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Nélson de Jesus Silva (born October 7, 1973 in Irará, Bahia), best known as Dida, is a Brazilian goalkeeper. He currently plays for Italian Serie A club A.C. Milan, with whom he is a two-time winner of the UEFA Champions League.
Dida's club career began in 1990, at the age of 16, with Alagoas team Cruzeiro de Arapiraca (not to be confused with Cruzeiro EC). Two seasons later, he returned to his home state after being signed by Bahia club Vitória, who would win the Bahia state championship in 1992. In 1993, he made 24 first-team appearances for Vitória after winning the Under-21 FIFA World Youth Championship as Brazil's first-choice.
He was acquired by Cruzeiro EC in 1994, where, in a span of five seasons, he won three Minas Gerais state titles, the 1996 Copa do Brasil, and the 1997 Copa Libertadores, along with a pair of Placar Bola de Prata awards as the top goalkeeper in the Campeonato Brasileiro Série A. But with this success soon came a burning desire to ply his trade in Europe. In January 1999, Dida announced that he would be leaving Cruzeiro to sign with Italian powerhouse A.C. Milan.
Dida's request to opt out of the remainder of his contract with Cruzeiro in order to go to Europe drew the Raposa management's anger, and thus kicked off an ugly dispute that lasted for five months, during which he suited up for Switzerland club FC Lugano just to keep in game shape. But when the issue was finally resolved and Dida formally joined Milan (following a transfer sum the Italians paid to Cruzeiro), playing time was hard to come by as incumbent Christian Abbiati already had a firm grip on the #1 jersey. Not only that, veteran Sebastiano Rossi was not to be counted out, so Dida was third on coach Alberto Zaccheroni's depth chart.
Milan loaned Dida to São Paulo club Corinthians in order to get him some regular first-team action. It was during this time that his renowned penalty-saving skills came to the fore. His saving of two spot-kicks in Corinthians' 3-2 victory over intrastate rivals São Paulo FC - with both penalties taken by Raí - in the semifinal of the 1999 Campeonato Brasileiro provoked the headline "Dida is God" from sports publication Lance!. In the inaugural FIFA World Club Championship (today the FIFA Club World Cup) in 2000, Dida saved a Nicolas Anelka penalty in a 2-2 draw with Real Madrid, and in the final against Vasco da Gama, Corinthians won the title in a 4-3 penalty shoot-out after Edmundo's shot went wide.
Milan recalled Dida for the 2000-01 season, and a chance to impress the team brass awaited at the beginning of the new Champions League campaign. He had leapfrogged past Rossi into the starting lineup, since Abbiati was away with Italy competing at the Sydney Olympics. A 4-1 group stage win over Beşiktaş J.K. on September 13, 2000 marked his official debut for the club, but it wasn't long before he would be dealt a cruel hand. On September 19, in the 89th minute against Leeds United at a rain-soaked Elland Road, he accidentally dropped the ball into his own goal after catching a Lee Bowyer shot, causing Milan to lose the match 1-0. It was an error of embarrassing proportions that continues to linger to this day, and despite a strong performance in a 2-0 Milan victory over FC Barcelona one week later, he was promptly benched following Abbiati's return. He made his first and only Serie A start that season as well, a 2-0 November loss to Parma F.C. in which Patrick Mboma scored both goals.
To make matters worse, one month after the Leeds debacle, he was among nearly a dozen Serie A players, among them Inter's �?lvaro Recoba and Lazio's Juan Sebastián Verón, who were charged with using fraudulent European passports. Dida confessed to falsifying papers in order to obtain a Portuguese passport, in an attempt to dodge the Italian league's limit on non-EU players so he could sign with Milan. FIGC slapped Milan with a £314,000 fine, and banned Dida from the league for one year, in addition to a FIFA-imposed year-long suspension from national team play. In April 2003, following a court appearance in Milano, he was handed a seven-month suspended prison sentence.
Dida was loaned back to Corinthians the next season following the passport flap, then recalled again to Milan for the '02-03 campaign, which he began on the bench until fate handed him a golden opportunity. On August 14, 2002, Abbiati limped off with a hip injury at halftime of a Champions League qualifying stage match against FC Slovan Liberec. Dida took his place for the second half and turned in a sterling performance that would shockingly result in a new first-choice keeper for Milan.
