Bruno Pereirinha

Bruno Alexandre Marques Pereirinha (born 2 March 1988) is a Portuguese former footballer. He played mainly as a right midfielder, also being able to operate as an attacking right-back.

Bruno Pereirinha
Personal information
Full nameBruno Alexandre Marques Pereirinha[1]
Date of birth (1988-03-02) 2 March 1988 (age 36)[1]
Place of birthRio de Mouro, Portugal[1]
Height1.74 m (5 ft 9 in)[1]
Position(s)Midfielder
Youth career
1995–2003Belenenses
2003–2006Sporting CP
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
2006–2013Sporting CP86(2)
2006Olivais Moscavide (loan)9(0)
2010Vitória Guimarães (loan)10(1)
2011Kavala (loan)13(0)
2012–2013Sporting CP B3(0)
2013–2015Lazio22(0)
2015–2017Athletico Paranaense7(1)
2017–2018Belenenses16(0)
2018–2019Cova Piedade15(0)
Total181(4)
International career
2006–2007Portugal U1916(0)
2007Portugal U207(1)
2007–2010Portugal U2123(0)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

He spent most of his professional career with Sporting CP, appearing in 145 official matches over five seasons (six goals scored) and winning three major titles, including two Taça de Portugal. Abroad, he had spells at Lazio in Italy and Athletico Paranaense of Brazil.

All youth levels comprised, Pereirinha won 53 caps for Portugal, including 23 for the under-21s.

Club career

Sporting CP

Born in Rio de Mouro, Lisbon District, Pereirinha made his professional debut for Sporting CP in 2006–07,[2] having started that same season on loan at Segunda Liga team C.D. Olivais e Moscavide,[3] as Miguel Veloso before him. His first appearance for the main squad came on 13 January 2007, playing 18 minutes of a 0–0 away draw with C.F. Os Belenenses, the club where he spent most of his youth career.[4]

On 13 March 2008, in the campaign's UEFA Cup round-of-16 second leg against Bolton Wanderers, Pereirinha scored an 85th-minute goal that gave Sporting a 1–0 home win and a spot in the quarter-finals.[5] He had also netted in the previous round, in the 3–0 away victory over FC Basel.[6]

Pereirinha continued to be regularly used the following years, but almost exclusively from the bench. On 21 March 2009, in a rare start, he opened the score against Lisbon neighbours S.L. Benfica in the final of the Taça da Liga, but the Lions eventually lost on penalties after 1–1 in regulation time.[7]

On 22 June 2010, being deemed surplus to requirements at Sporting, the 22-year-old Pereirinha was loaned to fellow Primeira Liga side Vitória de Guimarães, initially in a season-long move. In early January 2011, however, he joined Kavala F.C. of the Super League Greece also on loan.[8]

Lazio

In 2012–13, Pereirinha was completely ostracised by all four Sporting managers – as several other Portuguese players – also being demoted to the B team in division two and dealing with a right knee injury.[9] Subsequently, he cut ties with the club and signed shortly after with SS Lazio in Italy for three and a half years.[10]

Pereirinha left the Romans on 15 July 2015, after buying out his contract.[11]

Atlético Paranaense

On 15 July 2015, Pereirinha signed a two-year deal with Club Athletico Paranaense.[12] He made his debut ten days later, as a 76th-minute substitute for Eduardo in a 2–1 Série A win at Avaí FC. On 15 October, after only one minute on the pitch, he scored his first goal for his new team to put them back ahead in an eventual 2–2 draw against Cruzeiro Esporte Clube at the Arena da Baixada.[13]

Return to Portugal

In July 2017, Pereirinha returned to his country's top flight with a one-year contract at C.F. Os Belenenses, managed by Domingos Paciência, his last boss at Sporting.[14] He played about half of their league games, split equally as a starter and substitute, and was sent off in the first half of the last one, a 1–0 loss at Boavista FC.[15]

Having started the 2018–19 season without a club, Pereirinha was signed in September by C.D. Cova da Piedade of the second tier.[16]

International career

In 2007, aged 19, Pereirinha broke into the Portugal under-21 side, also representing the nation in the 2007 FIFA U-20 World Cup held in Canada.[17][18][19] On 25 March 2009 he, alongside teammate Rui Pedro, was suspended by under-21 coach Carlos Queiroz after both attempted an unsuccessful backpass penalty during a match against Cape Verde in the Madeira International Tournament (the score was then at 2–0 for the hosts).[20]

Personal life

Pererinha's father, Joaquim, was also a footballer. A defender, he represented among others Benfica and S.C. Farense.[21][22]

Career statistics

As of 31 August 2015
ClubSeasonLeagueCupContinentalTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Sporting CP2005–06[23]Primeira Liga00000000
2006–07[23]Primeira Liga11140151
2007–08[23]Primeira Liga220609[a]2372
2008–09[23]Primeira Liga251418[a]0392
2009–10[23]Primeira Liga170517[a]0291
2011–12[23]Primeira Liga1106010[b]0270
2012–13[23]Primeira Liga00000000
Total8622523421456
Olivais Moscavide (loan)2006–07[23]Segunda Liga9010100
Vitória Guimarães (loan)2010–11[23]Primeira Liga10110111
Kavala (loan)2010–11[24]Super League Greece13000130
Lazio2012–13[24]Serie A80003[b]0110
2013–14[24]Serie A11000110
2014–15[24]Serie A302050
Total2202030270
Athletico Paranaense2015[24]Série A20000020
Career total14232903722085

Honours

Sporting CP

Lazio

Athletico Paranaense

References

External links