- Marcus Tulio Tanaka
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Marcus Tulio Tanaka Personal information Full name Marcus Tulio Tanaka Date of birth April 24, 1981 Place of birth Palmeira d'Oeste, SP, Brazil Height 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) Playing position Centre back Club information Current club Nagoya Grampus Number 4 Youth career Mirassol 1998–2000 Shibuya Makuhari High School Senior career* Years Team Apps† (Gls)† 2001–2003 Sanfrecce Hiroshima 39 (2) 2003 → Mito HollyHock (loan) 42 (10) 2004–2009 Urawa Red Diamonds 168 (37) 2010– Nagoya Grampus 29 (6) National team‡ 2004 Japan U-23 7 (0) 2006–2010 Japan 43 (8) * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of February 07, 2011.
† Appearances (Goals).
‡ National team caps and goals correct as of February 07, 2011This name uses Portuguese naming customs. The first or maternal family name is Murzani and the second or paternal family name is Tanaka.In this Japanese name, the family name is "Tanaka".Marcus "Tulio" Tanaka (田中 マルクス 闘莉王 Tanaka Marukusu Tūrio , born April 24, 1981 in Palmeira d'Oeste, São Paulo, Brazil), formerly name ; Marcus Túlio Lyuji Murzani Tanaka (until he obtained Japanese citizenship) is a Brazilian-born Japanese footballer who plays for the J. League Division 1 club Nagoya Grampus.
Contents
Career
Born in Palmeira d'Oeste, Brazil to a second generation Japanese-Brazilian father and Italian-Brazilian mother, Tulio moved to Japan at age 15 to complete his high school studies. After graduation from Shibuya Makuhari High School in Chiba Prefecture in 2001, Tulio joined the J.League club Sanfrecce Hiroshima.
When Sanfrecce was relegated to J. League Division 2 after his second season in 2002, he was loaned to fellow J. League Division 2 side Mito Hollyhock. On 10 October 2003, Tulio obtained his Japanese citizenship. In 2004, after a season at Mito, Tulio returned to the J. League Division 1, joining Urawa Reds and played for Japan at the 2004 Olympic games.
Tulio made his debut for the Japan's senior national team on 9 August 2006, against Trinidad and Tobago. He scored his first goal for Japan on 15 November 2006 in a 2007 AFC Asian Cup qualifier against Saudi Arabia. After the strong performance in 2006 season, which led Urawa to win their first ever J. League Division 1 title, he received J-League Player of the Year. But he missed 2007 AFC Asian Cup finals due to an injury. His absence was a big blow to the Japan NT.
Tulio went on to score his second goal for the Japanese national team, on 22 August 2007, in an international friendly versus Cameroon - a header.
On 17 July 2008, he scored his first hat-trick in J. League Division 1 in a league game against Tokyo Verdy.
On 22 December 2009, after falling out with the management at Urawa as he was deployed in an unfamiliar position at the back, Tulio joined Nagoya Grampus.[1] He played 168 games and scored 37 goals for his ex-club.[2]
On 30 May 2010, he scored for Japan against England in the 7th minute of a World Cup warm-up, and also scored for England against Japan in the form of an own goal 67 minutes later.[3] As Japan captain Yuji Nakazawa later did the same thing, the game finished 2-1 for England.
On 4 June 2010, he scored for Côte d'Ivoire against Japan in the form of an own goal in 13th minute of a friendly match. Three minutes later, he injured Côte d'Ivoire attacker Didier Drogba's elbow which was fractured by high challenge from Tulio.
He was a playmaker in his younger days, whose passes and headers helped his team score goals[vague].
Position
He is an offensive centre back/Libero, who can score goals.