His European career had suddenly taken off and it would soon lead to him writing his name into Milan history after the 2003 Champions League final at Old Trafford against league rivals Juventus, where his three saves against David Trézéguet, Marcelo Zalayeta and Paolo Montero in the penalty shoot-out, which had followed 120 minutes of goalless play, helped the Rossoneri win their sixth CL title and gained him worldwide prominence. The praise poured in from his home country as well, as he was labeled "Saint Dida" by the Brazilian press, and Folha de São Paulo chipped in with the headline "Dida pushes Milan to the top of Europe."
Dida was named the 2003-04 Serie A Goalkeeper of the Year as he conceded only 20 goals in 32 appearances, thus becoming the first and only non-Italian goalkeeper to win the award. Despite being hit and felled twice by foreign objects hurled from the crowd by opposing fans, he kept a clean sheet as Milan clinched their 17th Scudetto in club history with a 1-0 win over AS Roma on May 3, 2004. His consistent, eye-catching performances had transformed him into one of the world's top keepers and soon had pundits drawing comparisons between him and Juventus superstar Gianluigi Buffon, but he wasn't bowled over by such accolades. "I have no problem considering [Buffon] as the best around, because I certainly don't feel at the top," Dida said to Sky Sports in 2004. "I like to think of myself as the worst. Only that way can I find the stimulus to keep on improving."
Dida continued his solid form through the first half of the 2004-05 campaign, posting Champions League clean sheets against the likes of Celtic FC and Manchester United, but he would ultimately be remembered by both seasoned and casual football fans for the infamy of the second leg of the CL quarterfinal derby between bitter crosstown rivals AC Milan and Inter Milan on April 12, 2005.
With Milan leading 1-0 (and 3-0 on aggregate) thanks to an early Andriy Shevchenko goal, Inter's hardcore supporters became infuriated after a second-half Esteban Cambiasso goal was controversially nullified by referee Markus Merk - who, moments later, booked Cambiasso for dissent - due to the fact that he had just whistled Inter forward Julio Cruz for a foul on Dida in the six-yard box as players were jockeying for position inside the penalty area following an Inter corner kick. Bottles and various debris were subsequently thrown onto the pitch, but soon escalated to lit flares. As Dida attempted to clear bottles in order to take a goal kick, a flare hurtled down from the upper deck and struck the keeper on the back of his right shoulder. Merk halted the match in the 74th minute. After a thirty-minute delay in which firefighters were called in to remove the burning flares from the pitch, the match was restarted. Dida, however, was unable to continue, and was substituted by Abbiati. Less than a minute later, though, Merk finally abandoned the match after more flares and debris rained down. The match was awarded as a 3-0 victory, totaling a 5-0 aggregate, to Milan.
Dida suffered bruising and first-degree burns to his shoulder, but did not miss any game time, as he was back between the posts for Milan's Serie A match on April 17 against Siena. Meanwhile, Inter were fined €200,000 - the largest fine ever handed down by UEFA - and were ordered to play their first four 2005-06 Champions League home matches behind closed doors as punishment. (They went unbeaten in all four, scoring three wins and one draw.)
The match was televised to an international audience, but it was the aftermath that would make worldwide headlines. It even drew wide coverage in the United States, with ESPN first breaking the story during a broadcast of Pardon the Interruption. Despite his claims that the incident had not affected him, it spelled the start of a downward spiral for Dida, as his form suddenly dipped. He struggled in the semifinals against PSV Eindhoven and in the infamous loss in the final to Liverpool F.C. in Istanbul, in which Milan blew a 3-0 halftime lead in a span of six minutes late in the second half and the match ended 3-3 after extra time. Dida was only able to save John Arne Riise's penalty as Liverpool triumphed 3-2 in the ensuing shoot-out. Lost in the disappointment was the fact that he had set a CL record for consecutive clean sheets with seven, a mark that was surpassed by Arsenal's Jens Lehmann the next season. On April 12, 2006, the first anniversary of the flare incident, PTI replayed the clip of Dida being hit as the program went to a commercial break.
