Leonardo Araújo

Leonardo Araújo
Leonardo
Leonardo Nascimento de Araújo 5.jpg
Personal information
Full name Leonardo Nascimento de Araújo
Date of birth 5 September 1969 (1969-09-05) (age 42)
Place of birth Niterói, Brazil
Height 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)
Playing position Attacking midfielder
Left back
Club information
Current club Paris Saint-Germain (Director of football)
Youth career
1984–1987 Flamengo
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1987–1990 Flamengo 52 (0)
1990–1991 São Paulo 44 (1)
1991–1993 Valencia 71 (6)
1993–1994 São Paulo 12 (3)
1994–1996 Kashima Antlers 49 (30)
1996–1997 Paris Saint-Germain 34 (7)
1997–2001 Milan 102 (22)
2001–2002 São Paulo 13 (0)
2002 Flamengo 0 (0)
2002–2003 Milan 1 (0)
National team
1990–2002 Brazil 60 (8)
Teams managed
2009–2010 Milan
2010–2011 Internazionale
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).

Leonardo Nascimento de Araújo, known as Leonardo (born 5 September 1969 in Niterói, Brazil), is a football manager and a former midfielder. He is currently active as director of football of French club Paris Saint-Germain.

A former Brazil international, he also served as player and manager of Italian side Milan, and successively as manager of crosstown rivals Inter. He played in the 1994 World Cup winning side, as well as the runners up team in 1998.

Contents

Club career

Leonardo began his career with the Brazilian club Flamengo in 1987; at just 17, he was given the opportunity to play with his hero Zico plus Leandro, Bebeto and Renato Gaúcho, and to take part in winning his first Brazilian championship. In 1990, Leonardo signed with São Paulo FC, and in 1991, Leonardo, Raí, and other young talents were assembled as part of the so-called 'esquadrão tricolor' ("three-coloured squad") under the command of Brazilian legend Telê Santana, giving Leonardo his second Brazilian championship.

Later that year, he made the switch to European football, signing with the Spanish club Valencia CF. After two seasons with Valencia, he returned to Brazil for a brief stint with São Paulo in 1993, during which time the team won several titles, including the prestigious Copa Libertadores and International Cup.

In 1994, after the World Cup, Leonardo signed with the Kashima Antlers of the newly-formed J. League. Leonardo continued his success in Kashima, again playing with his idol and friend Zico. In 1996, he returned to Europe, this time signing with French club Paris St Germain, where he again proved to be successful, one of his goals helping them to oust Liverpool out of the semi-finals of the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup.

At this point in his career, Leonardo had mostly stopped playing as a leftback and moved into the midfield, sometimes on the left, sometimes as a playmaker. Already in Japan, this had resulted in some spectacular goals[1] for Leonardo, a trend which continued in Europe.

In the summer of 1997 he signed with Italian team A.C. Milan, for 8.5 million euros from PSG. With Milan he became a prominent part of a star-studded lineup. He played four full seasons, scoring 22 goals[2] and playing 177 games for Milan, before returning to Brazil with São Paulo FC and Flamengo. He later returned to Milan and finished his career with them in 2003.

International career

Leonardo made his international debut in 1990. He was selected as a leftback for the 1994 World Cup, keeping the young Roberto Carlos out of the team, much to his chagrin. Leonardo played well in the first games but was then given a four-match suspension for elbowing the American midfielder Tab Ramos, resulting in a broken malar bone. The stricken Ramos had to stay in hospital for three and a half months afterwards. Leonardo's suspension prevented him from participating in the remainder of the competition. It was the second longest ban imposed in World Cup history, after Mauro Tassotti's eight-game suspension for breaking the nose of Luis Enrique at the same tournament.

In 1997, Leonardo was given the Number 10 shirt for the national team. He was an important member of the team that won the Copa America in 1997.

