Hakan Şükür Explained

Hakan Şükür
Constituency:İstanbul (III)
Term Start:12 June 2011
Term End:23 June 2015
Birth Date:1 September 1971
Birth Place:Sapanca, Turkey
Party:Independent (2013–present)
Otherparty:Justice and Development Party (2011–2013)
Spouse:
    Children:3
    Awards:State Medal of Distinguished Service (2002)[1] (later revoked)
    Module:
    Height:1.91 m
    Embed:yes
    Header-Color:lavender
    Position:Striker
    Youthclubs1:Sakaryaspor
    Years1:1987–1990
    Clubs1:Sakaryaspor
    Caps1:41
    Goals1:19
    Years2:1990–1992
    Clubs2:Bursaspor
    Caps2:54
    Goals2:11
    Years3:1992–1995
    Clubs3:Galatasaray
    Caps3:90
    Goals3:54
    Years4:1995
    Clubs4:Torino
    Caps4:5
    Goals4:1
    Years5:1995–2000
    Clubs5:Galatasaray
    Caps5:156
    Goals5:108
    Years6:2000–2002
    Clubs6:Inter Milan
    Caps6:24
    Goals6:5
    Years7:2002
    Clubs7:Parma
    Caps7:15
    Goals7:3
    Years8:2002–2003
    Clubs8:Blackburn Rovers
    Caps8:9
    Goals8:2
    Years9:2003–2008
    Clubs9:Galatasaray
    Caps9:146
    Goals9:55
    Totalcaps:540
    Totalgoals:258
    Nationalyears1:1987–1988
    Nationalteam1:Turkey U16
    Nationalcaps1:6
    Nationalgoals1:2
    Nationalyears2:1988–1990
    Nationalteam2:Turkey U18
    Nationalcaps2:13
    Nationalgoals2:1
    Nationalyears3:1990–1993
    Nationalteam3:Turkey U21
    Nationalcaps3:16
    Nationalgoals3:5
    Nationalyears4:1992–2007
    Nationalteam4:Turkey
    Nationalcaps4:112
    Nationalgoals4:51
    Residence:United States

    Hakan Şükür (; born 1 September 1971) is a Turkish former professional footballer who played as a striker. Nicknamed the "Bull of the Bosphorus" and Kral (king),[2] [3] [4] [5] he spent the majority of his professional career with Galatasaray, being a three-time Gol Kralı (Goal King, title and award given to the annual top goalscorer of the Süper Lig),[6] representing the club in three different spells and winning a total of 14 major titles.[7] [8] [9]

    Şükür represented Turkey a total of 112 times, scoring 51 goals, making him the nation's top goalscorer[10] [11] and 19th in the world at the time of his retirement. One of the most prolific strikers of the modern era, he netted 383 goals throughout his club career as well as the fastest ever in a World Cup, in 2002.[12] He retired from football in 2008.[13]

    In the 2011 general elections, he was elected as an Istanbul MP for the Justice and Development Party. He resigned from the party in December 2013, to serve as an independent.[14] He is wanted for arrest in Turkey since August 2016 for being a member of Gülen movement and has lived in exile in the United States since mid 2016.[15] On July 14, 2017, a decree was issued stating that all medals awarded to Hakan Şükür were to be revoked.[16]

    Club career

    Early years

    Born in Sapanca, Sakarya Province, Şükür began his football career with local club Sakaryaspor, making his professional debut shortly after his 17th birthday. His first goal came in a match against Eskişehirspor on 26 February 1989: with the match tied 2–2, he entered the pitch as a substitute and scored the winning goal;[17] he went on to score a further 18 Süper Lig goals in his three-year spell with the club.

    In the summer of 1990, Şükür joined fellow first division side Bursaspor. He scored six goals in 27 games in his second season, helping the team to a sixth-place finish,[18] and making his Turkey national team debut shortly after.

