Leonardo Araújo
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Leonardo | ||
Personal information | ||
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Full name | Leonardo Nascimento de Araujo | |
Date of birth | September 5, 1969 (age 37) | |
Place of birth | Niterói, Brazil | |
Playing position | Attacking midfielder Fullback |
|
Youth clubs | ||
1984-1987 | Flamengo | |
Senior clubs1 | ||
Years | Club | App (Gls)* |
1987-1990 1990-1991 1991-1993 1993-1994 1994-1996 1996-1997 1997-2001 2001-2002 2002-2002 2002-2003 |
Flamengo São Paulo FC Valencia CF São Paulo FC Kashima Antlers Paris St. Germain AC Milan São Paulo FC Flamengo AC Milan |
52 (0) 40 (1) 71 (6) 15 (3) 49 (30) 32 (7) 96 (22) 12 (0) 8 (3) 1 (0) |
National team | ||
1991-2002 | Brazil | 60 (8) |
1 Senior club appearances and goals |
Leonardo Nascimento de Araujo, known simply as Leonardo (born September 5, 1969 in Niterói, Brazil), is a football midfielder, who played for Brazil, playing on the teams that won the 1994 FIFA World Cup (although he was suspended for the latter part of the tournament), and placed second in 1998.
Contents |
[edit] Playing career
Leonardo began his career with the Brazilian club Flamengo in 1987; at just 17, he was given the opportunity to play with his hero Zico plus Leandro, Bebeto and Renato Gaúcho, and to take part in winning his first Brazilian championship. In 1990, Leonardo signed with São Paulo FC, and in 1991, Leonardo, Raí, and other young talents were assembled as part of the so-called "esquadrão tricolor" under the command of Brazilian legend Telê Santana, giving Leonardo his second Brazilian championship.
Later that year, he made the switch to European football, signing with the Spanish club Valencia CF. After two seasons with Valencia, he returned to Brazil for a brief stint with São Paulo in 1993, during which time the team won several titles, including the prestigious Toyota Cup.
Leonardo made his international debut in 1989. He is remembered for the vicious elbow to the head of American midfielder Tab Ramos during the second round of the 1994 World Cup. He later apologized to Ramos in English, stating that he did not intentionally hurt him. Leonardo was suspended for the rest of the tournament as Brazil won the championship. The four match suspension was the second longest imposed during the World Cup.
In 1994, after the World Cup, Leonardo signed with the Kashima Antlers of the newly-formed J. League. Leonardo continued his success in Kashima, again playing with his idol and friend Zico. By 1996, he had had enough of Japan and returned to Europe, this time signing with French club Paris St Germain, where he again proved to be successful, one of his goals helping them to oust Liverpool FC out of the semi-finals of the Cup Winners Cup. In 1997, Leonardo was given the #10 shirt for the national team.
The following year, Leonardo played all seven games in his second 1998 FIFA World Cup, helping Brazil to a second-place finish. In the second opening round match against Morocco, he netted one shot and began celebrating, but was later called off-side. In 1997 he signed with Italian giants AC Milan, becoming a prominent part of that club's star-studded lineup. He played four full seasons in Milan, but was hampered by injuries. In 2001, he returned to play for São Paulo and then Flamengo, before finishing his career in Milan in 2003. He was selected to play a game for the 2002 World Cup qualifying campaign and ended his career with 60 caps and eight goals for Brazil.
[edit] Post-playing career
Since 2002, Leonardo has dedicated himself to social works with the Fundação Gol de Letra and Fondazione Milan.
Leonardo worked for BBC Television in the United Kingdom during the 2006 FIFA World Cup, as one of their Match of the Day analysts, alongside another former World Cup winner Marcel Desailly.
On 5th November 2006, Leonardo appeared on the panel of the Match of the Day 2 alongside Lee Dixon and Ian Wright. Leo is quoted as saying, "Sometimes I think they play good, other times, maybe not so good." Referring to almost every football situation.
[edit] Honours
[edit] Club Honours
- 1987 - Flamengo
- 1991 - São Paulo FC
- Brazil Cup 1990
- São Paulo State Championship 1991
- South American Recup 1993, 1994
- South American Supercup 1993
- Intercontinental Cup 1993
- J. League 1996
- Italian League 1999
- Italian Cup 2003
[edit] International Honours
- 1994 FIFA World Cup - Winner
- 1997 Copa America - Winner
- 1997 Confederations Cup - Winner
- 1998 FIFA World Cup - Runner-up
[edit] External links
Brazil squad - 1994 FIFA World Cup Champions (4th Title) | ||
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1 Taffarel | 2 Jorginho | 3 Ricardo Rocha | 4 Ronaldão | 5 Mauro Silva | 6 Branco | 7 Bebeto | 8 Dunga | 9 Zinho | 10 Raí | 11 Romário | 12 Zetti | 13 Aldair | 14 Cafu | 15 Márcio Santos | 16 Leonardo | 17 Mazinho | 18 Paulo Sérgio | 19 Müller | 20 Ronaldo | 21 Viola | 22 Gilmar | Coach: Parreira |
Brazil squad - 1998 FIFA World Cup Runners-up | ||
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1 Taffarel | 2 Cafu | 3 Aldair | 4 Júnior Baiano | 5 César Sampaio | 6 Roberto Carlos | 7 Giovanni | 8 Dunga | 9 Ronaldo | 10 Rivaldo | 11 Emerson | 12 Carlos Germano | 13 Zé Carlos | 14 Gonçalves | 15 André Cruz | 16 Zé Roberto | 17 Doriva | 18 Leonardo | 19 Denílson | 20 Bebeto | 21 Edmundo | 22 Dida | Coach: Zagallo |
Categories: 1969 births | Living people | Brazilian footballers | C.R. Flamengo players | São Paulo Futebol Clube players | La Liga footballers | Valencia CF footballers | Paris Saint-Germain players | A.C. Milan players | Serie A players | FIFA World Cup 1994 players | FIFA World Cup 1998 players | FIFA World Cup-winning players | Kashima Antlers players | Non-Japanese footballers in Japan | Brazil international footballers