Rivaldo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rivaldo
Personal information
Date of birth April 19, 1972
Place of birth    Recife, Brazil
Height 186 cm (6 ft 1 in)
Nickname Rivaldo or Ribo
Playing position Attacking Midfielder / Forward
Club information
Current club Olympiacos
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
1989-1991
1991-1992
1992-1993
1993-1994
1994-1996
1996-1997
1997-2002
2002-2003
2004
2004-Present
Paulista
Santa Cruz FC
Mogi Mirim EC
Corinthians
Palmeiras
Deportivo de La Coruña
FC Barcelona
AC Milan
Cruzeiro EC
Olympiacos CFP


27 (9)
41 (17)
104 (53)
41 (21)
157 (86)
22 (5)
11(2)
65 (32)   
National team2
1993-2003 Brazil 74 (34)

1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only and
correct as of 2006.
2 National team caps and goals correct
as of 2006.
* Appearances (Goals)

Vítor Borba Ferreira (born April 19, 1972 in Recife, Pernambuco), commonly known as Rivaldo, is a Brazilian professional football (soccer) player, who plays for Greek club Olympiacos in the Super League Greece. He most notably played five years with Spanish club FC Barcelona, with whom he won the 1998 and 1999 Spanish La Liga championship and the 1998 Copa del Rey. He was honoured as FIFA World Player of the Year and European Footballer of the Year in 1999. He was named by Pelé as one of the 125 Greatest Living Footballers at a FIFA Awards Ceremony in 2004.

Between 1993 and 2003, Rivaldo played 74 matches and scored 34 goals for the Brazil national football team (A Seleção), and he was part of the 2002 FIFA World Cup winning Brazilian team. An attacking midfielder, he is known for his play-making capabilities, as well as his technique. He is also known for his bicycle kicks.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Rivaldo had an extremely poor upbringing in the favelas of the port town of Recife. His physical appearance still marks the poverty he experienced in his childhood: malnourishment-caused bowleggedness and the loss of several teeth. Rivaldo's father Romildo was killed in a road accident in 1989, but Rivaldo went on to his first professional contract later that year.[1]

[edit] Beginnings in Brazil

Rivaldo began his professional career at the age of 16, when he signed with Paulista in 1989.[2] despite the Paulista coaches believing him too physically weak to succeed.[1] He went on to play for Santa Cruz FC in 1991. In 1992, he moved south to the state of São Paulo where he played for Mogi Mirim EC in the second tier of Brazilian football. In 1993, the forward moved to the state capital to play for SC Corinthians in the first division. In the same year, he debuted for the Brazilian national football team, scoring the only goal in the friendly match against Mexico.

In the next year, he switched local allegiances and moved to SE Palmeiras, helping the club successfully defend its league championship in 1994. In both 1993 and 1994, he was honoured by the authoritative publication Placar Magazine with the Bola de Prata for the best player in his field position. He was selected to represent Brazil at the 1996 Summer Olympics. The Brazilian team won the bronze medal, but Rivaldo was made the scape-goat for Brazil's semi-final defeat to Nigeria, and was excluded from the Brazilian national team by national team manager Mario Zagallo.[2]

[edit] Transfer to Europe

After the 1996 Olympics, Rivaldo moved to Spain as he joined Deportivo La Coruña in the Spanish La Liga championship. He only stayed for one season, but nonetheless a very successful one for both him and the club. Rivaldo was the (shared) fourth best goal scorer of the season with 21 goals in 41 matches, as La Coruña ended third in the league. Rivaldo moved on to league rivals FC Barcelona in 1997, in a transfer deal securing La Coruña a 4.000 million peseta (around $26 million) transfer fee.[2]

In his first season at Barcelona, he was the second best goal scorer with 19 goals in 34 matches, as Barcelona won The Double of La Liga championship and Copa del Rey. Rivaldo returned to the Brazilian national team for the 1998 FIFA World Cup, where he scored three goals, including two in the 3-2 quarter-final win against Denmark. Rivaldo had not been a part of the triumphant Brazilian team at the 1997 Copa América tournament, but he was the absolute star in the successful defence of that title at the 1999 Copa América. Rivaldo earned himself the distinction as top scorer of the tournament with 5 goals, one being the equaliser from a trademark free-kick in a 2-1 win over Argentina in the quartefinals, and two in the 3-0 victory over Uruguay in the final. He was named the Most Valuable Player of the tournament.

