Diego Souza (footballer, born 1985)

(Redirected from Diego de Souza Andrade)

Diego de Souza Andrade (born 17 June 1985) is a retired[1] Brazilian professional footballer who played as a forward for Vasco da Gama, Grêmio, Sport Recife, and many other clubs.

Diego Souza
Souza with São Paulo in 2018
Personal information
Full nameDiego de Souza Andrade
Date of birth (1985-06-17) 17 June 1985 (age 38)
Place of birthRio de Janeiro, Brazil
Height1.86 m (6 ft 1 in)
Position(s)Forward, midfielder
Team information
Current team
Sport Recife
Youth career
2002–2003Fluminense
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
2003–2005Fluminense60(8)
2005–2007Benfica0(0)
2005–2006Flamengo (loan)35(7)
2007Grêmio (loan)64(16)
2008–2010Palmeiras130(34)
2010–2011Atlético Mineiro34(5)
2011–2012Vasco da Gama87(30)
2012Al-Ittihad5(2)
2013Cruzeiro22(7)
2013–2015Metalist Kharkiv19(1)
2014–2015Sport Recife (loan)78(21)
2016Fluminense9(4)
2016–2017Sport Recife95(36)
2018–2019São Paulo59(17)
2019Botafogo (loan)41(9)
2020–2023Grêmio155(71)
2023Sport Recife11(1)
International career
Brazil U17[citation needed]
2005Brazil U202(0)
2009–2017Brazil7(2)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals, correct as of 03:44, 10 December 2023 (UTC)
‡ National team caps and goals, correct as of 7 January 2018

In a journeyman career, he played for ten clubs in the Campeonato Brasileiro Série A, including nine of the Big Twelve, having begun at Fluminense in 2003.[2] He also played for Sport Recife, where he was Série A top scorer in 2016.[3]

Souza also had brief spells in Portugal, Saudi Arabia and Ukraine. He earned seven caps for Brazil from his debut in 2009, scoring twice.

Club career

Early career

Born in Rio de Janeiro, Souza began playing club football for Fluminense in the Campeonato Brasileiro Série A. In May 2005, he signed a five-year deal with Portugal's Benfica. That July he was loaned to Fluminense's rivals Flamengo – the club he supported as a child – until May 2006, with his wages to be split between Benfica and Flamengo.[4]

Souza was loaned for the year 2007 to Grêmio. In May that year, Benfica set a fee of €4 million (R$11 million) if the move were to be made permanent.[5] In that year's Copa Libertadores, he scored in wins over compatriots São Paulo (quarter-final) and Santos (semi-final) as his team finished runners-up.[6][7]

Palmeiras

In 2008, he moved to Palmeiras (and partner) for €3.75 million total fee.[8] He signed a contract until December 2011.[9] Co-currently, along with Lenny, Fluminense transferred its shares on both players' economic rights to Desportivo Brasil (owned by Traffic Group) as part of the deal, made Fluminense gained a profit of R$ 1,320 thousand and R$1,500 thousand respectively.[10] Both players were signed by Palmeiras as part of R$40 million partnership with Traffic, which Palmeiras only owned 10~20% of the rights of Diego.[11]

On 18 April 2009, he received a red card after an argument with Domingos during the state semi finals match against Santos. He later took Domingos down after coming back to the field.

Atlético Mineiro

On 30 June 2010, Atlético Mineiro's president Alexandre Kalil announced the signing of Souza.[12] After the transaction, the club from Belo Horizonte owned 70% of his economic rights and Traffic the rest, with the team having paid reported R$6.6 million (€2.2 million).[13]

Vasco da Gama

On 2 March 2011, Souza signed for Vasco da Gama on a four-year deal. The Rio-based club paid €1.5 million to Atlético who retained 17% of his economic rights, €500,000 to sportswear firm Penalty, and €1.2 million to Traffic.[14] He reached double figures in the national league for the first time with 11 goals, including a hat-trick on 25 September in a 3–0 win at Cruzeiro.[15] The team also won the Copa do Brasil for which he added three more, including one in each leg of a 3–1 aggregate win over Avaí.[16]

Al Ittihad and Cruzeiro

In July 2012, Souza moved back abroad to Al-Ittihad of the Saudi Professional League. He began legal action against the club in October due to unpaid wages.[17] Denied an exit visa from the Middle Eastern kingdom, he sought help from the Brazilian embassy in Riyadh in November.[18]

Cruzeiro signed Souza before the end of 2012, and the transfer was allowed to go through by the following February when FIFA denied an appeal by Al Ittihad.[19] He scored four goals as they came runners-up to his former team Atlético in the Campeonato Mineiro, including two in a 4–0 (5–0 aggregate) home win over Villa Nova in the semi-finals on 28 April.[20]

Metalist Kharkiv and Sport

Souza with Metalist Kharkiv in 2013

In July 2013, Souza moved to Metalist Kharkiv in Ukraine, for a fee of €4 million.[21]In January 2014, he wanted to return to Brazil to escape the 2014 pro-Russian unrest in Ukraine.[22]A loan deal with Sport Recife was set in September 2014.[23]

