Rui Costa
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Rui Costa | ||
Personal information | ||
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Full name | Rui Manuel César Costa | |
Date of birth | March 29, 1972 (age 35) | |
Place of birth | Lisbon, Portugal | |
Height | 1.80 m | |
Nickname | O Maestro (The Maestro), O Número 10 (The Number 10), Il Principe di Lisbonna (The Prince Of Lisbon), |
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Playing position | Attacking Midfielder | |
Club information | ||
Current club | SL Benfica | |
Number | 10 | |
Senior clubs1 | ||
Years | Club | App (Gls)* |
1990-1991 1991-1994 1994-2001 2001-2006 2006- |
AD Fafe SL Benfica Fiorentina AC Milan SL Benfica |
38 (6) 107 (18) 239 (40) 169 (7) 9 (2) |
National team2 | ||
1993-2004 | Portugal | 94 (26) |
1 Senior club appearances and goals |
Rui Manuel César Costa, OIH, usually referred to simply as Rui Costa (pron. IPA: [ʁui 'kɔʃtɐ]) (born March 29, 1972 in Lisbon), is a Portuguese football player. He is an attacking midfielder for Portuguese club SL Benfica and is also capable of playing as a deep-seated defensive midfielder. He is considered to be the best Portuguese playmaker of all times - for that, he is commonly known as the maestro, or "The Number 10", as reference to his outstanding skills as an offensive centre midfielder. His pin-point passes, extraordinary vision on the pitch and ferocious right-footed kick made him famous all around Europe. In 2004, he was named by Pelé to the FIFA 100, a list of the 125 greatest living football players.
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[edit] Career
At the age of 5, Rui joined the infant indoor soccer team of Damaia Ginásio Clube. Roughly four years later, at the age of 10, Rui tried his luck at SL Benfica. Within 10 minutes of training, Eusébio, who was supervising the youngsters, was impressed at Rui's skills. Up until 1990 Rui played for Benfica's youth squads. That season he was loaned to AD Fafe on a season long deal.
In 1991, after the Under-21 World Cup (which Portugal won after a victorious penalty kick scored by Rui Costa), Rui returned to Benfica. There, he conquered the Cup of Portugal (in 1993) and the Portuguese First Division Title (in 1993/94). This would be Benfica's last league title until eleven years later, in 2004/05. At the end of his third season at Benfica's senior squad, Fiorentina offered 6 million Euro for the young midfielder, an impressive fee at the time. Since the club was struggling with financial problems, Rui Costa had to leave.
Rui played for 7 seasons at Fiorentina, where he conquered two Italian Cups (in 1995/96 and 2000/2001). Despite the heavy competition (namely Zidane), Rui Costa was named the best number 10 player in the Serie A a few times. His departure of Fiorentina was discussed every season, since many clubs constantly showed interest in signing him. However, he only left when Fiorentina went bankrupt after the 2001/2002 season.
Fatih Terim was the coach of Fiorentina in the 2000-2001 season when he was leaving Fiorentina for AC Milan he took Rui Costa with him who payed the exorbitant amount of 35 million euros for the player. In signing Rui Costa became Milan's most expensive transfer of all-time. Rui played for five seasons in Milan, where he conquered one Serie A title, one Italian Cup, one Italian Super Cup, one UEFA Champions League and one European Super Cup.
Rui Costa was an irreplaceable figure for his first two seasons with Milan (In which Milan won the Champions League, European Super Cup, and Italian Cup), but went to be merely a substitute as Kaká went to make his entrance. This made Rui Costa unhappy, although he did admit that the emergence of Kaká brought sunshines for Milan.
In 2004, Rui played his last match for the Portuguese squad at the Euro 2004 final (where Portugual lost to Greece for 1-0).
On May 25, 2006, Rui Costa's return to SL Benfica to play for the forthcoming season was announced in a press conference. The player was released from AC Milan after both the player and the club reached an agreement to end the contract that bound them one year before its term. Rui Costa also gave up his 4.6 million euro contract/year to play in the club that, year after year, dreamed about the player's return.[1]Rui's affection for Benfica is publicly known and so is his desire to end his career at the Portuguese giants.
