- Mário Sérgio Pontes de Paiva
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Mário Sérgio Personal information Full name Mário Sérgio Pontes de Paiva Date of birth September 7, 1950 Place of birth Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Playing position Midfield Senior career* Years Team Apps† (Gls)† 1969–1971 Flamengo 0 (0) 1971–1975 Vitória 82 (6) 1975–1976 Fluminese 14 (0) 1976–1979 Botafogo 20 (3) 1979 Rosario Central 0 (0) 1979–1981 Internacional 53 (4) 1981–1982 São Paulo 11 (1) 1982–1983 Ponte Preta 7 (1) 1983 Grêmio 0 (0) 1984 Internacional 8 (1) 1984–1985 Palmeiras 11 (1) 1986 Botafogo (SP) 0 (0) 1986 AC Bellinzona 0 (0) 1987 Bahia 1 (0) National team 1981–1985 Brazil 8 (0) Teams managed 1987 Vitória 1993–1995 Corinthians 1998 São Paulo 2001 Vitória 2001 Atlético Paranaense 2002–2003 São Cetano 2003–2004 Atlético Paranaense 2004 Atlético Mineiro 2007 Figueirense 2007 Botafogo 2008 Atlético Paranaense 2008 Figueirense 2009 Portuguesa 2009 Internacional 2010 Ceará * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).Mário Sérgio Pontes de Paiva, more commonly known as Mário Sérgio (born September 7, 1950 in Rio de Janeiro), is a retired Brazilian footballer and manager.
Contents
Career
Playing career
Mário Sérgio began his career in football with local club Flamengo, although he didn't make a first team appearance for the team. After two years at the club, the Brazilian midfielder moved north from Rio to Salvador based club Vitória where he made over 80 league appearances, and won the Campeonato Baiano league in 1972, in his five year stint with the club. In 1975, the Brazilian was transferred for the second time in his career, this time to his former club's, Flamengo, rivals: Fluminense. The midfielder, played fourteen times in his two years back in Rio, which included a second league title win of his career after his team secured the Campeonato Carioca title in 1975. But he soon began transferring to eight clubs across Brazil and one in Argentina, Rosario Central, for the next decade where he stayed for a maximum of three years.
During this time, Sérgio made his international début for Brazil in 1981 and picked up a number of honours at club level, including: a Campeonato Brasileiro Série A league title in 1979, the highest league in Brazilian football; two Campeonato Gaúcho league titles in 1981 and 1984 and an Intercontinental Cup with Grêmio in 1983 after his side beat Hamburger SV 2–1.
After a brief spell in Europe with Swiss team AC Bellinzona, the Brazilian moved back to Brazil with Esporte Clube Bahia in 1987 where he would make one final league appearance before retiring that year.
Managerial career
After retiring in 1987, Sérgio embarked on a career in coaching with roles at his former clubs Vitória and São Paulo as well as with Corinthians.[1] 20 years after his retirement from football as a player, the Brazilian embarked on a career in football management after being announced as the manager of Figueirense Futebol Clube.[1] Sérgio, however would only stay there for six months where he led his team to the final of the Copa do Brasil before losing in the final 2–1 on aggregate to Fluminense.[2] But, unable to maintain this consistency, he left his role later that year.[3] Only weeks after leaving the club, Sérgio found a new managerial job, this time with Botafogo, a club he had played for as a player.[1] The job would only last until early the following month after he had only managed the team for three league matches: all of them losses.[4] In 2008, after briefly working as Atlético Paranaense's manager, on September 16 he was hired as Figueirense's manager,[5] Portuguesa have sacked coach Estevam Soares and hired the former Figueirense coach.[6] On March 6, 2009 Portuguesa officials have fired the coach after five wins, five draws and two losses.[7] On October 5, 2009, Mário Sérgio was announced as Internacional new coach.
