Marcelo Pereira Moreira

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Pavão
Personnel
Surname Marcelo Pereira Moreira
birthday April 15, 1974
place of birth Recife PEBrazil
size 167 cm
position right wing
Juniors
Years station
1981-1991 Pequeninos de Joquey
1991-1993 Sao Paulo FC
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1991-1997 Sao Paulo FC 24 (0)
1992 →  Brasil de Farroupilha  (loan) 4 (0)
1996 →  Athletico Paranaense  (loan) 0 (0)
1996 →  Rio Branco EC  (loan)
1997 →  Mogi Mirim EC  (loan)
1997 →  Atlético Goianiense  (loan)
1998-2000 SC Austria Lustenau 47 (1)
2001 Mogi Mirim EC
2002-2003 FC Treze
1 Only league games are given.

Marcelo Pereira Moreira called Pavão (born April 15, 1974 in Recife PE , Brazil ) is a former Brazilian soccer player. In 1994 he was awarded the Bola de Prata (silver shoe) as the best right defender in the Brazilian league .

With a transfer fee of over five million schillings , in January 1998 it became the most expensive commitment in the history of SC Austria Lustenau .

Club career

Career start

Pavão began his career in the youth of the Pequeninos de Joquey , one of the best-known training clubs in Brazil, which for years has been considered the first talent supplier for the major clubs of São Paulo. There he played in a team with the future Brazilian internationals André Luiz and Zé Roberto , before he was signed with André Luiz from São Paulo FC in 1991 .

As a youth player committed, he then made his debut on October 9, 1991 in the Paulista Championship in the 1: 4 defeat against AA Internacional , in which he managed the only goal. The rest of the season he then spent again in the youth team before he was awarded to the small Brasil de Farroupilha for the 1992 season . For Farroupilha he completed four games and won the lower class "Campeonato Gaúcho de Futebol - Segunda Divisão" with the team .

Promotion at São Paulo

Back at São Paulo FC he had a difficult time on the professional team. With Cafu he had the unrestricted star of the team in front of him in his position on the right wing, in midfield he could not get past veteran Válber . During the season he only made few appearances in the Paulista Championship and the Copa do Brasil . In the Campeonato Brasileiro it was not considered at all. In contrast, he was one of the top performers in the U-18 team of his club and in 1993 he celebrated winning the prestigious "Copa São Paulo de Juniores" .

With the departure of Cafu to Real Saragossa during the 1994 season, Pavão's situation changed suddenly. As the first replacement on the right wing, he became a regular under coach Muricy Ramalho and played a formidable season. Through his storms he became an important template for the offensive and is named as a decisive factor for winning the Copa Conmebol in the same year. At the end of the season he was then awarded the Bola de Prata , for the best right defender of the season in Brazil and was voted into the team of the year. As a result, he came up for discussion in the Brazilian media as to whether Pavão should not drive as a back-up for Jorginho to the 1994 World Cup , since his actual replacement Cafu had played a poor season. National coach Carlos Alberto Parreira didn't even nominate Pavão for a preparation game for the World Cup, which quickly took the matter off the table.

The year 1995 turned into a disastrous season for São Paulo. Without big stars, but with many perspective players like Marcelo Bordon or Denílson , they tried to build on the successes of previous years, which failed completely. The season ended without a title and slipped in the league to the insignificant 12th place in the table. Pavão could no longer build on the strong performances of the previous year and went under with the team. As a consequence of the weak year, the club management changed the team for the 1996 season in almost all positions. Cláudio , Capone and Juliano Belletti were signed for the right wing alone . The previously weak Pavão was suggested in return to leave the club.

This was followed by a loan move to the newly promoted Athletico Paranaense . However , he quickly fell out of favor with the coaching legend Émerson Leão , whereupon he was sent back to São Paulo after only 4 games in the Copa do Brasil. As a result, he was loaned out to several smaller clubs without causing a stir before he made the leap to Europe in the winter transition period of the 1997/98 season.

