• Bayern Munich's Robert Lewandowski, aged 31, scored 34 league goals this season. EPA
    Bayern Munich's Robert Lewandowski, aged 31, scored 34 league goals this season. EPA
  • Ciro Immobile of SS Lazio, 30, has scored 34 goals as of July 28, 2020. Getty
    Ciro Immobile of SS Lazio, 30, has scored 34 goals as of July 28, 2020. Getty
  • Juventus' Cristiano Ronaldo, 35, has scored 31 goals. AP
    Juventus' Cristiano Ronaldo, 35, has scored 31 goals. AP
  • 24-year-old Timo Werner, who has moved to Chelsea, has 28 goals. Reuters
    24-year-old Timo Werner, who has moved to Chelsea, has 28 goals. Reuters
  • Barcelona's Argentine forward Lionel Messi, 33, has 25 goals for the season. AFP
    Barcelona's Argentine forward Lionel Messi, 33, has 25 goals for the season. AFP
  • Borussia Dortmund's Erling Haaland, 20, has 29 goals. Reuters
    Borussia Dortmund's Erling Haaland, 20, has 29 goals. Reuters
  • Inter's Romelu Lukaku, 27, has 23 goals. EPA
    Inter's Romelu Lukaku, 27, has 23 goals. EPA
  • Jamie Vardy, 33, of Leicester City poses with the Premier League Golden Boot award for scoring 23 goals. Getty
    Jamie Vardy, 33, of Leicester City poses with the Premier League Golden Boot award for scoring 23 goals. Getty

From Ciro Immobile to Cristiano Ronaldo, veterans prove a perfect fit in race for Europe's Golden Shoe


Ian Hawkey
  • English
  • Arabic

Top goalscorers in Europe

34 goals - Robert Lewandowski (68 points)

34 - Ciro Immobile (68)

31 - Cristiano Ronaldo (62)

28 - Timo Werner (56)

25 - Lionel Messi (50)

*29 - Erling Haaland (50)

23 - Romelu Lukaku (46)

23 - Jamie Vardy (46)

*NOTE: Haaland's goals for Salzburg count for 1.5 points per goal. Goals for Dortmund count for two points per goal.

Not long before midnight on the 337th day of the longest Serie A season, the old order was reestablished. Juventus had done enough on Sunday to confirm their ninth successive title, at 2-0 up against Sampdoria with the 90 minutes almost completed.

For the players of Lazio, who had for much of this extended campaign been the most convincing challengers, there was a sense of resignation, but some good news.

Just before the final whistle in Turin, Cristiano Ronaldo thumped a penalty against the crossbar. Had he aimed a centimetre or so lower, he’d have crept closer to the important prize still at stake as Italy’s top division goes into its last two matchdays.

Lazio’s chase for the Italian championship faded after the June restart. But their striker, Ciro Immobile, still leads the race for both the Capocannoniere award – for Serie A’s top marksman – and has two games left to take the lead in the rankings for the European Golden Shoe, the trophy for the continent’s best goalscorer in league football.

He is on 34 goals, and, because of the disjointed season, need only look in one of his rear-view mirrors for possible overtaking: Ronaldo, whose Juve play Cagliari on Wednesday and Roma on Sunday, is three goals behind him.

Robert Lewandowski, of Bayern Munich, has the same number as Immobile, but his club Bayern Munich wrapped up their league business – with the title – a month ago.

Would anyone dare bet against Ronaldo outflanking them both, given his current form, which, apart from the penalty miss, has been compelling?

Post-restart, the Portuguese has 10 goals from as many matches, including both in the 2-1 win over Lazio that all but ended Lazio’s title ambitions, and the pair in the 2-2 draw against Atalanta that kept Atalanta’s challenge at arm’s length.

Shortly before matches were suspended because of the coronavirus pandemic, Ronaldo also set up the opening goal in the 2-0 win over Internazionale, who at that stage had firm title ambitions.

Ronaldo has won the Golden Shoe four times, first as a 23-year-old with Manchester United, and three times with Real Madrid – the last of those after he had turned 30.

