Pauleta
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Pauleta | ||
Personal information | ||
---|---|---|
Full name | Pedro Miguel Carreiro Resendes | |
Date of birth | April 28, 1973 | |
Place of birth | Ponta Delgada, Azores, Portugal | |
Height | 1,80 m | |
Playing position | Striker | |
Club information | ||
Current club | PSG | |
Number | 9 | |
Youth clubs | ||
1991 1992–1994 1994 |
Santa Clara Operário Angrense |
|
Senior clubs1 | ||
Years | Club | App (Gls)* |
1994–1995 1995–1996 1996–1998 1998–2000 2000–2003 2003–2008 2008-2009 |
União Micaelense Estoril-Praia UD Salamanca Deportivo de La Coruña Girondins de Bordeaux Paris Saint-Germain ? |
0 (0) 30 (19) 71 (34) 58 (18) 98 (65) 167 (76) |
National team2 | ||
1997–2006 | Portugal | 88 (47) |
1 Senior club appearances and goals |
Pedro Miguel Carreiro Resendes, OIH (born April 28, 1973 in Ponta Delgada, Azores), nicknamed Pauleta (pron. IPA: [pau'letɐ]), is a Portuguese professional football player. He is a striker who was last active for the French club Paris Saint-Germain, where he was team captain.
Pauleta is the leading scorer for the Portuguese national team, having scored 47 goals in 88 matches. He played for his country in Euro 2000, the 2002 FIFA World Cup, Euro 2004, and the 2006 FIFA World Cup before retiring from international football.
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[edit] Clubs
Pauleta started his career at youth level playing for local clubs in the Azores, before turning professional with lower league clubs and working his way up the ranks. Pauleta was part of F.C. Porto's youth team for a brief stint, but left soon due to homesickness. He signed his first professional contract with União Micaelense in 1994, spending a season at the club. He then moved to Estoril-Praia in 1995, scoring 19 goals in 30 league games.
The goals continued to flow following a switch to Spanish lower-league club UD Salamanca in 1996. Pauleta struck 19 times as the Spanish club gained promotion to the top-flight Spanish La Liga championship in 1997. He scored a further 15 times in his first season in the top flight. That scoring rate earned a move to RC Deportivo La Coruña in 1998. Pauleta enjoyed a two-year spell with the Galician team, hitting 33 goals in 92 matches, including eight from 12 starts as Deportivo won their first league championship title in the 1999/2000 season.
Pauleta joined Girondins de Bordeaux in the top-flight French Ligue 1 division in September 2000, and enjoyed an impressive run with the Girondins in his first season. He scored a debut hat-trick as Bordeaux crushed FC Nantes Atlantique 5-0 in an away match. He ended as the league's leading scorer with 21 goals in the 2001/2002 season. Subsequently, Pauleta was voted 2002 Footballer of the Year by fellow players and coaches. In total, he registered 65 league goals in 98 games for Bordeaux and went on to win a second Footballer of the Year award.
He joined Paris Saint-Germain FC ahead of the 2003/2004 season, signing a three-year contract in a reported €12m transfer deal. He helped the Parisians to their first silverware in six years, by scoring the only goal of the 2004 French Cup final against LB Châteauroux. Pauleta continued with his goal scoring exploits in the league, registering 18 goals in 37 games, as PSG finished the league in second place. On April 2, 2006 he scored his first hat-trick for Paris Saint-Germain against former club Bordeaux, as the home side won 3-1. Despite reported interest from defending French champions Olympique Lyonnais, Pauleta stayed at Paris-Saint Germain to help them clinch the 2006 French Cup title. He scored his 99th and 100th overall goals for PSG in heroic fashion, the 99th being a fantastic volley, and the 100th being a textbook header.
After 2007-08, as PSG faced relegation until the very last matchday (eventually reaching safety at 16th), Pauleta claimed that he would retire from football in 2008, with the possible exception being if any of the Big three in Portugal came calling.[1]
[edit] National team
Pauleta was the first Portuguese national team player to never have played in Portugal's top-flight, Portuguese Liga, when he made his Portugal debut against Armenia in August 1997. He would have to wait 18 months for his first national team start, against the Netherlands. His first goals came a month later, when he scored two in a 7-0 rout of Azerbaijan, in a March 26, 1999 Euro 2000 qualifier.
A substitute at the Euro 2000 tournament, he led the Portuguese attack at the 2002 FIFA World Cup. Pauleta scored a hat-trick against Poland, and ended up scoring three times in as many games, as Portugal was ousted in the group stage.
Although he played all but one game on the road to the Euro 2004 final, Pauleta did not score in that tournament finals. However, on October 12, 2005, against Latvia, he became the national team's all-time goal scoring leader, surpassing Eusébio's previous record of 41 goals.
Pauleta was the European top scorer in the qualifying round for the 2006 FIFA World Cup. In a friendly match against Cape Verde in May 2006, preluding the World Cup finals, Pauleta showed great form as he netted three times in a Portuguese 4-1 win. However, after scoring the first goal for Portugal in the World Cup game against Angola, he failed to find the net again during the tournament. After Portugal's defeat to Germany in the third place play-off game, Pauleta announced his international retirement.
[edit] Honours
- 1995 Top goalscorer in Liga de Honra
- 2000 La Liga Championship
- 2002 Top goalscorer in Ligue 1, season 2001-2002
- 2002 Ligue 1's Footballer of the Year
- 2003 Ligue 1's Footballer of the Year
- 2004 French Cup
- 2004 Euro 2004 finalist
- 2006 French Cup
- 2006 Top goal scorer in Ligue 1, season 2005-2006
- 2006 Top goalscorer during Europe's 2006 World Cup qualifiers
- 2006 World Cup fourth place
- 2007 Top goalscorer in Ligue 1, season 2006-2007
- 2008 French League Cup
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- (French) PSG profile
- Career stats at L'Equipe
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