Romário
From Encyclopedia Jr, free information reference for Kids
| Romário | ||
| Personal information | ||
|---|---|---|
| Full name | Romário de Souza Faria | |
| Date of birth | January 29, 1966 | |
| Place of birth | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | |
| Height | 1.69 m (5 ft 6 in) | |
| Nickname | Baixinho (Shorty) | |
| Position | Centre Forward | |
| Club information | ||
| Current club | Adelaide United | |
| Youth clubs | ||
| 1983-1985 | Olaria AC | |
| Professional clubs* | ||
| Years | Club | Apps (goals) |
| 1985-1987 1988-1992 1992-1994 1995-1996 1996-1998 1998-1999 2000-2001 2002-2002 2003-2003 2003-2004 2005-2006 2006 2006 |
Vasco da Gama PSV Eindhoven FC Barcelona Flamengo Valencia CF Flamengo Vasco da Gama Fluminense FC Al Sadd Fluminense FC Vasco da Gama Miami FC Adelaide United |
113 (73) 167 (165) 46 (34) 46 (31) 11 (5) 39 (26) 44 (41) 26 (17) 6 (0) 34 (18) 31 (23) 27 (22) 0 (0) |
| National team** | ||
| 1987-2005 | Brazil | 70 (55) [1] |
|
* Professional club appearances and goals |
||
Romário de Souza Faria (born January 29, 1966), better known simply as Romário, is a Brazilian football center forward who helped the Brazil national team win the 1994 FIFA World Cup and was one of the most prolific strikers in the world in the 1990s, having had successful tenures with European clubs PSV Eindhoven and FC Barcelona, and in Brazil with Vasco da Gama. His professional career has extended past age 40, an age at which most professional footballers have retired.
Romário has scored nearly 1000 official goals, a mark officially obtained only by former Brazilian attacker Pelé. He is the third highest goalscorer in the history of the Brazilian team, as well as the second highest scorer of all time in the Brazilian League, finishing as the top scorer six times. He was selected the Best player in the world in 1994 and is catalogued as one of the greatest forwards in the history of the game by FIFA.[4]
Romário was named as one of the top 125 greatest living footballers as part of FIFA's 100th anniversary celebration in March 2004. Former Argentina international player Diego Maradona, in his autobiography El Diego, described Romário as an "incredible finisher" adding that he had not seen a striker like him, and mentioning that Romário would be in his all-time "dream team" without any hesitation.
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[edit] Club career
Born in Rio de Janeiro, of very humble beginnings, Romário started his career playing for Vasco da Gama (becoming one of the best footballers of the club in the last two decades) where he won two State Championships (1987/88). Between 1988 and 1992 he played for PSV Eindhoven, who won the Dutch League in 1989, 1991 and 1992. He moved to Spain's FC Barcelona for the 1993-1994 season, in which, along with players like Hristo Stoichkov, Jose Mari Bakero, Josep Guardiola, Michael Laudrup and Ronald Koeman, he helped the club win the League, while becoming the season's top goalscorer with 30 goals in 33 matches.
Romário was named FIFA World Player of the Year in 1994, after being the runner-up in 1993. In 1995 he returned to Brazil to play for Flamengo. He spent the next year in Valencia. In 1998, he missed out the World Cup and then returned to Flamengo until 1999.
He played for Vasco da Gama again in 2000, winning the Mercosur Cup, the Brazilian League, the South American and Brazilian Footballer of the Year award. From 2002 until 2004 he played for Fluminense. On October 21, 2004 he was fired from the club after a conflict with the coach. He then went back to play for the team he started at, Vasco da Gama. In 2005, at nearly 40 years of age, Romário scored 22 goals in the Brazilian Championship, making him the league's top goalscorer.
In the beginning of 2006, he joined Miami FC along with former 1994 FIFA World Cup teammate Zinho. He helped Miami FC reach their first ever USL First Division Playoffs, scoring 18 league goals in 23 appearances for the team. He is due to play a four match guest stint in the Australian A-League with South Australian club Adelaide United FC.
On January 28, 2006, one day before his fortieth birthday, he scored his 950th goal. Romário has the mark of 984 league goals as of September 20th, 2006.[citation needed]
[edit] National team
As a member of the Brazilian national team, Romário won the silver Olympic medal in Seoul in 1988, scoring seven goals. He was part of the Brazilian squad in the World Cups of 1990 and 1994. He scored 55 goals in 70 international matches, being the third highest goalscorer in the history of the Brazilian team behind Pelé and Ronaldo. He was a reserve in the 1990 World Cup, playing only 66 minutes in one match, against Scotland. Brazil was eliminated in second round.
[edit] 1994 World Cup
In 1993, during Romário's successful season at Barcelona, he was called to the national team for the Copa America. During one of Brazil's matches, coach Carlos Alberto Parreira left Romário as a reserve, after which he expressed his dissatisfaction, saying he wouldn't have come over from Spain if he had known he was not going to play. These declarations caused Parreira to ban Romário from the Brazilian team.[5]
Brazil played the first seven matches of the 1994 World Cup qualification without Romário, and suffered their first loss ever in World Cup qualifying against Bolivia. journalists and fans claimed for his presence. Brazil had to beat Uruguay at the Maracana Stadium to finish first of their group. Before the match against Uruguay, Parreira gave up and called Romário. Brazil won 2-0, with Romário scoring both goals, and qualified to the World Cup.