Leonardo played all seven games in his second World Cup, helping Brazil to a second-place finish. In the second opening round match against Morocco, he netted one shot and began celebrating, but was later called off-side. He was last selected to play for Brazil in the 2002 World Cup qualifying campaign and ended his career with 60 caps and 8 goals for Brazil.

Post-playing career

Since 2002, Leonardo has dedicated himself to social works with the Fundação Gol de Letra and Fondazione Milan.

Leonardo worked for BBC Television in the United Kingdom during the 2006 World Cup, as one of their Match of the Day analysts, alongside another former World Cup winner Marcel Desailly. He appeared again as a Match of the Day analyst on 1 June 2007 alongside Alan Hansen and Alan Shearer. This was the first England game at the new Wembley Stadium finishing 1–1 with Brazil.

Since Leonardo stopped playing for Milan he has become a sort of combination of scout and agent for the club in Brazil and the great respect he enjoys in his homeland has helped Milan to land several world-class players. He was instrumental in the process of getting Kaká to Milan and in July 2007 it was revealed that Leonardo had been one of the main factors in convincing Alexandre Pato to sign for Milan.

Coaching career

In December 2007, he was interviewed for the vacant position of director of football at English Premier League side, West Ham United.[3]

Milan

In early 2008 he was appointed Technical Director of his former club A.C. Milan. Later the same year he obtained Italian citizenship, after twelve years in Italy as a resident.[4]

After Carlo Ancelotti left Milan to become the manager of Chelsea F.C. at the end of May 2009, Leonardo was named head coach of Milan[5][6] despite still lacking the required coaching badges (he was set to attend a UEFA A coaching course on June 2009).[7] He was however exempted from requiring a UEFA Pro license, which is mandatory for Italian Serie A managers, due to being a former World Cup winner as a player.[8] Leonardo wasted no time in declaring that he wanted his team to play attractive attacking football, even invoking the name of his old mentor, Telê Santana.[9]

After a poor start of season, featuring a shock 0–4 loss to crosstown rivals Internazionale, that started speculation about his possible dismissal from the head coaching post at Milan, results started improving for the rossoneri under Leonardo, also thanks to the application of a 4–2–1–3 tactic (nicknamed also "4-2-fantasy" by Milan vice-president Adriano Galliani). This tactic, quite unusual on Italian football, and greatly focusing on creative players such as Ronaldinho, Andrea Pirlo and Clarence Seedorf, led Milan to improved results at both Serie A and UEFA Champions League level, including a remarkable 3–2 win at Santiago Bernabeu Stadium against Real Madrid and a 3–0 away win to Juventus which enabled Leonardo's side to finish in second place at the half-way point of the season, six points shy of leaders Inter with a game in hand. However, the path to UEFA Champions League final was halted prematurely as Milan was eliminated in the first knockout round by Manchester United in a 2–7 aggregate loss (2–3, 0–4).

In the final weeks of the seasons, it was speculated that Leonardo could leave Milan at the end of the season. In April 2010, Leonardo confirmed divergences with club owner and Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, defining their relationship as "difficult".[10] It was confirmed that Leonardo would leave Milan by mutual agreement after their season ending game against Juventus.[11] Leonardo waved an emotional goodbye to a packed San Siro, as he managed his side's last game with a 3–0 win against Juventus.

Internazionale

On 24 December 2010, after days of speculation, it was confirmed Leonardo would take over as head coach of fresh FIFA Club World Cup champions Internazionale, replacing Rafael Benítez in a somewhat controversial move, due to the Brazilian's long career with rivals Milan as both player and manager; he agreed a 18-month contract due to expire on 30 June 2012.[12] Leonardo has started extremely well, collecting 30 points from 12 games, with an average of 2.5 points per game, better than his predecessors Benitez and Jose Mourinho. On March 6, 2011 Leonardo set a new Italian Serie A record by collecting 33 points in 13 games, the previous record was 32 points in 13 games made by Fabio Capello in 2004–05 season.

