Brazilian football manager
Alves and the second or paternal family name is Moreira.
In this Portuguese name , the first or maternal family name isand the second or paternal family name is
Enderson Alves Moreira (born 28 September 1971), known as Enderson Moreira, is a Brazilian football manager, currently in charge of Sport Recife.
Managerial career [ edit ]
Born in Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, Moreira had a Physical Education graduation before joining América Mineiro's youth setup in 1995, as a fitness coach.
In 1996, after being appointed manager of the under-20s, he led the side to the first Copa São Paulo de Futebol Júnior title of their history.
[1] Moreira later was in charge of local lower clubs, and after another stint at América, was appointed as Atlético Mineiro's under-20 manager.
He later moved to the latter's fierce rivals Cruzeiro, again finishing first in Copinha.[1]
On 26 October 2008 Moreira was appointed Ipatinga manager, after previously being the club's assistant manager.
[2] After failing to avoid relegation with the club, he subsequently returned to youth football.
On 23 December 2009, after a spell at Atlético Paranaense, Moreira was named Sport Club Internacional B manager.
[3] On 21 March 2011 he was appointed assistant manager at Fluminense,[4] but acted as the club's interim for two months.[5]
On 28 September 2011 Moreira was appointed at the helm of Goiás.
[6] He led the club to a Série B title in 2012, and also achieved an impressive sixth position in the following year's Série A, but opted to not renew his contract in December 2013.[7]
On 16 December 2013 Moreira signed for Grêmio,[8] but was relieved from his duties on 27 July 2014.
[9] On 3 September he was appointed Santos manager, replacing fired Oswaldo de Oliveira.[10]
On 5 March 2015 Moreira was sacked, despite the club's unbeaten status in the year.
[11] On the 16th he was named manager of Atlético Paranaense, replacing fired Claudinei Oliveira.
[12] His spell at the latter didn't last long, and he was relieved from his duties on 20 April.[13]
On 21 May 2015 Moreira returned to Fluminense, after Ricardo Drubscky's dismissal.
[14] Dismissed on 15 September after a 1–4 heavy loss against Palmeiras,[15] he returned to Goiás on 15 December ahead of the 2016 campaign.[16]
Moreira was fired by the Esmeraldino on 8 June 2016, with the club in the relegation places.
[17] On 20 July he signed for América Mineiro, seriously threatened with relegation in the top tier;[18] after improving the club's performance overall, he still failed to avoid the drop three matches before the end of the tournament.
In 2017, Moreira led América back to the Série A, after winning the Série B tournament.
On 16 June 2018, he resigned from the club,[19] and was announced after accepting an offer from fellow top division club Bahia.[20]
On 1 April 2019, after being knocked out of the year's Copa do Nordeste, Moreira was dismissed by Bahia.
[21] Late in the month, he replaced fired Lisca at the helm of Ceará, but was himself sacked on 1 October.[22]
On 10 February 2020, Moreira returned to Ceará, replacing sacked Argel Fucks,[23] but resigned on 17 March to take over Cruzeiro the following day.
[24] He was relieved of his duties on 8 September, after a 1–1 home draw against CRB,[25] and returned to Goiás on the 28th;[26] his spell at the latter club also did not last long, as he was sacked on 17 November after ten winless matches.[27]
On 7 January 2021, Moreira replaced Marcelo Chamusca at the helm of Fortaleza, still in the top tier.
[28] He was sacked on 25 April, after being knocked out of the 2021 Copa do Nordeste.[29]
On 20 July 2021, Moreira again replaced Chamusca, now in charge of Botafogo.
[30] He led the club back to the top tier as champions, but was still sacked the following 11 February.[31]
On 26 June 2022, Moreira returned to Bahia, in the place of sacked Guto Ferreira,[32] but was himself dismissed on 1 October.
[33] On 18 November, he was named in charge of Sport Recife for the upcoming season.[34]
Managerial statistics [ edit ]
As of 3 October 2022
Managerial record by team and tenure Team Nat From To Record Ref Ipatinga 26 October 2008 22 February 2009 9 2 2 5 8 16 −8 0 22.
22 América Mineiro (interim) 22 March 2009 11 April 2009 3 1 1 1 3 3 +0 0 33.
33 Fluminense (interim) 25 March 2011 29 May 2011 12 7 2 3 20 15 +5 0 58.
33 [35] Goiás 28 September 2011 14 December 2013 149 84 35 30 267 155 +112 0 56.
38 [36] Grêmio 16 December 2013 27 July 2014 35 19 9 7 49 25 +24 0 54.
29 [37] Santos 3 September 2014 5 March 2015 31 16 6 9 48 31 +17 0 51.
61 Atlético Paranaense 16 March 2015 20 April 2015 8 3 3 2 14 7 +7 0 37.
50 [13] Fluminense 21 May 2015 15 September 2015 26 11 4 11 29 31 −2 0 42.
31 [15] Goiás 15 December 2015 8 June 2016 27 13 7 7 36 26 +10 0 48.
15 [36] América Mineiro 20 July 2016 16 June 2018 111 43 32 36 112 110 +2 0 38.
74 [19] Bahia 16 June 2018 1 April 2019 59 22 19 18 74 45 +29 0 37.
29 [21] Ceará 22 April 2019 1 October 2019 22 6 5 11 22 23 −1 0 27.
27 [38] Ceará 10 February 2020 17 March 2020 10 6 4 0 16 7 +9 0 60.
00 [39] Cruzeiro 18 March 2020 8 September 2020 12 6 3 3 17 10 +7 0 50.
00 [40] Goiás 28 September 2020 17 November 2020 10 0 3 7 8 19 −11 00 0.
00 [27] Fortaleza 7 January 2021 25 April 2021 22 11 4 7 23 23 +0 0 50.
00 [41] Botafogo 23 July 2021 11 February 2022 31 20 7 4 50 18 +32 0 64.
52 [31] Bahia 26 June 2022 1 October 2022 18 6 6 6 20 18 +2 0 33.
33 Total 595 276 152 167 816 582 +234 0 46.
39 ―Honours [ edit ]América MineiroCruzeiroInternacionalCopa Sub-23: 2010GoiásBotafogoSport Recife