- Daniel Carvalho
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This article is about the Brazilian footballer. For the Portuguese, see Daniel da Cruz Carvalho
Daniel Carvalho Personal information Full name Daniel da Silva Carvalho Date of birth 1 March 1983 Place of birth Jaguarão, Brazil Height 1.78 m (5 ft 10 in) Playing position Midfielder
WingerClub information Current club Atlético Mineiro Number 83 Youth career 2000–2001 Internacional Senior career* Years Team Apps† (Gls)† 2001–2003 Internacional 66 (7) 2003–2010 CSKA Moscow 85 (9) 2008 → Internacional (loan) 12 (0) 2010 → Al-Arabi (loan) 10 (3) 2010– Atlético Mineiro 27 (4) National team 2004 Brazil U23 12[citation needed] (7) 2006 Brazil 3 (1) * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 16 May 2010 (UTC).
† Appearances (Goals).Daniel da Silva Carvalho (born 1 March 1983 in Pelotas, Rio Grande do Sul), more commonly known as Daniel Carvalho is a Brazilian football attacking midfielder well known for his dribbling and free kicks[citation needed]. He plays for Atlético Mineiro.
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Club career
Carvalho started his career in his native state of Rio Grande do Sul at Sport Club Internacional before transferring to CSKA Moscow. In 2005, he became the first foreign player to be named Russian Footballer of the Year. Carvalho's brilliant play during the 2005 UEFA Cup was the key to success of his team, who won the competition, defeating Sporting Lisbon in the Final.
This made CSKA the first Russian club to ever win a UEFA competition. He was Man of the Match in the final as he was involved in all three of CSKA's goals. He scored in the 3–1 UEFA Super Cup lost to then European Champions Liverpool, but despite this defeat, Carvalho had shown he could cope on the European stage. In November 2007,[1] Carvalho signed a new contract with CSKA until summer 2010,[1] according to CSKA president Yevgeni Giner (or until December 2009,[2] according to CSKA Press Office), with the option of further prolongation[2] and the minimum fee release clause.[1] However, he went on a six-month loan back to SC Internacional in July 2008. Since then he has returned to CSKA and hopes to recapture the form which propelled the Muscovite club to UEFA Cup honours in 2005. On 4 Jan 2010 Qatari club Al-Arabi Sports Club have signed the Brazilian attacking midfielder from PFC CSKA Moscow.[3]
In May 2010, he was signed by Atlético Mineiro, and once again returned to Brazil.[4]
International career
He was called up for a friendly between Brazil and Norway on 16 August 2006 for the first time. He started the match and scored on his debut, and took part in the following 3–0 defeat of Argentina on 3 September. He also scored in the 4–0 win in an unofficial friendly match against Kuwaiti club Al Kuwait on 7 October 2006.
Honours
Club
- Internacional
- Campeonato Gaúcho:
- 2002, 2003
- Copa Sudamericana:
- Campeonato Gaúcho:
- CSKA Moscow
- Russian Premier League:
- 2005, 2006
- Russian Cup:
- 2004/2005, 2005/2006, 2008/2009
- Russian Super Cup:
- UEFA Cup:
- Russian Premier League:
Brazil
Individual
- CSKA Moscow
- Footballer of the Year in Russia
Career statistics
CSKA Moscow
Competition Apps Goals Yellow Cards Red Cards Russian Premier League 49 5 5 0 Russian Cup 11 4 0 0 Parlament Russian Super Cup 2 1 0 0 Champions League 1 0 0 0 UEFA Cup 14 7 3 0 UEFA Super Cup 1 1 0 0 - (ru) Russian Premier League player statistics (by match) – 2006 season
- (ru) Russian Premier League player statistics (by match) – 2005 season
- (ru) Russian Premier League player statistics (by match) – 2004 season
Career
Season Apps Goals Team 2001–2003 66 7 Sport Club Internacional 2004–2006 82 19 CSKA Moscow - All career stats are correct as of 2 August 2006.