Dida's rough patch continued into 2005-06, as he slogged through a mistake-riddled season, notably in matches against Parma, Sampdoria, Olympique Lyonnais, and both matches against Inter. The nadir of his campaign was in a 1-1 draw with Sampdoria on January 31, 2006, during which an Andrea Gasbarroni strike deflected awkwardly off his right shoulder and into the net as he attempted a standing underhand catch. This mistake contributed to the end of Milan's 100-percent home record and led to speculation that he was in danger of being dropped from the starting lineup, while Brazil coach Carlos Alberto Parreira publicly declared that his starting position for the upcoming World Cup was not secure. Dida, however, missed only two Serie A matches not to benching, but to a midseason ankle injury. Though Milan's drive to return to the Champions League final fell short after a 1-0 semifinal aggregate loss to Barcelona, that series began a revival of his form with stops against Ronaldinho, Samuel Eto'o and Henrik Larsson in both legs.
He got off to a great start in 2006-07; following a strike by Lazio's Stephen Makinwa in Milan's 2-1 season-opener victory on September 10, Dida did not allow a Serie A goal for the next 446 minutes until Emiliano Bonazzoli scored for Sampdoria in a 1-1 draw on October 15, and conceded only two goals in five of Milan's six Champions League group stage matches. He made his 200th appearance for Milan in a 1-0 defeat of Ascoli on September 20, 2006, and four months later, on January 28, 2007, he played his 150th career Serie A match in a 1-0 win over Parma.
However, '06-07 was also the first injury-plagued season of Dida's long career. He wound up missing 11 Serie A matches due to knee and shoulder problems; he had missed 10 Serie A games in the previous three seasons combined. As a result, his play had consequently suffered again by the start of 2007. On March 4, he was jeered at the San Siro after an embarrassing collision with teammate Daniele Bonera in a 3-1 win over Chievo Verona that resulted in an easy Chievo goal. Meanwhile, he was burned by a pair of Daniel Van Buyten away goals in a 2-2 CL semifinal draw against Bayern Munich on April 4, and dubiously surrendered a Cristiano Ronaldo header and Wayne Rooney injury-time winner in a 3-2 quarterfinal first-leg loss to Manchester United three weeks later. This defeat frustrated Milan fans to the point that he was the subject of a short-lived mock auction on eBay, but he then played a role in Milan's decisive 3-0 second-leg victory on May 3, which sent the Rossoneri back into the CL final on a 5-3 aggregate. He was also voted as the Man of the Match in the second leg against Bayern Munich, performing several spectacular saves to ensure his goal remains untouched. His form subsequently rebounded again and it continued into the long-awaited rematch with Liverpool in Athens on May 23. That night, Dida retired his Istanbul ghosts with three crucial saves from Jermaine Pennant, Steven Gerrard, and Peter Crouch, which complemented Filippo Inzaghi's scoring touch as Milan won 2-1 and raised its seventh Champions League trophy.
His contract with Milan was due to expire in June 2007, but he was initially hesitant to sign an extension due to financial matters. This led to months of speculation and rumors by the press, such as Dida possibly returning for a third stint with Corinthians (which he later dispelled by announcing he would not return to Brazilian club football), going to Manchester United as a backup to Edwin van der Sar, or his leaving on a free transfer to Barcelona, with a lengthy list of names including Buffon, Livorno stopper Marco Amelia, CSKA Moscow's Igor Akinfeev, and Celtic's Artur Boruc heavily touted as possible replacements. The tumult finally came to an end on March 10, 2007, when Dida penned a three-year extension that will see him remain with the Rossoneri until June 2010. He said afterwards in a Milan Channel interview, "It took six months to reach this agreement and now it's finally done. I'm extremely happy."
With 91 appearances in 11 years, Dida is Brazil's third-highest capped goalie, behind only Émerson Leão (107 matches) and Cláudio Taffarel (101). The only Brazilian goalie to be known by his nickname, he made his Canarinho debut at the 1993 Under-21 FIFA World Youth Championship in Australia, where Brazil won the championship for a third time, while his first match for the Seleção came in a 1-0 defeat of Ecuador on July 7, 1995.
nelson dida image
nelson dida pic
football payer nelson dida
nelson dida photo
Nélson de Jesus Silva (born October 7, 1973 in Irará, Bahia), best known as Dida, is a Brazilian goalkeeper. He currently plays for Italian Serie A club A.C. Milan, with whom he is a two-time winner of the UEFA Champions League.