On March 15, 2011, Leonardo led Inter to a memorable 3–2 Champions League away victory over F.C. Bayern Munich at the Allianz Arena in the Round of 16 after losing the first leg at home. On 2 April 2011, Leonardo's Inter lost 3–0 against their fierce rivals A.C. Milan, and when Inter two weeks later lost 2–0 against relegation battlers Parma, Inter's title ambitions had effectively ended. On 6 April 2011 Leonardo's Inter lost 2–5 to Schalke 04 in the quarter finals of the Champions League. On 29 May 2011, Inter defeated Palermo (3–1) to give Leonardo his first and only trophy as a manager of Inter: the Coppa Italia (called the TIM Cup for sponsorship reasons).

Paris Saint-Germain

In June 2011, speculation arose about the future of Leonardo at Inter after some media cited about talks between him and the new Qatari owners of Paris Saint-Germain, where Leonardo already spent one season as a player in 1996–97. Following that, Inter president Massimo Moratti began searching a replacement for Leonardo, then hiring former Genoa boss Gian Piero Gasperini as new head coach and releasing Leonardo from his contract thereafter.

In July 2011 Leonardo was then introduced as new director of football of Paris Saint-Germain, being responsible for the club's major transfer market decisions. His first signings included several high-profile players from the Italian Serie A such as Jérémy Ménez, Mohamed Sissoko, Salvatore Sirigu and Javier Pastore.

Career statistics

Club

Season Club League League Cup Continental Other Total
Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
1987 Flamengo Série A 18 0 - - - - - - 18 0
1988 18 0 - - - - ? 0 18+? 0
1989 16 0 8 0 ? 0 - - 24+? 0
1990 São Paulo Série A 22 0 4 3 - - - - 26 3
1991 22 1 - - - - - - 22 1
1991–92 Valencia La Liga 37 3 ? ? - - - - 37+? 3+?
1992–93 34 3 ? ? - - - - 34+? 3+?
1993 São Paulo Série A 12 3 - - ? 2 2 0 14+? 5
1994 - - - - - - 1 1 1 1
1994 Kashima Antlers J. League 9 7 1 0 - - - - 10 7
1995 28 17 3 1 - - - - 31 18
1996 12 6 10 5 - - - - 22 11
1996–97 Paris Saint-Germain Division 1 32 7 2 0 9 3 - - 43 10
1997–98 2 0 - - 1 0 - - 3 0
1997–98 Milan Serie A 27 3 5 1 - - - - 32 4
1998–99 27 12 2 0 - - - - 29 12
1999–00 20 4 1 1 5 1 - - 26 6
2000–01 22 3 5 2 5 1 - - 32 6
2001 São Paulo Série A 13 0 - - - - - - 13 0
2002 Flamengo Série A 0 0 - - - - - - 0 0
2002–03 Milan Serie A 1 0 4 2 - - - - 5 2
Career Totals 372 69 45+? 15+? 20+? 7 2+? 1 439+? 92+?

International

[13]

Brazil national team
Year Apps Goals
1990 2 0
1991 3 0
1992 0 0
1993 2 0
1994 9 0
1995 7 2
1996 3 0
1997 17 4
1998 8 0
1999 2 1
2000 0 0
2001 2 0
Total 55 7

Managerial statistics

Statistics correct as of 30 May 2011.

Team Nat From To Record
G W D L Win %
Milan Italy 1 June 2009 16 May 2010 &1000000000000004800000048 &1000000000000002300000023 &1000000000000001300000013 &1000000000000001200000012 &1000000000000004792000047.92
Internazionale Italy 29 December 2010 1 July 2011 &1000000000000003200000032 &1000000000000002200000022 &100000000000000030000003 &100000000000000070000007 &1000000000000006875000068.75
Total &1000000000000008000000080 &1000000000000004500000045 &1000000000000001600000016 &1000000000000001900000019 &1000000000000005625000056.25

Honours

Player

Flamengo
São Paulo
Kashima Antlers
  • J-League (1): 1996
Milan
National Team

Manager

Internazionale

References


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