Английская Википедия:Cuca (footballer, born 1963)

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Use American English Шаблон:Infobox football biography

Alexi Stival (born 7 June 1963), known as Cuca (Шаблон:IPA-pt), is a Brazilian professional football coach and former player.

Cuca played as a forward, winning Campeonato Gaúcho titles for Grêmio and Internacional, while also featuring for Palmeiras and Santos, among others. He made one appearance for the Brazil national team in 1991.

Since his retirement, Cuca has been the head coach of a number of clubs, mostly in his native country. He has led nine of the Big 12, winning the Campeonato Brasileiro Série A with Palmeiras in 2016 and Atlético Mineiro in 2021, and also lifting the 2013 Copa Libertadores with the latter.

Personal life

Born in Curitiba, Paraná, Cuca started playing football to help covering the expenses of a heart surgery for his father Dirceu. His nickname Cuca was created by his older brother Amauri: their parents used to mock Amauri when the boy was fooling around by saying that the city's police officer, nicknamed Cucla, would catch him on the act; once the little brother arrived at home and was described as "very handsome" by their mother, Amauri, in an attempt to mock his brother, called him Cuca in a reference to the police officer Cucla, not knowing that his nickname had an L.[1]

Cuca is married to Rejane since 1985,[2] and has two daughters, Maiara and Natasha.[3] He is a practising Roman Catholic.[4][5] Cuca's younger brother Cuquinha was also a footballer; a midfielder, he only had a short career before starting to work as his assistant in 1999.[6] Their elder brother, Amauri, was a central defender who also played professionally.[7]

In 1987, while playing a tournament in Switzerland with Grêmio, Cuca and three other teammates: Eduardo Henrique Hamester, Henrique Arlindo Etges, and Fernando Castoldi, were arrested for 28 days for allegedly raping a 13-year-old girl in a hotel room in Bern.[8] Two of the players admitted to having sex with the girl, but claimed that the encounter was consensual and that they were unaware that she was underaged; Cuca and the other teammate denied participating.[9] Forensic examination found traces of semen from Cuca and Eduardo on the girl's body,[10] but no evidence of violence, and the four were released on bail and allowed to return to Brazil.[11] Despite Cuca not being identified by the accuser as one of the offenders,[12] he was convicted in absentia two years later by a Swiss court to 15 months imprisonment for "engaging in sexual act with a minor and coercion".[9][10] The sentence was not served and expired in 2004.[13] In 2023, the girl's attorney, Willi Egloff, said in an interview that the accuser did identify Cuca as one of the offenders.[14]

On 7 November 2020, while coaching Santos, Cuca tested positive for COVID-19, being immediately transferred to the Hospital Sírio-Libanês.[15]

Playing career

Club

Cuca started his career with Santa Cruz-RS after graduating with hometown side Pinheiros.[16] He moved to Juventude in May 1985, and was a regular starter for the club until his transfer to Grêmio in July 1987.[17]

While at Grêmio, Cuca scored the decisive goal of the 1989 Copa do Brasil Final against Sport Recife.[18] He moved abroad for the first time in his career in August 1990, spending six months at La Liga side Real Valladolid.[19]

Upon returning to Brazil, Cuca joined Grêmio's fierce rivals Internacional on loan.[20] After struggling with injuries, he featured regularly for Palmeiras[21] and Santos.[22]

Cuca was signed by Portuguesa ahead of the 1994 season on loan,[23] but failed to impress.[24] He subsequently represented Remo, Juventude and Chapecoense, retiring with the latter in 1996 at the age of 33.

International

Cuca played one game for the Brazilian national team on 27 February 1991, against Paraguay, at Morenão, Campo Grande.[25]

Coaching career

Shortly after retiring, Cuca started coaching Uberlândia in 1998. He was subsequently in charge of Avaí (two stints), Brasil de Pelotas, Internacional de Limeira, Internacional de Lages, Remo,[26] Criciúma, Gama, Paraná[27] and Goiás,[28] gaining notoriety with the latter after taking the latter club in the last position of the 2003 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A and avoiding relegation by finishing ninth.

On 17 December 2003, Cuca was appointed head coach of São Paulo in the place of Roberto Rojas.[29] He was dismissed the following 2 September, after being knocked out of the year's Copa Libertadores in the semifinals and dropping to the seventh place in the league.[30] Eight days after leaving São Paulo, he was named Grêmio head coach,[31] but could not avoid the club's first-ever relegation.

