Bruno Fernandes (footballer, born 1974) explained

Bruno
Full Name:Bruno Marcelo Pereira Fernandes[1]
Birth Date:30 June 1974
Birth Place:Funchal, Portugal
Height:1.750NaN0
Position:Midfielder
Youthyears1:1986–1989
Youthyears2:1989–1993
Youthclubs1:União Madeira
Youthclubs2:Marítimo
Years1:1993–2002
Years2:1993–1994
Years3:1995–1997
Years4:2002–2004
Years5:2003
Years6:2003–2004
Years7:2004–2007
Years8:2007–2010
Years9:2011–2013
Years10:2015–2017
Clubs2:Camacha (loan)
Clubs3:Machico (loan)
Clubs5:Marítimo (loan)
Clubs6:Moreirense (loan)
Clubs8:Marítimo
Clubs9:União Madeira
Clubs10:Bairro Argentina
Caps1:107
Caps2:13
Caps3:57
Caps4:1
Caps5:7
Caps6:17
Caps7:83
Caps8:68
Caps9:57
Caps10:21
Totalcaps:431
Goals1:4
Goals2:0
Goals3:4
Goals4:0
Goals5:0
Goals6:0
Goals7:7
Goals8:10
Goals9:8
Goals10:8
Totalgoals:41

Bruno Marcelo Pereira Fernandes (born 30 June 1974), known simply as Bruno, is a Portuguese former professional footballer who played as a central midfielder.

In a 24-year senior career, he played for two clubs in his native region, Marítimo and Nacional, also representing Porto albeit with no success. He amassed Primeira Liga totals of 283 games and 21 goals.

Club career

A graduate of local C.S. Marítimo's youth academy, Bruno was born in Funchal, and he made his debut with the first team in 1993 at the age of 19, but was soon loaned to Madeira neighbours A.D. Camacha. In the following seasons he worked his way into his hometown club's starting XI, and soon became a fan favourite in the role of playmaker; his goal against Leeds United in the 2001–02 UEFA Cup, a thundering 45-yard free kick, enabled for a 1–0 victory against the English (who eventually won 3–1 on aggregate).[2] [3]

Subsequently, many top European clubs became interested in Bruno, as he earned a trial with Premier League's Newcastle United which eventually fell through,[4] [5] and he stayed in Portugal, joining Primeira Liga side FC Porto on a three-year contract in April 2002.[6] However, the dream move proved to be a nightmare[7] and he was loaned out to Marítimo during the second part of the season[8] and to Moreirense F.C. for the entire following campaign,[9] before signing for Marítimo neighbours C.D. Nacional in 2004–05.[10]

After three seasons – in his first, he scored in a 4–2 away win over Sporting CP on 22 May 2005[11] – which included two more UEFA Cup participations that brought first-round exits against Sevilla FC[12] [13] and FC Rapid București,[14] Bruno re-signed for a third spell with boyhood club Marítimo, on a free transfer.[15] After having contributed 18 matches and two goals to a sixth-place finish in 2009–10, thus returning to the Europa League, the 36-year-old retired.

In the 2011 off-season, after one year out of football, Bruno returned to active with another side in Madeira, C.F. União.[16] He only missed seven league matches during the season, as the team finally retained their Segunda Liga status.

Honours

Porto

2002–03

2002–03[17]

2002–03[18]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bruno. Mais Futebol. pt. 4 February 2022.
  2. Web site: Leeds fall to freak strike. BBC Sport. 20 September 2001. 24 February 2010.
  3. Web site: Leeds maul Maritimo. BBC Sport. 28 September 2001. 4 February 2022.
  4. Web site: Newcastle e Marítimo negoceiam Bruno. Newcastle and Marítimo in negotiations for Bruno. TVI 24. 23 June 2000. 4 February 2022.
  5. Web site: Bruno por confirmar no Newcastle. Bruno still not confirmed at Newcastle. TVI 24. 20 July 2000. 4 February 2022.
  6. Web site: Porto strengthen with Bruno. UEFA. 16 April 2002. 26 May 2010.
  7. Web site: "Só três jogos no FC Porto? Os meus colegas eram melhores". "Only three matches at FC Porto? My teammates were better". Mais Futebol. Roberta. Vieira. pt. 29 March 2019. 4 February 2022.
  8. Web site: Transfers: 6–12 January. UEFA. 12 January 2003. 26 May 2010.
  9. Web site: Moreirense: Bruno em campo na derrota caseira com o Maia (2–4). Moreirense: Bruno took the field in home loss to Maia (2–4). Mais Futebol. Carlos Manuel. Freitas. pt. 27 December 2003. 4 February 2022.
  10. Web site: Bruno: "Marítimo-Nacional é duro, até iam agredindo a minha filha". Bruno: "Marítimo-Nacional is a tough one, they nearly assaulted my daughter". Mais Futebol. Roberta. Vieira. pt. 29 March 2019. 4 February 2022.
  11. News: Sporting em depressão. Depressing Sporting. Público. Marco. Vaza. pt. 23 May 2005. 13 November 2017.
  12. News: Nacional-Sevilha, 1–2: Aposta certa no ataque feita demasiado tarde. Nacional-Sevilla, 1–2: Right attacking bet was made but only too late. Record. pt. 1 October 2004. 4 February 2022.
  13. News: El Sevilla nunca cayó en Europa tras obtener dos goles de renta en la ida. Sevilla have never fallen in Europe after two-goal advantage in first leg. La Vanguardia. es. 25 April 2014. 4 February 2022.
  14. Web site: Nacional-Rapid de Bucareste, 1–2 a.p. (crónica). Nacional-Rapid Bucharest, 1–2 a.e.t. (match report). Mais Futebol. João Manuel. Fernandes. pt. 28 September 2006. 4 February 2022.
  15. Web site: Bruno e Luís Olim confirmados. Bruno and Luís Olim confirmed. C.S. Marítimo. pt. 2007. 17 July 2009.
  16. News: Veteranos Bruno e Ávalos reforçam União da Madeira. Veterans Bruno and Ávalos strengthen União da Madeira. Diário de Notícias. pt. 29 June 2011. 22 April 2014. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20140219064201/http://www.dnoticias.pt/actualidade/desporto/271370-veteranos-bruno-e-avalos-reforcam-uniao-da-madeira. 19 February 2014.
  17. News: FC Porto-Trofense, 2–0: Ser sério e ganhar cedo em dia de falhar golos. FC Porto-Trofense, 2–0: Serious display and early win on day of missed goals. Record. pt. 25 November 2002. 15 November 2017.
  18. News: Polonia-FC Porto, 2–0 (Lukasiewicz, 67, Kus 80). Record. pt. 3 October 2002. 29 May 2017.