Born in a small town near the city of Vicenza, Roberto Baggio was spotted as a future talent early on and he signed with the Vicenza team, who was playing in the third Italian division at that time, when he was only 15 years of age. It's hre that he learned the basics of soccer and got accustomed to professionalism and by the time he was 18, he was already on the shortlist of Fiorentina, one of the powers in Serie A (the first Italian division) at that time.
Although not playing in the first few months at Fiorentina, after one season of getting used to the high air of the Serie A, Baggio was finally given the chance to enter the pitch on September the 1st, 1986. Although his first 2 seasons he wasn’t really a first team regular, over the next 3 he would spend at Fiorentina, he will have one of the biggest boosts of his career, becoming an idol for the fans and one of the most feared strikers in Italy.
This great form brought him in the eyes of the national team staff, but also attracted huge offers for him from bigger, wealthier clubs throughout Europe. In 1990, Italian champions Juventus Torino faxed Fiorentina an offer for Baggio that they and the player could not resist: $20 million, the biggest sum paid for a soccer player at that time.
In the 5 seasons played for Juventus, Roberto Baggio was more prolific than ever, scoring almost 80 goals in 141 matches, a feat that's even more important considering it was achieved in the most defensive championship of the World.
But the achievements at Juventus weren't all that great, with the team having a rather low form compared to what was about to follow for the Torino club. He only managed to win the Championship once with Juve, in 1995 when he also won his first and only Italian Cup. 1993 also brought him his only European cup success, as he won the UEFA Cup with his team.
This period was actually his best, as he won the UEFA Cup in 1993, was named FIFA World Player of the Year and World Footballer of the Year as well and qualified Italy's national side to the 1994 World Cup.
After leaving Juventus in 1995, Baggio was not in the best of forms, as his morale was shattered by the fact that he missed the decisive penalty in the 1994 World Cup final against Brazil (however it was Baggio that almost single-handedly got Italy to the Final in the first place).
He played for AC Milan for 2 seasons, but did not have the success he had hoped for, thus moved to Bologna in 1997. It's here that he regained his well known appetite for goal, as he scored 22 goals in 30 matches. Although he was already 30 years of age, Inter Milan sought to bring him back to his glory and bought him in 1998 but again, Baggio didn't become the leader that Inter's bosses had hoped for.
In 2000, Baggio decided it was time for him to step down a level after so many years played for huge clubs and went on to Brescia, a mid-table team where he played constantly and had no worries about his place in the squad. This relaxed setting allowed him to get some of his past form back as he scored 45 goals in 95 matches, during 4 seasons with the Bianco azzuri club.