- Paulo Nunes
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Paulo Nunes Personal information Full name Arílson de Paula Nunes Date of birth October 30, 1971 Place of birth Pontalina, Brazil Height 1.74 m (5 ft 8 1⁄2 in) Playing position Striker Youth career Flamengo Senior career* Years Team Apps† (Gls)† 1991–1994 Flamengo 45 (4) 1995–1997 Grêmio 44 (21) 1997–1998 Benfica 5 (2) 1998-1999 Palmeiras 39 (18) 2000 Grêmio 18 (2) 2001 Corinthians 6 (3) 2002 Gama 12 (1) 2002–2003 Al-Nassr 2003 Mogi Mirim National team 1997 Brazil 2 (0) * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).Arílson de Paula Nunes, better known as Paulo Nunes (born October 30, 1971), is a former Brazilian football player.[1] He retired in 2003 playing for Mogi Mirim Esporte Clube.[2]
Contents
Career
Born in Pontalina, Goiás,[2] Nunes played on two Copa Libertadores championship teams: in 1995 with Grêmio, and in 1999 with Palmeiras. He also played for Flamengo and Corinthians, as well as Benfica in Portugal.[2] In 1996 he was the top scorer in the Série A.
International career
He played his first game for the Brazil national team on June 3, 1997,when his country and France drew 1–1 for the Tournoi de France.[3] Paulo Nunes second and last game for the country was the June 29, 1997 Copa América game against Bolivia, when his team beat the opponent team 3–1.[4] His 1997 Brazil national team also won the Copa América.
Statistics
National team Club Season Apps Goals Brazil Grêmio 1997 2 0 Total 2 0 International appearances and goals # Date Venue Opponent Result Goal Competition 1997 1. June 3, 1997 Lyon, France France 1–1 0 Tournoi de France 2. June 29, 1997 La Paz, Bolivia Bolivia 3–1 0 Copa América Honors
- Brazil
- Copa América (1): 1997
- Grêmio
- Copa Libertadores (1): 1995
References
- ^ "Paulo Nunes". ogol.com.br. http://www.ogol.com.br/jogador/arilson_de_paula_nunes/atual/ficha/0/default/13191. Retrieved October 5, 2011.
- ^ a b c "Paulo Nunes" (in Portuguese). br.sambafoot.com. http://br.sambafoot.com/jogadores/464_Paulo_Nunes.html. Retrieved October 5, 2011.
- ^ "França - Brasil" (in Portuguese). br.sambafoot.com. http://br.sambafoot.com/selecao/1997_Torneio_da_Franca/269_Brasil_Franca.html. Retrieved October 5, 2011.
- ^ "Bolívia - Brasil" (in Portuguese). br.sambafoot.com. http://br.sambafoot.com/selecao/1997_Copa_America/188_Brasil_Bolivia.html. Retrieved October 5, 2011.
External links
- Paulo Nunes at Sambafoot.com
- Paulo Nunes at National Football Teams
Campeonato Brasileiro Série A top scorers 1971: Dadá Maravilha | 1972: Dadá Maravilha / Pedro Rocha | 1973: Ramón | 1974: Roberto Dinamite | 1975: Flávio | 1976: Dadá Maravilha | 1977: Reinaldo | 1978: Paulinho | 1979: César / Roberto César | 1980: Zico | 1981: Nunes | 1982: Zico | 1983: Serginho Chulapa | 1984: Roberto Dinamite | 1985: Edmar | 1986: Careca | 1987: Müller | 1988: Nílson | 1989: Túlio Maravilha | 1990: Charles | 1991: Paulinho McLaren | 1992: Bebeto | 1993: Guga | 1994: Amoroso / Túlio Maravilha | 1995: Túlio Maravilha | 1996: Paulo Nunes / Renaldo | 1997: Edmundo | 1998: Viola | 1999: Guilherme | 2000: Romário / Dill / Magno Alves | 2001: Romário | 2002: Luís Fabiano / Rodrigo Fabri | 2003: Dimba | 2004: Washington | 2005: Romário | 2006: Souza | 2007: Josiel | 2008: Keirrison / Washington / Kléber Pereira | 2009: Adriano / Diego Tardelli | 2010: Jonas | 2011: BorgesCopa do Brasil top scorers 1989: Gérson | 1990: Bizu | 1991: Gérson | 1992: Gérson | 1993: Gilson | 1994: Paulinho McLaren | 1995: Sávio | 1996: Luizão | 1997: Paulo Nunes | 1998: Romário | 1999: Romário / Petković | 2000: Oséas | 2001: Washington | 2002: Deivid | 2003: Nonato | 2004: Dauri | 2005: Fred | 2006: Valdiram | 2007: André Lima / Denis Marques / Dimba / Victor Simões | 2008: Edmundo / Romerito / Wellington Paulista | 2009: Taison | 2010: Neymar | 2011: Alecsandro / Adriano / Rafael Coelho / Kléber / WilliamBrazil 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: ZagalloThis biographical article related to a Brazilian association football forward born in the 1970s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. - Brazil