- Mauro Silva
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Mauro Silva Personal information Full name Mauro da Silva Gomes Date of birth January 12, 1968 Place of birth São Bernardo do Campo, Brazil Height 1.77 m (5 ft 9 1⁄2 in) Playing position Defensive midfielder Senior career* Years Team Apps† (Gls)† 1988–1990 Guarani 1 (0) 1990–1992 Bragantino 61 (0) 1992–2005 Deportivo La Coruña 369 (1) 1988–2005 Total 431 (1) National team 1991–2001 Brazil 59 (0) * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).Mauro da Silva Gomes (born 12 January 1968 in São Bernardo do Campo, São Paulo), simply Silva, is a retired Brazilian footballer who played as a defensive midfielder.
A workhorse with incredible stamina, as well as tackling and leadership skills, he was best known for his 13-year spell with Deportivo de La Coruña, also being part of Brazil's World Cup-winning squad in 1994.
Contents
Football career
After started playing with Guarani Futebol Clube, Silva moved to Clube Atlético Bragantino in 1990, where he spent the following two seasons. Subsequently, he was snapped by Spain's Deportivo de La Coruña, for 250 million pesetas (approximately €1.6 million), arriving at the same time as countryman Bebeto.
With the Galicians, Silva was an everpresent fixture, only suspensions and injuries preventing him from being cast into the starting XI (in 1994–95 he only appeared in six league matches and, already 36, was limited to 20 in his final year), as he helped the club to one league, two cups and three supercups, adding to this the club's five participations in the UEFA Champions League, reaching the semifinals in 2003–04: after a 0–0 draw at F.C. Porto, he missed the second leg due to suspension, and Depor lost 0–1.
On 22 May 2005, after 13 years with Deportivo, Silva was replaced by longtime understudy Aldo Duscher during a 0–3 home loss against RCD Mallorca, bidding farewell to the club and football (in the same match as another club legend, Fran). With Brazil, he collected 58 caps in 10 years, playing all the matches and minutes (except for the second half of the group stage match against Sweden) in the nation's victorious campaign at the 1994 FIFA World Cup.
Statistics
Club
Club performance League Cup Continental Total Season Club League Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Brazil League Copa do Brasil South America Total 1987 Guarani Série A 0 0 1988 1 0 1989 0 0 1990 Bragantino Série A 18 0 1991 21 0 1992 22 0 Spain League Copa del Rey Europe Total 1992/93 Deportivo La Liga 37 0 1993/94 35 1 1994/95 6 0 1995/96 22 0 1996/97 32 0 1997/98 31 0 1998/99 36 0 1999/00 33 0 2000/01 31 0 2001/02 27 0 2002/03 32 0 2003/04 27 0 2004/05 20 0 Country Brazil 62 0 Spain 369 1 Total 431 1 International
Brazil national team Year Apps Goals 1991 13 0 1992 7 0 1993 11 0 1994 11 0 1995 1 0 1996 1 0 1997 10 0 1998 4 0 1999 0 0 2000 0 0 2001 1 0 Total 59 0 Honours
Club
- São Paulo State League: 1990
- Spanish League: 1999–2000
- Spanish Cup: 1994–95, 2001–02
- Spanish Supercup: 1995, 2000, 2002
Country
- FIFA World Cup: 1994
- Copa América: 1997; Runner-up 1991
- CONCACAF Gold Cup: Third-place 1998
Individual
- Brazilian Golden Ball: 1991
- Brazilian Silver Ball: 1992
External links
- BDFutbol profile
- Mauro Silva at National-Football-Teams.com
- Deportivo archives
Bola de Ouro 1973: Atilio Ancheta / Agustín Cejas | 1974: Zico | 1975: Valdir Peres | 1976: Elías Figueroa | 1977: Toninho Cerezo | 1978: Falcão | 1979: Falcão | 1980: Toninho Cerezo | 1981: Paulo Isidoro | 1982: Zico | 1983: Roberto Costa | 1984: Roberto Costa | 1985: Marinho Chagas | 1986: Careca | 1987: Renato Gaúcho | 1988: Taffarel | 1989: Ricardo Rocha | 1990: César Sampaio | 1991: Mauro Silva | 1992: Júnior | 1993: César Sampaio | 1994: Amoroso | 1995: Giovanni | 1996: Djalminha | 1997: Edmundo | 1998: Edílson | 1999: Marcelinho Carioca | 2000: Romário | 2001: Alex Mineiro | 2002: Kaká | 2003: Alex | 2004: Robinho | 2005: Carlos Tévez | 2006: Lucas | 2007: Thiago Neves | 2008: Rogério Ceni | 2009: Adriano | 2010: Darío ConcaBrazil squad – 1991 Copa América Runners-up 1 Taffarel • 2 Mazinho • 3 Cléber • 4 Ricardo Rocha • 5 Mauro Silva • 6 Branco • 7 Renato Gaúcho • 8 Valdir • 9 Careca Bianchesi • 10 Neto • 11 João Paulo • 12 Sérgio • 13 Cafu • 14 Gottardo • 15 Márcio Santos • 16 Lira • 17 Márcio • 18 Raí • 19 Luís Henrique • 20 Mazinho Oliveira • 21 Silvio • 22 Ronaldo • Coach: FalcãoBrazil squad – 1994 FIFA World Cup Winners (4th Title) 1 Taffarel • 2 Jorginho • 3 Ricardo Rocha • 4 Ronaldão • 5 Mauro Silva • 6 Branco • 7 Bebeto • 8 Dunga (c) • 9 Zinho • 10 Raí • 11 Romário • 12 Zetti • 13 Aldair • 14 Cafu • 15 Márcio Santos • 16 Leonardo • 17 Mazinho • 18 Paulo Sérgio • 19 Müller • 20 Ronaldo • 21 Viola • 22 Gilmar • Coach: ParreiraBrazil squad – 1997 Copa América Winners (5th Title) 1 Taffarel • 2 Cafu • 3 Aldair • 4 Márcio Santos • 5 Mauro Silva • 6 Roberto Carlos • 7 Giovanni • 8 Dunga • 9 Ronaldo • 10 Leonardo • 11 Romário • 12 Carlos Germano • 13 Djalminha • 14 Zé Maria • 15 Célio Silva • 16 Gonçalves • 17 Zé Roberto • 18 César Sampaio • 19 Flávio Conceição • 20 Denílson • 21 Edmundo • 22 Paulo Nunes • Coach: ZagalloBrazil squad – 1998 CONCACAF Gold Cup Third Place 1 Taffarel • 2 Zé Maria • 3 Júnior Baiano • 4 Gonçalves • 5 Mauro Silva • 6 Júnior • 7 Edmundo • 8 Flávio Conceição • 9 Zinho • 10 Denílson • 11 Romário • 12 Carlos Germano • 13 Russo • 14 César Belli • 15 Sylvinho • 16 Doriva • 17 Assunção • 18 Sérgio Manoel • 19 Donizete • 20 Élber • Coach: ZagalloCategories:- 1968 births
- Living people
- People from São Bernardo do Campo
- Brazilian people of Black African descent
- Naturalised citizens of Spain
- Brazilian footballers
- Association football midfielders
- Guarani Futebol Clube players
- Clube Atlético Bragantino players
- La Liga footballers
- Deportivo de La Coruña players
- Brazil international footballers
- 1994 FIFA World Cup players
- FIFA World Cup-winning players
- Brazilian expatriate footballers
- Expatriate footballers in Spain
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