Adílson Batista

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Adílson Batista
Adilson batista.jpg
Personnel
Surname Adílson Dias Batista
birthday March 16, 1968
place of birth CuritibaBrazil
position Defender
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1987-1988 Athletico Paranaense
1989-1992 Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte
1993 SC Internacional
1994 Atlético Mineiro
1994-1996 Gremio Porto Alegre
1997-1999 Júbilo Iwata
2000 Corinthians São Paulo
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1990-1991 Brazil 3 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2001 Mogi Mirim EC
2002 América FC (RN)
2002 Avaí FC
2003 Paraná Clube
2003-2004 Gremio Porto Alegre
2004 Paysandu SC
2005 Sport Recife
2005-2006 Figueirense FC
2006-2007 Júbilo Iwata
2008-2010 Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte
2010 Corinthians São Paulo
2011 FC Santos
2011 Athletico Paranaense
2011 Sao Paulo FC
2012 Atlético Goianiense
2013 Figueirense FC
2013-2014 CR Vasco da Gama
2015 Joinville EC
2018 America Mineiro
2019 Ceará SC
2019-2020 Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte
1 Only league games are given.

Adílson Dias Batista (born March 16, 1968 in Curitiba ) is a former Brazilian soccer player and current coach . Since December 2019 he has been training Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte .

Player career

society

Athletico Paranaense

Batista began his professional career in 1988 at Athletico Paranaense , with whom he was able to win the Paraná national championship straight away .

Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte

As early as the following season, the defensive player moved to Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte , where he should also play successfully. In 1990 and 1992 he won the national championship of Minas Gerais and the Copa do Brasil in 1993 with Belo . Much more important, however, were the successes in the competition for the Supercopa Sudamericana, which took place between 1988 and 1997 . In 1991 the club reached the final for the second time in the club's history. After a 2-0 win against the Argentine representative CA River Plate , the back game turned with a 3-0 win at Estádio Governador Magalhães Pinto . In the following year, the team repeated this triumph.

SC Internacional and Atlético Mineiro

For the new season Batista transferred to league competitor SC Internacional from Porto Alegre, where he remained untitled and moved to Atlético Mineiro after just one year . Although they finished fourth in the overall Brazilian championship and thus achieved a good result, the defender also remained without a trophy in Mineiro.

Gremio Porto Alegre

In the same year he joined Grêmio Porto Alegre . Here he started collecting numerous trophies again. 1995 and 1996 the national championship of Rio Grande do Sul , and for the first time in his career the national championship in 1996. However, he experienced the greatest success in 1995 in the competition for the Copa Libertadores . There they dominated the preliminary round and moved into the final of the South American Champions League in the knockout phase via Club Olimpia , Palmeiras São Paulo and CS Emelec . Atlético Nacional from Colombia was waiting for Batista's team there. The final won 3: 1 and 1: 1 and won the competition for the second time since 1983. Batista was in his club's starting line-up on both legs. Under coach Luiz Felipe Scolari , Batista was one of the great achievers of this success alongside Catalino Rivarola , Paulo Nunes and Mário Jardel . The following year they also won the Recopa Sudamericana . In the 4-1 win against the Argentine team CA Independiente , Batista ran alongside Paraguayan Catalino Rivarola in Gremio's central defense and scored the interim 3-1 for his club with a penalty.

Júbilo Iwata

In 1997, the defensive player ventured abroad and hired the Japanese club Júbilo Iwata , where he immediately won the J. League and reached the final of the national cup tournament, which they lost 2-1 to the Kashima Antlers . In the following year, however, the team managed to win the Yamazaki Nabisco Cup . Batista had the most successful year in Japan in 1999: in addition to the championship, international victories were also celebrated. Via Instant-Dict FC ( People's Republic of China ), Finance and Revenue FC ( Burma ), the intermediate round (with Dalian Shide , Pohang Steelers , Busan Daewoo Royals ) and the semi-final against Al Ain Club , the team made it to the final of the AFC Champions League . Opponent there was the Iranian club Esteghlal Tehran , which they defeated 2-1. Shortly afterwards, the club also won the Asian Super Cup and won the triple.

