Mbala Mbuta Biscotte

Mbala Mbuta Biscotte (born 7 April 1985 in Kinshasa) is a Congolese footballer who last plays as striker for FC Locarno.

Mbala Mbuta
Personal information
Full name Lakuya Mbala Mbuta Biscotte
Date of birth (1985-04-07) 7 April 1985
Place of birth Kinshasa, Zaire
Height 1.65 m (5 ft 5 in)
Playing position(s) Striker
Club information
Current team
SO Choletais
Number 8
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2002 TP Mazembe 36 (16)
2003–2004 DC Motema Pembe 71 (45)
2004–2005 Hapoel Tel Aviv 14 (8)
2005–2006 Yverdon-Sport FC 33 (19)
2006–2007 Grasshopper Club Zürich 22 (8)
2007–2009 Yverdon-Sport FC 17 (8)
2008 → Al-Ittihad (Jeddah) (loan)[1] 18 (13)
2014 – TP Mazembe
National team
2002–2010 DR Congo 32 (3)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Career

Mbala has previously played for Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. and Grasshopper Club Zürich,[2] he also played for the congolese club DC Motema Pembe, because of him they won the cup of Congo. And bolasie chose to play for them

International career

Biscotte is a popular player on the DR Congo national football team. He appeared in the 2004 African Nations Cup where the Congo failed to advance to the second round. He has made regularly appearances for the national squad since late 2004.[3] In 2004/2005 he helped the Congo qualify for the 2006 African Nations Cup. Biscotte played in every match in the 2006 African Nations Cup where the Congo made it to the quarter-finals.

Perhaps his most famous moment was against South Africa in 2004 for 2006 World Cup/African Nations Cup qualifying. In the 87th minute he made a mazy run around numerous defenders deep in South Africa's end that set up Kabamba Musasa for a tap in goal that gave the DR Congo a 1–0 victory. Because of that victory the fan named him Pied de Jesus (Jesus' foot) and also named him sauvons le Congo meaning Saves Congo due to the fact that his intervention revived DR Congo's qualification chances.

Biscotte also featured prominently in the BBC documentary Frontline Football, part one of which followed the Congolese national team as they prepared for the match against South Africa. The goal he set up for Kabamba Musasa features as a perfect climax to the documentary.

International goals

Scores and results list DR Congo's goal tally first.[4]
NoDateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
1.14 January 2004Port Said Stadium, Port Said, Egypt Egypt2–22–2Friendly
2.20 June 2004Stade des Martyrs, Kinshasa, DR Congo Burkina Faso2–13–22006 FIFA World Cup qualification
3.16 August 2005Stade Olympique Yves-du-Manoir, Paris, France Guinea1–03–1Friendly

Personal life

Biscotte's brother Glynn has represented DR Congo's Under 21s, and is currently playing in England for Brigg Town.

gollark: (before you complain, GHC allocates something like a tibibyte at startup)
gollark: CC doesn't limit RAM, but probably a few terabytes is enough.
gollark: They don't actually emulate them very in-depthly, or at all beyond a maybe limited-size filesystem mounted at `/disk` or `/diskX`.
gollark: The emulators emulate them fine.
gollark: ... yes?

See also

References

  1. Mbala Biscotte – Football.ch
  2. "Stats Centre: Biscotte Mbala Facts". Guardian.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2012-06-17. Retrieved 2009-05-31.
  3. Biscotte MbalaFIFA competition record
  4. "Biscotte, Mbala". National Football Teams. Retrieved 7 April 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.