Wilson Francisco Alves

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Wilson
Personal information
Full name Wilson Francisco Alves
Date of birth (1927-12-21)21 December 1927
Place of birth Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Date of death Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Place of death São Paulo, Brazil
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1943-1952 Vasco da Gama
1953-1954 Portuguesa
1955-1957 Santos
International career
1949 Brazil
Managerial career
1963-1966 São Bento
1966-1967 Portuguesa
1968 Guarani
1968-1969 América-SP
1970-1971 São Bento
1971 Paulista
1972 América-SP
1973 Noroeste
1975 Marília
1975 Comercial-MS
1976-1977 Noroeste
1977-1978 Grêmio Maringá
1978 Comercial-MS
1979 América-SP
1979-1980 Marília
1981 São Bento
1981 Taubaté
1982 Grêmio Maringá
1982 América-SP
1985 Volta Redonda
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Wilson Francisco Alves - also known as Wilson only - (21 December 1927, Rio de Janeiro – 12 July 1998, São Paulo) was a Brazilian football player and manager. The defender had his greatest successes with CR Vasco da Gama in the 1940s and 1950s, a club then known as Expresso da Vitória. With the Brazilian national team he won a South American Championship. A highlight of his coaching years was the winning of a State Championship of Paraná.

Career

Wilson started to play at the age of 16 with the local club EC São José in Rio de Janeiro. From 1943 to 1952 he was part of CR Vasco da Gama, where he won five State Championships of Rio de Janeiro. The highlight of this period was the victory in the South American Championship of Champions 1948 in Chile, the predecessor of today's Copa Libertadores. From the decisive match of the tournament against Argentina's Champions CA River Plate it is reported that he marked the young Alfredo Di Stéfano "to perfection".[1] Other notable players of Vasco in this era, remembered as o Expresso da Vitória ("the Victory Express") and managed initially by Ondino Viera and from 1947 by Flávio Costa, were amongst others the captain Augusto, goalkeeper Moacyr Barbosa and the attackers Jair da Rosa Pinto, Ademir Menezes and Chico.

Wilson was a core player of the Brazilian team that won the South American Football Championship of 1949. Altogether he played five times for his country, all matches in the successful tournament. Wilson finished his career as player until 1957 with Portuguesa and Santos FC where he won twice the São Paulo State Championship, generally known as Campeonato Paulista.

Wilson, frequently called Capão after Morro do Capão in Rio where he was born, then started a career as coach. In 1966 and 1967 he led Portuguesa through the matches of the Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa, precursor to the national championship competition.

Between 1977 and 1982 he managed the campaigns of Grêmio Maringá, EC Comercial from Campo Grande (MS) and América FC from São José do Rio Preto (SP) in the national championships.

But on most occasions he coached small to midsize teams in small to midsize towns. in 1961 he took A. Prudentina EA from Presidente Prudente for the first time to the first division of the São Paulo state league. With Grêmio Maringá he won in 1977 the State Championship of Paraná, prevailing against the Coritiba Foot Ball Club in the finals with results of 1-0 and 1-1. With EC São Bento from Sorocaba (SP) he won the championships of the interior of the years 1964 and 1965 and in 1981 he defeated the national team od Saudi Arabia 1-0.[2] Beyond this he coached numerous other clubs of the interior. Thee football-magazine Placar named him in 1975 in an article devoted to him the "best paid coach of the interior" and described him as rather focussing on friendship amongst the players, rather than "complicated tactics".

Wilson Francisco Alves, the Capão, died on 12 July 1998 at the age of 70 - the same day, when Brazil lost the final of the World Cup in France.

Honours

As player

National Team
Clubs

As coach

Clubs

References

  1. Campeonato Sul-Americano de Campeões 1948 Vasco.Net
  2. Jogo Histórico: EC São Bento 1 X 0 Arábia Saudita, História do Futebol-Final

External links