________________

Premier League Golden Boot winners

  • Teddy Sheringham of Tottenham, 1992-93, 22 goals. Shutterstock
    Teddy Sheringham of Tottenham, 1992-93, 22 goals. Shutterstock
  • Newcastle's Andy Cole, 1993/94, 34 goals. Getty
    Newcastle's Andy Cole, 1993/94, 34 goals. Getty
  • Alan Shearer of Blackburn, 1994-95, 34 goals
    Alan Shearer of Blackburn, 1994-95, 34 goals
  • Alan Shearer of Blackburn, 1995/96 31 goals.
    Alan Shearer of Blackburn, 1995/96 31 goals.
  • Alan Shearer of Newcastle United 1996/97, 25 goals.
    Alan Shearer of Newcastle United 1996/97, 25 goals.
  • =Liverpool's Michael Owen, 1997/98, 18 goals. Shutterstock
    =Liverpool's Michael Owen, 1997/98, 18 goals. Shutterstock
  • =Blackburn's Chris Sutton, 1997/98, 18 goals. Shutterstock
    =Blackburn's Chris Sutton, 1997/98, 18 goals. Shutterstock
  • =Coventry's Dion Dublin, 1997/98, 18 goals. Getty
    =Coventry's Dion Dublin, 1997/98, 18 goals. Getty
  • = Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink of Leeds, 1998/99, 18 goals.
    = Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink of Leeds, 1998/99, 18 goals.
  • = Manchester United's Dwight Yorke, 1998/99, 18 goals.
    = Manchester United's Dwight Yorke, 1998/99, 18 goals.
  • Sunderland's Kevin Phillips, 1999/2000, 30 goals.
    Sunderland's Kevin Phillips, 1999/2000, 30 goals.
  • Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink of Chelsea, 2000/01, 23 goals. Shutterstock
    Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink of Chelsea, 2000/01, 23 goals. Shutterstock
  • Arsenal's Thierry Henry, 2001/02, 24 goals. Shutterstock
    Arsenal's Thierry Henry, 2001/02, 24 goals. Shutterstock
  • Manchester United's Ruud Van Nistelrooy, 2002/03, 25 goals. AFP
    Manchester United's Ruud Van Nistelrooy, 2002/03, 25 goals. AFP
  • Arsenal's Thierry Henry, 2003/04, 30 goals. AFP
    Arsenal's Thierry Henry, 2003/04, 30 goals. AFP
  • Thierry Henry of Arsenal, 2004/05, 25 goals. AFP
    Thierry Henry of Arsenal, 2004/05, 25 goals. AFP
  • Arsenal's Thierry Henry, 2005/06, 27 goals. Shutterstock
    Arsenal's Thierry Henry, 2005/06, 27 goals. Shutterstock
  • Chelsea's Didier Drogba, 2006/07, 20 goals. EPA
    Chelsea's Didier Drogba, 2006/07, 20 goals. EPA
  • Cristiano Ronaldo of Manchester United, 2007/08, 31 goals. Shutterstock
    Cristiano Ronaldo of Manchester United, 2007/08, 31 goals. Shutterstock
  • Chelsea's Nicolas Anelka, 2008/09, 19 goals. AP
    Chelsea's Nicolas Anelka, 2008/09, 19 goals. AP
  • Chelsea's Didier Drogba, 2009/10, 29 goals. AFP
    Chelsea's Didier Drogba, 2009/10, 29 goals. AFP
  • =Manchester United's Dimitar Berbatov, 2010/11, 20 goals. AFP
    =Manchester United's Dimitar Berbatov, 2010/11, 20 goals. AFP
  • =Manchester City's Carlos Tevez, 2010/11, 20 goals. AFP
    =Manchester City's Carlos Tevez, 2010/11, 20 goals. AFP
  • Arsenal's Robin Van Persie, 2011/12, 30 goals. AFP
    Arsenal's Robin Van Persie, 2011/12, 30 goals. AFP
  • Robin van Persie, now with Manchester United, 2012/13, 26 goals. AFP
    Robin van Persie, now with Manchester United, 2012/13, 26 goals. AFP
  • Liverpool's Luis Suarez, 2013/14, 31 goals. AFP
    Liverpool's Luis Suarez, 2013/14, 31 goals. AFP
  • Manchester City's Sergio Aguero, 2014/15, 26 goals. AFP
    Manchester City's Sergio Aguero, 2014/15, 26 goals. AFP
  • Tottenham's Harry Kane, 2015/16, 25 goals. Shutterstock
    Tottenham's Harry Kane, 2015/16, 25 goals. Shutterstock
  • Harry Kane of Tottenham, 2016/17, 29 goals. Shutterstock
    Harry Kane of Tottenham, 2016/17, 29 goals. Shutterstock
  • Liverpool's Mohamed Salah, 2017/18, 32 goals. AFP
    Liverpool's Mohamed Salah, 2017/18, 32 goals. AFP
  • =Liverpool's Mohamed Salah, 2018/19, 22 goals. AP
    =Liverpool's Mohamed Salah, 2018/19, 22 goals. AP
  • =Arsenal's Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, 2018/19, 22 goals. Shutterstock
    =Arsenal's Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, 2018/19, 22 goals. Shutterstock
  • =Liverpool's Sadio Mane, 2018/19, 22 goals. AFP
    =Liverpool's Sadio Mane, 2018/19, 22 goals. AFP
  • Jamie Vardy of Leicester City, 2019/20, 23 goals. Getty
    Jamie Vardy of Leicester City, 2019/20, 23 goals. Getty

