Manuel dos Santos (footballer) explained

Manuel dos Santos
Fullname:Manuel dos Santos Fernandes
Birth Date:28 March 1974
Birth Place:Praia, Cape Verde
Height:1.72 m
Position:Left back
Youthyears1:1984–1994
Youthclubs1:Monaco
Years1:1994–1997
Years2:1997–2000
Years3:2000–2004
Years4:2004–2005
Years5:2006–2007
Years6:2007–2008
Years7:2009–2010
Clubs1:Monaco
Clubs2:Montpellier
Clubs3:Marseille
Clubs4:Benfica
Clubs5:Monaco
Clubs6:Strasbourg
Clubs7:Rapid Menton
Caps1:22
Caps2:94
Caps3:98
Caps4:24
Caps5:40
Caps6:37
Totalcaps:315
Goals1:0
Goals2:0
Goals3:1
Goals4:0
Goals5:1
Goals6:0
Totalgoals:2

Manuel dos Santos Fernandes (born 28 March 1974), known as Dos Santos, is a former professional footballer who played as a left back. Born in Cape Verde, Dos Santos represented France internationally.

Football career

Born in Praia, Cape Verde one year before the nation gained independence from Portugal, Dos Santos migrated to France at a very young age, and started his professional career at AS Monaco FC. He then played for Montpellier HSC and Olympique de Marseille, spending four Ligue 1 seasons with the latter: with L'OM, he appeared in nine complete matches in the 2003–04 UEFA Cup,[1] including the 0–2 final loss against Valencia CF[2] which would be his last match for the club.

In the summer of 2004, Portuguese Primeira Liga side S.L. Benfica bought Dos Santos for an undisclosed fee, and he signed a three-year contract.[3] The first-choice during his debut campaign, as the Lisbon-based side ended an 11-year drought in the league, he appeared rarely in the following season, and left in the January 2006 transfer window.

Dos Santos then returned to former club Monaco, where he replaced Manchester United-bound Patrice Evra after signing a -year link.[4] After 46 competitive games during this stint, a new deal was not agreed and he was released.

In July 2007, Dos Santos moved to RC Strasbourg, where he spent one year before announcing his retirement from the game in February 2009, aged 35. Shortly after, however, he signed with amateurs Rapid de Menton, close to where he had fixed his residence in Monaco.

Dos Santos returned to Monaco in 2010, going on to be in charge of its youth teams for several years.[5]

Honours

Monaco

1996–97

Montpellier

1999[6]

Marseille

Benfica

2004–05

2005

Notes and References

  1. News: Dos Santos en rémission. Dos Santos in remission. UEFA.com. French. 5 May 2004. 20 February 2015.
  2. News: Valencia 2–0 Marseille. BBC Sport. 19 May 2004. 20 February 2015.
  3. News: Benfica choisit Dos Santos. Benfica choose Dos Santos. UEFA.com. French. 17 July 2004. 20 February 2015.
  4. News: Dos Santos seals Monaco return. UEFA.com. 16 January 2006. 19 July 2011.
  5. News: Manuel Dos Santos entraîneur des U19. Manuel Dos Santos U19 manager. ASM Foot. French. 6 July 2011. 20 February 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20110711223531/http://www.asmfoot.fr/breve-13265-Centre-de-formation-Manuel-Dos-Santos-entraineur-des-U19.html. 11 July 2011. dead.
  6. Web site: Hamburg 1-1 Montpellier (Aggregate: 2 - 2p). uefa.com . https://web.archive.org/web/20040729221157/http://www.uefa.com/Competitions/IntertotoCup/AllTimeStatistics/season%3D1999/Round%3D1274/match%3D56921/index.html. 16 June 2020. 29 July 2004.