Bruno Marioni
Bruno Marioni (born Bruno Giménez 15 June 1975, in San Nicolás de los Arroyos, Buenos Aires Province) is an Argentina striker for CF Pachuca of the Primera División de México.
Bruno Marioni career stats
Bruno Marioni biography
Bruno Marioni (born Bruno Giménez 15 June 1975, in San Nicolás de los Arroyos, Buenos Aires Province) is an Argentina striker for CF Pachuca of the Primera División de México.
Marioni started playing for Newell's Old Boys in 1995 before moving to Sporting Clube de Portugal in 1997 where he was known as Bruno Gimenez. After 2 seasons in Portugal, Marioni returned to Argentina joining Estudiantes de La Plata (Clausura 1999) and the Club Atlético Independiente. In 2000 he again played in Europe, with Villarreal CF for one season, and after the Clausura 2001 again with Independiente, he joined CD Tenerife. He returned to Independiente for the Apertura 2003, and then transferred to his former team of Pumas UNAM. In his opening season with Pumas UNAM, he was the league's top scorer with 16 goals, along with fellow Argentine, Nestor Silvera. In 2005, playing for Pumas UNAM, Marioni was the Copa Sudamericana's top scorer with 7 goals. He then played for Toluca, and netted an apertura leading 11 goals, and in the January transfer window he moved to Boca Juniors. For Apertura 2007 he returns to Mexico for CF Atlas. He played the Interliga 2008 Tournament with CF Atlas and qualified to Copa Libertadores 2008.
Marioni joined CF Pachuca on June 15 2008
Honours
- Primera División de México champion: Clausura 2004
- Primera División de México top scorer (2): Clausura 2004, Apertura 2006
- Copa Sudamericana top scorer: 2005
- Copa Libertadores 2007 (with Boca Juniors)
- Interliga 2008 Tournament top scorer (with CF Atlas)
Reference:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruno_Marioni
Related pages
Bruno Marioni, Carlos Rodríguez, Christian Correa, Christian Giménez, Damián Álvarez, Edwin Borboa, Edy Brambila, Fausto Pinto, Gabriel Caballero, Jaime Correa, José Cárdenas, José Torres, Juan Rojas, Julio Manzur, Leobardo López, Luis Montes, Marco Pérez, Miguel Calero, Paul Aguilar, Raúl Martínez, Rodolfo Cota, Víctor Mañón, Willy Guerrero