Dida's club career began in 1990, at the age of 16, with Alagoas team Cruzeiro de Arapiraca (not to be confused with Cruzeiro EC). Two seasons later, he returned to his home state after being signed by Bahia club Vitória, who would win the Bahia state championship in 1992. In 1993, he made 24 first-team appearances for Vitória after winning the Under-21 FIFA World Youth Championship as Brazil's first-choice.
He was acquired by Cruzeiro EC in 1994, where, in a span of five seasons, he won three Minas Gerais state titles, the 1996 Copa do Brasil, and the 1997 Copa Libertadores, along with a pair of Placar Bola de Prata awards as the top goalkeeper in the Campeonato Brasileiro Série A. But with this success soon came a burning desire to ply his trade in Europe. In January 1999, Dida announced that he would be leaving Cruzeiro to sign with Italian powerhouse A.C. Milan.
Dida's request to opt out of the remainder of his contract with Cruzeiro in order to go to Europe drew the Raposa management's anger, and thus kicked off an ugly dispute that lasted for five months, during which he suited up for Switzerland club FC Lugano just to keep in game shape. But when the issue was finally resolved and Dida formally joined Milan (following a transfer sum the Italians paid to Cruzeiro), playing time was hard to come by as incumbent Christian Abbiati already had a firm grip on the #1 jersey. Not only that, veteran Sebastiano Rossi was not to be counted out, so Dida was third on coach Alberto Zaccheroni's depth chart.
Milan loaned Dida to São Paulo club Corinthians in order to get him some regular first-team action. It was during this time that his renowned penalty-saving skills came to the fore. His saving of two spot-kicks in Corinthians' 3-2 victory over intrastate rivals São Paulo FC - with both penalties taken by Raí - in the semifinal of the 1999 Campeonato Brasileiro provoked the headline "Dida is God" from sports publication Lance!. In the inaugural FIFA World Club Championship (today the FIFA Club World Cup) in 2000, Dida saved a Nicolas Anelka penalty in a 2-2 draw with Real Madrid, and in the final against Vasco da Gama, Corinthians won the title in a 4-3 penalty shoot-out after Edmundo's shot went wide.
Milan recalled Dida for the 2000-01 season, and a chance to impress the team brass awaited at the beginning of the new Champions League campaign. He had leapfrogged past Rossi into the starting lineup, since Abbiati was away with Italy competing at the Sydney Olympics. A 4-1 group stage win over Beşiktaş J.K. on September 13, 2000 marked his official debut for the club, but it wasn't long before he would be dealt a cruel hand. On September 19, in the 89th minute against Leeds United at a rain-soaked Elland Road, he accidentally dropped the ball into his own goal after catching a Lee Bowyer shot, causing Milan to lose the match 1-0. It was an error of embarrassing proportions that continues to linger to this day, and despite a strong performance in a 2-0 Milan victory over FC Barcelona one week later, he was promptly benched following Abbiati's return. He made his first and only Serie A start that season as well, a 2-0 November loss to Parma F.C. in which Patrick Mboma scored both goals.
To make matters worse, one month after the Leeds debacle, he was among nearly a dozen Serie A players, among them Inter's �?lvaro Recoba and Lazio's Juan Sebastián Verón, who were charged with using fraudulent European passports. Dida confessed to falsifying papers in order to obtain a Portuguese passport, in an attempt to dodge the Italian league's limit on non-EU players so he could sign with Milan. FIGC slapped Milan with a £314,000 fine, and banned Dida from the league for one year, in addition to a FIFA-imposed year-long suspension from national team play. In April 2003, following a court appearance in Milano, he was handed a seven-month suspended prison sentence.
Dida was loaned back to Corinthians the next season following the passport flap, then recalled again to Milan for the '02-03 campaign, which he began on the bench until fate handed him a golden opportunity. On August 14, 2002, Abbiati limped off with a hip injury at halftime of a Champions League qualifying stage match against FC Slovan Liberec. Dida took his place for the second half and turned in a sterling performance that would shockingly result in a new first-choice keeper for Milan.
