Zico(2)

Doxm...HBHZ
17 Apr 2024
41

Administrative roles

Zico was a director at Kashima Antlers between 1996 and 2002.[67]
On 30 May 2010, it was announced that Zico would become the new Flamengo football director on a four-year deal, coming back to the team where he won his most important honors after 25 years. This comeback, however, lasted only five months as he resigned due to disagreements with the board.
On 10 June 2015, Zico officially announced he would run for the FIFA presidency role after the recent announcement of Sepp Blatter's resignation following the alleged corruption surrounding the winning bids from Russia and Qatar to host the 2018 and 2022 tournaments.
In August 2018, Zico returned to Kashima Antlers as technical director, 16 years after his previous spell as a director at the club.

Personal life


Zico is the grandson of Fernando Antunes Coimbra (paternal grandfather) and Arthur Ferreira da Costa Silva (maternal grandfather), both Portuguese. His father, José Antunes Coimbra, also Portuguese (b. Tondela, 1901; d. Rio de Janeiro, 1986), came to Brazil aged 10. Zico's mother, Matilde Ferreira da Silva Costa, was born in 1919 but died 16 years after her husband in 2002.

Zico was the youngest of six children—Maria José (Zezé), Antunes, Nando, Edu and Antônio (Tonico).

In 1969 Zico met his future wife, Sandra Carvalho de Sá. In 1970 the couple became engaged and married in 1975.[69][70][71] Sandra's sister, Sueli, is Edu's wife. Zico has three sons, Arthur Jr., Bruno and Thiago.[72] Zico is also a member of the legendary squad Classic Eleven from the FIFA video games series. Zico is Roman Catholic.

Honours


Player[76]

Club


Flamengo[3][77]
Campeonato Carioca: 1972, 1974, 1978, 1979, 1979 (extra), 1981, 1986
Campeonato Brasileiro Série A: 1980, 1982, 1983
Copa União: 1987[23]
Copa Libertadores: 1981
Intercontinental Cup: 1981
Kashima Antlers[77]
J.League Suntory Series: 1993
World Soccer Magazine 18th Greatest Player of the 20th century
Placar 16th Best Player of the 20th century[93]


International

Brazil[3][78]

FIFA World Cup third place: 1978
Copa América third place: 1979
Taça do Atlântico: 1976
Copa Río Branco: 1976
Taça Oswaldo Cruz: 1976
Bicentennial Cup: 1976
Brazil U23
CONMEBOL Pre-Olympic: 1971
Individual
edit
Bola de Ouro: 1974, 1982[77]
Bola de Prata: 1974, 1975, 1977, 1982, 1987[77]
Campeonato Carioca top scorer: 1975 (30 goals), 1977 (27 goals), 1978 (19 goals), 1979 (26 goals), 1982 (21 goals)[77]
South American Footballer of the Year: 1977, 1981, 1982[77]
South American Footballer of the Year Silver Ball: 1976, 1980

El Grafico[a] 2nd Best South American Player of the Year: 1981[79][b]
Brazilian season top scorer: 1976 (63 goals), 1977 (48 goals), 1979 (81 goals), 1980 (53 goals), 1982 (59 goals)[80][81][82][83][84]
FIFA XI: 1979, 1982
Campeonato Brasileiro Série A top scorer: 1980 (21 goals), 1982 (21 goals)[77]
Guerin Sportivo All-Star Team: 1980, 1981, 1983
Copa Libertadores Best Player: 1981[77]
Copa Libertadores top scorer: 1981[77]
Intercontinental Cup MVP Award: 1981[77]
Guerin Sportivo Player of the Year: 1981
FIFA World Cup Bronze Boot: 1982
FIFA World Cup All-Star Team: 1982
World Soccer Player of the Year: 1983[85]
Chevron Award: 1984[86]
Serie A Player of the Year: 1984[87]
Beach Soccer World Championship Top Scorer: 1995 (12 goals)
Beach Soccer World Championship Best Player: 1995
FIFA Order of Merit: 1996[88]
FIFA 100: 2004[10]
Golden Foot Legends Award: 2006[89]
Brazilian Football Museum Hall of Fame: 2010
Japan Football Hall of Fame: 2016[90]
IFFHS 3rd Best Brazilian Player of the 20th century[91]
IFFHS 7th Best South American Player of the 20th century[91]
IFFHS 14th Best Player of the 20th century[91]
FIFA 7th Best Player of the 20th century (FIFA Magazine and Grand Jury vote)
France Football 9th Best Player of the 20th century[92]
World Soccer Magazine 18th Greatest Player of the 20th century
Placar 16th Best Player of the 20th century[93]
IFFHS Legends

Records
edit
Top scorer in Flamengo's history – 508 goals[27]
Top scorer in Maracanã Stadium – 333 goals[95]
Japan Soccer League record for goals scored in straight matches – 11 goals in 10 matches (1992)
Flamengo record holder – Top scorer in a single season – 81 goals (1979)
Manager
edit
Club
edit
Fenerbahçe
Süper Lig: 2006–07
Turkish Super Cup: 2007
Bunyodkor
Uzbekistani Cup: 2008
Uzbek League: 2008
CSKA Moscow
Russian Super Cup: 2009
Russian Cup: 2008–09
Olympiacos
Super League Greece runners-up: 2009–10
FC Goa
Indian Super League runners-up: 2015
International

Japan






Write & Read to Earn with BULB

Learn More

Enjoy this blog? Subscribe to Mrmti2

0 Comments

B
No comments yet.
Most relevant comments are displayed, so some may have been filtered out.