Thomas Fabbri

Thomas Fabbri (born 21 June 1991) is an Italian footballer who plays as a defender.

Thomas Fabbri
Personal information
Date of birth (1991-06-21) 21 June 1991
Place of birth Cesena, Italy
Height 1.79 m (5 ft 10 12 in)[1]
Playing position(s) Defender
Youth career
Cesena
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2011–2015 Parma 0 (0)
2011–2012Bellaria (loan) 3 (0)
2012–2013Santarcangelo (loan) 0 (0)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Career

Fabbri spent the 2009–10 season with the Cesena youth reserve side in the national "spring" league. In June 2011 he was exchanged with Luigi Palumbo. Both players was signed by co-ownership deal and valued the 50% registration rights for €1 million. Both clubs had a selling profit of nearly €2 million, however the increase only in form of intangible asset (the contract value of T.Fabbri and L.Palumbo) Both players signed a 4-year contract.

T.Fabbri joined Bellaria[2] along with other Cesena team-mate Jacopo Luppi, Marcello Scarponi, Michele Gabbianelli. The Romagna club also retained Alessio Briglia who already transferred to Cesena in March 2011. Moreover, the team was coached by Nicola Campedelli, the brother of Cesena president.

In summer 2012 he was signed by Santarcangelo.[3] The co-ownership of T.Fabbri was renewed and Palumbo joined Cesena outright on 20 June 2013. On the same day Cesena also bought back Nicola Del Pivo and sold Gianluca Lapadula back to Parma. in June 2014 the co-ownership was renewed again.[4]

gollark: The US healthcare system is just really quite broken and there is probably not some individual there who's just going "MWAHAHAHA, my plan to increase the price of healthcare has succeeded, and I could easily make everything reasonable but I won't because I'm evil!", or one person who could decide to just make some stuff free right now without introducing some huge issues. It's a systemic issue.
gollark: Yes, they do have considerations other than minimizing short-term COVID-19 deaths, but that is sensible because other things do matter.
gollark: The US government, and large business owners and whoever else ("capitalism"), don't really want people to die in large numbers *either*, they're:- still *people*- adversely affected by said large numbers dying, because: - if lots of people die in the US compared to elsewhere, they'll look bad come reelection - most metrics people look at will also be worse off if many die and/or are ill for a while - many deaths would reduce demand for their stuff, and they might lose important workers, and more deaths means a worse recession
gollark: That is stupid on so many levels. Is it meant to be some homepathic thing, where the blood is obviously even more worserer if they dilute it?
gollark: Why did YouTube recommend this to me‽ Why?

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 14 October 2013. Retrieved 23 June 2014.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. "Bellaria, arrivano cinque giocatori dal Cesena" (in Italian). Tutto Mercato Web. 8 July 2011. Retrieved 14 April 2012.
  3. http://www.tuttolegapro.com/notizie-ufficiali/ufficiale-santarcangelo-ecco-i-tre-colpi-dell-ultimo-giorno-53238
  4. "Accordi di compartecipazione: elenco finale" (in Italian). Parma FC. 20 June 2014. Archived from the original on 15 July 2014. Retrieved 29 January 2015.

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