Eugênio Machado Souto
Geninho | ||
Personnel | ||
---|---|---|
Surname | Eugênio Machado Souto | |
birthday | May 15, 1948 | |
place of birth | Ribeirão Preto , Brazil | |
position | goalkeeper | |
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
1966-1973 | Botafogo FC (SP) | |
1974-1976 | AA Francana | |
1976-1980 | EC São Bento | |
1980 | Paulista de Jundiaí | |
1981 | SER Caxias do Sul | |
1982 | EC Vitória | |
1983-1984 | EC Novo Hamburgo | |
Stations as a trainer | ||
Years | station | |
1984 | Novo Hamburgo | |
1985 | AA Francana | |
1986 | Botafogo (SP) | |
1986-1987 | Santos | |
1988-1989 | Vitória Guimarães | |
1990 | São Carlense | |
1991 | Botafogo (SP) | |
1991-1992 | Portuguesa | |
1992 | Santos | |
1993 | Botafogo (SP) | |
1993 | Al-Shabab | |
1993 | Fortaleza | |
1994 | União São João | |
1994-1995 | Vitória | |
1995 | Ponte Preta | |
1996 | Juventude | |
1997 | Guarani | |
1997 | Bahia | |
1998 | Vitória | |
1998 | Matonense | |
1999 | União São João | |
1999 | Juventude | |
2000 | Ituano | |
2000 | Paraná Clube | |
2001-2002 | Athletico Paranaense | |
2002-2003 | Atlético Mineiro | |
2003 | Corinthians | |
2003-2004 | Vasco da Gama | |
2005 | Al-Ahli | |
2005-2006 | Goiás | |
2006 | Corinthians | |
2006-2007 | Goiás | |
2007 | Sport Recife | |
2007-2008 | Atlético Mineiro | |
2008 | Botafogo | |
2008-2009 | Athletico Paranaense | |
2009 | Nautico | |
2010 | Atlético Goianiense | |
2010-2011 | Sport Recife | |
2011 | Athletico Paranaense | |
2011 | Vitória | |
2012 | Comercial | |
2012 | Portuguesa | |
2013 | Sao Caetano | |
2013-2014 | Sport Recife | |
2014-2015 | Avaí | |
2015 | Ceará SC | |
2016-2017 | ABC Natal | |
2018-2019 | Avaí | |
1 Only league games are given. |
Eugênio Machado Souto or Geninho for short (born May 15, 1948 in Ribeirão Preto ) is a former Brazilian football player and current coach . As an active player, he was used in the position of goalkeeper . During his coaching career he looked after various clubs.
Player career
Geninho began his active career in his hometown in 1966 at Botafogo Futebol Clube (SP) . There he stood between the posts of the Pantera until 1973 . In the 1974 season, the goalkeeper moved to AA Francana before he moved to EC São Bento after two years . Between 1980 and 1984 Geninho transferred again to four other clubs, but without being able to win a major title. His most famous station was the north Brazilian club EC Vitória .
Coaching career
After the end of his active career, Geninho devoted himself to the coaching office. As early as 1984, the year he left professional football, he was coach at his last player station, EC Novo Hamburgo . With AA Francana and Botafogo FC (SP) , engagements at other former clubs followed. In 1986 he took over for the first time at a major Brazilian club and signed with FC Santos . But the results were more than disappointing. In 1988 he moved to his first of three foreign posts. In Portugal, Geninho took over the coaching position at Vitória Guimarães . In 1990 he returned to Brazil, where he worked for various clubs. In 1993 the Arab club Al-Shabab lured him to Asia, where he won the Saudi Arabian soccer championship and the Crown Prince Cup that same year . But after just a few months, the football teacher was hired back in his home country. There he trained several teams before he was signed by the Paraná Clube in 2000 . He led this in group A of the Copa João Havelange (18 teams) in third place. Thus, the club qualified for the next round. In this round, which was played after knockout games, Paraná won after four home and away games. As a result, Geninho's team was entitled to start in the final phase, for which a total of sixteen clubs qualified. There they were eliminated in the quarterfinals after 1: 3 and 1: 0 against the eventual winner CR Vasco da Gama .