On 3 February 2005, Cuca replaced Júlio César Leal at the helm of Flamengo,[32] Dismissed on 15 April,[33] he took over Coritiba on 6 May.[34] He was sacked by Coxa on 12 October 2005,[35] being subsequently appointed in charge of São Caetano on 9 November.[36]

On 22 May 2006, Cuca was presented as the new Botafogo head coach.[37] He resigned on 28 September 2007,[38] but returned to the club on 7 October after the departure of Mário Sérgio;[39] he resigned for a second time on 29 May 2008.[40]

Cuca was appointed Santos head coach on 2 June 2008,[41] but resigned on 7 August after the club was seriously threatened with relegation.[42] He returned to Flamengo on 12 December,[43] after a two-month spell at Fluminense,[44] but was relieved from his duties the following 23 July.[45]

Cuca returned to Flu on 1 September 2009, replacing Renato Gaúcho.[46] Sacked on 19 April of the following year,[47] he took over Cruzeiro on 8 June 2010[48] and managed to lead the club to a second place, two points shy of champions and former club Fluminense. He left the side on 19 June 2011, being replaced by Joel Santana.[49]

Файл:Cuca, técnico do Palmeiras (35149910902).jpg
Cuca as head coach of Palmeiras in June 2017

On 8 August 2011, Cuca was announced as new head coach of Atlético Mineiro, replacing Dorival Júnior.[50] He won the 2012 Campeonato Mineiro and also lifted the 2013 Copa Libertadores, but on 18 December 2013, after a 3–1 defeat to Raja Casablanca, he was dismissed.[51]

On 21 December 2013, just three days after being sacked by Galo, Cuca was appointed at the helm of Chinese Super League side Shandong Luneng.[52] He announced his departure from the club on 6 December 2015, after winning the Chinese FA Cup and the Chinese FA Super Cup.[53]

On 14 March 2016, Cuca replaced Marcelo Oliveira at the helm of high-spending Palmeiras.[54] He led the club to a Série A title after 22 years, but opted to resign on 30 November, alleging "personal reasons".[55]

Файл:Alexi Stival Cuca 2017.jpg
Cuca in July 2017

Cuca returned to Verdão on 5 May 2017, replacing fired Eduardo Baptista and signing a contract until the end of 2018.[56] On 13 October, he was himself dismissed, with his assistant Alberto Valentim taking his place.[57]

On 30 July 2018, Cuca was appointed head coach of Santos for the second time.[58] He took the club out of the relegation zone, but left after finishing in a disappointing tenth position due to a health problem.[59]

On 14 February 2019, Cuca agreed to a two-year contract with São Paulo, effective as of 15 April due to his heart condition.[60] He resigned on 26 September,[61] and returned to Santos on 7 August 2020.[62] He led the latter to the final of the 2020 Copa Libertadores, where he lost and was sent off late in the game.

In February 2021, shortly after losing the Libertadores final, Cuca announced his departure from Santos at the end of the season when his contract expired, alleging 'mental exhaustion'.[63] His departure was officially announced by the club on 21 February, after qualifying the club to the 2021 Libertadores.[64]

On 5 March 2021, Cuca agreed to a two-year deal with Atlético Mineiro, returning to the club after seven years.[65] He led the side to one of the most successful seasons in their history, winning the domestic treble and ending a 50-year streak since their last Campeonato Brasileiro title. He also equaled Levir Culpi's record as Atlético's most decorated head coach, with six titles. His departure was announced on 28 December 2021, due to personal reasons.[66]

On 23 July 2022, Cuca returned to Atlético Mineiro, signing a four-month contract.[67] He left on a mutual agreement on 14 November, after only 21 matches.[68]

On 20 April 2023, Cuca was announced as the new head coach of Corinthians, with a contract until the end of the year.[69] On 27 April 2023, he resigned from the role,[70] citing personal reasons related to his sexual assault arrest in Switzerland in 1987. His hiring was almost immediately criticized by pundits, fans, and even the Corinthians women's team, citing the 1987 incident as inadmissible behavior by any member of the club.[71]

Career statistics

Club

Club Season League State League Cup Continental Other Total
Division Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
Santa Cruz-RS 1984 Gaúcho 24 4 24 4
1985 0 0 18[lower-alpha 1] 4 18 4
Total 24 4 18 4 42 8
Juventude 1985 Gaúcho 22 2 1[lower-alpha 2] 0 23 2
1987 Série B 0 0 43 14 43 14
Total 0 0 65 16 1 0 66 15
Grêmio 1987 Série A 13 7 13 7
1988 22 8 25 11 4[lower-alpha 3] 1 51 20
1989 13 4 24 7 9 6 5[lower-alpha 3] 2 51 19
1990 0 0 25 14 2 1 6[lower-alpha 4] 1 33 16
Total 48 19 74 32 11 7 6 1 9 3 148 62
Valladolid 1990–91[72] La Liga 12 4 2 1 14 5
Internacional 1991 Série A 13 3 21 5 34 8
Grêmio 1992 Série B 9 2 9 2
Palmeiras 1992[73] Série A 0 0 18 5 6 2 24 7
Santos 1993[74] Série A 9 2 29 9 3[lower-alpha 5] 0 41 11
Portuguesa 1994[24] Série A 0 0 13 2 13 2
Remo 1994 Série A 13 2 13 2
Career total 104 32 244 73 19 10 6 1 31 7 404 123