    Galatasaray – Torino

    Subsequently, Şükür signed for national giants Galatasaray.[17] Nicknamed the Bull of the Bosphorus,[19] he scored 19 goals in thirty matches in his first year with the club, helping it win both the league and cup titles, adding 16 and 19, respectively, in the next two seasons and attracting the attention of Torino. In 1995, he moved to Turin, becoming the second Turkish player to ever play in Serie A, but returned to his country and Galatasaray in the following winter transfer window, after failing to settle and only netting once in the league.

    Upon his return to Galatasaray, Şükür regained his scoring form, scoring 16 goals in the league and helping the club to win the cup. The following season, he collected 38 goals in the league, tying him for second-most goals scored in a season with Metin Oktay, one goal behind record holder Tanju Çolak; both players were playing for Galatasaray when they broke the record. Şükür also finished third in the ESM Golden Boot rankings with 57 points, behind Mário Jardel (60) and Ronaldo (68).[20] He won the Gol Kralı award the following two seasons, netting 33 and 18 goals respectively, with the Galatasaray winning the title in all three seasons.[6] [21]

    In the 1999–2000 season, Şükür's last with Galatasaray in his second stint, the team completed a domestic double for the second year in succession, and added the year's UEFA Cup, becoming the first Turkish side to win a European title; in the 4–1 penalty shootout win against Arsenal, he scored on his attempt, having netted ten times in 17 games during the campaign.[22]

    Return to Italy – Blackburn

    Şükür then moved to Italy again, this time to Inter Milan, scoring six goals in 35 official matches. His appearances were limited by the presence of Ronaldo and Christian Vieri in the team's attack and January 2002, after seasons, he signed with another team in the country, Parma, but was unable to produce again, only finding the net three times. He helped Parma win the Coppa Italia, but only played in the first leg of the final.[23] [24]

    Having been released, on 9 December 2002, Şükür joined Blackburn Rovers in the Premier League for the remainder of the campaign, signed by former Galatasaray manager Graeme Souness.[25] His spell began with him sustaining a broken leg in training, which ruled him out for two months,[26] after which made his debut for the club on 1 March 2003, replacing the injured Egil Østenstad at half time in a 1–0 home win over Manchester City;[27] he scored twice from nine appearances, both goals coming in a 4–0 defeat of Fulham at Loftus Road on 7 April.[28]

    Third spell at Galatasaray

    Şükür returned to Galatasaray on 7 July 2003, after failing to negotiate a new contract with Blackburn.[26] He scored 12 times in 28 league games in his first season and 18 in the following, with the team winning the 2005 Turkish cup during that timeframe. Also, on 3 December 2003, he found the net twice in a 2–0 home defeat of Juventus for the 2003–04 UEFA Champions League;[29] in November 2003, to celebrate UEFA's Jubilee, he was selected as Turkey's Golden Player by the Turkish Football Federation, as their most outstanding player of the past fifty years.[30]

    In the 2005–06 season, Şükür again scored in double digits (ten) as Galatasaray again won the league. After helping the club win a record-tying 17th first division title in 2007–08, netting eleven goals, he decided to retire from the game, aged nearly 37. Subsequently, he often appeared as a television pundit on the Turkish Radio and Television Corporation;[31] during his career, he scored 38 goals in all European competitions.[32]

    International career

    Şükür won his first cap for Turkey in a friendly with Luxembourg in March 1992 – his debut being awarded by German manager Sepp Piontek – scoring his first international goal in his next match, against Denmark, and totalling six in his first 11 appearances. He netted seven in qualification for UEFA Euro 1996 and started all of the matches at the finals in England, in which they were eliminated in the group stage without scoring a single goal.

    Şükür scored eight times in qualification for the 1998 FIFA World Cup: half of those in a 6–4 home win over Wales on 20 August 1997,[33] but Turkey did not reach the play-offs. At Euro 2000, he netted twice for the quarter-finalists, in a 2–0 group stage win against co-hosts Belgium.[34] [35]

    During the 2002 World Cup, held in South Korea and Japan, Şükür scored once for Turkey in seven matches, as the national team finished in third place. On 29 June, he scored the fastest ever goal in a FIFA World Cup and in any major international football tournament, netting against South Korea 10.8 seconds into the third-place play-off, which Turkey went on to win 3–2.[19]

