Didi (footballer, born 1928)

Didi
Didi in 1958
Personal information
Full name Valdir Pereira
Date of birth (1928-10-08)8 October 1928
Place of birth Campos dos Goytacazes, Brazil
Date of death 12 May 2001(2001-05-12) (aged 72)
Height 1.72 m (5 ft 8 in)
Position(s) Midfielder (retired)
Youth career
1944–1945 São Cristóvão FC
1945 Industrial
1945 Rio Branco
1945–1946 Goytacaz
1946–1947 Americano
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1947–1949[1] Madureira 32 (8)
1949–1956 Fluminense 150 (51)
1956–1959 Botafogo 64 (40)
1959–1960 Real Madrid 19 (6)
1960–1962 Botafogo 44 (19)
1962–1964 Sporting Cristal 32 (4)
1964–1965 Botafogo 11 (1)
1965–1966 CD Veracruz 29 (4)
1966 São Paulo 4 (0)
Total 385 (133)
National team
1952–1962 Brazil 68 (20)
Teams managed
1962–1964 Sporting Cristal
1967–1969 Sporting Cristal
1969–1970 Peru
1971 River Plate
1972–1975 Fenerbahçe
1975 Fluminense
1977 Cruzeiro
1977–1981 Al-Ahli (Jeddah)
1981 Botafogo
1981 Cruzeiro
1982–1983 Al-Shabab[2]
1985 Fortaleza
1986 São Paulo
1986 Alianza Lima
1989–1990 Bangu
Honours
Men's Football
Representing  Brazil
FIFA World Cup
Winner 1958 Sweden
Winner 1962 Chile
Copa América
Runner-up 1953 Peru
Runner-up 1957 Peru
Runner-up 1959 Argentina
Panamerican Championship
Winner 1952 Chile
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Valdir Pereira (8 October 1928 – 12 May 2001), was a former Brazilian football player. He has played for the Brazil national team. Together with Pelé, Vavá, Garrincha and Mário Zagallo, he formed the attack quintet of the Brazilian team that became world champions in 1958 and 1962. Considered as one of the greatest midfielders of all time. Didi was a very gifted playmaker known for his long balls and free kicks. He was the inventor of the folha seca ("dry leaf") with which he gave the ball such an effect that it seemed as if it would disappear over the goal but at the last moment disappeared between the posts like a dry leaf falling from the tree had fallen. He was nicknamed "the Ethiopian Prince" for the elegance and class he gave to the midfield of the teams he played for.

Early life

Didi was born in Campos dos Goytacazes, located 200 kilometers north of Rio de Janeiro. There he learned to play football in the street in barefoot matches. At the age of 14, Didi almost had to give up after he was injured and an infection developed on his right knee. It looked like his leg would have to be amputated, but Didi recovered after spending six months in a wheelchair. Two years later, he signed his first contract in his hometown with the club of the same name.

Club career

Didi started playing football for Madureira in 1947. In 1949 he transferred to Fluminense, one of Rio's biggest clubs. There, Didi impressed, but in 1950 he was still too young to participate in the World Cup in his own country. That same year he was part of a representative team from Rio that opened the Maracanã against a team from São Paulo. In the game, Didi scored the first ever goal in one of the largest stadiums in the world. A year later he won the Rio de Janeiro State Championship with his club and the Copa Rio the following year. However, Didi ran into trouble at the time when Fluminense's arch-rival Botafogo, tried to get him in. The relationship between Fluminense and Didi deteriorated as a result, also because he was criticized after he left his wife and young daughter for the actress Guiomar Batista. Finally, in 1956, after seven years, Didi made the switch to Botafogo for two million cruzeiro, a record amount at the time. At Botafogo, he immediately bonded with Nílton Santos and Garrincha, with whom he would celebrate the State Championship together a year later. In 1959, the playmaker made the move to Real Madrid , where he became the first black player in club history. Real were one of the best clubs in the world at the time, but Didi had a frustrating period there. Didi was unable to force a starting spot and ran into problems with Alfredo Di Stéfano , who did not want to share his star status. The Brazilian therefore decided to return to Botafogo after two seasons. With that club he again won the State Championship in 1961 and 1962. The playmaker went on to play for several other clubs before ending his active career in 1966.

