Evaristo (footballer)

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Evaristo de Macedo
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Evaristo
Evaristo in 1960
Personal information
Full name Evaristo de Macedo Filho
Date of birth (1933-06-22) 22 June 1933 (age 90)
Place of birth Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Height 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)[1]
Position(s) Forward
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1950–1952 Madureira 35 (18)
1953–1957
Flamengo[2]
61 (38)
1957–1962 Barcelona 114 (78)
1962–1965 Real Madrid 17 (4)
1965–1966
Flamengo
7 (0)
Total 234 (138)
International career
1955–1957 Brazil 14 (8)
Managerial career
1968 Fluminense
1969 Vasco da Gama
1971 Bahia
1971 Bangu
1972 Santa Cruz
1973 Bahia
1977–1979 Santa Cruz
1980–1986 Qatar
1985 America
1985 Brazil
1986 Iraq
1988–1989 Bahia
1990
Grêmio
1991–1992 Cruzeiro
1992 Qatar
1993
Santos
1993–1995
Flamengo
1996
Atlético Paranaense
1997
Grêmio
1997 Vitória
1998 Bahia
1998
Flamengo
1999 Corinthians
2001 Bahia
2002
Vasco da Gama
2002–2003
Flamengo
2003 Bahia
2004 Vitória
2005
Atlético Paranaense
2007 Santa Cruz
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Evaristo de Macedo Filho, (born 22 June 1933, in Rio de Janeiro), known simply as Evaristo, is a Brazilian former footballer and coach.

Club career

Madureira (1950–1952)

Raised in the north of

Flamengo play on weekends with his uncle. In 1950, aged 17, Evaristo joined a friend who was attending a trial at Madureira and was asked to come back the following day. Signed as an amateur, he scored 18 goals in 35 games, including one against Fluminense at the Maracanã Stadium.[3]

Flamengo (1953–1957)

Evaristo was called up to the Brazilian squad at the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki. After returning home following elimination to an experienced Germany side, all of the Brazil players received new club offers. Turning down offers from Vasco da Gama and Fluminense, Evaristo joined Flamengo, and won three successive Rio State Championships with the club. He scored 103 goals in 191 games for Flamengo, including four during a 12–2 win over São Cristóvão, the biggest win ever recorded at the Maracanã to date.[3]

Barcelona (1957–1962)

Evaristo's five-goal display with Brazil in a 9–0 win over Colombia at the 1957 South American Championship brought him to the attention of FC Barcelona technical secretary Josep Samitier, who had flown to South America in search of a striker.[3] Samitier watched Evaristo playing for Brazil during qualification for the 1958 FIFA World Cup and, impressed, made Evaristo's father a proposal deemed "impossible to turn down", with a basic wage of 700,000 pesetas/£6,000 a year (about £140,000 in 2021).[3] The offer came additionally including a house, a Mercedes-Benz, and a club liaison officer who assisted with Evaristo's marriage to his childhood sweetheart Norma three months later. Each player had an individual fan club arranged by the club, but the players outside of training and official activity were free to enjoy life and relax in the city.[3]

Playing in a Barcelona side alongside

first European Cup final, which they lost 3–2 to Benfica at the Wankdorf Stadium in Bern, now remembered as the "Square-Posts Final" due to the match supposedly being the reason the shape of the goalposts was changed.[3]

During Evaristo's time with Barcelona, the club won two league titles, a cup title, and two Inter-Cities Fairs Cups. Barcelona's statistics department state that in official matches, Evaristo scored 105 goals in 151 games for the side, while the club's official site states in total he scored 181 in 237. Only Rivaldo, who scored 129 goals in 235 games between 1997 and 2002, has more official goals by a Brazilian for Barcelona than Evaristo; Evaristo however still retains the best goals-per-game ratio of any Brazilian to play more than 50 games for Barcelona.[3][4]

Unfortunately, Evaristo's relationship with Barcelona with regards to international representation had been strained from the start. Having played every minute of a two-legged World Cup qualifier against Peru, and with eight goals in fourteen games, when they signed him Barcelona verbally agreed to release Evaristo for the World Cup final tournament in Sweden. However, with Spain having failed to qualify, the Spanish Cup went ahead at the same time as the tournament in Sweden, and Barcelona went back on their promise to release him. Brazil went on to win their first World Cup, with 17-year-old Pelé their headlining player; Evaristo would never wear the famous Brazilian yellow shirt again.[3]

Real Madrid (1962–1965)

In 1962, wanting to sign another foreign player – yet with rules only allowing one per team under both Spanish and European rules – Barcelona asked Evaristo to naturalise as a Spanish citizen. After bitter wrangling, Evaristo agreed to quit Barcelona that summer.[3] Although he had offers from clubs in both France and Italy, with his family happy in Spain Evaristo agreed to join rivals Real Madrid. In contrast to the transfer of Luís Figo 38 years later, Barcelona's fans directed their anger not at the player, but at the board.[3] Despite a serious knee injury limiting him to just nineteen appearances and six goals for Real Madrid, Evaristo still won two La Liga titles in two seasons with the club.[3]

Return to Flamengo (1965–1966)

Evaristo returned as he had planned to Flamengo in 1965, adding another league title before retiring a year later, at the age of 33.[3]

International career

Evaristo competed for Brazil at the 1952 Summer Olympics, alongside other notable players such as Vavá and Zózimo.[5]

Evaristo was capped by the national side fourteen times, scoring eight goals. He also holds the record of most goals for the Brazil national team in a single match, with Evaristo netting five times for the Seleção in a 9–0 win over Colombia in 1957.[6]

Evaristo played every minute of Brazil's

Spanish Cup went ahead at the same time as the World Cup, and Barcelona went back on their initial promise to release Evaristo for the tournament in Sweden; this soured the relationship between Evaristo and the club, and he would go on to join rivals Real Madrid, never playing again for the national team.[7]

Managerial career

Evaristo had a brief tenure as manager of the Brazil national team in 1985, and he later became head coach of Iraq for the 1986 World Cup. Evaristo would take on various further managerial positions, including three separate stints in charge of his former club Flamengo.

Club statistics

Club performance League
Season Club Division Apps Goals
Spain League
1957–58 Barcelona La Liga 24 13
1958–59 23 20
1959–60 24 14
1960–61 21 11
1961–62 22 20
Total 114 78
1962–63 Real Madrid La Liga 7 3
1963–64 10 1
Total 17 4

Honours

Flamengo

Barcelona

Real Madrid

References

  1. ^ "Evaristo". www.footballdatabase.eu. Retrieved 2023-02-16.
  2. ^ Fla Estatistica (in Portuguese)
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Gary Meenaghan (14 January 2021). "Evaristo de Macedo: The record-breaking Brazilian loved by Barca & Madrid". BBC Sport. Retrieved 14 January 2021.
  4. ^ Buturugeanu, Alex (17 October 2010). "Tradatorii (IV): Tejada & Macedo". Istoria Fotbalului. Bucharest. Retrieved 17 October 2010.
  5. ^ "Evaristo de Macedo". Olympedia. Retrieved 6 November 2021.
  6. ^ "Com quatro gols, Neymar se iguala a nomes como Zico, Romário e Careca [With four goals, Neymar equals Zico, Romário, Careca and other names]". Sportv (in Portuguese). Retrieved 20 March 2015.
  7. ^ Gary Meenaghan (14 January 2021). "Evaristo de Macedo: The record-breaking Brazilian loved by Barca & Madrid". BBC Sport.