    Of his 112 senior appearances, Şükür captained Turkey in thirty. After appearing in some Euro 2008 qualifiers, notably scoring four against Moldova in a 5–0 win in Frankfurt, Germany,[36] he was not selected for the finals, his last game being a 0–1 home loss to Greece at the age of 36 (17 October 2007).[37]

    Personal life

    Şükür is of Albanian origin. Both of his parents are immigrants from Yugoslavia, his father being born in Pristina, and his mother in Skopje.[7] [8] [9] [38] His surname is spelled "Shykyr" in Albanian.[39] His first wife, Esra Elbirlik, married him in a ceremony broadcast live on television,[40] initiated by Prime Minister Tansu Çiller and performed by Mayor of Istanbul Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.

    The couple divorced after four months, and Elbirlik and her family died in the 1999 İzmit earthquake. Şükür fathered three children with his second spouse, Beyda.[41] In 2010, the football stadium of Sancaktepe was named after him.[42] In April 2014, his name was removed again.

    Politics

    On 18 June 2011, Şükür was elected as a Member of Parliament to the Grand National Assembly of Turkey in the 2011 general elections, from the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), representing the 2nd electoral district of Istanbul Province.[43]

    On 16 December 2013, Şükür, known for his links to the Islamic Gülen movement of the Turkish cleric Fethullah Gülen,[14] resigned from his position in protest after the interdiction of the group's "dershane" system, and decided to continue working as an independent MP.[44] He subsequently went on to work as a football pundit for Turkish Radio and Television Corporation.[45]

    Prosecution and exile

    In February 2016, Şükür was charged with insulting president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on Twitter.[46] In August, a warrant was issued for his arrest as he was charged with being a member of the Gülen movement, designated as a terrorist organization in Turkey.[47]

    In an interview published in May 2018 by The New York Times, Hakan Şükür stated that he left Turkey in September 2015 and moved to California to be with a friend. He mentioned that after his term as a member of parliament ended in 2015, he faced obstacles in every job he tried to pursue in Turkey, which led him to decide to live in the United States.[48] He then called his wife and asked her to join him with their three children. After obtaining an investor EB-5 visa in the United States, he became a part-owner of a cafe in Palo Alto in 2016.[49] He would later leave this job because "strange people kept coming into the bar".[50] He noted that his long-term plan in the United States was not to run a cafe but to coach at a sports academy, similar to what he had planned to do in Turkey.[51]

    In November 2019, he revealed in a video on his YouTube channel that he was working as an Uber driver.[52] Germany's Welt am Sonntag, in an interview with Şükür, reported that he had closed his cafe to work as an Uber driver and was also selling books.[53] Additionally, he mentioned that the Turkish government had seized his properties, businesses, and bank accounts in Turkey.[54]

    On April 3, 2023, Hakan Şükür announced on his Twitter account that after years in the United States, he and his family had received their green cards, which would allow them to reside and work in the US.

    As of August 2023, Hakan Şükür has opened a football school in Palo Alto, California, for boys aged 10-13 and 13-17.

    The Turkish government seems to be still very sensitive to the subject. In December 2022 during the TRT broadcast of a World Cup match between Canada and Morocco, commentator Alper Bakircigil commented on Hakim Ziyech's goal in the fourth minute about a record held by Şükür, who scored the fastest goal in World Cup history at 10.8 seconds, in their third place match against South Korea at the 2002 World Cup. He was removed from the broadcast at half-time and fired from his job later that day. News accounts speculated that his firing was due to his employer (state-run TRT) reacting to the mention of the name.[55] [56]