Career statistics
- As of February 07, 2011
Club performance League Cup League Cup Continental Total Season Club League Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Japan League Emperor's Cup League Cup Asia Total 2001 Sanfrecce Hiroshima J. League Division 1 17 1 - 5 0 - 22 1 2002 22 1 - 5 0 - 27 1 2003 Mito HollyHock J. League Division 2 42 10 3 0 - - 45 10 2004 Urawa Red Diamonds J. League Division 1 21 3 1 0 6 1 - 28 4 2005 26 9 2 0 7 1 - 35 10 2006 33 7 1 0 7 1 - 41 8 2007 26 3 1 0 - 10* 0 37 3 2008 31 11 1 0 1 0 4 1 37 12 2009 31 4 - 1 1 - 32 5 2010 Nagoya Grampus 29 6 - 1 0 - 30 6 2011 27 4 0 0 2 2 5 0 34 6 Career total 305 59 9 0 35 6 19 1 366 66 - Includes 2 matches at FIFA Club World Cup
Japan national team Year Apps Goals 2006 5 1 2007 4 1 2008 10 2 2009 13 2 2010 11 2 Total 43 8 Tulio is a regular for the Japan National Team. In a friendly match against England in Graz, he scored for both teams; an early goal to give Japan the lead, then an own goal to draw England level. (England went on to win 2-1)[4]
National team career statistics
Appearances in major competitions
Team Competition Category Appearances Goals Team Record Start Sub Japan 2004 Summer Olympics U-23 3 0 0 Round 1 Japan 2007 AFC Asian Cup qualification Senior 4 0 1 Qualified Japan 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification Senior 8 0 3 Qualified Japan 2010 FIFA World Cup Senior 4 0 0 Round 16 Goals for senior national team
# Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition 1. 15 November 2006 Sapporo Dome, Sapporo, Japan Saudi Arabia 1–0 3–1 2007 AFC Asian Cup qualification 2. 22 August 2007 Kyushu Sekiyu Dome, Oita, Japan Cameroon 1–0 2–0 Friendly match (2007 Kirin Challenge Cup) 3. 14 June 2008 Rajamangala Stadium, Bangkok, Thailand Thailand 0–1 0–3 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification 4. 19 November 2008 Jassim Bin Hamad Stadium, Doha, Qatar Qatar 0–3 0–3 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification 5. 17 June 2009 Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne, Australia Australia 0–1 2–1 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification 6. 8 October 2009 Outsourcing Stadium, Shizuoka, Japan Hong Kong 4–0 6–0 2011 AFC Asian Cup qualification 7. 11 February 2010 National Stadium, Tokyo, Japan Hong Kong 2–0 3–0 2010 East Asian Football Championship 8. 30 May 2010 UPC-Arena, Graz, Austria England 1–0 1–2 Friendly match Awards and honours
Japan
- Kirin Cup: 3
Club
- Urawa Red Diamonds
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- 2007
- J. League Division 1: 1
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- 2006
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- 2005, 2006
- Nagoya Grampus
- J. League Division 1: 1
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- 2010
Individual
- Japanese Footballer of the Year: 1
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- 2006
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- 2006
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- 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010
References
- ^ Reuters (2009-12-22). "Japan star Tulio swaps Urawa Red Diamonds for Nagoya Grampus Eight - Global - ESPN Soccernet". Soccernet.espn.go.com. http://soccernet.espn.go.com/news/story?id=716796&sec=global&cc=3436. Retrieved 2010-06-14.
- ^ "Tulio zu Nagoya Grampus". Transfermarkt.de. http://www.transfermarkt.de/de/news/34108/tulio-zu-nagoya-grampus.html. Retrieved 2010-06-14.
- ^ Barry Glendenning (30 May 2010). "Football: England v Japan - as it happened | Football | guardian.co.uk". London: Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2010/may/30/football-england-japan-friendly. Retrieved 2010-06-14.
