Caçapa
Cláudio Roberto da Silva (born 29 May 1976), commonly known as Cláudio Caçapa or simply Caçapa (Brazilian Portuguese: [kaˈsapɐ]), is a Brazilian football coach and former player who played as a central defender. He was most recently the manager of Belgian Pro League club RWD Molenbeek. Having made his senior debut in 1996 for Atlético Mineiro, Caçapa went on to play for Lyon, Newcastle United, Cruzeiro, Évian and Avaí. He was capped three times by the Brazil national team.[3] Club careerAtlético MineiroCaçapa began his career in 1996 with Brazilian club Atlético Mineiro, where he established himself as a first team regular. He received the Bola de Ouro (Golden Ball) award in 1999 after being voted the best defender in Série A that season.[4] LyonIn 2001, Caçapa began attracting interest from European clubs and joined Lyon on loan in 2001.[5] He played his first game in the French Ligue 1 championship on 17 February 2001 and scored in the 2001 Coupe de la Ligue Final which Lyon won after extra time. In the summer, he signed a five-year contract with the club. He was captain of Lyon for five seasons, winning the French championship in each of these seasons. He became a French citizen in October 2006 after living in the country for over five years. His contract with Lyon expired in the summer of 2007 and he refused to sign a new deal with the club.[6] Newcastle UnitedCaçapa signed for Newcastle United on a Free transfer after his contract with previous club Lyon expired, on 3 August 2007, signing an initial two-year deal with an option for a third.[7] He made his debut for Newcastle as an 89th-minute substitute during the goalless draw against Aston Villa on 18 August, and in doing so he became the 1,000th player to represent the Magpies in a competitive match.[8] He scored his first goal for the club with a header against Tottenham Hotspur on 22 October in a 3–1 win.[9] On 3 November, Caçapa was substituted out of Newcastle's game against Portsmouth after only 18 minutes.[10] It was later announced that his poor play in the game was due to a "slight hamstring strain".[11] He returned to the Newcastle squad on 15 December, when he was named Man of the Match in their away win at Fulham. He scored his second goal for Newcastle on 16 January 2008 when they went through to the FA Cup 4th Round after a 4–1 replay victory over Stoke City.[12] He was ruled out for five weeks on 22 March after suffering a groin injury before the 2–0 win over Fulham. In the 2008–09 season he was utilised both as a defender and a midfielder due to Newcastle having both a small squad and numerous injuries to players. Most of Caçapa's 2008–09 campaign was blighted by injury. He made his last appearance in December, failing to appear throughout 2009 as Newcastle were relegated before being released on 1 July 2009 when his contract expired. CruzeiroAfter the Newcastle contract expired, he joined Atlético Mineiro archrivals Cruzeiro,[13] where he played until the end of the 2010 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A. ÉvianCaçapa returned to France to join Évian in the Ligue 2 when he signed for a six-months contract on 25 January 2011. He helped the club to win the Ligue 2 and achieve promotion to the Ligue 1 for their first time in their history. AvaíAfter his contract with Évian expired, he has received an offer from Avaí and agreed to sign for the club on 25 July 2011.[14] He was released from his contract after the end of the season and announced his retirement on 20 March 2012, also opening a football school called Arena Lyon in his hometown Lavras.[15] International careerCaçapa's impressive form at Atlético Mineiro was rewarded with a call-up to the Brazil national team. He made his debut for his country on 23 February 2000 against Thailand and went on to make three international appearances and one unofficial international appearance in a match against Japanese club Tokyo Verdy. Managerial careerCaçapa was hired as the manager of Brazil's under 15 national team in December 2013.[16] He was sacked on 27 February 2015.[17] He was appointed as the assistant manager of Lyon in January 2016. [3] On 30 June 2023, Caçapa was named interim head coach of Botafogo back in his home country.[18] On 25 July 2023, Caçapa was named RWD Molenbeek new head coach.[19] On 11 February 2024, he parted ways with the club.[20] Managerial statistics
HonoursClubAtlético Mineiro
Lyon
Évian References
External links
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