Corinthians São Paulo

In the 2000 season, Batista returned to his home country, where he wore the Corinthians São Paulo jersey in his last year as a professional . There he was part of the squad that won the first FIFA Club World Cup in 2000. In the final on January 14, 2000 against Vasco da Gama , Batista was on the field for the full time. At the end of the year he ended his active career.

National team

For the Brazilian national team Batista was used in a few games between 1990 and 1991 without having participated in a tournament. The defender made his debut shortly after the 1990 World Cup, on October 17, 1990 against the team from Chile . He was in the starting line-up of the Seleção coach Falcão and was later replaced. Batista played his last of four games on February 27, 1991 against Paraguay . From then on, however, he was no longer nominated for the national team.

Coaching career

After his active career, Batista decided to get into the coaching business.

Clubs in Brazil

He held his first head coach position back in 2001 when he was in charge of the Mogi Mirim EC team. The following season he was drawn to América FC (RN) , where he won his first coaching title at the Rio Grande do Norte national championship. Via Avaí FC and Paraná Clube , he came to Grêmio Porto Alegre in 2003 , his biggest position as a football teacher until then. After rather poor results and the threat of relegation to the second division, Batista was dismissed in 2004. But in Sport Recife he quickly found a new employer, which he left quickly to train Figueirense FC from then on. Here he won his second national championship as head coach.

Júbilo Iwata

After this success, Batista moved to Japan for the second time in his life, to Júbilo Iwata . But neither in the league nor in the cup he was as successful as as a player for this club.

Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte

In 2008 he moved back to Brazil to Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte . In the same and the following year Batista won the state championship of Minas Gerais with his new team . By winning the Copa Bimbo in 2009, he even won the double and thus his first international cup as a coach. In the final against Nacional Montevideo from Uruguay , his team had the upper hand 4-1. At Cruzeiro Batista trained players like Ramires , who would later become a national player. In addition, in 2009 he led his team into the final of the Copa Libertadores , where they then failed to Estudiantes de La Plata from Argentina. With a win, he would have been the first Brazilian to win the coveted trophy both as a player and as a coach. Because of his defensive style of play, he was often heavily criticized by fans and supporters during his time at Belo Horizonte. In 2010 he qualified again for the Copa Libertadores . There they failed in the quarterfinals 2-0 and 2-0 at São Paulo FC .

After the second game, on June 3, 2010, Batista announced that they would be leaving the club. Batista goes down in the club's history books as the coach under whom the 1000th competitive game in the national championship was staged. This was on January 11, 2010 in the encounter with Fluminense Rio de Janeiro , which they lost 3-2.

Corinthians São Paulo

Just seven weeks after leaving Cruzeiro, on July 24, 2010, Corinthians São Paulo announced that Batista would be the team's new coach. He inherited Mano Menezes , who had recently been detached from Corinthinas as the new coach of the Brazilian national team.

successes

As a player

As a trainer

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Campeonato Paranaense de Futebol Profissional - Primeira Divisão - 1988 ( Memento from April 20, 2009 in the Internet Archive ) on federacaopr.com.br (team photo)
  2. ^ Colombian clubs in Copa Libertadores / 1995 on rsssf.com
  3. Felipão x Adílson: duelo de amigos em clássico no Pacaembu on estadao.com (Portuguese)
  4. Adilson Batista é o novo treinador do Corinthians e se apresenta terça-feira from July 24, 2010 on globoesporte.globo.com (Portuguese)
  5. Squad of the Brazilian national team 1990 ( Memento of March 4, 2011 in the Internet Archive ) on reocities.com
  6. Squad of the Brazilian national team 1991 ( Memento of March 4, 2011 in the Internet Archive ) on reocities.com
  7. Adílson Batista assumirá o Jubilo Iwata on mercadofutbeol.com (Portuguese)
  8. Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte draws in La Plata. In: Der Tagesspiegel. July 9, 2009, accessed April 5, 2014 .
  9. 1000th match of each club in Brazilian Championship on rsssfbrasil.com
  10. ^ Corinthians picks Batista to replace Menezes. In: USA TODAY. The Associated Press, July 25, 2010, accessed April 5, 2014 .
  11. The coach carousel in full swing from July 30, 2010 on fifa.com
  12. Profile on zerozerofootball.com ( Memento from April 7, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) (Portuguese)