- José Oscar Bernardi
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Oscar Personal information Full name José Oscar Bernardi Date of birth June 20, 1954 Place of birth Monte Siao, Brazil Height 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in) Playing position Defender Senior career* Years Team Apps† (Gls)† 1972–1979 Ponte Preta 34 (1) 1979–1980 New York Cosmos 3 (0) 1980–1987 São Paulo 77 (6) 1987–1989 Nissan Motors National team 1978–1986 Brazil 60 (2) Teams managed 1989–1991 Nissan Motors 1992 AA Internacional 1992 Guarani 1993–1995 Al-Hilal 1995–1996 Kyoto Purple Sanga 1997 Al-Hilal 1997 Cruzeiro 1998 Al-Shabab * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).José Oscar Bernardi (born June 20, 1954), nicknamed Oscar, is a noted association footballer, having been on the Brazil national football team and a member of São Paulo Futebol Clube and Associação Atlética Ponte Preta, and having played in defence at the Football World Cup in 1978, 1982, and as a reserve in 1986. He was capped sixty times for Brazil between April 1978 and May 1986.
Oscar also played for Japanese team Nissan FC between 1987 and 1989. After his professional retirement, he coached several football clubs in Japan and Brazil. He now runs an athletic training center in Monte Sião, Minas Gerais. Oscar Bernardi founded a football club, named Brasilis Futebol Clube, in 2007.[1]
Contents
Statistics
Club performance League Season Club League Apps Goals Brazil League 1972 Ponte Preta 0 0 1973 0 0 1974 0 0 1975 0 0 1976 Série A 12 0 1977 16 1 1978 6 0 1979 0 0 United States League 1980 New York Cosmos NASL 3 0 Brazil League 1980 São Paulo Série A 0 0 1981 10 0 1982 16 0 1983 11 0 1984 12 2 1985 19 3 1986 9 1 1987 0 0 Country Brazil 111 7 United States 3 0 Total 114 7 Brazil national team Year Apps Goals 1978 11 0 1979 1 0 1980 4 0 1981 13 0 1982 11 1 1983 0 0 1984 2 0 1985 11 0 1986 6 1 Total 59 2 Awards
- Brazil League Silver Ball: 1977
- Japanese Footballer of the Year: 1988
- Japan Soccer League Best Eleven: 1987-88, 1988-89
References
- ^ "Brasilis Futebol Clube" (in Portuguese) (PDF). Federação Paulista de Futebol. http://www.futebolpaulista.com.br/clube.php?cod=66&ref=4. Retrieved May 16, 2011.
- ^ http://www.national-football-teams.com/v2/player.php?id=18646
External links
Japanese Footballer of the Year 1961: Naganuma · 1962: Ozawa · 1963: Yaegashi · 1964: Sugiyama · 1965: Ogi · 1966: Kamamoto · 1967: Miyamoto · 1968: Kamamoto · 1969: Sugiyama · 1970: Ogi · 1971: Kamamoto · 1972: Nomura · 1973: Sugiyama · 1974: Kamamoto · 1975: Kamamoto · 1976: Nagai · 1977: Carvalho · 1978: Ochiai · 1979: Imai · 1980: Kamamoto · 1981: Kamamoto · 1982: Ozaki · 1983: Kimura · 1984: Kimura · 1985: Yoshida · 1986: Takeda · 1987: Morishita · 1988: Oscar · 1989: Kimura · 1990: Ramos · 1991: Ramos · 1992: Kazu · 1993: Kazu · 1994: Pereira · 1995: Stojković · 1996: Kawaguchi · 1997: Nakata · 1998: Nakayama · 1999: Sawanobori · 2000: Nakamura · 2001: Yanagisawa · 2002: Fujita · 2003: Kubo · 2004: Nakazawa · 2005: Araújo · 2006: Tulio · 2007: Suzuki · 2008: Endō · 2009: Ogasawara · 2010: Honda ·
Brazil squad – 1978 FIFA World Cup Third Place 1 Leão • 2 Toninho • 3 Oscar • 4 Amaral • 5 Toninho Cerezo • 6 Edinho • 7 Zé Sérgio • 8 Zico • 9 Reinaldo • 10 Rivelino • 11 Dirceu • 12 Carlos • 13 Nelinho • 14 Abel • 15 Polozzi • 16 Rodrigues Neto • 17 Batista • 18 Gil • 19 Jorge Mendonça • 20 Roberto Dinamite • 21 Chicão • 22 Valdir Peres • Coach: CoutinhoBrazil squad – 1982 FIFA World Cup 1 Valdir Peres • 2 Leandro • 3 Oscar • 4 Luizinho • 5 Toninho Cerezo • 6 Júnior • 7 Paulo Isidoro • 8 Sócrates • 9 Serginho • 10 Zico • 11 Éder • 12 Paulo Sérgio • 13 Edevaldo • 14 Juninho • 15 Falcão • 16 Edinho • 17 Pedrinho • 18 Batista • 19 Renato • 20 Roberto Dinamite • 21 Dirceu • 22 Carlos • Coach: SantanaBrazil squad – 1986 FIFA World Cup Kyoto Sanga F.C. – managers Takama (1993) · Shimatani (1994) · Yonashiro (1994) · Oscar (1995–96) · Yonashiro (1996) · Rocha (1997) · Ooft (1998) · Shimizu (1998–99) · Kimura (1999) · Kamo (1999–00) · Engels (2000–03) · Kimura (2003) · Pim (2003) · Kimura (2003) · Nishimura (2004) · Hashiratani (2004–06) · Minobe (2006–07) · Kato (2007–10) · Akita (2010) · Oki (2011–)
Categories:- 1954 births
- Living people
- Brazilian footballers
- Brazilian expatriate footballers
- Brazilian people of Italian descent
- Associação Atlética Ponte Preta players
- North American Soccer League players
- New York Cosmos players
- São Paulo FC players
- Japan Soccer League players
- Brazilian football managers
- Ittihad FC managers
- Kyoto Sanga F.C. managers
- 1978 FIFA World Cup players
- 1982 FIFA World Cup players
- 1986 FIFA World Cup players
- Expatriate footballers in Japan
- Expatriate football managers in Japan
- Expatriate football managers in Saudi Arabia
- Brazil international footballers
- Al-Hilal managers
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