Sonny Anderson

Anderson da Silva (born 19 September 1970), better known as Sonny Anderson, is a Brazilian former professional footballer who played as a striker. A prolific goalscorer at the club level, he was best known for his spells with Lyon, Monaco (he played most of his abroad career in France, amassing Ligue 1 totals of 221 matches and 138 goals) and Barcelona.

Sonny Anderson
Personal information
Full nameAnderson da Silva
Date of birth (1970-09-19) 19 September 1970 (age 53)
Place of birthGoiatuba, Brazil
Height1.81 m (5 ft 11 in)
Position(s)Striker
Youth career
1987XV de Jaú
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1988–1991Vasco da Gama42(1)
1992Guarani18(4)
1992–1994Servette52(31)
1994Marseille20(16)
1994–1997Monaco91(51)
1997–1999Barcelona47(16)
1999–2003Lyon110(71)
2003–2004Villarreal38(13)
2004–2005Al-Rayyan20(24)
2005–2006Al-Gharafa19(6)
Total457(231)
International career
1987Brazil U172(0)
1989Brazil U206(3)
1997–2001Brazil6(1)
Managerial career
2011Neuchâtel Xamax
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

He participated with Brazil in the 2001 Confederations Cup, and won a total of six caps for his country, scoring one goal.

Club career

Born in Goiatuba, Goiás, Anderson started playing professionally with CR Vasco da Gama, but failed to make an early impression. After failing to score in 18 matches in his last year, he moved to Guarani.

Anderson's first abroad experience came with Servette FC, and his impact was instant, scoring 18 goals in his first season then helping the club to the national league in the following by netting 11 in just the first half of the campaign, as he left in January 1994 to Olympique de Marseille.

After six months, with L'OM relegated due to a bribery scandal, Anderson moved to fellow Division 1 side AS Monaco FC, scoring at an equally impressive pace and winning team (1997 league) and individual accolades alike.

In 1997, Anderson joined FC Barcelona: having to battle for first-choice status with the likes of Luis Enrique and Patrick Kluivert, he fared well, scoring ten times in La Liga alone in his first season, as the Catalans won the double.[1] In his second year, which included some run-ins with manager Louis van Gaal,[2][3] he played less, which prompted a return to France with rising Olympique Lyonnais, for approximately 18 million. He would be a very important attacking figure as the team won the first two of seven consecutive national championships.

Aged 33, free agent Anderson returned to Spain with Villarreal CF.[4] In his only full campaign he scored 12 times, including against Real Madrid (1–0, after only two minutes on the pitch), former club Barcelona (2–1, in the 89th minute) and Valencia CF (1–0), while also helping the Yellow Submarine to the semifinals of the UEFA Cup.[5]

After being instrumental in Villarreal's 2004 UEFA Intertoto Cup win,[6] Anderson finished his career in Qatar. He then returned to Lyon, going on work with the team's strikers.[7]

In June 2007, Anderson played a farewell match at the Stade de Gerland, in a match facing his friends and the 2002 French champions. Four years later he rescinded his link with Lyon and started a coaching career, joining Neuchâtel Xamax in Switzerland.[8] On 24 July, after only two league games, he was sacked.[9]

International career

Anderson could not translate his club success to the international front. He only won six caps for the Brazil side, the first coming in a friendly against South Korea on 11 August 1997, in which he scored his only international goal.[10] He was also a member of the team that took part at the 2001 FIFA Confederations Cup, and obtained his final international cap that same year.

Career statistics

Club

ClubSeasonLeagueNational cupLeague cupContinentalOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Vasco1988Série A3000000030
1989Série A9000000090
1990Série A121000050171
1991Série A180000000180
total42100005000471
Guarani1992Série A18400000000184
Servette1992–93Nationalliga A35203520
1993–94Nationalliga A17114[a]22113
Total5231425633
Marseille1993–94Division 120162016
Monaco1994–95Division 1231112332716
1995–96Division 1342110212[a]13923
1996–97Division 13419003410[a]44727
Total9151228812511366
Barcelona1997–98La Liga2310505[b]14[c]03711
1998–99La Liga246106[b]43110
Total471660115406821
Lyon1999–2000Division 1322320328[d]34528
2000–01Division 12922423214[b]55031
2001–02Division 1251421205[e]33418
2002–03Division 1241200007[f]51[g]03217
Total11071838434161016194
Villarreal2003–04La Liga35120018[h]75319
2004–05La Liga31007[i]4105
Total38130025116324
Al-Rayyan2004–05Qatar Stars League2024000000002024
Al-Gharafa2005–06Qatar Stars League19600000000196
Career total4572331651612913950585289

Honours

Vasco da Gama

Servette

Monaco

Barcelona

Lyon

Villarreal

Individual

References

External links