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Ricardo Sá Pinto
Portuguese football player/manager/director

Ricardo Sá Pinto

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Portuguese football player/manager/director
A.K.A.
Ricardo Sa Pinto
Places
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Porto, Portugal
Age
52 years
Stats
Height:
178 cm
Weight:
71 kg
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Ricardo Manuel Andrade e Silva Sá Pinto (born 10 October 1972) is a Portuguese former footballer who played as a forward, and a manager.

He was known for his fighting spirit, best displayed in his stints at Sporting, where he was dubbed "Ricardo Lion Heart" by the club's fans. In a career which was cut short by injury and suspension, he appeared in 230 Primeira Liga games (scoring 51 goals), also playing abroad in Spain for two years.

Sá Pinto appeared with the Portugal national team in two European Championships, reaching the semi-finals at Euro 2000. He started working as a manager in 2012, having spells at Sporting, Red Star, OFI, Atromitos, Belenenses, Al-Fateh, Standard Liège, Legia Warsaw and Braga.

Playing career

Club

Born in Porto, Sá Pinto made his professional debut with local S.C. Salgueiros and soon represented the Portuguese under-21s, helping the side reach the 1994 UEFA European Championship final. He first appeared in the Primeira Liga with the former on 30 August 1992, coming on as a second-half substitute in a 0–2 away loss against S.C. Farense.

In the 1994–95 season, Sá Pinto joined Sporting CP. After some solid performances he attracted the attention of La Liga's Real Sociedad, scoring in his first official game for his new club, a 3–3 home draw against Real Oviedo on 30 August 1998.

After 70 matches and six goals (only two seasons of action due to international suspension) in Spain, Sá Pinto returned to Sporting where he played six further years, troubled by many injuries, although he eventually gained team captaincy. In the 2006–07 campaign he joined fellow Portuguese international Sérgio Conceição at Standard Liège – with Jorge Costa having retired at the club in the summer – in the Belgian top level, and retired at almost 35.

International

Sá Pinto received 45 caps for Portugal, 25 with Sporting and 20 for Real Sociedad, scoring nine times. His first game was on 7 September 1994 in a 2–1 win over Northern Ireland in Belfast, in which he netted the second goal; he played at UEFA Euro 1996, equalising against Denmark (1–1) in the group stage opener, and Euro 2000. He scored six times in qualification for the latter tournament, including a hat-trick in an 8–0 demolition of Liechtenstein in Coimbra on 9 June 1999.

On 26 March 1997, Sá Pinto assaulted national team coach Artur Jorge upon hearing the news of not having been picked up for a match. The player travelled to Estádio Nacional in Lisbon where the team was practicing, and punched the manager in the face, being banned for one year from all national and international competitions.

Sá Pinto's last appearance was in the 6–0 win over Cyprus for the 2002 FIFA World Cup qualifiers, on 6 June 2001. An injury prevented him from being present at the finals.

GoalDateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition

19 June 1996Hillsborough Stadium, Sheffield, England Denmark1–11–1UEFA Euro 1996
26 September 1998Puskás Ferenc Stadium, Budapest, Hungary Hungary1–11–3Euro 2000 qualifying
36 September 1998Puskás Ferenc Stadium, Budapest, Hungary Hungary1–21–3Euro 2000 qualifying
426 March 1999Estádio D. Afonso Henriques (1965), Guimarães, Portugal Azerbaijan1–07–0Euro 2000 qualifying
59 June 1999Estádio Cidade de Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal Liechtenstein1–08–0Euro 2000 qualifying
69 June 1999Estádio Cidade de Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal Liechtenstein3–08–0Euro 2000 qualifying
79 June 1999Estádio Cidade de Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal Liechtenstein4–08–0Euro 2000 qualifying
823 February 2000Stade du Pays de Charleroi, Charleroi, Belgium Belgium1–11–1Friendly
92 June 2000Estádio Municipal de Chaves, Chaves, Portugal Wales2–03–0Friendly
103 September 2000Kadrioru Stadium, Tallinn, Estonia Estonia0–31–32002 World Cup qualification

Coaching career

In early November 2009, Sá Pinto returned to Sporting, replacing former teammate Pedro Barbosa as director of football as coach Paulo Bento was sacked following a string of poor performances/results. On 21 January 2010, following a physical confrontation with club player Liédson in the team's locker room after the 4–3 home win against C.D. Mafra for the Taça de Portugal, he immediately presented his resignation.

Sá Pinto had his first coaching experience in 2010, being named assistant manager at U.D. Leiria under Pedro Caixinha. On 13 February 2012, after a spell with Sporting's under-19, he was appointed first-team manager, replacing fired Domingos Paciência.

On 25 May 2012, even though Sporting could only rank fourth in the league and lost the domestic cup final, Sá Pinto signed a new two-year contract with the Lions. On 4 October, however, following a 0–3 away loss against Videoton FC – led by former national teammate Paulo Sousa – in that season's UEFA Europa League, he was relieved of his duties.

Sá Pinto was appointed at Serbian giants Red Star Belgrade on 18 March 2013, winning the first eight SuperLiga matches in charge of the club but resigning his post on 19 June, in disagreement with its board of directors. From October 2013 to February 2015 he worked in the Superleague Greece with OFI Crete F.C. and Atromitos FC.

Sá Pinto returned to Portugal and its capital in June 2015, after agreeing to become C.F. Os Belenenses manager in replacement of Lito Vidigal whilst signing a two-year contract. On 15 December, however, after a 3–4 away loss against Académica de Coimbra and failure to qualify from the Europa League group stage, he resigned from his position.

On 29 May 2016, Sá Pinto was appointed manager of Al-Fateh SC. On 11 June 2017, after a second spell with Atromitos and even though he had agreed to a new deal after an eighth-place finish, he left for Standard Liège; in spite of initially underperforming in the Belgian League, he led his team to the conquest of the domestic cup in his first year as well as a final runner-up league position, but left on 20 May 2018.

In August 2018, Sá Pinto was announced as the new manager of Legia Warsaw after signing a three-year contract with the Ekstraklasa club. He was sacked the following April with the team in second, five points off Lechia Gdańsk with three games remaining.

On 3 July 2019, Sá Pinto returned to his country for the first time in four years, taking over S.C. Braga on a two-year contract. He was dismissed on 23 December with the team eighth in the league, despite winning their Europa League group.

Managerial statistics

As of match played 22 December 2019
TeamNatFromToRecord
GWDLGFGAGDWin %
Sporting13 February 20124 October 20123015784131+10050.00
Red Star19 March 201319 June 201311803179+8072.73
OFI16 October 201325 May 201434157123539−4044.12
Atromitos25 September 20145 February 2015195952020+0026.32
Belenenses9 June 201515 December 20152688102542−17030.77
Al-Fateh29 May 201623 September 2016511359−4020.00
Atromitos5 February 201711 June 2017135261112−1038.46
Standard Liège11 June 201720 May 2018462214107856+22047.83
Legia Warsaw13 August 20181 April 20192815764229+13053.57
Braga3 July 201923 December 20193018575536+19060.00
Total2421126070329283+46046.28

Honours

Player

Club

Sporting

  • Primeira Liga: 2001–02
  • Taça de Portugal: 1994–95, 2001–02
  • Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira: 2000
  • UEFA Cup: Runner-up 2004–05

International

Portugal U-21

  • UEFA European Under-21 Championship: Runner-up 1994

Manager

Sporting

  • Taça de Portugal: Runner-up 2011–12

Standard Liège

  • Belgian Cup: 2017–18
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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