Vítor Silva Explained

Vítor Silva
Fullname:Vítor Marcolino da Silva
Birth Date:20 February 1909
Birth Place:Lisbon, Portugal
Position:Forward
Youthyears1:1921–1924
Youthclubs1:CIF
Years1:1926–1927
Clubs1:Carcavelinhos
Years2:1927–1936
Clubs2:Benfica
Caps2:79
Goals2:62
Nationalyears1:1928–1936
Nationalteam1:Portugal
Nationalcaps1:19
Nationalgoals1:8

Vítor Marcolino da Silva (20 February 1909 – 21 July 1982) was a Portuguese footballer. Listed by Benfica, as one of the club's best forwards in history, Silva represented the club on 131 official games, scoring 108 goals.[1]

Club career

Born in Lisbon, Silva represented Club Internacional de Foot-ball in his early teens, but as club stopped competing; he moved to Hóquei CP, and later Carcavelinhos. In 1927, Benfica made his first paid transfer, when they paid for Silva move. He made his debut on 8 April 1928 in a loss against Sporting.[2]

First deployed as an outside forward, he was quickly moved to the center, where his goalscoring abilities made him famous, using the flying header as trademark. Over the next seasons, he won three Campeonato de Portugal, the club first Primeira Liga, assuming captain armband from 1931 to 1934. He retired at only 27 years old, due to a thrombophlebitis, with a match in his honor on 13 September 1937 against Sporting.

Silva returned to his day job of coachtrimmer, also collaborating with Benfica football section for many years.

International career

Silva had 19 caps for Portugal, scoring 8 goals. His first cap came at only 18, on 8 January 1928 in a 2–2 draw with Spain in Lisbon. The highlight of his international career was his presence at the 1928 Football Olympic Tournament,[3] where he played in all the three matches, scoring three goals, one in each of them and being the top scorer for Portugal, who was eliminated at the quarter-finals by Egypt, due to a 1–2 loss. He represented the national team for the last time in a 1–3 loss to Germany in Lisbon on 27 February 1936, in a friendly game.[4]

International goals

[5]

No. Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition
1. 15 April 1928 align=center 3–1 4–1 Friendly
2. 27 May 1928 align=center 1–2 4–2 Football at the 1928 Summer Olympics
3. 29 May 1928 align=center 1–0 2–1
4. 4 June 1928 align=center 1–2 1–2
5. 1 December 1929 align=center 1–1 1–6 Friendly
6. 31 May 1931 align=center 2–2 3–2
7. 18 March 1934 align=center 1–0 1–2 1934 World Cup Qualification
8. 27 February 1936 align=center 1–3 1–3 Friendly

Honours

Benfica[6]

1935–36

1929–30, 1930–31, 1934–35

1932–33

References

General

Specific

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Avançados. 5 February 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304114136/http://www.slbenfica.pt/SLB/Historia/GrandesJogadores/Avancados/tabid/309/mid/1456/dnnprintmode/true/language/pt-PT/Default.aspx?SkinSrc=. 4 March 2016. slbenfica.pt. pt. dead.
  2. Book: João Malheiro. Memorial Benfica 100 Glórias. July 2006. Benfica Memorial, 100 glories. QuidNovi. 978-972-8998-26-4. 150–151. Third. pt.
  3. Web site: Vítor Silva . Olympedia . 13 September 2021.
  4. Web site: Vitor Silva. eu-football.info. 5 February 2018.
  5. Web site: Portugal national football team results .
  6. May 2015. Bicampeões para a história. Back-to-back champions for the ages. pt. Visão. Portugal. Impresa Publishing. 39. 0872-3540.