Maxwell Batista da Silva

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Maxwell Batista da Silva
Personnel
Surname Maxwell Batista da Silva
birthday October 23, 1989
place of birth CamaçariBrazil
size 172 cm
position Left full-back
Juniors
Years station
2006-2011 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro
2006 → Artsul FC (loan)
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
2009-2011 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 3 (0)
2011 →  Duque de Caxias FC  (loan) 4 (0)
2012 SC Corinthians Alagoano
2013 Colorado AC
2014 Guaratinguetá Futebol 7 (0)
2015 Ferroviária Vale do Rio Doce 0 (0)
2016 Sociedade Boca Júnior FC 16 (1)
2016-2017 CS Sergipe 17 (0)
2017 Murici FC 5 (0)
2018 EC Jacuipense 9 (0)
2018 CS Sergipe 0 (0)
2019 Canaã EC 10 (0)
2020– AA Sao Mateus 2 (4)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
2010 Brazil U20
1 Only league games are given.
As of February 1, 2020

Maxwell Batista da Silva (born October 23, 1989 in Camaçari ) is a Brazilian football player . He is used in the position of a left full -back. At the beginning of his career he was known by a false identity.

Career

Maxwell started his career in the youth division of Flamengo Rio de Janeiro . Although still a member of the youth squad, he played at Flamengo from the 2009 season in the professional squad from time to time. In the course of winning the fifth championship title , he played three games in 2009 (no goal). On July 12, 2009, the 10th day of the season, he ran as a substitute in the Série A away against São Paulo . In the game he was substituted on for Gonzalo Fierro in the 77th minute . This was followed by two more missions on matchdays 13 and 20, in both of which he was in the starting line-up. In the 2010 season he came to no more appearances in the A-squad and was loaned to Duque de Caxias FC in 2011 .

False identity

After returning to Flamengo in early 2012, Maxwell confessed to having been endowed with a false identity since joining Flamengo. The talent scout Carlos Araújo Mendes presented talents that he had discovered on the Orkut network service . Maxwell acquired the identity of one of these talents when he joined Flamengo in 2006. Until the time of its own disclosure, he acted as:

Jorbison Reis dos Santos, b. December 30, 1991

As a reason for his own exposure, he stated that he would like to be baptized. Shortly after the announcement, he canceled his contract with Flamengo, which was published by the CBF on January 13th. On January 17th, the CBF published a new contract from Maxwell under his real name with the SC Corinthians Alagoano . What was curious about this was that the contract was signed on January 12th, the day before the termination with Flamengo. In other words, the day before Jorbison ceased to exist in football, Maxwell had already been born.

As a result, a career began in which he seldom longer than one After a stopover at Colorado AC 2013, Maxwell moved to Guaratinguetá Futebol in 2014 . Maxwell spent the 2015 season at Ferroviária Vale do Rio Doce and for the games for the 2016 national championship for Sociedade Boca Júnior FC . In the same year joined Maxwell for the games in the Série D for CS Sergipe . The club stayed for the 2017 national championship games. After the 2017 championship games with Murici FC in Série D, he went to EC Jacuipense for 2018 . For the 2018 championship round, Maxwell went back to Sergipe. For 2019 he went to Canaã EC and in 2020 to AA São Mateus .

National team

In 2010 Maxwell, then still as Jorbison, took part in a tournament for the U-20 national team in Uruguay.

successes

Flamengo

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Série A Debut 2009 , match report on worldfootball.net., Accessed on February 5, 2020
  2. Wrong identity , report on globo. com of March 2012, page in portug., accessed 11 February 2020
  3. Change to Guaratinguetá , report on globo.com from January 9, 2014, page in portugal, accessed on February 11, 2020
  4. Change to Ferroviária , report on ndmais.com.br from February 11, 2015, page in portug., Accessed on February 11, 2020
  5. Change to Jacuipense , report on bahianoticias.com.br of December 8, 2017, page in portug., Accessed on February 11, 2020
  6. U-20 national team , report on uol.com.br from January 13, 2010, page in portug., Accessed on February 11, 2020