Born in Locarno, Switzerland, to a German father from Aachen and Swiss mother of Italian descent, Neuville started his professional career with Servette FC. In only his second season in the Swiss Super League, he scored a career-best 16 goals[2] to help the club win the national championship after a nine-year wait.
Neuville signed for Bayer 04 Leverkusen in the 1999 summer, quickly becoming an essential offensive figure for his new club. He scored 28 goals combined from 2000 to 2002 (including a hat-trick against Hamburger SV on 24 November 2001),[5] while also adding five in 15 UEFA Champions League appearances in 2001–02, as Bayer finished second to Real Madrid (he scored one apiece in both legs of the semifinal clash against Manchester United); the club also finished second in the league during this timeframe.
After Klaus Augenthaler's became Leverkusen coach, Neuville's playing time was limited and he was not offered a contract extension. In summer 2004, aged 31, Neuville joined Borussia Mönchengladbach on a free transfer.[6][7] On 17 October 2004 he scored an infamous goal with his hand against 1. FC Kaiserslautern in a 2–0 home win, which was widely reviled and landed him a two-match ban.[8] He netted 22 goals in his first two seasons combined, but appeared scarcely as the Foalsdropped down a level in 2007, mainly due to injury.[9][10]
Neuville returned to form in 2007–08, scoring 15 goals to help Borussia return to the top flight the immediate campaign after, the competition's sixth-best. He made his last Bundesliga appearance on the final matchday of the 2009–10 season, against former team Bayer Leverkusen.[11]
It was planned that Neuville would start to work as a youth coach for Borussia Mönchengladbach.[11] Instead, he decided to play one more year and signed for Arminia Bielefeld in the 2. Bundesliga.[12] However, after only a couple of months, he left by mutual consent, retiring at the age of 37.[13]
International career
After electing to represent Germany at international level, Neuville made his international debut on 2 September 1998 against Malta, in a friendly, replacing Mario Basler for the last fifteen minutes of the 2–1 away win. In his first months training with the national team he needed an interpreter to understand coach Erich Ribbeck's message, while getting his across as well.[14]
Subsequently, Neuville went on to collect 69 caps with ten goals.[15] He was picked for the squad that finished second at the 2002 FIFA World Cup. Neuville made his first start of the tournament in the round-of-16 win against Paraguay, and scored his first World Cup goal late on, the only goal of the game.[16] In the final against Brazil, Neuville hit the post with a free kick from 30 yards out with the scores at 0-0, before Germany eventually lost the match 2-0.[17]
After missing selection for UEFA Euro 2004, in the second group stage match of the 2006 World Cup against Poland, Neuville, who had replaced Lukas Podolski, buried a desperate injury-time cross from fellow substitute David Odonkor, beating goalkeeperArtur Boruc on the way to a 1–0 victory.[18] He did not score again for the national team until 31 May 2008, when he slid in a Marcell Jansen cross in a Euro 2008 warm-up against Serbia,[19] appearing in the tournament's final stages in the Group B match against Austria as a late substitute, and retiring from international play at the age of 35.
Personal life
Along with Bernd Schneider, Neuville was one of the two known smokers in the Germany national team.[20] His name (properly pronounced in French – not German – fashion) stemmed from his Belgian grandfather.
In 1997, Neuville fathered son Lars-Oliver.
Career statistics
Club
Appearances and goals by club, season and competition