    Career statistics

    Club

    Appearances and goals by club, season and competition[57]
    ClubSeasonLeagueCup[58] EuropeTotal
    DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
    Sakaryaspor1987–881.Lig302151
    1988–891.Lig115115
    1989–901.Lig275275
    Total4110214311
    Bursaspor1990–911.Lig274274
    1991–921.Lig277733410
    Total5411736114
    Galatasaray1992–931.Lig301985624726
    1993–941.Lig271674904320
    1994–951.Lig331971854825
    Total9054221023713571
    Torino1995–96Serie A5151
    Galatasaray1995–961.Lig2516723218
    1996–971.Lig323834443946
    1997–981.Lig343292705034
    1998–991.Lig331992764927
    1999–20001.Lig32145117105425
    Total15611933153520224152
    Inter Milan2000–01Serie A2451091346
    Parma2001–02Serie A1530010163
    Blackburn Rovers2002–03Premier League920092
    Galatasaray2003–04Süper Lig281210963818
    2004–05Süper Lig3318343522
    2005–06Süper Lig311042213713
    2006–07Süper Lig2642061345
    2007–08Süper Lig281141924114
    Total14655147261018672
    Career total54026079349438709332

    International

    Appearances and goals by national team and year[59]
    National teamYearAppsGoals
    Turkey199285
    199331
    199453
    199574
    1996123
    199756
    199841
    199973
    200093
    2001106
    2002102
    200394
    200485
    200550
    200654
    200751
    Total11251

    Scores and results list Turkey's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Şükür goal.[37] [59]

    List of international goals scored by Hakan Şükür
    No.DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
    1 8 April 1992 Ankara, Turkey 2–1 Friendly
    2 26 August 1992 Trabzon, Turkey 3–2 Friendly
    3
    4 28 October 1992 Ankara, Turkey 1–04–1 1994 World Cup qualification
    5 3–1
    6 27 October 1993 Istanbul, Turkey 1–12–1 1994 World Cup qualification
    7 7 September 1994 Budapest, Hungary 1–22–2 Euro 1996 qualifying
    8 12 October 1994 Istanbul, Turkey 3–05–0 Euro 1996 qualifying
    9 4–0
    10 26 April 1995 Bern, Switzerland 1–02–1 Euro 1996 qualifying
    11 6 September 1995 Istanbul, Turkey 1–02–0 Euro 1996 qualifying
    12 2–0
    13 15 November 1995 Stockholm, Sweden 2–12–2 Euro 1996 qualifying
    14 1 May 1996 Samsun, Turkey 3–2 Friendly
    15 10 November 1996 Istanbul, Turkey 4–07–0 1998 World Cup qualification
    16 6–0
    17 2 April 1997 Bursa, Turkey 1–01–0 1998 World Cup qualification
    18 20 August 1997 Istanbul, Turkey 1–06–4 1998 World Cup qualification
    19 3–3
    20 5–4
    21 6–4
    22 10 September 1997 Serravalle, San Marino 3–05–0 1998 World Cup qualification
    23 10 October 1998 Bursa, Turkey 1–01–0 Euro 2000 qualifying
    24 27 March 1999 Istanbul, Turkey 1–02–0 Euro 2000 qualifying
    25 5 June 1999 Helsinki, Finland 2–24–2 Euro 2000 qualifying
    26 4–2
    27 19 June 2000 Brussels, Belgium 1–02–0 UEFA Euro 2000
    28 2–0
    29 11 October 2000 Baku, Azerbaijan 1–01–0 2002 World Cup qualification
    30 24 March 2001 Istanbul, Turkey 1–01–1 2002 World Cup qualification
    31 2 June 2001 Istanbul, Turkey 3–03–0 2002 World Cup qualification
    32 15 August 2001 Oslo, Norway 1–1–1 Friendly
    33 1 September 2001 Bratislava, Slovakia 1–01–0 2002 World Cup qualification
    34 5 September 2001 Istanbul, Turkey 1–01–2 2002 World Cup qualification
    35 14 November 2001 Istanbul, Turkey 2–05–02002 World Cup qualification
    36 17 April 2002 Kerkrade, Netherlands –02–0 Friendly
    37 29 June 2002 Daegu, South Korea 1–03–22002 FIFA World Cup
    38 11 June 2003 Istanbul, Turkey 3–23–2 Euro 2004 qualifying
    39 6 September 2003 Vaduz, Liechtenstein 3–03–0 Euro 2004 qualifying
    40 9 September 2003 Dublin, Republic of Ireland 2–2 Friendly
    41 19 November 2003 Istanbul, Turkey 2–02–2Euro 2004 qualifying
    42 21 May 2004 Sydney, Australia 3–1 Friendly
    43
    44 2 June 2004 Seoul, South Korea 1–01–0 Friendly
    45 5 June 2004 Daegu, South Korea 1–1–2 Friendly
    46 18 August 2004 Denizli, Turkey 1–1–2 Friendly
    47 11 October 2006 Frankfurt, Germany 1–05–0 Euro 2008 qualifying
    48 2–0
    49 3–0
    50 5–0
    51 2 June 2007 Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina 1–02–3 Euro 2008 qualifying