References
- ^ a b c "Mário Sérgio". Sambafoot. 2007-10-08. http://en.sambafoot.com/trainers/113_Mario_Sergio.html. Retrieved 2008-08-12.
- ^ "Fluminense vence fora e conquista Copa do Brasil pela 1ª vez" (in Portuguese). UOL Esporte. 2007-06-06. http://esporte.uol.com.br/futebol/ultimas/2007/06/06/ult59u122641.jhtm. Retrieved 2008-08-12.
- ^ "Após goleada, Figueirense demite técnico Mário Sérgio" (in Portuguese). Estadão. 2007-09-06. http://www.estadao.com.br/esportes/not_esp47547,0.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-12.
- ^ "Mário Sérgio pede demissão e Cuca reassume o Botafogo" (in Portuguese). Estadão. 2007-10-07. http://www.estadao.com.br/esportes/not_esp61596,0.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-12.
- ^ "Figueirense anuncia contratação do técnico Mário Sérgio" (in Portuguese). Filha Online. 2008-09-16. http://www1.folha.uol.com.br/folha/esporte/ult92u445415.shtml. Retrieved 2008-09-16.
- ^ http://www.estadao.com.br/noticias/esportes,portuguesa-demite-soares-e-contrata-mario-sergio,311503,0.htm
- ^ [1]
São Paulo F.C. – managers Salles (1931–34) · Del Debbio (1936) · Feola (1937–38) · Rodrigues (1938) · Feola (1939) · Amsel (1939) · Barbuy (1939) · Platero (1940) · Feola (1941–42) · Ross (1942) · Joreca (1943–47) · Feola (1947–50) · Leônidas (1951) · A. Oliveira (1951) · Leônidas (1952) · Jim Lopes (1953–54) · Leônidas (1954–55) · Feola (1955–56) · Caxambu (1957c) · Guttmann (1957–58) · Renganeschi (1959) · Januzzi (1959) · Feola (1959) · Costa (1960–61) · Cardoso (1961) · Aymoré Moreira (1962) · Brandão (1963) · Poy (1964) · Vieira (1964) · Lopes (1965) · Aymoré Moreira (1966) · Pirillo (1967–68) · Lameiro (1968–69) · Zezé Moreira (1970) · Brandão (1971) · Poy (1971) · Ramos (1972) · Mota (1972) · Poy (1972) · Telê Santana (1973) · Poy (1973–75) · Juliato (1976) · Minelli (1977–78) · Juliato (1979) · Carlos Alberto Silva (1980) · Neto (1981) · Formiga (1981) · Poy (1982) · Travaglini (1983) · Valdir de Moraes (1984) · Cilinho (1984–85) · Serrão (1986) · Pepe (1986–87) · Cilinho (1987–88) · Carlos Alberto Silva (1989) · Gimenez (1990) · Forlán (1990) · Telê Santana (1990–96) · Muricy (1996) · Parreira (1996) · Muricy (1996–97) · Darío Pereyra (1997–98) · N. Baptista (1998) · Mário Sérgio (1998) · Carpegiani (1999) · Milton Cruz (1999c) · Culpi (2000) · Vadão (2001) · N. Baptista (2001–02) · O. Oliveira (2002–03) · Milton Cruz (2003c) · Rojas (2003) · Cuca (2004) · Leão (2004–05) · Milton Cruz (2005c) · Autuori (2005) · Muricy (2006–09) · Milton Cruz (2009c) · Ricardo Gomes (2009–10) · Milton Cruz (2010c) · Baresi (2010c) · Carpegiani (2010–11) · Milton Cruz (2011c) · Adílson (2011) · Milton Cruz (2011c) · Leão (2011–)
