Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Zizinho
Brazilian footballer and manager (1921–2002) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Thomaz Soares da Silva, also known as Zizinho (Portuguese pronunciation: [ziˈzĩɲu]; 14 September 1921 – 8 February 2002), was a Brazilian footballer who played as an attacking midfielder for the Brazil national football team.[9][10] He came to international prominence at the 1950 World Cup, where he scored two goals. He was lauded as a complete player, with an array of offensive skills such as his dribbling, passing, and shooting ability with both feet, as well as his accuracy from dead ball situations and extraordinary vision. He was Pelé's idol,[7] and is often considered one of the best Brazilian men's footballers of the pre-Pelé era.
Remove ads
Career
Born at Niterói, Rio de Janeiro, he played for Flamengo, Bangu, São Paulo FC, Audax Italiano of Chile among others teams. He is considered the first idol of Flamengo, club that he defended - winning the state championships in 1942, 1943 and 1944 - until he was transferred just before the start of 1950 World Cup to Bangu. In São Paulo he won the state championship in 1957 being extremely important and becoming an idol.
In the 1950 World Cup he helped Brazil to progress to the final, but their surprise 2–1 defeat to Uruguay tarnished his reputation. Zizinho played a total of 53 times for his national team, scoring 30 goals. He turned down last minute invitations by the CBF to join first the 1954 World Cup Squad and then the 1958 squad, citing on both occasions that it would be unfair on the player being dropped at the last minute to make way for him.
Pelé always said that Zizinho was the best player he ever saw. "He was a complete player. He played in midfield, in attack, he scored goals, he could mark, head and cross."[11]
Remove ads
Career statistics
Club
International
Remove ads
Honours
Club
- Flamengo
- Campeonato Carioca: 1942, 1943, 1944
- São paulo
- Campeonato Paulista: 1957
International
- FIFA World Cup runner-up: 1950
- South American Championship: 1949
- Taça do Atlântico: 1956
- Roca Cup: 1945
- Copa Rio Branco: 1950
- Taça Oswaldo Cruz: 1955, 1956
Individual
- FIFA World Cup Golden Ball: 1950[12]
- FIFA World Cup All-Star Team: 1950
- IFFHS Brazilian Player of the 20th Century (4th place)[13]
- IFFHS South American Player of the 20th Century (10th place)[13]
- Brazilian Football Museum Hall of Fame
Records
- South American Championship / Copa América all-time top goalscorer: 17 goals (shared with Norberto Méndez)[14]
Manager
- Brazil Olympic
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads