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| Denílson | |
|---|---|
| Name | Denílson |
| Fullname | Denílson de Oliveira Araújo |
| Birth date | 24 August 1977 |
| Birth place | São Paulo, Brazil |
| Height | 1.69 m |
| Position | Winger |
| Youthyears1 | 1988–1994 |
| Youthclubs1 | São Paulo FC |
| Years1 | 1994–1998 |
| Clubs1 | São Paulo FC |
| Caps1 | 97 |
| Goals1 | 25 |
| Years2 | 1998–2005 |
| Clubs2 | Real Betis |
| Caps2 | 171 |
| Goals2 | 14 |
| Years3 | 2005–2006 |
| Clubs3 | Real Madrid CF |
| Caps3 | 13 |
| Years4 | 2006–2007 |
| Clubs4 | Girona FC |
| Years5 | 2007 |
| Clubs5 | Al-Ahli Saudi FC |
| Years6 | 2008 |
| Clubs6 | FC Dallas |
| Caps6 | 16 |
| Years7 | 2009–2010 |
| Clubs7 | Santos FC |
| Caps7 | 19 |
| Years8 | 2011 |
| Clubs8 | Tianjin Teda F.C. |
| Caps8 | 12 |
| Years9 | 2011–2013 |
| Clubs9 | Itumbiara Esporte Clube |
| Nationalyears1 | 1996–2003 |
| Nationalteam1 | Brazil national football team |
| Nationalcaps1 | 61 |
Denílson. Brazilian former professional footballer born in São Paulo, renowned for his dribbling, flair and role as a wide attacker. He gained prominence with São Paulo FC and became one of the most expensive transfers when moving to Real Betis, later representing Real Madrid CF, FC Dallas, Santos FC and the Brazil national football team. His career intersected with major tournaments such as the FIFA World Cup and the Copa América.
Born in São Paulo, he joined the youth academy of São Paulo FC alongside contemporaries who progressed through Brazilian development pathways. Early coaches at Estádio do Morumbi and regional youth competitions exposed him to fixtures against Fluminense FC, Palmeiras, Santos FC and Corinthians. Through performances in the Campeonato Brasileiro Série A youth tiers and state championships, he earned promotion to the first team managed by figures connected to Brazilian footballing institutions.
At São Paulo FC he broke into senior football during campaigns that involved matches against Cruzeiro Esporte Clube and continental contests under CONMEBOL tournaments. His technical skills prompted a high-value move to Real Betis in La Liga; there he contributed to club progress in domestic seasons and UEFA competition qualification alongside teammates and under managers experienced in Spanish football structures. A transfer to Real Madrid CF followed, where he competed with established attackers and played in fixtures at Santiago Bernabéu Stadium. Subsequent spells included a stint with Girona FC, a venture in the Saudi Pro League with Al-Ahli Saudi FC, a period in Major League Soccer at FC Dallas competing in the MLS Cup framework, a return to Brazil with Santos FC and a final overseas engagement in the Chinese Super League with Tianjin Teda F.C.. Throughout club moves he featured in domestic cups such as the Copa del Rey, state-level tournaments like the Campeonato Paulista, and continental cups organized by CONMEBOL.
He was capped by the Brazil national football team across late-1990s and early-2000s cycles, participating in the 1998 FIFA World Cup squad as a young selection and later the 2002 FIFA World Cup campaign. He appeared in editions of the Copa América and the FIFA Confederations Cup, representing squads assembled by national managers familiar with Brazil's talent pipeline. His international career included appearances alongside players from clubs such as AC Milan, FC Barcelona, Juventus FC and Manchester United, contributing to fixtures against national teams like Argentina national football team, Germany national football team and France national football team in tournaments and friendlies.
Primarily a right-sided winger, he was celebrated for close control, rapid changes of direction and a repertoire of feints developed in Brazilian street and academy contexts linked to institutions such as Pelé-era traditions and later practitioners from Garrincha’s stylistic legacy. Coaches and pundits from outlets connected to UEFA and CONMEBOL competitions contrasted his dribbling with physical and tactical demands of La Liga and Premier League exporters, prompting debate among journalists at El País, Marca and O Globo. Analysts compared him to contemporaries from Brazil national football team squads and discussed adaptation to differing managerial systems at clubs like Real Betis and Real Madrid CF.
Career totals span domestic league appearances and goals across clubs in Brazil, Spain, Saudi Arabia, United States and China. Internationally he earned over 60 caps for the Brazil national football team and scored multiple goals in qualifiers and tournament matches including continental qualifiers overseen by CONMEBOL and global fixtures sanctioned by FIFA.
His honours include domestic cups and league-related trophies with Santos FC and continental success markers through national team victory in global tournaments such as the FIFA World Cup editions contested by Brazil during his era. Individual recognitions involved mentions in seasonal awards circulated by entities like IFFHS and coverage in sports media networks including ESPN and Sky Sports.
Off the pitch he has been associated with charitable and football development initiatives within São Paulo and broader Brazilian football programs linked to academies and former professionals. His legacy is preserved in discussions about exportation of Brazilian attacking talent to Europe and the market dynamics exemplified by high transfer fees in La Liga during the late 1990s and early 2000s, influencing pathways for successors from clubs such as São Paulo FC and Santos FC.
Category:1977 births Category:Living people Category:Brazilian footballers Category:Association football wingers