Danilo Alvim

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Danilo Alvim
Danilo Alvim (cropped).jpg
Danilo Alvim with the Brazil national football team in the 1950 FIFA World Cup
Personal information
Full name Danilo Alvim Faria
Date of birth (1920-12-03)3 December 1920
Place of birth Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Date of death May 16, 1996(1996-05-16) (aged 75)
Place of death Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Position(s) Defensive midfielder
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1939–1942 América 50 (24)
1943 Canto do Rio 20 (17)
1944–1945 América 30 (27)
1946–1954 Vasco da Gama 305 (66)
1955–1956 Botafogo 77 (42)
Total 482 (176)
National team
1945–1953 Brazil 27 (10)
Teams managed
1956–1957 Uberaba
1963 Botafogo
1963–1965 Bolivia
1968–1970 Remo
1978 Náutico
1981 Galícia
Honours
Men's Football
Representing  Brazil (as player)
FIFA World Cup
Runner-up 1950 Brazil
Copa América
Winner 1949 Brazil
Runner-up 1945 Chile
Runner-up 1946 Argentina
Runner-up 1953 Peru
Representing  Bolivia (as manager)
Copa América
Winner 1963 Bolivia
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Danilo Alvim Faria (3 December 1920 – 16 May 1996) was a Brazilian footballer. He was a member of the ill-fated Brazilian 1950 World Cup team. One of the greatest center-halves in the World during his prime, he was renowned as a very sophisticated and elegant player who possessed fine ball control and accurate long range passing.

Club career[]

Danilo Alvim was an amateur playing with América when Flávio Costa's Rio de Janeiro squad practiced against them in 1941. He was asked to fill in for one of the injured players and so impressed the famous coach that he was asked to join the squad. At first he thought it was a joke, but when he realized it was true he went out to celebrate. On his way back home he was hit by a car and had his leg broken (in 39 places according to some sources).

In 1942 he came back to América and was cut by the manager to save costs. Rather than cutting him outright the team's directors sent him to Canto do Rio where he led the team to a Rio de Janeiro championship. He was promptly recalled to América as well as the Rio de Janeiro state team that Flávio Costa had invited him to join before his accident. In 1946 he joined Vasco de Gama and became a huge part of the "expresso da vitória" (the victory express), one of Brazil's best ever club teams and the first to win an international title (the South American club championship in 1948 - before the Copa Libertadores came to be). Danilo retired while playing for Botafogo. He was known as "Prince" due to the characteristic elegance of his style of play.

International career[]

He played 27 games with 10 goals between 1945 and 1953, winning the 1949 Copa América. He was a starter for the famous 1950 World Cup team, unjustly remembered for losing the last game to Uruguay, despite being one of Brazil's best ever squads. Brazil only needed to draw Uruguay to win the 1950 FIFA World Cup at the Maracanã stadium. Uruguay came from a goal down to win the match 2-1. This defeat is remembered today as the Maracanaço. It is considered Brazil's worst disaster in history. Danilo is, till today, considered one of Brazil's most complete centre-halves and, by some, a top 10 among Brazil's craques. Just as Ademir, Zizinho, Jair and others on the 1950 team, he would likely be regarded even more highly if it were not for that one day in the Maracanã stadium.

Managerial career[]

After ending his playing career and revealing that ever since his accident he could never fully extend or bend his right leg, Danilo became a coach. In 1963, he led Bolivia to their only title - Copa América - with a 5-4 win over Brazil along the way.

References[]

External links[]

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