Zé Eduardo (footballer, born 1987)

Brazilian footballer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

José Eduardo Bischofe de Almeida or simply Zé Eduardo, also known as Zé Love[1][2][3] (born 29 October 1987), is a Brazilian footballer who last played for Iguatu.

Full name José Eduardo Bischofe de Almeida
Date of birth (1987-10-29) 29 October 1987 (age 38)
Place of birth Promissão, Brazil
Height 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)
Quick facts Personal information, Full name ...
Zé Eduardo
Personal information
Full name José Eduardo Bischofe de Almeida
Date of birth (1987-10-29) 29 October 1987 (age 38)
Place of birth Promissão, Brazil
Height 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)
Position Forward
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2004–2005 Palmeiras 2 (0)
2005 Portuguesa Santista 0 (0)
2005–2006 Atlético Paranaense 0 (0)
2006–2007 Cruzeiro 0 (0)
2006Villa Nova (loan) 0 (0)
2006Ipatinga (loan) 0 (0)
2007Sport (loan) 0 (0)
2007–2008 Grêmio 0 (0)
2008Ferroviária (loan) 0 (0)
2008–2010 Pinheiros 0 (0)
2008Fortaleza (loan) 8 (0)
2009São Caetano (loan) 12 (1)
2009América (MG) (loan) 10 (0)
2009ABC (loan) 9 (3)
2010Santos (loan) 0 (0)
2010–2011 Santos 44 (13)
2011–2015 Genoa 10 (0)
2012–2013Siena (loan) 9 (2)
2014Coritiba (loan) 32 (5)
2015 Shanghai Shenxin 11 (1)
2015–2016 Goiás 15 (3)
2016 Al-Shaab CSC 12 (4)
2016–2017 Vitória 13 (4)
2017–2018 Figueirense 10 (3)
2018 Al-Faisaly 8 (1)
2018 Oeste 6 (0)
2019 Pahang 13 (4)
2019–2022 Brasiliense 27 (13)
2022–2023 Cianorte 2 (1)
2023 Iguatu 4 (1)
* Club domestic league appearances and goals as of 2 November 2023
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Zé Eduardo holds an Italian passport.[4]

Career

Early career

Zé Eduardo started his professional career in Palmeiras. During his stay at the club, José Eduardo earned the moniker of "Zé Love" and "God of Goalscorer" in a comparison with Palmeiras' standout striker Vagner Love because of his "very impressive" goal scoring stats. After an unremarkable stint at the São Paulo club, Zé Eduardo played for Portuguesa Santista, Atlético Paranaense,[5] Cruzeiro (who bought 70% of the player's economic rights for R$ 300,000[6]), Bragantino (2006 Campeonato Paulista), Ipatinga (April – May 2006), Villa Nova (2006 Taça Minas Gerais[7]), Sport (January – August 2007), Grêmio (2007 Copa FGF[8]), Ferroviária (2008 Campeonato Paulista Série A2) and Fortaleza (2008 Brasileiro Série B), also to no success [according to whom?]. In December 2008, Zé Eduardo joined São Caetano's squad for the 2009 Campeonato Paulista, scoring only one goal for the team,[9] but proving himself to be a valuable[according to whom?] player for the team. After a short stint in América from Minas Gerais, Zé Eduardo joined Natal's ABC, where he drew the attention of the larger clubs after scoring three goals in nine matches. [citation needed]

Santos

Joining Santos with no fanfare, Zé Eduardo went on to find great glory at the Vila Belmiro club, at first on loan.[10] Starting off as a substitute, Eduardo played remarkably well, eventually earning a place in the starting 11. Winning the Paulistão and the Copa do Brasil, Zé Eduardo was one of the best players of the Santos squad, scoring a hat-trick against Fluminense at Estádio Olímpico Nilton Santos, while Maracaña was under construction.[11] Zé Eduardo was the team joint-fourth-scorer of the team in the Paulistão with 6 goals (along with Wesley), behind Neymar, André Felipe, Ganso.[12] In the 2010 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A, Zé Eduardo scored 10 times, just 7 goals short of Neymar. Zé Eduardo's goals were ranked second in Santos and joint-8th in the league.[13]

After playing for several teams, Zé Eduardo accepted an offer from Italian Serie A club Genoa, signing a five-year contract on 23 January 2011.[14] It was impossible for him to join Genoa before the closing of the international transfer window because his Italian passport issuance was delayed. Consequently, Genoa allowed him to play for his former club Santos until 22 June (while during that 6 months his contract was owned by FC Lugano). On that day, he started for Santos in the second leg of the 2011 Copa Libertadores Finals, which Santos won 2–1 over Uruguayan powerhouse Peñarol.[15] Santos received R$ 6.088 million (about €2.7M),[14][16] as Santos owned 60% of the player's economic rights.[14] Genoa announced that they paid €5.4 million to its sister club Lugano in its 2011 annual financial report.[17]

Genoa

Zé Eduardo was formally signed by Genoa in the summer of 2011 and his contract was recorded by Lega Serie A on 3 August 2011. He featured in a pre-season friendly,[18] but after a long intensive season in Brazil, he was injured and trained away from the main squad.[19] Zé Eduardo made his official club debut on 2 December 2011, in a 2–0 defeat by Milan. He had a medical with West Ham United in late January 2012[20] but the loan deal collapsed. Returning to Italy, he made four appearances as a substitute. The first on 12 February. He played no games in March and did not appear again until 29 April 2012, again as a substitute. His squad number 9 was taken away and given to Italian international Alberto Gilardino with Zé Eduardo being given the number 57 shirt; a number usually taken by players left outside the main squad.

Zé Eduardo refused a trial with A.C. Milan on 22 August 2012, which would have seen him replace the injured Alexandre Pato. Zé Eduardo is quoted as saying, "I have won one Libertadores and two Campeonatos Paulistas with Santos, I don't do tests".[21]

On 20 January 2014, he was signed by Coritiba on loan until the end of the season.[22]

Career statistics

As of 1 July 2016

More information Club, Season ...
Club Season League Cup Continental State League Total
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
São Caetano (loan) 2009 0000--141141
Total 000000141141
ABC (loan) 2009 9300----93
Total 9300000093
Santos 2010 281060221565118
2011 1060131167308
Total 29106015331138126
Genoa 2011–12 9010----100
Total 90100000100
Siena (loan) 2012–13 8111----92
Total 8111000092
Genoa 2013–14 1000----10
Total 1000----10
Shanghai Shenxin 2015 11100----111
Total 10100----111
Goiás 2015 1530000--153
Total 1530000--153
Al-Shaab 2016 124------124
Total 124------124
Career Total942281153451416240
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Honours

References

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