Pedro Barny

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Pedro Barny
Personal information
Full nameLuís Pedro B. Barny Monteiro
Date of birth (1966-07-20) 20 July 1966
Place of birthPorto, Portugal
Height1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Playing positionCentre back
Youth career
Estrelas Desportivas
Gil Vicente
1980–1985Boavista
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1985–1988Boavista49(0)
1988–1990Estrela Amadora65(0)
1990–1992Boavista69(4)
1992–1993Sporting CP30(0)
1993–1995Boavista62(0)
1995–1998Belenenses57(4)
1998–1999Aves15(1)
National team
1986–1987Portugal U217(0)
Teams managed
2001–2002Académica (assistant)
2002–2004Estrela Amadora (assistant)
2004–2007Boavista (assistant)
2005Boavista
2006Boavista
2008–2009Espinho
2010Angola (assistant)
2010–2011Al-Ittihad (assistant)
2012Persepolis (assistant)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).

Luís Pedro Barros Barny Monteiro, known as Barny (born 20 July 1966 in Porto), is a Portuguese retired footballer who played as a central defender, and a current manager.

Playing career

Barny played in 332 top division games over the course of 13 seasons, representing mainly hometown club Boavista FC. After three years of intermittent use as a youngster and a two-year spell with C.F. Estrela da Amadora,[1][2] he returned to his main club, helping it to three top-four finishes in his four campaigns there – in between, he spent the 1992–93 campaign with Sporting Clube de Portugal, being first-choice.

Barny retired in June 1999 at the age of 33, after three top flight seasons with C.F. Os Belenenses and one with C.D. Aves, in his first and only second level experience. He won two Portuguese Cups from 1990 to 1992, with Estrela and Boavista.

Manager career

Barny started coaching two years after retiring. In 2004 he rejoined Boavista as an assistant coach, acting as interim in the seasons 2004–05 and 2006–07[3] for a total of four top flight matches (one draw and three losses).

From 2007 to 2009 Barny was in charge of S.C. Espinho in division three, then resumed his assistant career in several teams and countries, mostly under countryman Manuel José.[4][5]

Honours

Player

Estrela Amadora
Boavista

References

External links

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