Change to Austria

The then Austrian Bundesliga team , SC Austria Lustenau , had signed him after months of negotiations for the club's record sum of over five million schillings , which still exists today . The change caused quite a stir in the Austrian media, as Lustenau, as a rather small club, had made such a high financial outlay. In addition, Lustenau President Hubert Nagel also publicly announced that they had signed an absolute star who would bring "more than double the transfer fee" into the club's coffers if they were resold. The advance praise developed a great expectation of the player, which he could never meet in a row.

In his first half of the year he was barely able to convince, but was repeatedly set up by the then trainer Edmund Stöhr . When his performance did not improve in the 1998/99 season, Stöhr had no choice but to put Pavão on the bench, making him Austria's most expensive substitute at the time. In the second half of the season, however, he fought his way back into the starting line-up and for the first time since his move had consistently strong performances over a long period of time before a persistent disc injury put him out of action for a long time.

After Stöhr left and Klaus Scheer was appointed head coach, everything pointed to Pavão's final breakthrough in the “Ländle” . Scheer tried to play offensively and, unlike Stöhr, to put less on the defensive, which benefited Pavão, but let the team slide to the bottom of the table. At the end of the season Lustenau was relegated from the Bundesliga.

Due to a new foreigner regulation in the first division , the team had to be completely rebuilt in the following season, whereupon Pavão had to leave the club. The Nigerian Jide Olugbodi was actually planned as a fixed departure, but in contrast to Pavão, he completed a strong preparation for the season, which is why the club made the surprising decision.

Early retirement

As a result, he completed a trial training with the then Spanish second division club CD Tenerife , but was not signed. It was similar for him in a row at several Brazilian clubs that did not want to sign him for cost reasons. It was not until 2001 that he returned to Mogi Mirim EC for some time , from 2001 to 2002 he played for the small FC Treze , which he left after outstanding salaries.

He then instructed his player manager to find a club abroad for him again because he no longer wanted to play for a Brazilian club. During his time in Lustenau, his manager at the time had cheated him out of "a considerable amount of money" intended for his family in Brazil. Most recently, he had received almost no money from Mogi Mirim and FC Treze, which meant that he had lost confidence in Brazilian football.

After he couldn't find a club, he took a job as a car salesman in the company of his childhood friend André Luiz in São Paulo.

successes

In the club

As a player

Ronaldo (TW)
Pavão -    Jorge Luís    -    Cléber  -    Roberto Carlos
Zé Elias    -    Marcelinho Carioca    -    Zinho
Rivaldo    -    Márcio Amoroso    -    Luizão

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ "Pequeninos do Jockey": A training course for footballers and people fifa.com, accessed on April 17, 2010
  2. Página de Introdução da RSSSF Brasil ( Portuguese ) rsssfbrasil.com. Retrieved September 3, 2019.
  3. Pavão . futpedia.globo.com. Archived from the original on April 30, 2009. Retrieved September 3, 2019.
  4. ^ Austrian cup winners from 1918/19 . austriasoccer.at. Archived from the original on June 21, 2008. Retrieved September 3, 2019.
  5. São Paulo Futebol Clube Matches - 1991 rsssfbrasil.com, accessed April 17, 2010
  6. ^ São Paulo Futebol Clube Matches - 1993 rsssfbrasil.com, accessed April 17, 2010
  7. CSP'08: esquadrões da Copa São Paulo: São Paulo - 1993 (Portuguese) ( Memento of July 7, 2010 in the Internet Archive ) olheiros.net/artigo/, accessed on April 17, 2010
  8. Bola de Prata Winners (Placar Magazine) rsssfbrasil.com, accessed April 17, 2010
  9. As of April 2010
  10. ^ "The chronic legionnaire's disease -" Sports newspaper No. 6/02 of February 5, 2002 Page: 6
  11. a b "Pavao is a Brazilian - and not a football soldier" - Neue Vorarlberger Tageszeitung No. 185 from August 10, 1999 Page: 31 Department: Sport
  12. Pavão: craque por um instante (Portuguese) ( Memento from January 11, 2010 in the Internet Archive ) olheiros.net, accessed on April 17, 2010