    Honours

    Sakaryaspor

    Bursaspor

    Galatasaray[61]

    Parma

    Turkey

    Individual

    Further reading

    See also

    Bibliography

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: A Milli Futbol Takımımıza Devlet Üstün Hizmet Madalyası Verilmesi Töreni. National football team honoured by state in medal ceremony. Presidency of Turkey. tr. 9 October 2002. 31 May 2015.
    2. News: Kral'ın vasiyeti. The king's legacy. Hürriyet. tr. 12 November 1998. 28 March 2015.
    3. News: Hakan Şükür'e FIFA'dan kral ödül. Hakan Şükür king of FIFA award. Zaman. Çakır. Ahmet. tr. 24 March 2015. 28 March 2015. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20150327002528/http://www.zaman.com.tr/spor_hakan-sukure-fifadan-kral-odul_2285083.html. 27 March 2015.
    4. News: Hakan Şükür'e çağrı: O kitabı yayınlayalım. The calling of Hakan Şükür: I will publish a book. Zaman. Çakır. Ahmet. tr. 17 November 2013. 28 March 2015. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20150402095712/http://www.zaman.com.tr/ahmet-cakir/hakan-sukure-cagri-o-kitabi-yayinlayalim_2168298.html. 2 April 2015.
    5. Web site: Hakan Şükür'den spor dünyasını sarsacak sözler. Şükür promises to shake the world of sports up. Samanyolu Haber TV. tr. 12 October 2014. 28 March 2015.
    6. Web site: Ligin Gol Kralları. League top scorers. Turkish Football Federation. tr. 29 August 2010.
    7. News: Türklere üç nasihat. Three strikes for Turks. Radikal. Demirtaş. Serkan. tr. 12 October 2005. 25 March 2010. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20070930221733/http://www.radikal.com.tr/haber.php?haberno=166712&tarih=12%2F10%2F2005. 30 September 2007.
    8. Web site: Erdoğan'dan Hakan Şükür açıklaması. Description of Hakan Şükür by Erdoğan. NTV. tr. 23 February 2013. 6 March 2013.
    9. News: Thaçi priti legjendën Şükür. Thaçi meets legend Şükür. Telegrafi. sq. 21 August 2010. 3 April 2018.
    10. Web site: En Fazla Milli Olan Oyuncularımız. Most capped players with national team. Turkish Football Federation. tr. 15 October 2015.
    11. Web site: En Fazla Gol Atan Milli Oyuncularımız. National team top scorers. Turkish Football Federation. tr. 15 October 2015.
    12. News: Meet Hakan Sukur. The Guardian. 4 December 2002. 29 August 2010.
    13. Web site: Hakan Sukur. BBC Sport. 9 April 2002. 7 February 2012.
    14. News: Ex-footballer Hakan Şükür resigns from ruling AKP. Hürriyet Daily News. 16 December 2013. 17 December 2013.
    15. Web site: Turkey coup: Ex-footballer Hakan Sukur sought over Gulen links . BBC . 12 August 2016 . 17 November 2019.
    16. Web site: 2017-07-16 . Yeni KHK yayımlandı; binlerce kişi ihraç edildi - Gündem - T24 . 2023-12-25 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170716155909/http://t24.com.tr/haber/yeni-khk-yayimlandi-binlerce-kisi-ihrac-edildi,414414 . 16 July 2017 .
    17. Web site: Hakan Şükür. Galatasaray S.K. tr. 29 August 2010.
    18. Web site: 1991–1992 Sezonu. 1991–1992 season. Turkish Football Federation. tr. 29 August 2010.
    19. Web site: Hakan Sukur Biography. Football Team Players. 29 August 2010. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20100621082941/http://www.footballteamplayers.com/hakan-sukur-biography.html. 21 June 2010.