________________

Back then it was tempting to assume that his gluttonous goalscoring – he hit 48 Liga goals that season, 2014-15 – would fade with the approach of sporting middle-age. Not so. He turned 35 in February, and again finds himself jousting for the Golden Shoe.

Great goalscorers do not necessarily peak in their 20s. While this has been an uniquely spaced-out season, with the pause in competitions offering beneficial rest and recuperation, several veterans are current proof of that.

Jamie Vardy finished the season as the Premier League’s leading scorer – 23 goals – at the age of 33, another landmark in a true late-bloom of a career. Ten years ago Vardy was playing in the Northern Premier League, the seventh tier of English football.

La Liga’s top scorer this season is also well into his 30s, although he can hardly be described as a late developer: Lionel Messi, 33, won the first of his six Golden Shoes when he was 22.

Lewandowski turned 31 last August. He has been a consistently excellent marksman for the best part of a decade, but his return of Bundesliga goals this season  – 34 from 31 matches – is his best ever.

In Bayern’s efficient march to the league title after the lockdown, he scored nine goals in eight matches, and his frustration when he missed out on a game because of yellow card leading to a suspension was plain.

He will regret that blank 90 minutes even more should Immobile score in either of Lazio’s remaining matches, against relegated Brescia and against Napoli.

Immobile is 30, and enjoying the most prolific season of a career that has had its ups and downs. He joined Juventus as a teenager, but left them 10 years ago, and made a name for himself as a finisher in Serie B with Pescara.

After a flat season in the top-flight with Genoa, he then struck 22 Serie A goals in the first of two campaigns with Torino. That earned him the first of his 39 Italy caps, in 2014.

It earned him a transfer, too, to Borussia Dortmund, who had just lost Lewandowski to Bayern. Immobile – three goals in 24 league games – was not the man to fill the gap.

Spain’s Liga suited him a little better than the Bundesliga, but after a short loan spell at Sevilla he rejoined Torino on loan. Lazio watched his form return once back in his native Italy, and signed him from Dortmund in 2016. One hundred and one goals later, the €9 million (Dh38m) they spent on Immobile looks a steal.

Top goalscorers in Europe

34 goals - Robert Lewandowski (68 points)

34 - Ciro Immobile (68)

31 - Cristiano Ronaldo (62)

28 - Timo Werner (56)

25 - Lionel Messi (50)

*29 - Erling Haaland (50)

23 - Romelu Lukaku (46)

23 - Jamie Vardy (46)

*NOTE: Haaland's goals for Salzburg count for 1.5 points per goal. Goals for Dortmund count for two points per goal.