At the end of 2015, Souza signed a three-year deal to return to Fluminense after over a decade away.[24] The following 22 March however, he returned to Sport on a deal until the end of 2017.[25] He finished the 2016 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A as one of three joint top scorers with 14 goals in 34 games, equalling a club record from 1984 and becoming only the third Série A top scorer from a northeastern club – the first since Bahia's Charles Fabian in 1990.[3]

Later career

On 7 January 2018, Souza signed for São Paulo on a two-year deal for a fee of R$10 million, with the club obtaining his full economic rights.[26] Seventeen days later, he netted his first goal to open a 2–0 victory against Mirassol in the 2018 Campeonato Paulista.[27] His only national campaign with the Tricolor yielded 12 goals, putting him third in the league's top scorers behind Santos' Gabriel Barbosa and Atlético Mineiro's Ricardo Oliveira.[28]

After losing his place at São Paulo, Souza transferred on 8 March 2019 to Botafogo. This was his 10th Série A club, his 9th of the Big Twelve, and made him the 17th player to represent all four Rio-based members of the latter.[29] His first Série A goal for the club came on 2 June as the only one of a home win against city rivals and former club Vasco.[30]

Souza's contract with Botafogo expired at the start of 2020, and he moved on a free transfer to Grêmio over a decade after leaving the club from Porto Alegre.[31] In the year's Campeonato Gaúcho, he was top scorer with 9 goals in 11 games as his team won the title, including one in the 3–2 aggregate final win over Caxias in August.[32] He scored 13 times in the national league season, four times in the Copa do Brasil and twice in the Copa Libertadores, to end the year as the top scorer in Brazilian football with 28, one more than Flamengo's Gabriel Barbosa.[33]

International career

Souza was part of the Brazil U-23 side in 2007 under coach Dunga.[citation needed] He was in the winning squad of Brazil U-17 at the 2001 South American Under 17 Football Championship in Peru. He played twice in 2005 FIFA World Youth Championship.

In September 2009, Souza was called up for the first time to the senior national team, by coach Dunga for a game against Chile in 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification.[34] He made his debut against Bolivia on 11 October in another qualifier, being replaced at half time by Alex Raphael Meschini in a 2–1 loss in La Paz; it was the nation's first defeat in 16 months.[35] He did not return to the team until 28 September 2011, when he came on as a 68th-minute substitute for Lucas Moura in a 2–0 win over Argentina in the Superclásico de las Américas.[36]

Following his first two caps, Souza had to wait over five years for another opportunity in January 2017, when Tite selected him for a friendly against Colombia based on his form for Sport Recife, and he retained his place for World Cup qualifiers that year.[37] On 13 June that year he scored his first international goals in a 4–0 win over Australia at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, in the eleventh second and in added time.[38]

Career statistics

Club

As of 10 December 2023[39]
Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
ClubSeasonLeagueState LeagueCupContinentalOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Fluminense2003Série A703[a]0100
200429312430447
2005408163184
Total40320593307211
Benfica2005–06Primeira Liga0000
Flamengo (loan)2005Série A215215
2006108230122
Total2258230337
Grêmio (loan)2007Série A33816612[b]26116
Palmeiras2008Série A336195415612
200934916612[b]46219
20100015771228
Total6715501811212414039
Atlético Mineiro2010Série A2854[a]0215
2011002020
Total2852040345
Vasco da Gama2011Série A321161935[a]25217
2012931669[b]33412
Total4114227931458629
Al-Ittihad2012–13Saudi Professional League52003[c]183
Cruzeiro2013Série A611244200227
Metalist Kharkiv2013–14Ukrainian Premier League191222[d]0233
Sport Recife (loan)2014Série A1941[a]0204
201534994223[a]010[e]25817
Total53139422401057821
Fluminense2016Série A0081001[f]394
Sport Recife2016Série A3414111[a]04[e]04015
2017271163726[a]19[e]45521
Total61256383711349536
São Paulo2018Série A3212133402[a]15016
20190061002[b]081
Total321219440415817
Botafogo (loan)2019Série A29731204[a]1389
Grêmio2020Série A25131196410[b]25228
2021311087309[g]75124
2022Série B32149411004219
2023Série A008020100
Total8837362012519915571
Sport Recife2023Série B111000000111
Career total52414921175662287212513923279

International

As of 10 November 2017[40]
Appearances and goals by national team and year
National teamYearAppsGoals
Brazil200910
201000
201110
201200
201300
201400
201500
201600
201752
Total72
Scores and results list Brazil's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Diego Souza goal.
List of international goals scored by Diego Souza[40]
No.DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
113 June 2017Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne, Australia  Australia1–04–0Friendly
24–0

Honours

Fluminense

Flamengo

Grêmio

Palmeiras

Vasco da Gama

Sport

International

Individual

References

External links