    20. Web site: Golden Boot ("Soulier d'Or") Awards. . 29 August 2010.
    21. Web site: Turkey – Topscorers. Bos. Jurrie. Yelkenci. Sener. 5 June 2014. RSSSF. 21 April 2015.
    22. Web site: Snap shot: Galatasaray win historic UEFA Cup. UEFA. Tozar. Türker. 17 May 2015. 7 January 2019.
    23. News: Coppa Italia Finale . juworld.net . 10 March 2021.
    24. News: Coppa Italia Finale . juworld.net. 10 March 2021.
    25. Web site: Blackburn sign Sukur. BBC Sport. 4 December 2002. 15 July 2010.
    26. Web site: Sukur rejoins Galatasaray. BBC Sport. 7 July 2003. 16 April 2015.
    27. Web site: Blackburn edge out Man City. BBC Sport. 1 March 2003. 16 April 2015.
    28. Web site: Blackburn overpower Fulham. BBC Sport. 7 April 2003. 20 October 2009.
    29. Web site: Sukur double sinks Juventus. BBC Sport. 3 December 2003. 15 July 2010.
    30. Web site: Golden Players take centre stage. UEFA. 29 November 2003. 7 January 2019.
    31. News: Deputy Şükür named new pundit of Lig TV. Hürriyet Daily News. 4 January 2012. 7 January 2019.
    32. News: Dünden bugüne Hakan Şükür!. Hakan Şükür from yesterday to today!. Habertürk. tr. 16 October 2008. 7 January 2019.
    33. News: Goal feast in Turkey-Wales thriller. Hürriyet Daily News. 22 August 1997. 24 May 2015.
    34. Web site: Belgium v Turkey clockwatch. BBC Sport. 19 June 2000. 24 May 2015.
    35. Web site: Rüştü and Şükür star as Belgium fall to Turkey. UEFA. 6 October 2003. 10 December 2015.
    36. Web site: Round-up of Euro 2008 qualifiers. BBC Sport. 11 October 2006. 15 July 2010.
    37. Web site: Hakan Sükür – Century of International Appearances. RSSSF. 7 July 2015.
    38. News: Hakan Şükür: Ben Türk değilim. Hakan Şükür: I'm not Turkish. Fanatik. tr. 22 February 2013. 22 February 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20140202144509/http://www.fanatik.com.tr/hakan-sukur-ben-turk-degilim_3_Detail_27_298363.htm. 2 February 2014. dead.
    39. Web site: Hakan Şükür: I am Albanian, not Turkish. Oculus News. July 2016. 14 July 2017.
    40. Web site: Bull on the horns of a dilemma. BBC Sport. May. John. 26 June 2002. 16 April 2015.
    41. News: The first wife of Hakan Şükür. Hürriyet Daily News. Alkaltan. Belgin. 21 December 2013. 16 April 2015.
    42. Web site: Footballer-turned-politician Hakan Şükür's name removed from stadium - Türkiye News . 2 December 2022 . . 9 April 2014 . en.
    43. Web site: Hakan Sukur becomes MP for Istanbul. Goal. Koylu. Enis. 18 June 2011. 12 August 2016.
    44. Web site: Hakan Şükür'den 'dershane' istifası. Hakan Şükür's 'classroom' resignation. Turkiye Gazetesi. tr. 17 December 2013. 18 December 2013.
    45. Web site: Hakan Şükür İstanbul Milletvekili. Hakan Şükür Istanbul deputy. TBMM. tr. 31 May 2015.
    46. News: 24 February 2016 . Former Turkish football star charged with insulting President Erdoğan . . 24 February 2016.
    47. Web site: Turkey coup: Ex-footballer Hakan Sukur sought over Gulen links. BBC. 12 August 2016. 12 August 2016.
    48. News: Lewis . Bob . 18 February 2018 . Hakan Sukur – Turkey's fallen hero who can never return home . The Guardian . 19 February 2018.
    49. News: 18 November 2017 . FETÖ fugitive Hakan Şükür spotted living high life in California . . 19 February 2018.
