Name:
Mário de Andrada SilvaNickname:
''Menino de Ouro'' , ''Demolidor de Defesas''
Country:
BrazilClub:
CA PaulistanoPosition: *
SSSide:
RF/RSAge:
21-25 years (??/??/1900 - ??/??/1957)
Height:
167 cm (Approx.)
Weight:
63 kg (Approx.)
Attack:
81Defence:
28Balance:
69Stamina:
73Top Speed:
75Acceleration:
82Response:
76Agility:
84Dribble Accuracy:
86Dribble Speed:
76Short Pass Accuracy:
85Short Pass Speed:
69Long Pass Accuracy:
81Long Pass Speed:
68Shot Accuracy:
84Shot Power:
77Shot Technique:
79Free Kick Accuracy:
70Curling:
67Header:
63Jump:
65Technique:
82Aggression:
85Mentality:
72Goalkeeper Skills:
50Team Work:
74Injury Tolerance:
BCondition/Fitness:
4Weak Foot Accuracy:
5Weak Foot Frequency:
5Consistency:
5Growth Type:
Early/LastingCARDS:P09 - Incisive Run
S02 - Passer
SPECIAL ABILITIES: Dribbling - Playmaking - Passing - Scoring
Dribble Style:
1Free Kick Style:
1Attack/Defence Awareness:
Attack-MindedINFO: He played for Paulistano from 1916 to 1925. He had a strong connection with Paulistano since childhood, when he played in the youth teams. He studied in Itu and Araraquara, returning to the capital of São Paulo in 1915 to join the Paulistano first team the following year. He was a four-time São Paulo state champion in 1916/17/18/19, regaining the title in 1921. Mário de Andrada formed a great partnership with Arthur Friedenreich, being responsible for many of his goals, as he was very good at passing and a good dribbler. When Friedenreich scored 33 goals in the 1921 São Paulo state championship, he had the luxury of scoring 26 himself, being the second-highest scorer in the competition. He never played for the Brazilian National Team because when he was at his peak, another right midfielder stood out, who was precisely the Corinthians player Neco. In 1925 he formed an excellent right wing partnership with right winger Filó.
At the end of the year, he abandoned football at only 25 years old, as playing in a time when the sport was unpaid was a complicated task. In the 1950s, his name was widely discussed when he told journalist De Vaney that he had the complete list of his friend Fried's goals, which totaled 1239, but he died shortly before delivering it. His wife threw away some papers she considered unimportant, which caused the journalist to mistakenly alter the numbers, changing the count to 1329. This led to El Tigre being recognized by FIFA for many years as the greatest goalscorer in football history, even surpassing Pelé with his 1282 goals. Never confuse him with the poet and writer Mário de Andrade.
https://oglobo.globo.com/cultura/livros ... o-16654619http://observatoriodaimprensa.com.br/fe ... _football/https://www.uol.com.br/esporte/futebol/ ... santos.htmhttps://terceirotempo.uol.com.br/notici ... -os-temposhttps://museudofutebol.org.br/crfb/pers ... es/531374/