The Football League Paper

Molineux’s main man isnolonger O Substituto NUNO FACTFILE

- By Chris Dunlavy

NUNO Espirito Santo was always a leader off the pitch. Not that the Wolves manager had much choice.

At Vitoria Guimaraes, a veteran goalkeeper by the name of Neno provided lots of mentoring but few opportunit­ies.

At Deportivo, it was Jacques Songo’o and Jose Molina who barred his path. Later, as Jose Mourinho’s Porto conquered Europe, Nuno rarely beat Helton and Vitor Baia to a berth in the matchday squad.

Over the course of an 18-year career in three different countries, the 43-year-old played just 199 matches – and 102 of those were on loan in the Spanish second tier.

In Portugal, Nuno was dubbed O Substituto, a nickname that needs no translatio­n.

Yet meagre statistics and disparagin­g epithets are no measure of the goalie’s real value.

“Nuno was so much more than a keeper,” said Carlos Azenha, who spent two years as Porto’s assistant coach. “He was like an extension of the coach, in the dressing room and on the pitch.”

Bruno Alves, a team-mate at the Estadio Dragao during Nuno’s final years at Porto, said his friend was a ‘captain without an armband’.

“In my time in Porto, everyone knows that Nuno did not really play much,” said the 35year-old, who was capped 93 times for Portugal and won Euro 2016. “But he was the leader of the camp, no ques- tion. I learned a lot from him – as a man, as a captain and as a player.”

Like Steve McManaman at Real Madrid, Nuno was the man who repaired broken friendship­s, soothed bruised egos and fixed problems.

“I have lived with a lot of players, but Nuno is one of the greatest guys I’ve ever met,” adds South African striker Benni McCarthy, part of Mourinho’s Champions League -winning side in 2004.

“He is a very cheerful person. He knows how to motivate his colleagues. He is always ready to listen and to help. When someone fails, he is the first to encourage. If a teammate is down, he’s the first to try to re-motivate him. Colleagues rush to embrace him when they score a goal.”

Trumped

Mourinho put it more succinctly. “When you have Nuno,” he said. “You don’t have to worry about the dressing room.”

Nuno’s personalit­y was shaped by a framework of conduct in which the collective always trumped individual interests, even to the detriment of his own career.

Harmony, cohesion and unity are sacrosanct.

When Hulk and Cristian Sapunaru received four-month bans for fighting with stewards at the home of bitter rivals Benfica in 2010, the normally affable Gomes called a press conference. Born: Sao Tome and Principe, 1974 (Age 43) Playing career: Nuno grew up in Portugal and joined Vitoria Guimaraes as a teenager, making his debut as an 18-year-old in 1992. After 34 appearance­s in four years, he made a £1m switch to Deportivo La Coruña in La Liga. Scarcely used by Depor, he spent two seasons on loan at Merida, helping the Segunda Division side finish sixth in 1999-2000 and winning the Zamora trophy for most clean sheets. Nuno then joined newly-promoted La Liga side Osasuna, playing 33 games to help the club avoid relegation by a single place. Signed by Porto for £3m in 2002, he played just six times in two years but was part of the squad that won two league titles, the UEFA Cup and the Champions League from 2003-04. After brief spells at Dynamo Moscow and Aves, Nuno returned to Porto in 2007 and remained there until his retirement in 2010. Managerial career: Named manager of top-flight Portuguese side Rio Ave in 2012, Nuno notched finishes of sixth and 11th, also reaching two cup finals as the club achieved European qualificat­ion for the first time in its history. He subsequent­ly joined Valencia and achieved a fourth-place finish in 2014-15. However, a poor start to the 2015-16 campaign led to Nuno being sacked. After eight months out of the game, Nuno was named Porto manager in June 2016. His former club finished second in the Primeira Liga but were six points behind Benfica and failed to win any other silverware. Nuno was dismissed on May 22. He joined Wolves a week later.

Flanked by team-mates, he launched into his now legendary Somos Porto (We

are Porto) diatribe. “Nobody will divert us from our course,” he spat. “There is no-one, no injustice that takes away our union.”

To Nuno, the rights and wrongs of the incident were secondary. Protecting the group and standing up for his teammates were all that mattered.

This selfless streak is evident in his personal life, too. Nuno has always lived modestly, running the same car for a decade, shunning celebrity and shielding his family from the Press.

If principles were one constant for Nuno, the other was Jorge Mendes. These days, the 51-year-old is arguably the most powerful agent in world football. Clients include Mourinho and Cristiano Ronaldo.

Nuno was his first. In 1996, Mendes was working as a parttime DJ and video store manager when he met the young goalkeeper in a nightclub.

Nuno revealed he was one of Vitoria’s lowest-paid players; Mendes saw an opportunit­y.

Opportunit­y

First he convinced Nuno to hire him. Then he drove two and a half hours to Deportivo La Coruna, camping out in reception and trailing the club president down the street, extolling Nuno’s virtues until the Spaniard could take no more. A lifelong associatio­n – and the company now known as Gestifute – was born.

Mendes it was who brokered moves to Porto (twice), Dynamo Moscow and Aves. Mendes, too, whose connection­s and influence yielded managerial posts at Rio Ave, Valencia (owner and Mendes associate Peter Lim refused to buy the club unless Nuno was named manager), Porto and now Wolves. To his credit, Nuno has never attempted to hide his debt to the superagent. After Rio Ave reached the semi-finals of the Portuguese Cup in 2014, he answered his cell phone in the middle of the post-match Press conference.

“This is for you,” he said. “Promise me you’ll be at the final. Promise me! I love you”. Most assumed a close relative was on the line!

Nuno, though, is more than a fortunate son. His coaching chops were earned, first under ex-Porto coach Jesualdo Pereira at Malaga and Panathinai­kos, then on UEFA courses in Scotland. Ian Cathro, the deposed Hearts boss, was a classmate and remains a friend.

Rio Ave reached two cup finals and the Europa League.

In 2014-15, Valencia took four points off Real Madrid in qualifying for the Champions League, earning Nuno a slew of manager-of-the -month awards. A bad run and fan resentment over Mendes’ creeping involvemen­t led to him fatefully being replaced by the hapless Gary Neville.

Only last season’s move to Porto lacked redeeming features. Initially portrayed as a glorious return, it was anything but as negative tactics, a glut of draws and a faltering title charge ensued.

The measured nature that had served Nuno so well in the dressing room was, in the dugout, perceived by many Porto fans as a lack of passion.

Sad as they were to see him go, few argued with the decision. Seven days later, he arrived at Wolves.

“I believe in Nuno,” said Bruno Alves. “I believe he would have taken Porto on the right path and I believe he will be a success in England. He is a leader like no other.”

 ?? PICTURE: Action Images ?? SPIRIT OF THE DUGOUT: Wolves manager Nuno Espirito Santo
PICTURE: Action Images SPIRIT OF THE DUGOUT: Wolves manager Nuno Espirito Santo
 ??  ?? LEADER: Nuno was ‘the captain without the armband’, according to a former team-mate
LEADER: Nuno was ‘the captain without the armband’, according to a former team-mate

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