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・ António Rodrigues Sampaio
・ António Roquete
・ António Rosa Mendes
・ António Salvador (athlete)
・ António Saraiva
・ António Sardinha
・ António Sebastião Spínola
・ António Sebastião Valente
・ António Semedo
・ António Silva (actor)
・ António Simões
・ António Simões de Abreu
・ António Soares
・ António Soares Carneiro
・ António Soares dos Reis
António Sousa
・ António Sérgio
・ António Tavares
・ António Taí
・ António Teixeira
・ António Teixeira (disambiguation)
・ António Teixeira (Portuguese footballer)
・ António Teixeira de Sousa
・ António Teixeira Lopes
・ António van Grichen
・ António Variações
・ António Veloso
・ António Vicente Campinas
・ António Victorino de Almeida
・ António Vieira


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António Sousa : ウィキペディア英語版
António Sousa

António Augusto Gomes de Sousa ((:ɐ̃ˈtɔniu ˈsowzɐ); born 28 April 1957) is a Portuguese retired footballer who played as a central midfielder, and a current manager.
During his career he played, among others, for Porto and Sporting, amassing top division totals of 483 games and 83 goals over the course of 18 seasons. Subsequently, he worked as a manager for several clubs.
Gaining nearly 30 caps for Portugal during the 80's, Sousa represented the nation in one World Cup and another European Championship, scoring in both tournaments.
==Club career==
Born in São João da Madeira, Sousa started professionally with local A.D. Sanjoanense at only 16, with his team in the second division. In 1975 he signed with S.C. Beira-Mar, scoring a career-best 15 goals in his third year as the Aveiro club returned to the top flight (three of his four seasons there were spent in the main category).
Sousa was then bought by FC Porto, where he remained an undisputed starter: he won the league championship and the cup several times, also scoring against Juventus FC in the 1984 European Cup Winners' Cup Final, lost 1–2 in Basel.
In the 1984 summer, Sousa and longtime Porto central midfield partner Jaime Pacheco signed with Sporting Clube de Portugal – as part of the deal that sent 17-year-old prodigy Paulo Futre in the opposite direction – with the pair returning after two seasons. He then proceeded to win the European Cup, the Intercontinental Cup and the UEFA Super Cup with the northern side, continuing to appear regularly.
Sousa retired in 1996 at 39, as player-coach of first club Sanjoanense. He then dedicated himself exclusively to coaching, his main team being another former club as a player, Beira-Mar, where he remained for seven 1/2 years, with four consecutive first division seasons. In 1999, he led the latter to its biggest achievement, the Portuguese Cup, after defeating S.C. Campomaiorense 1–0.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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