- ^ http://www.national-football-teams.com/v2/player.php?id=15787
External links
- FIFA Statistics
- Japan national team profile
- Marcus Tulio Tanaka at National-Football-Teams.com
Awards GK: Yoichi Doi · DF: Marcus Tulio Tanaka · DF: Dutra · DF: Yuji Nakazawa · MF: Mitsuo Ogasawara · MF: Makoto Hasebe · MF: Daisuke Oku · MF: Yasuhito Endō · FW: Emerson · FW: Marques · FW: Masashi OguroGK: Motohiro Yoshida · DF: Ilian Stoyanov · DF: Marcus Tulio Tanaka · DF: Yuji Nakazawa · MF: Mitsuo Ogasawara · MF: Yuki Abe · MF: Fernandinho · MF: Yasuhito Endō · MF: Tatsuya Furuhashi · FW: Araújo · FW: Hisato SatōGK: Yoshikatsu Kawaguchi · DF: Marcus Tulio Tanaka · DF: Satoshi Yamaguchi · DF: Akira Kaji · MF: Keita Suzuki · MF: Yuki Abe · MF: Kengo Nakamura · MF: Hiroyuki Taniguchi · MF: Yasuhito Endō · FW: Washington · FW: Magno AlvesGK: Ryōta Tsuzuki · DF: Daiki Iwamasa · DF: Marcus Tulio Tanaka · DF: Satoshi Yamaguchi · MF: Yuki Abe · MF: Keita Suzuki · MF: Robson Ponte · MF: Kengo Nakamura · MF: Yasuhito Endō · FW: Juninho · FW: BaréGK: Seigo Narazaki · DF: Daiki Iwamasa · DF: Atsuto Uchida · DF: Marcus Tulio Tanaka · DF: Yuji Nakazawa · DF: Satoshi Yamaguchi · MF: Kengo Nakamura · MF: Yoshizumi Ogawa · MF: Yasuhito Endō · FW: Marquinhos · FW: Atsushi YanagisawaGK: Eiji Kawashima · DF: Daiki Iwamasa · DF: Atsuto Uchida · DF: Marcus Tulio Tanaka · DF: Yuto Nagatomo · MF: Naohiro Ishikawa · MF: Kengo Nakamura · MF: Mitsuo Ogasawara · MF: Yasuhito Endō · FW: Ryoichi Maeda · FW: Shinji OkazakiGK: Seigo Narazaki · DF: Marcus Tulio Tanaka · DF: Takahiro Masukawa · DF: Tomoaki Makino · MF: Danilson · MF: Marcio Richardes · MF: Kengo Nakamura · MF: Jungo Fujimoto · MF: Yasuhito Endō · FW: Ryoichi Maeda · FW: Joshua KennedyJapanese 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 ·
J. League Most Valuable Player Japan Squad Japan squad – 2004 Summer Olympics Japan squad – 2010 FIFA World Cup 1 Narazaki • 2 Abe • 3 Komano • 4 Túlio • 5 Nagatomo • 6 Uchida • 7 Endo • 8 Matsui • 9 Okazaki • 10 S. Nakamura • 11 Tamada • 12 Yano • 13 Iwamasa • 14 K. Nakamura • 15 Konno • 16 Ōkubo • 17 Hasebe (vc) • 18 Honda • 19 Morimoto • 20 Inamoto • 21 Kawashima • 22 Nakazawa • 23 Kawaguchi (c) • Coach: OkadaNagoya Grampus – current squad 1 Narazaki · 3 Chiyotanda · 4 Tulio · 5 Masukawa · 6 Abe · 7 Nakamura · 8 Fujimoto · 10 Ogawa · 11 Tamada · 14 Yoshimura · 16 Kennedy · 18 Nagai · 19 Sugimoto · 20 Danilson · 21 Nishimura · 22 Hashimoto · 23 Matsuo · 24 Fukushima · 25 Kanazaki · 26 Arai · 27 Hanai · 28 Taguchi · 29 Kuba · 31 Hasegawa · 32 Tanaka · 33 Isomura · 38 Santos · 50 Takagi · Manager: Stojković
Categories:- 1981 births
- Living people
- Mito HollyHock players
- Sanfrecce Hiroshima players
- Urawa Red Diamonds players
- Nagoya Grampus Eight players
- 2010 FIFA World Cup players
- Footballers at the 2004 Summer Olympics
- Olympic footballers of Japan
- Japanese Footballer of the Year winners
- J. League MVPs
- J. League players
- Association football defenders
- Japan international footballers
- Expatriate footballers in Japan
- Japanese footballers
- Brazilian expatriate footballers
- Naturalized citizens of Japan
- Japanese people of Italian descent
- Japanese people of Brazilian descent
- Brazilian people of Italian descent
- People from São Paulo (city)
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