Derlei

Not to be confused with Derley.
This name uses Portuguese naming customs. The first or maternal family name is Fernandes and the second or paternal family name is Silva.
Derlei

Derlei in 2005
Personal information
Full name Vanderlei Fernandes Silva
Date of birth (1975-07-14) 14 July 1975
Place of birth São Bernardo do Campo, Brazil
Height 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)
Playing position Striker
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1994–1997 América-RN 56 (21)
1997–1998 Guarani 25 (7)
1999 Madureira 14 (4)
1999–2002 União Leiria 91 (42)
2002–2005 Porto 57 (19)
2005–2007 Dynamo Moscow 41 (20)
2007Benfica (loan) 12 (1)
2007–2009 Sporting CP 27 (8)
2009–2010 Vitória 1 (1)
2010 Madureira 3 (1)
Total 327 (124)

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


Vanderlei Fernandes Silva (born 14 July 1975), known as Derlei, is a retired Brazilian footballer who played as a striker.

He spent most of his 16-year professional career in Portugal (one full decade), having represented all three most important clubs in the country and amassing top division totals of 187 games and 70 goals.

With Porto Derlei won eight major titles, including two leagues, one Champions League and one UEFA Cup.

Club career

Born in São Bernardo do Campo, São Paulo, Derlei started playing in the lower levels of football in Brazil, but joined Portugal's U.D. Leiria in 1999, going on to appear in 91 top division games with the club and score 42 goals. In his last season, as Leiria overachieved for a final seventh place led by young manager José Mourinho, he netted 21 times.[1]

Derlei joined FC Porto in the summer of 2002, playing an important part in a successful squad that was also managed by Mourinho. He was one of the top scorers in a side that conquered the UEFA Cup and UEFA Champions League in consecutive seasons – he scored twice in the 2003 UEFA Cup final against Celtic (adding another brace in the 4–1 semifinal win over S.S. Lazio[2]) – being nicknamed "Ninja" while playing for the northern side; the following campaign, as he was leading the domestic goalscoring chart, he suffered a severe knee injury. He came back from his injury to score the decisive goal from the penalty spot in the 2003-2004 UEFA Champions League semi-final second leg vs Deportivo La Coruna, which Porto won 1-0 on aggregate, and saw them through to the Champions League final. In the final vs Monaco, Derlei was a starting attacker in the 3-0 win which saw FC Porto win their 2cnd UEFA Champions League title. In December 2004, in one of his last ever games for Porto, Derlei started in their penalty kicks triumph over Once Caldes to be crowned World Champion in the very last Intercontinental Cup, which would morph into the expanded FIFA World Club Cup the following year.

In January 2005, after disciplinary problems related to his lateness in arriving from the winter break, Derlei was sold to FC Dynamo Moscow for 7 million,[3] being granted Portuguese citizenship shortly thereafter. After two years of Russian football where he was always one of the top five best goalscorers, Derlei joined S.L. Benfica on loan in January 2007;[4] on 2 February he played his first league match for the Eagles, a 0–0 home draw against Boavista FC.

In June 2007 Derlei left Benfica for Lisbon rivals Sporting Clube de Portugal, signing a contract until 2009 after being freed from his two-year contract with Dynamo Moscow – he was, therefore, one of the few players to have represented the Big Three of Portugal. He would, however, spend most of 2007–08 on the sidelines, with another serious knee injury.[5]

Derlei made a comeback to competition when, on 16 April 2008, he entered the field for Leandro Romagnoli in the 61st minute during the semi-final of the Portuguese Cup against previous team Benfica, managing to score only 18 minutes later to make it 3–2 to Sporting, in a match which eventually ended with a 5–3 win as the Lions went on to win the tournament against another former club of the player, Porto.

In his second season Derlei fought with Hélder Postiga for a chance to play alongside Liédson, and scored some goals, including an important one in a 1–0 home triumph over FC Shakhtar Donetsk in the Champions League, which sealed Sporting's group stage qualification on 4 November 2008.[6] At the end of the campaign he refused to accept the club's offer to renew the link, on the grounds the figures offered were not convincing, thus being made a free agent.

After some consideration, 34-year-old Derlei joined Esporte Clube Vitória on 27 August 2009, in a one-year deal. He made his club debut on 13 September in a match against league leader Sociedade Esportiva Palmeiras: having taken the pitch in the second half, he scored the 3–2 winner. Shortly after he switched to modest Madureira Esporte Clube, returning to a team he had represented more than one decade ago.

Club statistics

[7]

Club Season League Cup League Cup Europe Total
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
União Leiria 1999–00 268 268
2000–01 32133213
2001–02 3321103421
Total 9142109242
Porto 2002–03 2671113124020
2003–04 181211832716
2004–05 1300050180
Total 57192226158536
Dynamo Moscow 2005 1813001813
2006 1511201511
Total 3324203324
Benfica 2006–07 1210040161
Total 1210040161
Sporting 2007–08 4121000062
2008–09 205001272289
Total 2462112723411
Career total 2189273123717266114

Honours

Club

Porto
Sporting

Individual

References

  1. Derlei puts Porto first; UEFA.com, 16 September 2003
  2. Porto stun lacklustre Lazio; UEFA.com, 11 April 2003
  3. Derlei leads Dynamo influx; UEFA.com, 10 January 2005
  4. Benfica seal Derlei and Fernandes deals; UEFA.com, 29 January 2007
  5. Dire outcome for Sporting's Derlei; UEFA.com, 9 September 2007
  6. Derlei sparks Sporting celebrations; UEFA.com, 4 November 2008
  7. "Derlei". Footballdatabase. Retrieved 11 June 2015.
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