This performance did not go unnoticed by the top Brazilian teams and in 2001 Athletico Paranaense introduced Geninho as the new coach. In the league for the Campeonato Brasileiro de Futebol , the football coach led his new team to second place behind AD São Caetano and thus reached the finals of the national championship. Paranaense finally reached the final against AD São Caetano via São Paulo FC and Fluminense Rio de Janeiro . In the first game on December 16, 2001, Geninho's team won 4-2 with goals from Ilan Araújo and a three-pack from Alex Mineiro . The second leg a week later, the team won 1-0 (Alex Mineiro) again. It was the first all-Brazilian championship title for the club in club history. In May 2002, Geninho and Paranaense separated again. Shortly before, he won the Paraná State Championship . Just a day after leaving Paranaense, Geninho signed with Atlético Mineiro . After only six months he went to Corinthians São Paulo , where they immediately won the São Paulo state championship . In September of the same year was Geninho of Tite replaced as Corinthians coach. But in December he found a new job at CR Vasco da Gama . With these he then missed a success in the competition for the state championship of Rio de Janeiro . Only in the final did the team fail at Flamengo Rio de Janeiro .
In 2005 Geninho went to Saudi Arabia for the second time in his coaching career, where Al-Ahli made him an offer. But after six months this intermezzo ended quickly. In Goiás EC he found a new club at home. In 2006 he won the Goiás State Championship with GEC . In May of the same year, Corinthinas São Paulo recruited him, where he replaced Paulo Autuori de Mello . In August he went back to the Goiás EC. In the summer of 2007 he followed Sport Recife and took over the coaching post there before he was hired for the second time at Atlético Mineiro in December and again six months later fired and soon afterwards coach at Botafogo FR . But here, too, success did not materialize and Geninho was released from head coach after only six weeks. Between September 2008 and June 2009 he was finally in charge of Athletico Paranaense, where he worked between 2001 and 2002. Like then, he again won the Paraná State Championship. In the second half of the calendar year, the former goalkeeper Náutico Capibaribe . In February 2010 he was introduced as a coach at Atlético Goianiense . Here he won the Goiás state championship for the second time in his coaching career. For Goianiense it was the eleventh title win in this competition. In June they split again and Geninho rejoined Sport Recife. In 2012 he took over the management of the Associação Portuguesa de Desportos .
After further positions, Geninho took over Avaí FC for the second time in 2018 . With this he reached third place in Série B and thus promotion to Série A 2019 . The club was able to lead Geninho to victory in the national championship of Santa Catarina . Nevertheless, Geninho was dismissed after the ninth game day in the Série A. The club was at the time in 20th (last) place.
Success as a trainer
Vitória Guimarães
Al-Shabab
- Crown Prince Cup: 1993
- Saudi Arabian Football Championship : 1993
Athletico Paranaense
- Campeonato Brasileiro de Futebol : 2001
- Paraná State Championship : 2002, 2009
Corinthians
- São Paulo State Championship : 2003
Goiás EC
- Goiás State Championship : 2006
Atlético Goianiense
- Goiás State Championship : 2010
ABC
- National Championship of Rio Grande do Norte : 2016, 2017
- State Cup of Rio Grande do Norte : 2016, 2017
Avaí
Web links
- official homepage
- Geninho in the database of weltfussball.de
- Geninho in the database of sambafoot.com
- Geninho in the database of transfermarkt.de
Individual evidence
- ^ Termination of Eugênio Machado Souto at Avaí , report on globoesporte.globo.com of June 17, 2019, page in portugal, accessed on July 23, 2019
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Machado Souto, Eugênio |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Geninho |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Brazilian soccer player and coach |
DATE OF BIRTH | May 15, 1948 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Ribeirão Preto , Brazil |