Christian (footballer, born 1975) explained

Christian
Fullname:Christian Corrêa Dionisio[1]
Birth Date:23 April 1975
Birth Place:Porto Alegre, Brazil
Height:1.86 m[2]
Position:Striker
Youthyears1:1989–1992
Youthclubs1:Internacional
Years1:1992
Years2:1992–1993
Years3:1993–1994
Years4:1994–1995
Years5:1995–1999
Years6:1999–2001
Years7:2001–2003
Years8:2002
Years9:2002–2003
Years10:2003–2004
Years11:2005
Years12:2005
Years13:2006
Years14:2006
Years15:2007
Years16:2007
Years17:2008
Years18:2008
Years19:2009
Years20:2010
Years21:2010
Years22:2011
Clubs1:Internacional
Clubs2:Marítimo
Clubs3:Estoril
Clubs4:Farense
Clubs5:Internacional
Clubs6:Paris Saint-Germain
Clubs7:Bordeaux
Clubs8:Palmeiras (loan)
Clubs9:Galatasaray (loan)
Clubs10:Grêmio (loan)
Clubs11:Omiya Ardija
Clubs12:São Paulo (loan)
Clubs13:Botafogo
Clubs14:Juventude
Clubs15:Corinthians
Clubs16:Internacional
Clubs17:Portuguesa
Clubs18:Pachuca
Clubs19:Portuguesa
Clubs20:Monte Azul
Clubs21:São Caetano
Clubs22:Pelotas
Caps2:13
Caps3:7
Caps4:30
Caps5:50
Caps6:53
Caps7:18
Caps8:19
Caps9:11
Caps10:62
Caps11:15
Caps12:20
Caps13:5
Caps14:32
Caps15:5
Caps16:19
Caps18:13
Caps19:10
Caps20:5
Caps21:3
Goals2:3
Goals3:0
Goals4:4
Goals5:38
Goals6:20
Goals7:2
Goals8:8
Goals9:3
Goals10:25
Goals11:6
Goals12:8
Goals13:1
Goals14:11
Goals15:5
Goals16:4
Goals18:3
Goals19:1
Goals20:0
Goals21:0
Nationalyears1:1997–2001
Nationalteam1:Brazil
Nationalcaps1:11
Nationalgoals1:0

Christian Corrêa Dionisio (born 23 April 1975), known simply as Christian, is a Brazilian former professional footballer who played as a striker.

Career

Born in Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Christian began his career with hometown's Sport Club Internacional, and moved at just 17 to Portuguese club C.S. Marítimo, representing another two modest teams in the country in the following two seasons but always in the Primeira Liga.

In 1996, he returned to Internacional, where his performances eventually awarded him a callup to the Brazil national team, and he was eventually part of the 1999 Copa América-winning squad – 17 minutes against Chile in the group stage (1–0 win) and ten against Argentina in the quarterfinals (2–1) –[3] eventually signing with Paris Saint-Germain F.C.

In the French capital side, however, Christian failed to perform, also being loaned to two clubs before being released in June 2003. During his two-year loan spell at Grêmio Foot-Ball Porto Alegrense the team narrowly avoided relegation to the Série B in his first year, but it befell in the following.

Subsequently, Christian represented Omiya Ardija, São Paulo FC, Botafogo de Futebol e Regatas, Esporte Clube Juventude and Sport Club Corinthians Paulista, returning to Internacional in early 2007. The following year he joined Associação Portuguesa de Desportos, then moved to Mexico's C.F. Pachuca, switching back to Portuguesa shortly after, with the club now in the second level.

Career statistics

Club

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
ClubSeasonLeague
DivisionAppsGoals
Marítimo1993–94Primeira Liga133
Estoril1994–95Primeira Liga70
Farense1995–96Primeira Liga304
Internacional1996Série A10
19972624
19982012
199932
Total5038
Paris Saint-Germain1999–2000Ligue 12916
2000–01244
Total5320
Bordeaux2001–02Ligue 1182
Palmeiras2002Série A198
Galatasaray2002–03Süper Lig113
Grêmio2003Série A2810
20043415
Total6225
Omiya Ardija2005J1 League156
São Paulo2005Série A208
Botafogo2006Série A41
Juventude2006Série A2811
Internacional2007Série A194
Portuguesa2008Série A51
Pachuca2008–09Liga MX133
Portuguesa2009Série B101
2009–10
Total101
Career total377138

International

Appearances and goals by national team and year
National teamYearAppsGoals
Brazil199720
199820
199960
200000
200110
Total110

Honours

Brazil

Individual

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: FIFA Club World Cup Japan 2008 Presented By TOYOTA — List Of Players . FIFA.com . Fédération Internationale de Football Association . 5 December 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20081209121359/http://www.fifa.com/mm/document/tournament/competition/95/12/84/fcwc2008_2008_squadlists_1205.pdf . 9 December 2008 . dead .
  2. Web site: FIFA Club World Championship Japan 2005 – Official Rosters . FIFA.com . Fédération Internationale de Football Association . 4 December 2005 . https://web.archive.org/web/20051219093824/http://www.fifa.com/documents/tournaments/cwc/CWC_2005_sl-latest.xls . 19 December 2005 . dead .
  3. https://www.rsssf.org/tables/99safull.html Copa América 1999