In 1999, he won another La Liga title with Barcelona, and was again the second most scoring player in the league. In 1999, Rivaldo won both the FIFA World Player of the Year and European Footballer of the Year awards. In his third season in Barcelona, Rivaldo fell out with manager Louis van Gaal, when he insisted to play as a playmaker, and not on the left wing.[3] Even though he had a strained relationship with van Gaal, Rivaldo went on to score 10 goals in the European UEFA Champions League tournament, as the club reached the semi-finals. Van Gaal was fired in June 2000. In the following 2000-01 season, Rivaldo was once again the second best goal scorer of the league. In the last game of the season, against Valencia CF, Rivaldo scored a hat-trick to win the game 3-2. His third goal was a bicycle kick from the edge of the area in the 90th minute of the game, and is regarded as one of his greatest goals ever in a combination of importance and skill.[4] The win secured Barcelona a place in the following UEFA Champions League tournament.

[edit] 2002 World Cup

Rivaldo had been the centre of criticism when Brazil did not win matches, ever since the 1996 Olympics,[5] as he was said to be saving his best form for his club team. During the 2002 World Cup qualifying games, Brazil's poor form saw the team being booed by the Brazilian crowds, and in the 1-0 win against Colombia in November 2000, Rivaldo was booed so heavily that he threatened to retire from playing for his country.[6]

He was at the centre of numerous tug of wars between Barcelona and the Brazilian national team. In one incident in the summer of 2001, Rivaldo had to play an exhibition match for Brazil against Panama, commute to Poland to play a match for Barcelona, and then return to Brazil for a qualifying match against Paraguay, all within ten days.

The zenith of his national team career came at the 2002 FIFA World Cup, hosted in South Korea and Japan. He scored in the first five games for Brazil. Brazilian striker Ronaldo had done so for four matches, allowing journalists to question whether there was any rivalry between the two athletes. Rivaldo refused, insisting that all he wanted was to be the world champion. His spectacular goal against Belgium in the second round prompted Belgian coach Robert Waseige to name Rivaldo as the deciding factor.[7] Brazilian forward Ronaldinho helped Rivaldo score a crucial goal in the 2-1 win over England in the quarterfinals. Brazil eventually met Germany in the final, and went on to win the tournament with a 2-0 victory in the final.

His early performance at the tournament was marked by his play-acting in the group match against Turkey. In the closing stages of the match, with the ball out of play, Turkish defender Hakan Ünsal kicked a ball towards Rivaldo, who was waiting at the corner flag. The ball struck his thigh, but Rivaldo fell to the ground clutching his face. The referee sent the Turkish player off with a second yellow card. After a video review Rivaldo, was fined 11,670 Swiss Francs by FIFA, 1,670 of which were for "costs".[8]

[edit] Barcelona exit

In June 2002, Van Gaal returned to manage Barcelona. Rivaldo was released from his contract, and signed a three-year deal with the Italian Serie A club AC Milan. With Milan, he won the Italian Cup and the UEFA Champions League in the 2002-03 season. His time in Milan proved a mutually disappointing affair. He left the club after a season of very few starts, partly due to injury problems. He briefly returned to Brazil playing for Cruzeiro in Belo Horizonte. In 2004 he returned to Europe, joining Greek Alpha Ethniki division club Olympiacos.

Rivaldo scored some memorable goals in his first season at Olympiacos, including a fantastic effort in the Greek Cup final with a well placed lob from a difficult position close to the corner flag. Rivaldo also scored two memorable free kicks during the season, the first in the local derby against the other Athens giant, Panathinaikos, and the second against English club Liverpool in the UEFA Champions League. Olympiacos managed to keep the 1-0 lead against their arch-rivals, but Liverpool fought back to score the 3 goals needed to keep Olympiacos from the Final 16, much to Rivaldo's dismay. In the last game of his first season at Olympiacos, the club needed a victory in order to win the Alpha Ethniki championship, with Panathinaikos just one point behind. Olympiacos went on to beat Iraklis 0-1 in an away match in Thessaloniki, by yet another Rivaldo goal, and secured the championship.

