Paulo Silas

Brazilian footballer and manager From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Paulo Silas

Paulo Silas do Prado Pereira (born 27 August 1965), also known as Paulo Silas, Silas Pereira or simply Silas, is a Brazilian football pundit, coach, and former professional player.

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Silas
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Paulo Silas with Al Arabi, prior to a Qatar Stars League game
Personal information
Full name Paulo Silas do Prado Pereira
Date of birth (1965-08-27) 27 August 1965 (age 59)
Place of birth Campinas, Brazil
Height 1.78 m (5 ft 10 in)
Position(s) Central midfielder
Youth career
1980–1984 São Paulo
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1984–1988 São Paulo 55 (16)
1988–1990 Sporting CP 47 (11)
1990 Central Español 2 (3)
1990–1991 Cesena 26 (3)
1991–1992 Sampdoria 31 (3)
1992–1993 Internacional 51 (18)
1994–1995 Vasco da Gama 23 (2)
1995–1997 San Lorenzo 95 (24)
1997 São Paulo 16 (2)
1998–1999 Kyoto Purple Sanga 56 (11)
2000 Atlético Paranaense 20 (1)
2001 Rio Branco-SP 20 (0)
2001 Ituano 5 (0)
2001–2002 América Mineiro
2002 Portuguesa
2003–2004 Inter de Limeira
International career
1985 Brazil U-20
1986–1992 Brazil 34 (1)
Managerial career
2007 Fortaleza
2008–2009 Avaí
2010 Grêmio
2010 Flamengo
2011 Avaí
2011–2012 Al-Arabi
2012 Al-Gharafa
2013 Náutico
2013–2014 América-MG
2014 Portuguesa
2015 Ceará
2016 Avaí
2017 Novorizontino
2017 Red Bull Brasil
2019 Atlético Tubarão
2019 São Bento
*Club domestic league appearances and goals
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In his playing career as a central midfielder, he broke through at São Paulo in the mid-1980s, before playing for Sporting CP in Portugal, Cesena and Sampdoria in Italy, and San Lorenzo in Argentina among others. After winning South American and world titles with the under-20 team in 1985, he earned 34 caps for Brazil between 1986 and 1992. He was chosen for the FIFA World Cup in 1986 and 1990 and the Copa América in 1987 and 1989, winning the latter.

Silas began working as a manager in 2007, and led Avaí in three spells, including their best Campeonato Brasileiro Série A finish of 6th in 2009. He briefly managed Grêmio and Flamengo in the same league the following year, and Al-Arabi and Al-Gharafa of the Qatar Stars League.

Personal life

Silas was born in Campinas, São Paulo, Brazil. The Portuguese footballer Silas, who was a youth player at Sporting CP when the Brazilian was a first team player, took his nickname from his resemblance to him.[1] He is the young brother of the also footballer Eli Carlos, and twin brother of Paulo Pereira.

Club career

During his playing career from 1984 to 2003 he played in Brazil, Portugal, Uruguay, Argentina, Japan and Italy at São Paulo, Internacional, Vasco da Gama, Atlético Paranaense, Rio Branco de Americana, Ituano, América Mineiro, Portuguesa, Internacional de Limeira, Sporting Lisbon, San Lorenzo de Almagro, Central Español, Kyoto Purple Sanga, A.C. Cesena and U.C. Sampdoria.

Silas scored the opening goal on his Sporting debut on 21 August 1988, a 2–1 win away to Leixões on the first day of the Primeira Liga season; of his 14 goals in 52 games for the team from Lisbon, this was the only header. On 5 October that year in the first round of the UEFA Cup, he netted in a 2–1 win away to Ajax in Amsterdam (6–3 aggregate).[2]

Silas played his last game for Sporting on 25 March 1990, scoring in a 2–1 loss to rivals Benfica in the Estádio da Luz. Amidst the club's financial crisis, they were unable to pay his insurance, leaving him unable to complete the season; the issue was covered up by an ankle injury he suffered for Brazil against England.[2]

International career

In 1985, Silas was part of the Brazil under-20 team that won the South American Championship and the FIFA World Youth Championship.[3]

Silas made his international debut for Brazil on 16 March 1986 in a 3–0 friendly loss away to Hungary. He went to the 1986 FIFA World Cup in Mexico, where he made late substitute appearances in the last 16 win over Poland and the penalty shootout elimination by France in the quarter-finals. At the 1987 Copa América, he played once against Venezuela in a group-stage exit; he played five games of the 1989 edition victory on home soil.[3][4]

On 20 August 1989, Silas scored his only international goal in a 6–0 win over Venezuela in 1990 FIFA World Cup qualification at the Estádio do Morumbi. He made three appearances off the bench, including the 1–0 loss to rivals Argentina in the last 16.[3]

