Artur Duarte de Oliveira

Artur
Personal information
Full name Artur Duarte de Oliveira
Date of birth (1969-12-27) 27 December 1969
Place of birth Rio Branco, Brazil
Height 1.74 m (5 ft 9 in)
Playing position Forward
Club information
Current team
Rio Branco-AC (coach)
Youth career
Juventus-AC
Rio Branco-AC
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1989–1990 Rio Branco-AC
1991 Independência
1991–1992 Remo
1992–1996 Boavista 119 (47)
1996–1999 Porto 64 (11)
1999–2001 Vitória 22 (9)
2001 Botafogo 11 (3)
2002–2003 Figueirense
2004 Remo
Teams managed
2007 Rio Branco
2007 Remo
2008 Ananindeua
2008 Remo
2008 Castanhal
2009 São Raimundo-PA
2010 Cametá
2011 Atlético-AC
2011 Galvez
2012 Galvez
2013 Rio Branco-AC
2015 Galvez
2016– Rio Branco-AC

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.


Artur Duarte de Oliveira (born 27 December 1969), simply known as Artur, is a Brazilian retired footballer who played as a forward, and a current manager.

Playing career

Born in Rio Branco, Acre, Artur spent the vast majority of his career in Portugal after starting out professionally at Clube do Remo. He signed in 1992 with Boavista FC, scoring 13 times in 25 games in his first season to help his team to the fourth place.

In the 1996 summer, after 29 league goals in his last two years combined, Artur moved to Porto neighbours FC Porto, going on to win six major titles during his three-year spell, including three Primeira Liga championships in a row. On 18 September 1996 he was one of five players to find the net in a 5–0 away win against S.L. Benfica, with the domestic Supercup being conquered 6–0 on aggregate.

Artur returned to his homeland in early 1999, going on to make his Série A debuts at nearly 30 with Esporte Clube Vitória. He retired five years later, with his first club Remo.[1]

Managerial career

Artur started working as a manager in 2007, with Rio Branco Football Club, to where he returned six years after on 20 August.[2] He was sacked only one month later.[3]

Honours

Player

Vitória
Figueirense
Remo
Boavista
Porto

Manager

Rio Branco
Remo
São Raimundo-PA

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/6/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.