Edu Marangon
Edu Marangon | ||
Personnel | ||
---|---|---|
Surname | Carlos Eduardo Marangon | |
birthday | February 2 or February 15, 1963 | |
place of birth | São Paulo , Brazil | |
size | 180 cm | |
position | midfield player | |
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
1984-1988 | Portuguesa | 55 | (7)
1988-1989 | Torino Calcio | 22 | (2)
1989-1990 | FC Porto | 2 | (0)
1990 | Flamengo Rio de Janeiro | 0 | (0)
1990-1991 | FC Santos | 24 | (3)
1991-1992 | Palmeiras São Paulo | 16 | (3)
1992 | FC Santos | 0 | (0)
1993-1994 | Yokohama wing | 67 (18) |
1995 | Nacional Montevideo | ? |
1996 | Coritiba Foot Ball Club | 9 | (1)
1997 | Inter de Limeira | 0 | (0)
1997 | Club Atlético Bragantino | ? |
National team | ||
Years | selection | Games (goals) |
at least 1987 | Olympic selection Brazil | |
1987-1990 | Brazil | 9 | (1)
Stations as a trainer | ||
Years | station | |
2003 | Parana | |
2008 | Rio Claro Futebol Clube | |
2008-2009 | CA Juventus | |
2009– | Sorocaba | |
1 Only league games are given. |
Carlos Eduardo "Edu" Marangon (born February 2 or February 15, 1963 in São Paulo ) is a Brazilian soccer coach and former soccer player .
Career
society
In the early days of his professional career, the 1.80 meter tall midfielder was from 1984 in the ranks of the Portuguesa club , which is based in São Paulo . There Edu completed by the beginning of the second half of the 1988 season at national level 55 games in the Brazilian Série A and scored seven goals. There are also at least 13 goals in the regional Campeonato Paulista , which was held in the first half of the year. Shortly after the start of the national season in 1988 in the summer, he moved to Italy for the 1988/89 season and ran in 22 games for Torino Calcio , in which he scored two goals.
In the first half of the following season 1989/90 he worked for FC Porto , which later won the Portuguese championship . However, Edu only played two games and moved back to Flamengo Rio de Janeiro in early 1990 . For the club, he met at least twice at the Campeonato Carioca . From the second half of the year, he worked for FC Santos until 1991 . There he got three hits in 24 league appearances, from 1991 the Série A took place in the first half of the year, so he did not complete any regional games for Santos. In the course of the year he moved to Palmeiras São Paulo and thus initially took part in the Campeonato Paulista, where he scored at least four goals before he was used in 16 national games in 1992 and scored three goals.
Then he was again active in 1992 for FC Santos and scored at least one goal in the Paulista, before he moved for the first season of the Japanese professional league J. League in 1993 to the Japanese club Yokohama wing owned by All Nippon Airways . For the Wings he played 67 games in two seasons up to 1994, scored 18 times in the opposing goal and won the Kaiser Cup in 1993 . In 1995 he was under contract with Nacional Montevideo in Uruguay. The club was runner-up that year. This was followed by positions in Brazil again: In 1996 he played at Coritiba Foot Ball Club , took second place with the club in the Campeonato Paranaense and scored one goal in 9 Série A games. He spent the first half of 1997 at the national third-rate Inter de Limeira , with whom he took part in the first-class Campeonato Paulista and scored at least one goal. In the second half of the year he joined the Clube Atlético Bragantino from Bragança Paulista again to a first division club, with whom he escaped relegation as 22nd in the table by only nine goals goal difference. He then ended his career as a player.
National team
In April 1987 he was used in a friendly international match of the Brazilian Olympic team against Bolivia and scored a goal. For the Brazilian national football team , he played in at least nine international matches between 1987 and 1990 and scored one international goal. He took part in the Copa America in 1987 . During the tournament he was used twice and scored one goal.
Coaching
After playing football, he briefly coached Paraná in 2003, Rio Claro from February 2008 to November 2008, followed by Juventus from São Paulo until September 2009 and Sorocaba from September 2009.
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c d e f g h Edu Marangon in the database of National-Football-Teams.com (English), accessed June 24, 2016
- ↑ a b Statistiche su ForaDeJogo (Portuguese), accessed on February 20, 2016
- ↑ a b c d e Statistiche su futebol80.com.br (Portuguese), accessed February 20, 2016
- ↑ Los argentinos famosos que cruzaron el charco on ultimasnoticias.com.uy, August 19, 2010, accessed June 17, 2016
- ↑ Statistiche su futebol80.com.br (Portuguese), accessed February 20, 2016
- ↑ Copa América 1987 on rsssf.com, accessed June 24, 2016
- ↑ Profile on footballdatabase.eu , accessed on February 20, 2016
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Marangon, Edu |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Marangon, Carlos Eduardo (full name) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Brazilian soccer player |
DATE OF BIRTH | February 2, 1963 or February 15, 1963 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | São Paulo , Brazil |