André Pinto (footballer, born 1978) explained

André Pinto
Fullname:André Candançam Pinto
Birth Date:14 December 1978
Birth Place:São Paulo, Brazil
Position:Striker
Years1:1997–2001
Years2:2001–2002
Years3:2002
Years4:2003–2006
Years5:2003–2004
Years6:2006–2007
Years7:2008–2010
Years8:2009–2010
Years9:2010
Clubs5:Santa Clara (loan)
Clubs8:Paços Ferreira (loan)
Clubs9:São José
Caps3:7
Caps4:59
Caps5:30
Caps6:42
Caps7:4
Caps8:7
Goals3:0
Goals4:21
Goals5:15
Goals6:18
Goals7:0
Goals8:2

André Candançam Pinto (born 14 December 1978) is a Brazilian retired professional footballer who played as a striker.

Club career

In his country, São Paulo-born Pinto played for Associação Atlética Flamengo, Esporte Clube XV de Novembro (Piracicaba) and Associação Atlética Portuguesa (RJ). In January 2003 he moved to Portugal and joined C.D. Nacional, appearing in only ten Primeira Liga matches over his first two seasons and also being loaned to C.D. Santa Clara in the Segunda Liga;[1] he made his debut in the former competition on 2 February 2003, scoring in a local derby against C.S. Marítimo, a 3–2 away win.[2]

Pinto returned to Madeira for a further two seasons with Nacional, netting 14 times in 30 games in his second as the club qualified for the second time in its history to the UEFA Cup, after finishing fifth. Highlights included braces against Académica de Coimbra (2–2 home draw),[3] Boavista FC (3–0 away win),[4] Vitória de Setúbal (2–2, home)[5] and C.F. Os Belenenses (4–0, at home).[6]

Subsequently, Pinto spent two years in Japan with Kyoto Sanga FC,[7] scoring only three goals in his first season, which ended in relegation from the J1 League. On 31 January 2008, he returned to Portugal and signed for Marítimo as a replacement for S.L. Benfica-bound Ariza Makukula,[8] but the following two campaigns in the country, with that side and F.C. Paços de Ferreira,[9] yielded only a total of 11 appearances and two goals.

In 2010, Pinto returned to his homeland after nearly eight years, joining amateurs São José Esporte Clube.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Nacional: proposta ainda baixa por Adriano. Nacional: offer for Adriano still low. Mais Futebol. João Manuel. Fernandes. Portuguese. 8 July 2004. 25 October 2022.
  2. Web site: Marítimo-Nacional, 2–3 (crónica). Marítimo-Nacional, 2–3 (report). TVI 24. João Manuel. Fernandes. Portuguese. 2 February 2003. 27 May 2019.
  3. News: Nacional-Académica, 2–2: Domínio repartido. Nacional-Académica, 2–2: Shared domination. Record. Portuguese. 29 August 2005. 27 May 2019.
  4. News: Nacional esmaga Boavista no Bessa. Nacional crush Boavista at the Bessa. Correio da Manhã. Portuguese. 23 December 2005. 27 May 2019.
  5. News: Nacional-V. Setúbal, 2–2 (André Pinto 70, 84; Franja [g.p.] 35, Lacombe 90 +1)]. Nacional-V. Setúbal, 2–2 (André Pinto 70, 84; Franja [p.k.] 35, Lacombe 90 +1). Record. Portuguese. 6 January 2006. 27 May 2019.
  6. News: Nacional goleia Belenenses (4–0). Nacional rout Belenenses (4–0). Público. Portuguese. 7 April 2006. 27 May 2019.
  7. Web site: André Pinto (ex-Nacional) assina pelo Kyoto Purple Sanga. André Pinto (formerly of Nacional) signs for Kyoto Purple Sanga. Mais Futebol. Portuguese. 20 May 2006. 27 May 2019.
  8. Web site: André Pinto reforça ataque do Marítimo. André Pinto bolsters Marítimo offence. Mais Futebol. João Manuel. Fernandes. Portuguese. 31 January 2008. 27 May 2019.
  9. Web site: P. Ferreira: André Pinto e Edson de volta para a deslocação a Braga. P. Ferreira: André Pinto and Edson return for trip to Braga. Mais Futebol. Portuguese. 31 January 2009. 27 May 2019.