António Simões da Costa (Portuguese pronunciation:[ɐ̃ˈtɔniusiˈmõjʃ]; born 14 December 1943), known as Simões, is a Portuguese former footballer who played as a left winger.
He spent 14 professional seasons with Benfica, playing 449 official games and scoring 72 goals. In the late 1970s and early 1980s he represented several teams in the United States, and subsequently worked as a manager in both continents.[2]
Simões played more than 40 times for Portugal, including appearing at the 1966 World Cup.
Club career
Benfica
Born in Corroios, Seixal, Setúbal District, Simões joined S.L. Benfica when he was 15,[3] and was already an important first-team member just two years later, being part of the squads that won ten Primeira Liga championships and one European Cup. In the 1962 final of the latter competition, a 5–3 win against Real Madrid, he became the youngest ever player to conquer the tournament, at 18 years and four months.[2][4]
Simões left Benfica at the end of the 1974–75 season after winning his last league. He contributed 26 scoreless matches in the process.[2]
Immediately after quitting football, Simões was hired as coach of the Phoenix Inferno of the MISL.[7] He was dismissed in March 1984 and replaced by Ted Podleski, joining the Las Vegas Americans as assistant to Alan Mayer afterwards and also leaving in January 1985; in 1989, he was the SISL indoor season coach of the year with the Austin Sockadillos.[8]
International career
Simões made his debut with the Portugal national team on 6 May 1962, in a 2–1 friendly defeat to Brazil in São Paulo. He was a member of the squad that finished third in the 1966 FIFA World Cup in England, scoring the first goal in the group stage opener against the same opponent (3–1 win).[9]
Simões joined Iran's coaching staff in April 2011, acting as assistant to compatriot Carlos Queiroz.[12] He left in February 2014, for personal reasons.[13]
A diminutive winger known for his above-average skills, creativity and crossing, able to play with both feet,[15] Simões holds the record of youngest player (18 years and 139 days old) to play and win a European Cup final, when he appeared for Benfica against Real Madrid on 2 May 1962.[16]
^ abPaixão, Paulo; Castanheira, José Pedro (13 July 2016). "A lenda dos Magriços começou há 50 anos" [The legend of the Magriços started 50 years ago]. Expresso (in Portuguese). Retrieved 9 April 2020.
^"Especial 'Tetra'" ['Tetra' special edition]. Mística (in Portuguese). No. 33. Portugal: Impresa Publishing. April–June 2017. p. 70. ISSN3846-0823.
^ ab"Bicampeões para a história" [Back-to-back champions for the ages]. Visão (in Portuguese). Portugal: Impresa Publishing. May 2015. p. 48. ISSN0872-3540.
Simões, António (December 2013). António Simões, personalidades e reflexões do mais jovem campeão europeu da história [António Simões, personalities and thoughts of the youngest European champion ever] (First ed.). QuidNovi. ISBN978-989-554-977-1.