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Leandro Machado (footballer, born 1976)

Brazilian footballer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Leandro Machado Nascimento (born 22 March 1976) is a Brazilian former professional footballer who played as a forward.[1]

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Other than in his own country, he competed professionally in Spain, Portugal, Ukraine, Mexico, Paraguay and South Korea.

Machado was part of the Brazilian squad at the 1996 Gold Cup.

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Club career

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Born in Santo Amaro da Imperatriz, Santa Catarina, Machado was just 18 when he made his Série A debut with Sport Club Internacional. After three seasons the 20-year-old moved abroad, signing with Spanish club Valencia CF for 700 million pesetas[2] and first appearing in La Liga on 23 December 1996 when he came on as a second-half substitute for Goran Vlaović in a 3–0 home win over Hércules CF;[3] during his only season he notably scored once against Atlético Madrid (4–1 away success)[4] and twice against Athletic Bilbao (5–2, home),[5] and his team eventually finished in tenth position.

Machado netted ten times for Sporting Clube de Portugal in 1997–98, and the side ranked fourth in the Primeira Liga. On 30 November 1998 he returned to the Spanish top division, appearing rarely for CD Tenerife[6][7] in a relegation-ending campaign.

Subsequently, safe for three years at Clube de Regatas do Flamengo, Machado rarely settled with a team, playing with Internacional, FC Dynamo Kyiv, C.D. Santa Clara, Querétaro FC, Santos FC and Club Olimpia. He revived his career in South Korea with Ulsan Hyundai FC, scoring a career-best 13 goals in his first year and winning both the K League and the top scorer award in the process.

Machado retired at the age of 32 after a spell with Sport Club do Recife, due to knee problems.[8]

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International career

Machado earned the first of his two caps for Brazil during the 1996 CONCACAF Gold Cup, needing only 11 minutes after replacing Sávio to score the final 4–1 in a group stage contest against Canada.[9]

Career statistics

(Brazil score listed first, score column indicates score after each Machado goal)

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Honours

Internacional

Flamengo

Santos

Sport Recife

Dynamo Kyiv

Ulsan Hyundai

Brazil

Individual

References

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