His European career had suddenly taken off and it would soon lead to him writing his name into Milan history after the 2003 Champions League final at Old Trafford against league rivals Juventus, where his three saves against David Trézéguet, Marcelo Zalayeta and Paolo Montero in the penalty shoot-out, which had followed 120 minutes of goalless play, helped the Rossoneri win their sixth CL title and gained him worldwide prominence. The praise poured in from his home country as well, as he was labeled "Saint Dida" by the Brazilian press, and Folha de São Paulo chipped in with the headline "Dida pushes Milan to the top of Europe."
Dida was named the 2003-04 Serie A Goalkeeper of the Year as he conceded only 20 goals in 32 appearances, thus becoming the first and only non-Italian goalkeeper to win the award. Despite being hit and felled twice by foreign objects hurled from the crowd by opposing fans, he kept a clean sheet as Milan clinched their 17th Scudetto in club history with a 1-0 win over AS Roma on May 3, 2004. His consistent, eye-catching performances had transformed him into one of the world's top keepers and soon had pundits drawing comparisons between him and Juventus superstar Gianluigi Buffon, but he wasn't bowled over by such accolades. "I have no problem considering [Buffon] as the best around, because I certainly don't feel at the top," Dida said to Sky Sports in 2004. "I like to think of myself as the worst. Only that way can I find the stimulus to keep on improving."
Dida continued his solid form through the first half of the 2004-05 campaign, posting Champions League clean sheets against the likes of Celtic FC and Manchester United, but he would ultimately be remembered by both seasoned and casual football fans for the infamy of the second leg of the CL quarterfinal derby between bitter crosstown rivals AC Milan and Inter Milan on April 12, 2005.
With Milan leading 1-0 (and 3-0 on aggregate) thanks to an early Andriy Shevchenko goal, Inter's hardcore supporters became infuriated after a second-half Esteban Cambiasso goal was controversially nullified by referee Markus Merk - who, moments later, booked Cambiasso for dissent - due to the fact that he had just whistled Inter forward Julio Cruz for a foul on Dida in the six-yard box as players were jockeying for position inside the penalty area following an Inter corner kick. Bottles and various debris were subsequently thrown onto the pitch, but soon escalated to lit flares. As Dida attempted to clear bottles in order to take a goal kick, a flare hurtled down from the upper deck and struck the keeper on the back of his right shoulder. Merk halted the match in the 74th minute. After a thirty-minute delay in which firefighters were called in to remove the burning flares from the pitch, the match was restarted. Dida, however, was unable to continue, and was substituted by Abbiati. Less than a minute later, though, Merk finally abandoned the match after more flares and debris rained down. The match was awarded as a 3-0 victory, totaling a 5-0 aggregate, to Milan.
Dida suffered bruising and first-degree burns to his shoulder, but did not miss any game time, as he was back between the posts for Milan's Serie A match on April 17 against Siena. Meanwhile, Inter were fined €200,000 - the largest fine ever handed down by UEFA - and were ordered to play their first four 2005-06 Champions League home matches behind closed doors as punishment. (They went unbeaten in all four, scoring three wins and one draw.)
The match was televised to an international audience, but it was the aftermath that would make worldwide headlines. It even drew wide coverage in the United States, with ESPN first breaking the story during a broadcast of Pardon the Interruption. Despite his claims that the incident had not affected him, it spelled the start of a downward spiral for Dida, as his form suddenly dipped. He struggled in the semifinals against PSV Eindhoven and in the infamous loss in the final to Liverpool F.C. in Istanbul, in which Milan blew a 3-0 halftime lead in a span of six minutes late in the second half and the match ended 3-3 after extra time. Dida was only able to save John Arne Riise's penalty as Liverpool triumphed 3-2 in the ensuing shoot-out. Lost in the disappointment was the fact that he had set a CL record for consecutive clean sheets with seven, a mark that was surpassed by Arsenal's Jens Lehmann the next season. On April 12, 2006, the first anniversary of the flare incident, PTI replayed the clip of Dida being hit as the program went to a commercial break.
