João Resende Alves

João Alves
Personal information
Full name João António Ferreira Resende Alves
Date of birth (1952-12-05) 5 December 1952
Place of birth Albergaria-a-Velha, Portugal
Height 1.74 m (5 ft 9 in)
Playing position Midfielder
Youth career
1968–1969 Sanjoanense
1969–1972 Benfica
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1972–1973 Benfica 0 (0)
1972–1973Varzim (loan)
1973–1974 Montijo 30 (2)
1974–1976 Boavista 59 (26)
1976–1978 Salamanca 64 (10)
1978–1979 Benfica 26 (11)
1979–1980 Paris Saint-Germain 19 (0)
1980–1983 Benfica 71 (17)
1983–1985 Boavista 47 (3)
Total 316 (69)
National team
1974–1983 Portugal 36 (3)
Teams managed
1984–1986 Boavista
1988–1990 Estrela Amadora
1990 Boavista
1991–1992 Vitória Guimarães
1992–1994 Estrela Amadora
1994–1996 Belenenses
1996–1997 Boavista
1997 Salamanca
1997–1998 Campomaiorense
1998–2000 Farense
2000–2002 Académica
2002–2003 Estrela Amadora
2003–2004 Leixões
2009–2011 Servette
2012 Servette
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

João António Ferreira Resende Alves (born 5 December 1952) is a former Portuguese footballer, and a coach.

A skilled attacking midfielder, he was considered one of the best Portuguese players from his generation, and earned the nickname Luvas Pretas from the black gloves he used to wear while playing.[1]

During his career he represented mainly, with equal individual and team success, Benfica and Boavista, also coaching the latter in three separate occasions.

Playing career

Club

Born in Albergaria-a-Velha, Alves started playing at youth level for A.D. Sanjoanense, being recruited in 1969 by S.L. Benfica. His first professional team was Varzim S.C. in the 1972–73 season followed by C.D. Montijo, the latter being his Primeira Liga experience.

Alves moved to his first major club, Boavista FC, for the 1974–75 campaign, where he first showed more of his talent, earning him a transfer to Spain's UD Salamanca where he remained two more years. He then returned to Portugal and Benfica,[2] only to move after one year to Paris Saint-Germain FC.[3]

Failing to impress, Alves immediately moved back to the Estádio da Luz, where he would play for the next three seasons.[4] He then re-joined Boavista,[5] ending his career during 1984–85 at the age of 32 to become team coach.

Alves won two national championships for Benfica (1981 and 1983) and four Portuguese Cups (two for Boavista, in 1975 and 1976, and two with the former side, in 1981 and 1983).[1] He also played for them in the 1982–83 UEFA Cup final, losing on aggregate to R.S.C. Anderlecht of Belgium.[1]

International

Alves won 36 caps for Portugal (11 for Boavista, two for Salamanca and 17 for Benfica), scoring three goals. His debut took place on 13 November 1974 in a 0–3 friendly loss to Switzerland, and his final match was on 27 April 1983, in a 0–5 loss against the Soviet Union for the UEFA Euro 1984 qualifiers.

João Alves: International goals
GoalDateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
13 December 1975Estádio do Bonfim, Setúbal, Portugal Cyprus1–01–0Euro 1976 qualifying
230 March 1977Estádio dos Barreiros, Funchal, Portugal  Switzerland1–01–0Friendly
39 May 1979Ullevaal Stadion, Oslo, Norway Norway0–10–1Euro 1980 qualifying

Coaching career

Alves became a coach after finishing his player career, managing Boavista on three separate occasions, C.F. Estrela da Amadora (leading the Amadora team to an historical 1990 Cup of Portugal triumph), Vitória de Guimarães, C.F. Os Belenenses, Salamanca, S.C. Campomaiorense, S.C. Farense, Académica de Coimbra and Leixões SC. In 1996–97, he led former side Salamanca to a La Liga return.

After three years out of coaching, he returned to Benfica in 2007, to be in charge of its under-18 team. Two years later he returned to senior football, signing with Switzerland's Servette FC and achieving promotion to the Super League in his second season.