    50. News: Varley . Ciaran . 14 January 2020 . Hakan Sukur: How former Turkey star ended up in the US as a taxi driver . BBC Sport . 14 January 2020.
    51. Web site: 2019-08-25 . The Famous Soccer Player Hiding in Plain Sight in a California Bakery. John. Branch . . 2023-12-25 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190825183854/https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/03/sports/hakan-sukur.html . 25 August 2019 .
    52. Web site: 2020-01-19 . Hakan Şükür ile Kahve Molası ☕️ - YouTube . . 2023-12-25 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200119112325/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I2GinfzYFmU . 19 January 2020 .
    53. Web site: 2020-04-06 . Eski milli futbolcu Hakan Şükür ABD'de Uber şoförü oldu: 'Türkiye'de futbol özgür değil' Euronews . 2023-12-25 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200406123907/https://tr.euronews.com/2020/01/13/eski-milli-futbolcu-hakan-sukur-abd-de-uber-soforu-oldu . 6 April 2020 .
    54. Web site: Hakan Sukur: 'I'm an Uber driver now' | Football Italia . 13 January 2020 . Football Italia.
    55. Web site: Turkish commentator sacked during Morocco vs Canada game after saying forbidden name. Chan. Marcus. 2 December 2022. 2 December 2022. Sport Bible.
    56. Web site: 2 December 2022 . 'En hızlı golü Hakan Şükür attı' diyen spiker ikinci yarıda yerini başkasına bıraktı . The announcer who said 'Hakan Şükür scored the fastest goal' was replaced by someone else in the second half . 2 December 2022 . Gazete Duvar.
    57. Web site: Hakan Sükür. Footballdatabase. 6 July 2015.
    58. Includes Atatürk Cup, Chancellor Cup, President Cup, TSYD Cup, Turkish Cup and Turkish Super Cup
    59. Web site: Hakan Şükür. European Football. 10 December 2015.
    60. News: Kupanın 'EN'leri!. Cup hot shots!. Habertürk. tr. 4 May 2010. 7 January 2019.
    61. Book: The Greatest Ever. Greatest Ever Footballers. 2014. Headline. 978-1-4722-2705-8. 2006–2007.
    62. Web site: Coppa Italia 2001/02. Italian Cup 2001/02. My Juve. it. 25 April 2002. 7 January 2019.
    63. Web site: Nel 2002 il Parma Calcio vince la sua terza Coppa Italia contro la Juventus al Tardini; Carmignani trionfa in panchina. In 2002 Parma Calcio win their third Italian Cup against Juventus at the Tardini; Carmignani makes it on the bench. Il Parmense. Buratti. Simone. it. 28 August 2018. 7 January 2019.
    64. Book: Crouch, Terry. 2002. The World Cup - The Complete History. Great Britain. Aurum Press Ltd. 548. 1845131495.
    65. News: 2002 FIFA World Cup Korea/Japan™. FIFA. 8 February 2022. En. https://archive.today/20220208124130/https://www.fifa.com/tournaments/mens/worldcup/2002korea-japan. 8 February 2022.
    66. News: Korea Republic 2 – 3 Turkey. FIFA. 8 February 2022. En. https://archive.today/20220208130610/https://www.fifa.com/tournaments/mens/worldcup/2002korea-japan/match-center/43950063. 8 February 2022.
    67. Web site: The World's best Top Division Goal Scorer 1997. IFFHS. 1998. 15 October 2010.
    68. Web site: Hakan the hero for resurgent Turkey. UEFA. Tozar. Türker. 19 January 2011. 7 January 2019.
    69. Web site: Legends. Golden Foot. 23 September 2015. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20150925120930/http://www.goldenfoot.com/legends.php?l=en. 25 September 2015.