,
2006, Petri? was installed in goal after Basel’s keeper Franco Costanzo was sent
off for a foul on Nancy’s Issiar Dia and the team have already made all three
substitutions. The foul resulted in a penalty kick that gave Nancy the final
chance for an away victory, but Petri? was able to make an amazing save and
stopped the penalty kick taken by Mickaël Chrétien, helping his team to drive
home one point with a 2-2 draw.
Mladen Petri? (born January 1 1981) is a Croatian football striker. He has dual Croatian-Swiss citizenship.
Born in Dubrave (village close to Br?ko) in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Petri? first moved with his family to Vinkovci, Croatia, due to war and then later to Neuenhof, Switzerland, where he started to play football at the local club FC Neuenhof before moving to FC Baden and starting his professional career at the club in the summer of 1998. He left FC Baden after one season and went on to sign with Grasshoppers Zürich in the summer of 1999.
In 2001, Petri? was spotted in Switzerland by Mirko Jozi?, head coach of the Croatian national team at the time, and made his international debut for Croatia during the team’s South Korean tour in November 2001, where they played two friendly matches against the Korean national team. Petri? appeared in both of the two matches as a second-half substitute, but was subsequently nevertheless not called up to be part of the Croatian squad at the 2002 World Cup finals. He scored his first goal for Croatia in their friendly match against Wales on August 21, 2002 in Varaždin, which ended in a 1-1 draw. He subsequently made his competitive international debut as a second-half substitute in Croatia’s opening match of the Euro 2004 qualifying against Estonia, but did not play any international matches at the A-team level for three and half years following this match.
At club level, Petri? spent five seasons with Grasshoppers Zürich before leaving the club for FC Basel in the summer of 2004 for a transfer fee of three million euros and signing a four-year contract until June 2008. Playing for Grasshoppers, he made a total of 114 domestic league appearances and scored 30 goals for the club in the league.
In early 2006, Petri? made his international comeback with the Croatian national team by appearing as a second-half substitute in the team’s friendly matches against Korea Republic at the Carlsberg Cup in Hong Kong and Argentina in Basel. He was eventually omitted from the final 23-man squad for the 2006 World Cup finals, but received a pre-invitation.
At club level, Petri? was the fourth best goalscorer of the Swiss Super League for the 2005-06 season, scoring 15 goals in 31 matches. In the same season, he also appeared for FC Basel in all of their 12 UEFA Cup matches and managed to score three goals before the club was eliminated by Middlesbrough in the quarterfinals of the competition. He continued to perform well for FC Basel in the 2006-07 season of the Swiss Super League, scoring nine goals in eleven matches so far. He is currently also playing with the club in the 2006-07 season of the UEFA Cup and netted a brace in their first-leg first-round 6-2 home victory over Rabotni?ki Kometal.
In early August 2006, he was called up by the Croatian national team’s new coach Slaven Bili? to be part of the team in their friendly match against Italy on August 16, 2006 in Livorno and appeared in the match as a second-half substitute. He is currently also participating with the Croatian team in their Euro 2008 qualifying campaign, appearing in all of the team’s three qualifying matches so far. In the second qualifier, against Andorra on October 7, 2006 in Zagreb, he scored four goals in only 60 minutes of playing and became the first ever player to score four goals for the Croatian national football team in a competitive match. Croatia won the match 7-0, celebrating therewith their highest competitive victory ever.