S.C. Internacional – managers Poppe Leão (1909) · C. Kluwe (1910–15) · Carvalho (1910–15) · R. Kluwe (1916) · Alves (1917) · Cunha (1918) · C. Kluwe (1919–21) · Godolfim (1922) · Araújo (1923) · De Lorenzi (1923) · Pacheco (1924) · R. Kluwe (1925) · Sales (1926) · Arreguy (1926) · Mendonça (1927) · Correa Lima (1928) · Travassos (1929) · Ryff (1929) · Genta (1930) · De Lorenzi (1931) · Genta (1932) · Ryff (1933–34) · de Abreu (1934–35) · Parrot (1935) · Souto Mayor (1936) · Travassos Souto (1936) · Souza Neto (1937) · Fernandes Bouças (1937) · Goldenberg (1937) · Fernandes Bouças (1938) · Torriani (1939) · Azevedo e Sousa (1940) · Simões (1940) · Bocorni (1941) · Diez (1942) · de Abreu (1942) · Cavedini (1942) · da Silva (1943) · Bocorni (1943) · Cavedini (1944) · Britto (1945) · Letona (1946) · Volante (1946–48) · Magno (1949) · Cavedini (1949) · Alfeu (1949–50) · González (1950) · Teté (1951–57) · Leal (1957) · Francisco (1958) · Engelke (1958) · Rodrigues (1959) · Pirillo (1959) · Teté (1960) · Noronha (1960) · J. C. Cunha (1960–61) · Torres (1961) · Froner (1962) · Figueiró (1962) · Noronha (1963) · J. C. Cunha (1963) · Brunelli (1963) · Mendes Ribeiro (1963) · J. C. Cunha (1963) · Torres (1964) · Reis (1965) · Larry (1965) · Almeida (1966) · Magno (1966) · Mendes Ribeiro (1966) · Torres (1967) · Figueiró (1967) · Rolla (1968) · Menezes (1968–71) · Sani (1971–74) · Minelli (1974–76) · Castilho (1977) · Gainete (1977–78) · C. Duarte (1978–79) · Zé Duarte (1979) · Andrade (1979–80) · Juliato (1981) · C. Duarte (1981) · Guedes (1982–83) · Sani (1983–84) · Gonçalves (1984–85) · Cavalheiro (1986–87) · Andrade (1987) · Gainete (1988) · Chiquinho (1988) · Braga (1988–89) · Carpegiani (1989) · C. Duarte (1989) · Bráulio (1989) · Carbone (1989) · Guedes (1990) · Culpi (1990) · Espinosa (1990) · Bianchini (1990) · Andrade (1990–91) · Braga (1991) · C. Duarte (1991) · Lopes (1992) · Andrade (1993) · Falcão (1993) · Cardoso (1994) · C. Duarte (1994–95) · Braga (1995) · Rocha (1996) · Baptista (1996) · Figueroa (1996) · Roth (1997–98) · Cassiá (1998) · Gonçalves (1998) · Autuori (1999) · Louruz (1999) · Leão (1999) · Zé Mario (2000–01) · C. Duarte (2001) · Parreira (2001) · Wortmann (2002) · Ferreira (2002) · Roth (2002) · C. Duarte (2002) · Ramalho (2003) · Sandri (2004) · Santana (2004) · Ramalho (2004–05) · Braga (2006–07) · Gallo (2007) · Braga (2007–08) · Ferreira (2008) · Tite (2008–09) · Mário Sérgio (2009) · Fossati (2010) · Roth (2010–11) · Falcão (2011) · Loss (2011) · Dorival (2011–)
Categories:- 1950 births
- Associação Atlética Ponte Preta players
- Botafogo de Futebol e Regatas managers
- Botafogo de Futebol e Regatas players
- Brazilian footballers
- Brazil international footballers
- Clube de Regatas do Flamengo players
- Esporte Clube Bahia players
- Esporte Clube Vitória players
- Fluminense Football Club players
- Grêmio Foot-Ball Porto Alegrense players
- Living people
- Rosario Central footballers
- São Paulo FC players
- Sociedade Esportiva Palmeiras players
- Sport Club Internacional players
- São Paulo Futebol Clube managers
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