[edit] Golden Generation
Costa is a member of the popularly coined "golden generation" in Portuguese football, and alongside Luis Figo symbolises the reasons why that term came into use. The Portuguese under-20 national team won two successive World Youth Championships in 1989 and 1991; Costa and fellow FIFA 100 member Luís Figo were stars on the 1991 team. With their spectacular success at youth level, much was expected of the Portuguese national team at senior level as their galaxy of stars matured. However, they did not win a major international tournament at senior level, although they reached the semi-finals at Euro 2000, qualified for the 2002 World Cup and the last several members helped lead Portugal to its first-ever major final at Euro 2004, losing to Greece. Despite being principally a provider, Costa chipped in with a highly impressive 26 goals in 94 games for the Portugal.
[edit] Trivia
- In a friendly match between Benfica and Fiorentina played at the old Estádio da Luz (with Rui on the Italian side), Rui Costa scored a goal but, instead of celebrating, he cried. He would later say that that was the worst goal in his career.
- He is very superstitious about wearing the number 10 shirt - recently, at Benfica, Giorgos Karagounis offered him the 10 jersey.
- Although he played 12 years in Italy, he admits that he doesn't like pizza.
- He scored the penalty that gave Portugal the Under-20 World Cup of 1991, in Lisbon, against Brazil.
[edit] Honours
- UEFA Champions League (2003)
- Serie A (2004)
- Italy's SuperCup (1996)
- Portuguese First Division (1994)
- Cup of Portugal (1993)
- Coppa Italia (1996, 2001, 2003)
- FIFA World Youth Championship (1991)
- European Supercup (2003)
[edit] External links
- www.PortuGOAL.net | | The definitive Portuguese football site (Player Profile Section)
- Rui Costa's stats and profile
- Rui Costa's Unofficial Website
Portugal squad - 2000 European Football Championship Semi-finalists | ||
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1 Baía | 2 J. Costa | 3 Rui Jorge | 4 Vidigal | 5 F. Couto | 6 Paulo Sousa | 7 Figo | 8 João Pinto | 9 Sá Pinto | 10 Rui Costa | 11 S. Conceição | 12 P. Espinha | 13 Dimas | 14 Abel Xavier | 15 Costinha | 16 Beto | 17 P. Bento | 18 Pauleta | 19 Capucho | 20 Secretário | 21 Nuno Gomes | 22 Quim | Coach: Humberto Coelho |
Portugal squad - 2002 FIFA World Cup | ||
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1 Baía | 2 J. Costa | 3 Abel Xavier | 4 Caneira | 5 F. Couto | 6 Paulo Sousa | 7 Figo | 8 João Pinto | 9 Pauleta | 10 Rui Costa | 11 S. Conceição | 12 H. Viana | 13 J. Andrade | 14 P. Barbosa | 15 Nélson | 16 Ricardo | 17 P. Bento | 18 Frechaut | 19 Capucho | 20 Petit | 21 Nuno Gomes | 22 Beto | 23 Rui Jorge | Coach: Oliveira |
Portugal squad - 2004 European Football Championship Runners-Up | ||
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1 Ricardo | 2 P. Ferreira | 3 Rui Jorge | 4 J. Andrade | 5 F. Couto | 6 Costinha | 7 Figo | 8 Petit | 9 Pauleta | 10 Rui Costa | 11 Simão | 12 Quim | 13 Miguel | 14 N. Valente | 15 Beto | 16 R. Carvalho | 17 C. Ronaldo | 18 Maniche | 19 Tiago | 20 Deco | 21 Nuno Gomes | 22 Moreira | 23 H. Postiga | Coach: Scolari |
SL Benfica - Current Squad |
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1 Moreira | 2 P. Correia | 3 Anderson | 4 Luisão | 5 Léo | 6 Petit | 7 M. Ferreira | 8 Katsouranis | 9 Mantorras | 10 Rui Costa | 11 Miguelito | 12 Quim | 15 P. Jorge | 16 Beto | 18 Manú | 20 Simão | 21 Nuno Gomes | 22 Nélson | 23 David Luiz | 25 N. Assis | 26 Karagounis | 27 Derlei | 28 J. Coimbra | 30 Miccoli | 31 Moretto | Manager: Fernando Santos |
Persondata | |
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NAME | Costa, Rui Manuel César |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Costa, Rui |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | Professional football player |
DATE OF BIRTH | March 29, 1972 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Lisbon, Portugal |
DATE OF DEATH | |
PLACE OF DEATH |
Categories: Portuguese footballers | Benfica players | Serie A players | Fiorentina players | A.C. Milan players | Portuguese Liga footballers | Non-Italian football players in Italy | FIFA 100 | UEFA Euro 1996 players | UEFA Euro 2000 players | UEFA Euro 2004 players | FIFA World Cup 2002 players | 1972 births | Living people | Portugal international footballers