Dida's rough patch continued into 2005-06, as he slogged through a mistake-riddled season, notably in matches against Parma, Sampdoria, Olympique Lyonnais, and both matches against Inter. The nadir of his campaign was in a 1-1 draw with Sampdoria on January 31, 2006, during which an Andrea Gasbarroni strike deflected awkwardly off his right shoulder and into the net as he attempted a standing underhand catch. This mistake contributed to the end of Milan's 100-percent home record and led to speculation that he was in danger of being dropped from the starting lineup, while Brazil coach Carlos Alberto Parreira publicly declared that his starting position for the upcoming World Cup was not secure. Dida, however, missed only two Serie A matches not to benching, but to a midseason ankle injury. Though Milan's drive to return to the Champions League final fell short after a 1-0 semifinal aggregate loss to Barcelona, that series began a revival of his form with stops against Ronaldinho, Samuel Eto'o and Henrik Larsson in both legs.
He got off to a great start in 2006-07; following a strike by Lazio's Stephen Makinwa in Milan's 2-1 season-opener victory on September 10, Dida did not allow a Serie A goal for the next 446 minutes until Emiliano Bonazzoli scored for Sampdoria in a 1-1 draw on October 15, and conceded only two goals in five of Milan's six Champions League group stage matches. He made his 200th appearance for Milan in a 1-0 defeat of Ascoli on September 20, 2006, and four months later, on January 28, 2007, he played his 150th career Serie A match in a 1-0 win over Parma.
However, '06-07 was also the first injury-plagued season of Dida's long career. He wound up missing 11 Serie A matches due to knee and shoulder problems; he had missed 10 Serie A games in the previous three seasons combined. As a result, his play had consequently suffered again by the start of 2007. On March 4, he was jeered at the San Siro after an embarrassing collision with teammate Daniele Bonera in a 3-1 win over Chievo Verona that resulted in an easy Chievo goal. Meanwhile, he was burned by a pair of Daniel Van Buyten away goals in a 2-2 CL semifinal draw against Bayern Munich on April 4, and dubiously surrendered a Cristiano Ronaldo header and Wayne Rooney injury-time winner in a 3-2 quarterfinal first-leg loss to Manchester United three weeks later. This defeat frustrated Milan fans to the point that he was the subject of a short-lived mock auction on eBay, but he then played a role in Milan's decisive 3-0 second-leg victory on May 3, which sent the Rossoneri back into the CL final on a 5-3 aggregate. He was also voted as the Man of the Match in the second leg against Bayern Munich, performing several spectacular saves to ensure his goal remains untouched. His form subsequently rebounded again and it continued into the long-awaited rematch with Liverpool in Athens on May 23. That night, Dida retired his Istanbul ghosts with three crucial saves from Jermaine Pennant, Steven Gerrard, and Peter Crouch, which complemented Filippo Inzaghi's scoring touch as Milan won 2-1 and raised its seventh Champions League trophy.
His contract with Milan was due to expire in June 2007, but he was initially hesitant to sign an extension due to financial matters. This led to months of speculation and rumors by the press, such as Dida possibly returning for a third stint with Corinthians (which he later dispelled by announcing he would not return to Brazilian club football), going to Manchester United as a backup to Edwin van der Sar, or his leaving on a free transfer to Barcelona, with a lengthy list of names including Buffon, Livorno stopper Marco Amelia, CSKA Moscow's Igor Akinfeev, and Celtic's Artur Boruc heavily touted as possible replacements. The tumult finally came to an end on March 10, 2007, when Dida penned a three-year extension that will see him remain with the Rossoneri until June 2010. He said afterwards in a Milan Channel interview, "It took six months to reach this agreement and now it's finally done. I'm extremely happy."
With 91 appearances in 11 years, Dida is Brazil's third-highest capped goalie, behind only Émerson Leão (107 matches) and Cláudio Taffarel (101). The only Brazilian goalie to be known by his nickname, he made his Canarinho debut at the 1993 Under-21 FIFA World Youth Championship in Australia, where Brazil won the championship for a third time, while his first match for the Seleção came in a 1-0 defeat of Ecuador on July 7, 1995.
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