Rivaldo continued to score in the UEFA Champions League the following year. He scored a stunning 30 yard strike against Rosenborg BK, and against old foes Real Madrid, although this was not enough, as Olympiacos failed to advance from the preliminary Group Phase. In the domestic competitions, he kept the best for the second half of the season. He scored twice in Olympiacos' come-from-behind victory against Panathinaikos, as well as two in his team's 3-0 triumph against second placed AEK Athens, effectively securing another title for Thrylos. He also put Olympiacos through to the Greek Cup semi-finals, scoring on free-kicks in both quarter-final games against Skoda Xanthi.

Rivaldo renewed his contract with Olympiacos for a third and final year, and promised to give his best, despite having turned 34. He didn't wait long to turn his words into actions: He led Olympiacos to overturn their half-time deficit against Skoda Xanthi, and scored both goals for the dramatic 2-1 victory in the first game of the season, winning him the Greek SuperLeague's first-ever Player of the Week and Goal of the Week awards. In July 2006, Rivaldo announced that the 2006-07 season with Olympiacos would be his last in Europe, before returning to Brazil.[9]

He has stated that "the fans of Olympiacos are wonderful", and the best in any team he has met[10]; notable when considering that he has already played for teams such as Barcelona and Brazil.

[edit] Honours

Olympic medal record
Competitor for Flag of Brazil Brazil
Men's Football
Bronze 1996 Atlanta Team Competition
Club
International
Personal distinctions
Preceded by
Zinedine Zidane
European Footballer of the Year
1999
Succeeded by
Luís Figo
Preceded by
Zinedine Zidane
FIFA World Player of the Year
1999
Succeeded by
Zinedine Zidane

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Mike Lee, Overcoming Tragedy to be the Greatest, British Council
  2. ^ a b c Rivaldo: In the name of the father, FIFA, October 10, 2000
  3. ^ RIVALDO NOT A HAPPY NOU CAMP-ER, 4thegame, December 22, 1999
  4. ^ A star less bright, The Observer, June 30, 2002
  5. ^ Rodrigo Amaral, Rivaldo reflects on wheel of fortune, BBC, June 20, 2002
  6. ^ Brazil questions Rivaldo's role, BBC, November 19, 2000
  7. ^ John Chapman, Wilmots tells of ref's apology, BBC, June 17, 2002
  8. ^ Rivaldo fined half a day's pay for play-acting, The Age, June 6, 2002
  9. ^ Rivaldo to quit at end of season, BBC, July 17, 2006
  10. ^ Rivaldo interview in flash.gr. http://www.flash.gr, January 23,2007

[edit] External links


Flag of Brazil Brazil squad - 1998 FIFA World Cup Runners-up Flag of Brazil

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

Flag of Brazil Brazil squad - 2002 FIFA World Cup Champions (5th Title) Flag of Brazil

1 Marcos | 2 Cafu | 3 Lúcio | 4 Roque Júnior | 5 Edmílson | 6 Roberto Carlos | 7 Ricardinho | 8 Gilberto Silva | 9 Ronaldo | 10 Rivaldo | 11 Ronaldinho | 12 Dida | 13 Belletti | 14 Anderson Polga | 15 Kléberson | 16 Júnior | 17 Denílson | 18 Vampeta | 19 Juninho | 20 Edílson | 21 Luizão | 22 Rogério Ceni | 23 Kaká | Coach: Scolari

Olympiacos - Current Squad

2 Patsatzoglou | 3 Domi | 6 Stoltidis | 7 Castillo | 8 Marić | 9 Okkas | 10 Rivaldo | 11 Đorđević | 14 Żewłakow | 16  | 17 Taralidis | 18 Borja | 21 Georgatos | 22 Bulut | 23 Konstantinou | 28 Mendrinos | 30 Pantos | 32 Anatolakis | 35 Torosidis | 36 Fakinos | 40 Babangida | 55 Correa | 71 Nikopolidis | 74 Butina | 77 Pappas | 87 Panagopoulos | Manager: Lemonis