Ricardo Oliveira

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Ricardo Oliveira
Ricardo Oliveira.jpg
Ricardo Oliveira, 2007
Personnel
Surname Ricardo de Oliveira
birthday May 6, 1980
place of birth São PauloBrazil
size 182 cm
position Storm
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
2000-2002 Portuguesa 48 (23)
2002-2003 FC Santos 14 0(4)
2003-2004 Valencia CF 21 0(8)
2004-2006 Betis Seville 46 (26)
2006 →  São Paulo FC  (loan) 8 0(5)
2006-2008 AC Milan 26 0(3)
2007-2008 →  Real Saragossa  (loan) 55 (26)
2008-2009 Real Zaragoza 16 0(6)
2009 Betis Seville 11 0(8)
2009-2014 Al-Jazira Club 80 (54)
2010-2011 → São Paulo FC (loan) 15 0(7)
2014 Al-Wasl 11 0(4)
2014-2017 FC Santos 114 (58)
2018– Atlético Mineiro 83 (28)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
2004-2016 Brazil 15 0(5)
1 Only league games are given.
As of March 14, 2020

Ricardo de Oliveira (born May 6, 1980 in São Paulo ) is a Brazilian soccer player .

Career

society

The striker began his career at the age of 14 in the Corinthians São Paulo youth team . In 2000 he moved to Portuguesa São Paulo , where he was first used in the first team. He stayed with Portuguesa for three years before moving to Santos for one season . With these he played at the Copa Libertadores 2003 , where they reached the final against the Argentine representative Boca Juniors . This was lost 0: 2 and 1: 3, so that the club missed the win. With nine goals in the competition, Oliveira was the top scorer along with Boca striker Marcelo Delgado .

Oliveira was brought to Spain by Valencia CF in the summer of 2003 . With the club, he became Spanish champions and UEFA Cup winners in 2004 and scored eight goals in 21 games. He was then committed by Betis Sevilla . In the 2004/05 season he scored 22 goals in 36 games for Betis and also contributed one goal to the 2-1 win in the Copa del Rey final .

In his second season at Betis, he made only 9 appearances due to injuries including a cruciate ligament rupture and was loaned out to São Paulo FC in 2006 to recover in his homeland. He played for São Paulo at the Copa Libertadores 2006 , but only had a loan deal until August 10, 2006 and then had to return to Real Betis. Since the decisive game for the Copa victory did not take place until August 16 due to a change of date, Oliveira tried to get a delay, but the Spanish refused and he missed the biggest game of his career so far.

After his return to Betis there was a conflict with club president Manuel Ruiz de Lopera. The disputes ended on August 31, 2006 when Oliveira signed a five-year contract with AC Milan and moved to Italy for a transfer fee of 15 million euros.

For the 2007/08 season Oliveira was loaned to Real Zaragoza for one year . Saragossa secured a purchase option of ten million euros, originally in order to subsequently tie Oliveira for the long term. After relegation in 2008, Zaragoza drew the option to buy, but a longer commitment of the player to the club was not a realistic goal. Rather, Zaragoza speculated on a quick resale of Oliveira for a higher sum. In the winter of the 2008/09 season, shortly before the end of the transfer, Oliveira moved to Betis Sevilla , where he signed until 2013.

After the relegation of Betis Sevilla from the first division Oliveira moved from Spain to the United Arab Emirates for an estimated 15 million euros . There he signed a contract in Dubai with Al-Jazira Club . After just one year, Oliveira returned to his home country in Brazil, where he again joined São Paulo FC . In January 2014 he moved to Al-Wasl . In the same year he went back to Brazil, where he rejoined FC Santos.

After the end of the 2017 season, Olivera moved to Atlético Mineiro in Belo Horizonte , where he received a contract until the end of 2019. In September 2018, his contract with the club was prematurely extended to the end of 2020. In May 2020, the Olivera club submitted a proposal to terminate the contract, which it did not accept under the conditions mentioned.

National team

Ricardo Oliveira was a Brazilian international. The striker made his first official appearance in the national team on July 8, 2004 during the Copa America against Chile . At that time, national coach Carlos Alberto Parreira came on for Adriano in the 63rd minute . He had previously played in an unofficial match against Catalonia on May 25 , where he scored a goal in a 5-2 win. Oliveira completed a total of 13 or twelve games for the national team, except at the Copa America 2004 , including the Confederations Cup 2005 in Germany. Brazil won both competitions. However, the offensive player never made his breakthrough in the national team. The striker last wore the Seleção jersey on March 27, 2007 in a friendly against Ghana, when he started the 1-0 win. After that, it was no longer considered for a long time. Before he was called up by coach Carlos Dunga eight years later for the World Cup qualifiers against Chile and Venezuela in October 2015 . On October 14, 2015 Ricardo Oliveira celebrated his comeback in the national dress when he started the game against Venezuela and contributed a goal to the 3-1 victory.

successes

National team

society

Personal awards

Trivia

  • Ricardo's sister, Maria de Lourdes Silva de Oliveira, was in custody of kidnappers for five months between 2006 and 2007. In March 2007 she was freed by the Brazilian police. It had been in the hands of the kidnappers since October.
  • In the Copa Libertadores 2017 a minute's silence was observed for Oliveira in the game between Independiente Santa Fe and FC Santos on April 20, 2017 . But he was on the pitch and did n't notice the faulty award .

Web links

Commons : Ricardo Oliveira  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Copa Libertadores - Topscorers on rsssf.com
  2. Valencia sign South American duo from July 31, 2003 on uefa.com (English)
  3. Off for Oliveira! from November 16, 2005 on transfermarkt.de
  4. Oliveira makes Milan move on skysports.com (English)
  5. Milan lends Olivera on July 14, 2007 on transfermarkt.de
  6. Betis brought Oliveira to transfermarkt.de on February 1, 2009
  7. Oliveira to Abu Dhabi from July 18, 2009 on transfermarkt.de
  8. move to Atlético Mineiro , report on globo.com of 21 December 2017 page in Portuguese., Accessed on June 12, 2020
  9. Atlético Mineiro contract extension , report on superesportes.com.br of September 6, 2018, page in portugal, accessed on June 12, 2020
  10. Atlético Mineiro contract cancellation, report on bolavip.com of June 2, 2020, page in portug., Accessed on June 12, 2020
  11. Brazil: Copa America 2004 squad in Peru on weltfussball.de
  12. Match report: Brazil 1-0 Chile on weltfussball.de
  13. Seleção Brasileira (Brazilian National Team) 2004–2005 on rsssfbrasil.com
  14. ^ Brazil: Kader Confederations Cup 2005 in Germany on weltfussball.de
  15. Ghana - Brazil ( Memento from May 19, 2010 in the Internet Archive ) on sambafoot.com
  16. ^ Abducted sister of Ricardo Oliveira freed on March 13, 2007 on spiegel.de
  17. Ricardo Oliveira's sister kidnapped on October 5, 2006 on spiegel.de
  18. Minute of silence for Oliveira , report on abendzeitung-muenchen.de from April 24, 2017, accessed on April 24, 2017