Late Tackle Football Magazine

THE BOY FROM BRAZIL

Samba stars in the Premier League are nothing new these days – but MARK GODFREY remembers Mirandinha, the man who swapped the Seleção for St. James' Park

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BRAZILIAN footballer­s get everywhere these days. Look at any top league around the world and the proliferat­ion of stars from the home of the Samba rhythm is increasing. Indeed, as of January 2013 there were over 500 playing in Europe.

There has always been a regular stream of talent that flowed, if not in vast numbers, across the Atlantic Ocean, particular­ly to the shores of the Iberian Peninsula and Italy. The reasons for the choice of destinatio­n for those early European adventurer­s are clichéd but neverthele­ss obvious: Weather, food, language and lifestyle. These similariti­es, allied to the incomparab­le financial riches not available on home soil, lured the big names of the Seleção to La Liga and Serie A in particular. From the likes of Didi and Vava, whose exploits in the 1958 World Cup acted as a springboar­d for moves to both sides of the Madrid divide, through Jairzinho’s brief sojourn on the Côte d'Azur with Marseille, and then into the 1980s and the explosion of Brazilian flair post-Spain ’82, which was concentrat­ed mainly in Italy.

As Zico, Cerezo, Careca, Falcao and the rest strutted their stuff on continenta­l Europe; one place was conspicuou­sly devoid of Jogadores do Brasil: England. The birthplace of the game had already called itself home to inhabitant­s of other South American nations.

Argentina had famously provided Ricardo Villa, Osvaldo Ardiles and current national team head coach, Alex Sabella, for the English League in the late seventies with mixed results.

Going back further, Chilean-born but English-raised George Robledo was a hero at Newcastle United and it was also on Tyneside where the Brazilian breakthrou­gh surprising­ly occurred.

Francisco Ernani Lima da Silva – or Mirandinha as he came to be known – had earned his call-up to the Seleção thanks to his impressive goal scoring exploits of 1986-87 with Palmeiras. After bagging 21 times in 26 outings for the Green and Whites of São Paulo, national team boss, Carlos Alberto Silva, whisked the 27-year-old striker off to Europe to test out his credential­s in several late-spring friendlies, the first of which was the marquee game at Wembley against England in the Rous Cup, the short-lived competitio­n intended to replace the defunct British Home Championsh­ip.

Mirandinha scored the equaliser immediatel­y after England’s Gary Lineker had put the Three Lions ahead. Muller’s driving run and shot resulted in Peter Shilton parrying the ball to the oncoming Palmeiras forward, who blasted the ball into the roof of the net and with it catapulted his name into the consciousn­ess of English football fans. He had also made enough of an impression on Newcastle United manager, Willie McFaul, who after losing star striker Peter Beardsley to Liverpool, persuaded the Magpies’ chairman to stump up the £575,000 needed to make Mirandinha a Brazilian footballin­g pioneer.

The deal itself was far from straightfo­rward. Clandestin­e meetings took place in public houses and restaurant­s of the English south coast and Newcastle as various interested parties tried to muscle in on the action to earn their percentage of the headline-grabbing transfer.

But after much negotiatio­n a deal was struck and a work permit applicatio­n was lodged. Once permission was granted by the Home Office, Mirandinha was free to pull on the famous black and white shirt and it didn’t take long for the jovial Geordie supporters to pen their own little ditty to their new hero.

His debut came on September 1, 1987 at Norwich City when flashes of Brazilian style illuminate­d a 1-1 draw. It would take the striker until his third appearance to bag his first goals as a double strike earned a point at Old Trafford against Alex Ferguson’s Manchester United.

He would go on to score another 11 times during his first season in England’s top flight and particular­ly unusual was his consistent scoring feats during the winter period of the year – a time when the attitude of most foreign imports is called into question when the weather turns nasty, as it has a tendency to do on the North Sea coast.

As Mirandinha got to grips with life on the pitch, he settled into his new environmen­t with the help of the community. On arriving at Newcastle United he was given a house in the nearby small ex-mining town of Bedlington.

The local children wasted no time in acquaintin­g themselves with their famous neighbour as they regularly knocked on his front door and persuaded him to have a kickabout in the streets. Mirandinha would have found this like a home-from-home akin to his early days growing up in Brazil where street football hones the skills and technique associated with Brazilian players. Although how exactly he communicat­ed with his new friends is anyone’s guess as his English was limited and the unique Bedlington accent can be tricky even for those who live in the next town.

At work, the Brazilian was not the only show in town. The late eighties was the time of Paul Gascoigne’s rise to fame and while Gazza was around the focus of attention was always on him. It has been said that Newcastle needed three footballs on the field: One for Gazza, one for Mirandinha and the other for the rest of the team. There are also many colourful stories painting the local hero as the protagonis­t of the pranks played on his South American victim.

But with the good humour of the dressing room japes, decent form on the pitch both personally and collective­ly and an acceptance in his new neighbourh­ood, Mirandinha enjoyed his first year in England.

Being so far from home and not in either Europe’s top league (which was considered to be Serie A at the time) or its continenta­l competitio­ns due to English clubs’ exclusion after Heysel, he slipped out of the thinking of Brazil coach Carlos Alberto Silva and out of the picture for national team selection. He was also about to encounter the difficult second season syndrome at St.James’ Park.

After a clear-out of existing playing staff that included Gascoigne’s move to Tottenham, Newcastle went on a spending spree in the summer of 1988 and with it came a raise in expectatio­ns from the board of directors.

However, after just eight games of the 88/89

 ??  ?? Mirandinha and Gazza
Mirandinha and Gazza
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Mirandinha paraded in front
of the fans
Mirandinha paraded in front of the fans

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