peoplepill id: djalminha
D
Brazil
1 views today
1 views this week
Djalminha
Brazilian footballer

Djalminha

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Brazilian footballer
Places
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Santos, São Paulo, Brazil
Age
54 years
Stats
Height:
176
Weight:
69
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Djalma Feitosa Dias (born 9 December 1970), known as Djalminha [diʒawˈmĩj̃ɐ], is a Brazilian retired footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.

Blessed with above-average skills but also having a troublesome character, he represented among others Flamengo and Deportivo, and was also a Brazilian international.

Club career

Brazil

Son of former footballer Djalma Dias, Djalminha (Little Djalma) was born in Santos, São Paulo, while his father was playing for Santos FC. However, he started his career at Clube de Regatas do Flamengo, based in Rio de Janeiro.

Afterwards, Djalminha would have short stints with Guarani Futebol Clube and Sociedade Esportiva Palmeiras (where he received the Bola de Ouro (Brazilian Golden Ball) award in 1996), with a short-lived Japanese adventure with Shimizu S-Pulse in between.

Deportivo

In July 1997, Djalminha joined Spanish club Deportivo de La Coruña, and proceeded to score 26 La Liga goals in 87 appearances in his first three seasons combined, largely contributing to the team's first-ever national championship conquest in 2000. After that, the emergence of Juan Carlos Valerón, signed upon Atlético Madrid's relegation, and a May 2002 bust-up during training with Depor manager Javier Irureta, prompted his loan to Austrian Football Bundesliga side FK Austria Wien in the 2002 summer.

After just 11 appearances for Deportivo in the 2003–04 campaign, Djalminha finished his career with Mexico's Club América, retiring at 34.

Indoor football

In 2008, Djalminha returned to Depor, joining its indoor football team alongside club greats Donato, Fran, Noureddine Naybet and Jacques Songo'o.

International career

The stiff competition in Brazil in Djalminha's position, combined with his somewhat difficult temperament, limited him to just 14 full international caps in six years, the vast majority coming while at Deportivo. He was part of the squad that won the 1997 Copa América.

Djalminha was due to be called to the 2002 FIFA World Cup, but was finally not chosen by Luiz Felipe Scolari after his incident with Irureta days before the announcement of the final squad, losing his place to Kaká.

Career statistics

Club

Club performanceLeagueCupContinentalTotal
SeasonClubLeagueAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
BrazilLeagueCopa do BrasilSouth AmericaTotal
1989FlamengoSérie A1000????
199011171????
199141????
199270????
199363????
Guarani196196
19943333
JapanLeagueEmperor's CupAsiaTotal
1994Shimizu S-PulseJ1 League11400114
BrazilLeagueCopa do BrasilSouth AmericaTotal
1995GuaraniSérie A116????
1996Palmeiras221275????
1997005151
SpainLeagueCopa del ReyEuropeTotal
1997–98DeportivoLa Liga26831213110
1998–9930851359
1999–00311010733913
2000–0121931933313
2001–021816082323
AustriaLeagueAustrian CupEuropeTotal
2002–03Austria WienBundesliga102????
SpainLeagueCopa del ReyEuropeTotal
2003–04DeportivoLa Liga1123010152
MexicoLeagueCupNorth AmericaTotal
Apertura 2004Club AméricaLiga MX5151
CountryBrazil78292510????
Japan1140040
Spain1373821326918550
Austria102????
Mexico5151
Total24174??????

Spain statistics according to LFP; Brazil statistics according to Futpédia

International

Brazil
YearAppsGoals
199631
199773
199800
199900
200020
200100
200221
Total145

Honours

Football

Club

  • Copa do Brasil: 1990
  • Campeonato Carioca: 1991
  • Campeonato Brasileiro Série A: 1992
  • Campeonato Paulista: 1996
  • La Liga: 1999–2000
  • Copa del Rey: 2001–02
  • Supercopa de España: 2000, 2002
  • Austrian Football Bundesliga: 2002–03

International

  • Copa América: 1997

Individual

  • Bola de Prata: 1993, 1996
  • Bola de Ouro: 1996

Indoor football

Club

  • Spanish League: 2007–08, 2009–10
  • Spanish Cup: 2007–08, 2009–10
  • Brazilian Championship: 2009

International

  • Indoor Football World Cup: 2006

Individual

  • Indoor Football World Cup MVP: 2006
  • Brazilian Championship Top Scorer: 2009
    The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
    Lists
    Djalminha is in following lists
    comments so far.
    Comments
    From our partners
    Sponsored
    Djalminha
    arrow-left arrow-right instagram whatsapp myspace quora soundcloud spotify tumblr vk website youtube pandora tunein iheart itunes