At the World Cup finals, he partnered with Bebeto in the attack to lead his country to a record fourth World Cup title. He scored five goals in the tournament: one in each of the three first round matches, one against the Netherlands in quarterfinals, and the game-winning header against Sweden in the semifinals. He also assisted Bebeto in the only goal of the match against the United States in the eightfinals. He was voted the most outstanding player of the tournament.
[edit] The Ro-Ro attack
In the subsequent years, Romário formed, along with fellow Brazilian forward Ronaldo, a feared attacking combo, which was colloquially referred to as the Ro-Ro duo. They each scored a hat-trick in a 6-0 win against Australia in the 1997 FIFA Confederations Cup.
[edit] 1998 and 2002 World Cup absence
In a controversial decision, Romário, much to the dismay of Brazil fans and his own, was left out of the 1998 World Cup squad. Medical exams had revealed that he had a muscular injury, and he was submitted to intensive care, but he did not recover completely and was dismissed the day of the deadline for the World Cup squad submissions.[6] Brazil lost the World Cup final against hosts France.
Prior to the 2002 World Cup, Romário, aged 36, was in considerably good form for while playing for Fluminense, but once again he he was controversially left out of the national squad by coach Luiz Felipe Scolari due to indiscipline, despite general public demand for his inclusion. Brazil went on to win the tournament, beating Germany in the final.
On April 28, 2005, Romário played his last game with the Brazilian national team. He scored the second goal in Brazil's 3-0 win against Guatemala.
[edit] Honours
| Olympic medal record | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Men's Football | |||
| Silver | Seoul 1988 | Team | |
- Rio de Janeiro State Championship (1985-1999) - four times champion, seven times leading scorer
- KNVB Cup (1989, 1990) - two times champion
- Dutch League (1989, 1991, 1992) - three times champion and three times leading scorer
- Seoul Olympic Games (1988) - silver medal
- Copa America (1989-1997) - two times champion and leading scorer
- Spanish League (1994) - champion and leading scorer
- FIFA World Cup 1994 - champion and Most Valuable Player (Golden Ball) Award Winner
- Confederations Cup (1997) - champion and leading scorer
- Mercosur Cup (2000) - champion
- Brazilian Championship (2000) - champion
- FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup (2005) - 3rd place
| Preceded by: Salvatore Schillaci |
FIFA World Cup Golden Ball 1994 |
Succeeded by: Ronaldo |
| Preceded by: Roberto Baggio |
FIFA World Player of the Year 1994 |
Succeeded by: George Weah |
| Preceded by: Javier Saviola |
South American Footballer of the Year 2000 |
Succeeded by: Juan Román Riquelme |
| Preceded by: Adhemar |
Brazilian Championship Top Scorer 2001 |
Succeeded by: Luís Fabiano & Rodrigo Fabri |
| Preceded by: Washington |
Brazilian Championship Top Scorer 2005 |
Succeeded by: open |
[edit] Trivia
- He participated for Brazil at the 2005 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup.
- On Sept 3, 2006 Romário won in another sport he practices: footvolley. Romário has played footvolley for over 15 years and won the VIP Footvolley.net Open in Miami Beach, USA.
[edit] References and notes
- ^ Romário de Souza Faria - Goals in International Matches, RSSSF, May 1, 2005
- ^ 2006 season USL league top goal scorers Accessed September 14th 2006)
- ^ League goals from 1987 to 1989 and from 1992 to 2006 are taken from Romário's profile at FootballDatabase, footballdatabase.com . League goals from 1989 to 1992 (at PSV Eindhoven) are retrieved from Keep tally: 'Romario 1000', www.psv.nl - PSV, March 8, 2006
- ^ "Romario: I'm the face of Rio" - fifa.com, April 2005.
- ^ "Brazil in the 1994 World Cup" - Virtual-Brazil.com
- ^ "Brazil in the 1998 World Cup" - v-brazil.com
[edit] External links
- Player profile on sambafoot.com
- Romário - Video compilation of Romário's career thus far.
| Adelaide United FC - Current Squad |
|---|
|
1 Beltrame | 2 Alagich | 3 Rees | 4 Costanzo | 5 Valkanis | 6 Aloisi | 7 Pantelis | 8 Veart | 9 Kemp | 10 Fernando | 11 Romário | 12 Owens | 13 Dodd | 14 Goulding | 15 Burns | 16 Petta | 17 van Dommele | 18 Cornthwaite | 19 Qu | 20 Bajic | 21 Spagnuolo | 23 Giraldi | 25 Djite | Manager: Kosmina |
| Brazil squad - 1990 World Cup | ||
|---|---|---|
|
1 Taffarel | 2 Jorginho | 3 Ricardo Gomes | 4 Dunga | 5 Alemão | 6 Branco | 7 Bismarck | 8 Valdo | 9 Careca | 10 Silas | 11 Romário | 12 Acácio | 13 Mozer | 14 Aldair | 15 Müller | 16 Bebeto | 17 Renato Gaúcho | 18 Mazinho | 19 Ricardo Rocha | 20 Tita | 21 Mauro Galvão | 22 Zé Carlos | Coach: Lazaroni |
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| Brazil squad - 1994 World Cup Champions (4th Title) | ||
|---|---|---|
|
1 Taffarel | 2 Jorginho | 3 Ricardo Rocha | 4 Ronaldão | 5 Mauro Silva | 6 Branco | 7 Bebeto | 8 Dunga | 9 Zinho | 10 Raí | 11 Romário | 12 Zetti | 13 Aldair | 14 Cafu | 15 Márcio Santos | 16 Leonardo | 17 Mazinho | 18 Paulo Sérgio | 19 Müller | 20 Ronaldo | 21 Viola | 22 Gilmar | Coach: Parreira |
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