Шаблон:Reflist

International

[75]

Brazil
Year Apps Goals
1991 1 0
Total 1 0

Coaching statistics

Шаблон:Updated

Coaching record by team and tenure
Team Nat From To Record Шаблон:Abbr
Шаблон:Tooltip Шаблон:Tooltip Шаблон:Tooltip Шаблон:Tooltip Шаблон:Tooltip Шаблон:Tooltip Шаблон:Tooltip Шаблон:Tooltip
Uberlândia Шаблон:Flagicon January 1998 June 1998

Шаблон:WDL

Inter de Limeira Шаблон:Flagicon January 2000 February 2000

Шаблон:WDL

[76]
Inter de Lages Шаблон:Flagicon March 2001 May 2001

Шаблон:WDL

Remo Шаблон:Flagicon 23 August 2001 22 October 2001

Шаблон:WDL

Criciúma Шаблон:Flagicon October 2001 May 2002

Шаблон:WDL

[77]
Gama Шаблон:Flagicon 16 May 2002 4 July 2002

Шаблон:WDL

Paraná Шаблон:Flagicon 1 March 2003 26 May 2003

Шаблон:WDL

[78]
Goiás Шаблон:Flagicon 26 May 2003 17 December 2003

Шаблон:WDL

[79]
São Paulo Шаблон:Flagicon 17 December 2003 2 September 2004

Шаблон:WDL

[78]
Grêmio Шаблон:Flagicon 10 September 2004 28 October 2004

Шаблон:WDL

[80]
Flamengo Шаблон:Flagicon 3 February 2005 15 April 2005

Шаблон:WDL

[78]
Coritiba Шаблон:Flagicon 6 May 2005 12 October 2005

Шаблон:WDL

[78]
São Caetano Шаблон:Flagicon 9 November 2005 12 December 2005

Шаблон:WDL

[78]
Botafogo Шаблон:Flagicon 22 May 2006 28 September 2007

Шаблон:WDL

[38]
Botafogo Шаблон:Flagicon 7 October 2007 29 May 2008

Шаблон:WDL

[78]
Santos Шаблон:Flagicon 2 June 2008 7 August 2008

Шаблон:WDL

[81]
Fluminense Шаблон:Flagicon 11 August 2008 2 October 2008

Шаблон:WDL

[78]
Flamengo Шаблон:Flagicon 12 December 2008 23 July 2009

Шаблон:WDL

[78]
Fluminense Шаблон:Flagicon 1 September 2009 19 April 2010

Шаблон:WDL

[78]
Cruzeiro Шаблон:Flagicon 8 June 2010 19 June 2011

Шаблон:WDL

Atlético Mineiro Шаблон:Flagicon 8 August 2011 18 December 2013

Шаблон:WDL

Shandong Luneng Шаблон:Flagicon 21 December 2013 6 December 2015

Шаблон:WDL

Palmeiras Шаблон:Flagicon 14 March 2016 30 November 2016

Шаблон:WDL

[82]
Palmeiras Шаблон:Flagicon 5 May 2017 13 October 2017

Шаблон:WDL

[83]
Santos Шаблон:Flagicon 30 July 2018 2 December 2018

Шаблон:WDL

[81]
São Paulo Шаблон:Flagicon 15 April 2019 26 September 2019

Шаблон:WDL

[60]
Santos Шаблон:Flagicon 7 August 2020 21 February 2021

Шаблон:WDL

[64]
Atlético Mineiro Шаблон:Flagicon 5 March 2021 28 December 2021

Шаблон:WDL

Atlético Mineiro Шаблон:Flagicon 25 July 2022 14 November 2022

Шаблон:WDL

[68]
Corinthians Шаблон:Flagicon 20 April 2023 27 April 2023

Шаблон:WDL

Total

Шаблон:WDLtot

Honours

Player

Grêmio
Internacional
Chapecoense

Manager

Flamengo
Cruzeiro
Atlético Mineiro
Shandong Luneng
Palmeiras

Individual

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Commons category

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