International career
National team Season Apps Goals Brazil 2006 3 1 Total 3 1 International appearances and goals # Date Venue Opponent Result Goal Competition 2004 7 January 2004 Concepción, Chile Venezuela 4–0 0 2004 Olympic Games qualification (Brazil U-23) 9 January 2004 Concepción, Chile Paraguay 3–0 0 2004 Olympic Games qualification (Brazil U-23) 11 January 2004 Concepción, Chile Uruguay 1–1 0 2004 Olympic Games qualification (Brazil U-23) 15 January 2004 Concepción, Chile Chile 1–1 0 2004 Olympic Games qualification (Brazil U-23) 18 January 2004 Valparaíso, Chile Colombia 3–0 0 2004 Olympic Games qualification (Brazil U-23) 21 January 2004 Valparaíso, Chile Argentina 0–1 0 2004 Olympic Games qualification (Brazil U-23) 23 January 2004 Viña del Mar, Chile Chile 3–1 0 2004 Olympic Games qualification (Brazil U-23) 25 January 2004 Viña del Mar, Chile Paraguay 0–2 0 2004 Olympic Games qualification (Brazil U-23) 2006 1. 16 August 2006 Oslo, Norway Norway 1–1 0 Friendly 2. 3 September 2006 London, England Argentina 3–0 1 Friendly 7 October 2006 Kuwait City, Kuwait Al Kuwait Selection 4–0 1 Unofficial friendly 3. 10 October 2006 Stockholm, Sweden Ecuador 2–1 0 Friendly References
- Club profile
- Profile at Galo Digital
- Daniel Carvalho at National-Football-Teams.com
- ^ a b c "(Russian) CSKA president Yevgeni Giner: "Carvalho and Vagner prolonged contracts with CSKA"". sport-express.ru. 15 December 2007. http://sport-express.ru/art.shtml?151225. Retrieved 15 December 2007.
- ^ a b "(English) Daniel Carvalho signs new contract". cska-football.ru. 14 December 2007. http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http%3A%2F%2Fcska-football.ru%2Findex.pl%3Fl%3Den&date=2007-12-15. Retrieved 14 December 2007.
- ^ "football.uk.reuters.com(English)". 4 January 2010. http://football.uk.reuters.com/european/news/SGE60307T.php.
- ^ http://www.pfc-cska.com/news/clubnews/?id=3874
- ^ Seleção Brasileira (Brazilian National Team) 2006–2007
- ^ Seleção Brasileira Restritiva (Brazilian National Restrictive Team) 2004–2008
Clube Atlético Mineiro – current squad 1 Giovanni · 3 Guilherme Santos · 4 Leo Silva · 5 Réver · 6 Lima · 7 Serginho · 8 Dudu Cearense · 9 Guilherme · 10 Renan Oliveira · 11 Magno Alves · 14 Triguinho · 15 Wesley · 16 Leandro · 17 Bernard · 18 Marquinhos · 20 Richarlyson · 21 Toró · 22 Werley · 23 Lee · 25 Fillipe Soutto · 28 Giovanni Augusto · 30 Renan Ribeiro · 31 Luiz Eduardo · 33 Leleu · 35 Jônatas Obina · 39 Eron · 40 Neto Berola · 55 Pierre · 80 Mancini · 83 Daniel Carvalho · 90 André · TBD Jackson · Manager: Cuca
Russian Footballer of the Year 1991: Korneev · 1992: Lediakhov · 1993: Onopko · 1994: Simutenkov · 1995: Tsymbalar · 1996: Tikhonov · 1997: Alenichev · 1998: Titov · 1999: Smertin · 2000: Titov · 2001: Nigmatullin · 2002: Loskov · 2003: Loskov · 2004: Sychev · 2005: Carvalho · 2006: Arshavin · 2007: Zyryanov · 2008: Vágner Love · 2009: Domínguez 2010: Danny
Categories:- 1983 births
- Living people
- People from Rio Grande do Sul
- Brazilian footballers
- Brazilian expatriate footballers
- PFC CSKA Moscow players
- Sport Club Internacional players
- Brazil international footballers
- Expatriate footballers in Russia
- Russian Premier League players
- Al-Arabi Sports Club players
- Clube Atlético Mineiro players
- Internacional
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