On 28 November 2011, following Swiss Cup elimination at the hands of FC Biel-Bienne (0–3 away loss), Alves was relieved of his duties.[6] However, following poor results achieved by his successor and the club's takeover by Hugh Quennec, he was reinstated as manager in April 2012:[7] in the final five games of the season results improved, with the team achieving four wins and one draw – this included a 2–1 win over eventual champions FC Basel, which ended Servette's streak of 17 consecutive defeats against that opponent as well as ending their 26 match unbeaten run – and the side eventually qualified for the UEFA Europa League.

Managerial statistics

Team From To Record
G W D L GF GA GD Win %
Boavista August 1990 November 1990 66 28 16 22 86 69 +17 042.42
Estrela da Amadora July 1988 June 1990 85 31 25 29 92 83 +9 036.47
Boavista August 1990 November 1990 12 6 2 4 15 13 +2 050.00
Vitória de Guimarães January 1991 May 1992 56 24 15 17 67 61 +6 042.86
Estrela da Amadora July 1993 May 1994 39 13 15 11 51 41 +10 033.33
Belenenses October 1994 May 1996 66 25 15 26 81 67 +14 037.88
Salamanca July 1996 September 1996 2 0 1 1 2 3 −1 000.00
Boavista November 1996 12 January 1997 7 2 2 3 13 9 +4 028.57
Campomaiorense October 1997 29 November 1998 41 12 8 21 62 73 −11 029.27
Farense February 1999 January 2000 28 7 10 11 35 46 −11 025.00
Académica de Coimbra December 2000 3 December 2002 70 30 20 20 116 100 +16 042.86
Estrela da Amadora 6 March 2003 11 November 2003 20 6 5 9 16 31 −15 030.00
Leixões 5 November 2003 12 January 2004 7 1 3 3 7 15 −8 014.29
Servette 7 October 2009 28 November 2011 77 45 13 19 156 84 +72 058.44
Servette 25 April 2012 4 September 2012 17 6 5 6 17 19 −2 035.29
Career totals 593 236 155 202 827 714 +113 039.80

Source: [8]

Honours

Player

Boavista
Benfica

Manager

Estrela da Amadora

Individual

References

  1. 1 2 3 Malheiro, João (July 2006). Memorial Benfica 100 Glórias [Benfica Memorial, 100 glories] (in Portuguese) (Third ed.). QuidNovi. p. 80-81. ISBN 978-972-8998-26-4.
  2. "Alves pelo Vilar Formoso" [Alves for Vilar Formoso]. Diário de Lisboa (in Portuguese) (19642): 21. 27 April 1978. Retrieved 7 April 2017.
  3. "Alves deixa o Benfica" [Alves leaves Benfica]. Diário de Lisboa (in Portuguese) (20000): 17. 9 July 1979. Retrieved 6 April 2017.
  4. "Alves: regresso é de vez" [Alves: Return is for good]. Diário de Lisboa (in Portuguese) (20290): 19. 27 June 1980. Retrieved 20 March 2017.
  5. "João Alves e Boavista: a transferência mais cara do futebol português" [João Alves and Boavista: the most expensive transfer of Portuguese football]. Diário de Lisboa (in Portuguese) (21204): 17. 15 July 1983. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  6. "Costinha, bourreau d'Alves" [Costinha, Alves' executioner]. Le Matin (in French). 30 December 2011. Retrieved 31 May 2012.
  7. "Costinha encore viré, João Alves de retour!" [Costinha fired once again, João Alves returns!] (in French). Ma Chaine Sport. 25 April 2012. Archived from the original on 27 April 2012. Retrieved 24 May 2012.
  8. "João Alves". Zerozero. Retrieved 19 July 2017.
  9. 1 2 3 "Bicampeões para a história" [Back-to-back champions to history]. Visão (in Portuguese). Portugal: Impresa Publishing: 55. May 2015. ISSN 0872-3540.
  10. "O dia em que o Estrela da Amadora venceu a Taça de Portugal" [The day Estrela da Amadora won the Portuguese Cup] (in Portuguese). Mais Futebol. 1 June 2015. Retrieved 27 June 2017.
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