Coaching career

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Avaí

Silas was assistant to Zetti at Paraná and Fortaleza, and succeeded him at the latter for his first job in management in November 2007. The following March, he was signed by Avaí, who had previously been linked with Zetti.[5][6] He led the newly promoted club from Santa Catarina to a best-ever sixth place in the 2009 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A.[7]

Grêmio

In December 2009, Silas was hired by Grêmio.[8] He won the Campeonato Gaúcho state title in 2010 against his former club Internacional, but said that his team were not ready for the national league.[9] Also in May, his team made the Copa do Brasil semi-finals, losing 6–5 on aggregate to Santos.[10] He was dismissed on 8 August after taking two wins from 13 games in that championship to leave the team in 18th; a goalless draw in the Grenal derby against Inter had saved his job a week earlier.[11]

Flamengo

On 29 August 2010, Silas was hired by Flamengo on a one-year deal. He replaced Rogério Lourenço, and got the job instead of 1994 FIFA World Cup-winning manager Carlos Alberto Parreira. He was hired by the club's director Zico in his hometown of Campinas, where Flamengo had travelled to play Guarani.[12]

Silas' debut on 1 September 2010 was a 1–0 loss away to Cruzeiro. He was dismissed on 4 October having won once and drawn six times in ten games, leaving the team in 15th. After his penultimate game, he publicly criticised defender Jean for scoring an own goal in a 1–1 draw at Goiás.[13]

Qatar

Silas returned to Avaí in February 2011.[14] After losing all three of the first games of the national season, he left by his own accord for Al-Arabi in the Qatar Stars League.[15] In March 2012, he moved to Al-Gharafa in the same league, winning 4–1 on his debut the following day against Al Ahli with two goals by compatriot Diego Tardelli.[16]

Having son the Emir of Qatar Cup in the less than three months of his initial contract with the club from Al Rayyan, Silas signed a new one-year deal in June 2012.[17] On 27 November, he terminated his deal so he could look at offers from other Middle Eastern or Brazilian clubs.[18]

Return to Brazil

Silas returned to Brazil in a 45-day spell at Naútico ending on 2 June 2013. His debut was an elimination from the Copa do Brasil by CRAC-GO, followed by elimination from the Campeonato Pernambucano semi-finals by Santa Cruz and taking one point from three games at the start of the Série A season.[19]

In September 2013, Silas was hired at América Mineiro in the Campeonato Brasileiro Série B.[20] The following 10 February, he was dismissed after a defeat to Belo Horizonte rivals Cruzeiro left the club second-from-bottom in a season that they were aiming for the Campeonato Mineiro title.[21] He then had a seven-game spell at Portuguesa in Série B, winning once and drawing twice before his termination on 11 September.[22]

Silas was hired by Ceará on 13 February 2015.[23] His team reached the final of the Campeonato Cearense, losing 4–3 on aggregate to his former employers Fortaleza,[24] but won the Copa do Nordeste. He left by mutual accord on 27 June after winning once and drawing twice in the first nine games of the Série B season.[25]

At the end of March 2016, Silas signed for a third spell at Avaí, tasked with taking them back to the top division.[26] His tenure ended on 20 August, with the team in 15th place after 28 games.[27]

In September 2019, Silas became a pundit for ESPN Brasil.[28]

Career statistics

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Club

[29]

More information Club performance, League ...
Club performance League Cup League Cup Total
Season Club League AppsGoals AppsGoals AppsGoals AppsGoals
Brazil League Copa do Brasil League Cup Total
1985São PauloSérie A113113
1986339339
1987135135
19880000
Portugal League Taça de Portugal Taça da Liga Total
1988–89Sporting PortugalPrimeira Liga 358358
1989–90123123
Uruguay League Cup League Cup Total
1990Central EspañolPrimera División3232
Italy League Coppa Italia League Cup Total
1990–91CesenaSerie A263263
1991–92SampdoriaSerie A313313
Brazil League Copa do Brasil League Cup Total
1992InternacionalSérie A0000
19930000
1993Vasco da GamaSérie A6060
Argentina League Cup League Cup Total
1993–94San Lorenzo AlmagroPrimera División8585
1994–95357357
1995–96233233
1996–97259259
1997–984040
Brazil League Copa do Brasil League Cup Total
1997São PauloSérie A5050
Japan League Emperor's Cup J.League Cup Total
1998Kyoto Purple SangaJ1 League3052120346
19992662043329
Brazil League Copa do Brasil League Cup Total
2000Atlético ParanaenseSérie A200200
2001América-MGSérie A6060
CountryBrazil 94179417
Portugal 47114711
Uruguay 2323
Italy 576576
Argentina 95249524
Japan 561141636615
Total 35172416336176
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International

More information Brazil national team, Year ...
Brazil national team
YearAppsGoals
198650
198750
198800
1989161
199060
199100
199220
Total341
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Honours

Player

Sampdoria

Internacional

Vasco da Gama

San Lorenzo

Atlético-PR

Brazil U20

Managerial

Grêmio

Al-Arabi

Al-Gharafa

Ceará

References

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