António Luís Alves Ribeiro Oliveira
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António Oliveira | ||
Personal information | ||
---|---|---|
Full name | António Luís Alves Ribeiro Oliveira | |
Date of birth | June 10, 1952 | |
Place of birth | Penafiel, Portugal | |
Playing position | Midfielder | |
Senior clubs1 | ||
Years | Club | App (Gls)* |
1970-1979 1979 1980 1980-1981 1981-1985 1985-1986 |
FC Porto Real Betis FC Porto FC Penafiel Sporting Clube de Portugal C.S. Marítimo |
10 (1) |
National team | ||
Portugal | ||
Teams managed | ||
Portugal FC Porto Portugal |
||
1 Senior club appearances and goals |
António Luís Alves Ribeiro Oliveira (born June 10, 1952 in Penafiel, Portugal; pron. IPA: [ɐ̃'tɔniu oli'vɐiɾɐ]) is a former footballer,manager and president of Liga Vitalis club FC Penafiel. He is now a businessman
[edit] As a player
Oliveira appeared young on FC Porto at the age of 15, after more than positive recommendations from the youth teams. A very skilled forward, he was the main stars of the side that recaptured the title in the 77-78 season, ending a 20-year drought, which earned him a transfer to Real Betis, but he was unsuccessful and returned to Porto. However, the tides were changing, as both Jorge Nuno Pinto da Costa and Pedroto left Porto after internal problems with Americo de Sá. He joined Penafiel as a player-manager (still being called up for international matches), and then ended his career in Sporting CP.
Portuguese Footballer of the Year: 1978, 1981, 1982
Pedroto, the legendary Portuguese manager praised him as One of the best all-time players. By the time of his retirement, he was capped 29 times.
[edit] As manager
Oliveira had two terms in the national team: first during the whole Euro 1996 campaign and then for the 2002 FIFA World Cup. While he brought the national team again to a major competition (after notable failures such as the USA'94 campaign led by Carlos Queiróz) in the European tournament he was knocked out against soon-to-be finalists Czech Republic in the quarter-finals.
Several problems appeared in his second term. While the qualifying stage was unusually smooth, several problems and poorly seen changes occurred during the preparation and tournament - Vítor Baía replaced Ricardo in goal, Beto played right defender instead of Frechaut or Abel Xavier, Luís Figo playing in terrible physical condition, Costinha was left outside the final 22, placing Petit alone against USA, calling Hugo Viana as a last minute replacement for Daniel Kenedy (who tested positive in a doping control test) and several bad decisions in the final game against South Korea, and Portugal ended the tournament third in a group, an underachievement for what was believed to be on the "black horses" in the competition. He was fired after the World Cup, but the actual scenario beyond the bad results is still unknown.
[edit] As businessman and president
With his brother, he owned Olivedesportos, which controls most media related to football in Portugal, and due to that and many stories and rumours, he is seen as a "shady" character, even by Porto fans. Hours before Pinto da Costa was included in the Golden Whistle affair he acquired enough stocks to become the top private investor in the FC Porto SAD. One season before this, he won the presidency of Penafiel, and the club climbed from the League of Honour to the SuperLiga, where against most odds they finished the league placed 11th, well above the relegation mark.
Preceded by Nelo Vingada |
Portugal national football team manager 1994-1996 |
Succeeded by Artur Jorge |
Preceded by Humberto Coelho |
Portugal national football team manager 2000-2002 |
Succeeded by Agostinho Oliveira |
Preceded by Mário Reis |
Cup of Portugal Winning Coach 1997-98 |
Succeeded by António Sousa |
Preceded by Herman Stessl |
Portuguese SuperCup Winning Coach 1982-83 |
Succeeded by José Maria Pedroto |
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