International career

Didi made his debut for the Brazilian national team in 1952. Two years later he made his appearance at the World Cup in Switzerland. There, Brazil was sent home to Hungary in the quarter-finals after a match that would go down in history as the Battle of Bern. It was one of the most unsportsmanlike matches in World Cup history. Didi was left out for the Copa América 1956 along with Garrincha, Zózimo, Zizinho, Nílton Santos, Julinho, Castilho, Bauer and Pepé. He played during the Copa América in 1957 where Brazil finished second. In 1958 Didi had become one of the key figures of the Brazilian national team that traveled to the World Cup in Sweden with a revolutionary 4-2-4 formation. At the time, it was Didi who gave confidence to 17-year-old Pelé. The team eventually took home the title. After Brazil fell 1-0 behind Sweden in the final, Didi turned things around and went on to win 5-2. Didi was subsequently voted the best player of the World Cup.

Didi wanted to participate for the 1962 FIFA World Cup but the Brazilian press complained that the 33-year-old playmaker would be too old for it. Didi countered: "it's the ball that has to do the work, not the player". Brazil again reached the final, beating Czechoslovakia 3-1. It was Didi's last international match.

Managerial career

After his active career, Didi was active as a trainer in BrazilArgentinaPeruTurkey and Saudi Arabia. Didi had his greatest success in 1970 when he guided Peru to the quarter-finals of the World Cup. It eventually lost to the later world champion Brazil. In addition, he won the double with Fenerbahçe in 1974 and managed to extend the national championship a year later. 

International career statistics

[3]

Brazil national team
YearAppsGoals
1952 5 1
1953 5 0
1954 7 2
1955 2 0
1956 10 2
1957 10 9
1958 8 1
1959 7 3
1960 0 0
1961 4 1
1962 10 1
Total 68 20

Honours

Player

International

Brazil

Club

Botafogo
  • Campeonato Carioca: 1957, 1961, 1962[4]
  • Torneio Rio – São Paulo: 1962[4]
  • Tournament Home: 1961, 1962, 1963
  • Colombia International Tournament: 1960
  • Pentagonal Club of Mexico: 1962
Fluminense
  • Copa Rio: 1952
  • State Championship: 1951
Real Madrid[4]

Individual

  • FIFA World Cup Golden Ball: 1958[5]
  • FIFA World Cup All-Star Team: 1958
  • IFFHS Brazilian Player of the 20th Century (7th place)[6]
  • IFFHS World Player of the 20th Century (19th place)[6]
  • IFFHS South American Player of the 20th Century (17th place)[7]
  • The Best of The Best – Player of the Century: Top 50[8]
  • Brazilian Football Museum Hall of Fame
  • Ballon d'Or Dream Team (Bronze): 2020[9]
  • IFFHS South America Men's Team of All Time: 2021[10]

References

  1. "Jornal dos Sports". Biblioteca Nacional Digital (in Portuguese).
  2. "الشباب يلغي معسكره فالشرقية".
  3. "Waldir Pereira "Didi" - International Appearances and Goals". www.rsssf.com.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 "Didi, the unflappable genius". FIFA.com. Archived from the original on 10 September 2015. Retrieved 23 October 2015.
  5. "1982 FIFA World Cup Technical Report" (PDF). FIFA Technical Group. 1982. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-01-06.
  6. 6.0 6.1 IFFHS' Century Elections Archived 12 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  7. "IFFHS' Century Elections". www.rsssf.com.
  8. "The Best of The Best" Archived 26 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 17 November 2015
  9. "The other two Ballon d'Or Dream Team XIs: Zidane, Cruyff, Iniesta, Di Stefano... but no Casillas". MARCA. 15 December 2020. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  10. https://www.iffhs.com/posts/1116. {cite web}: Missing or empty |title= (help)