José Carlos Serrão

José Carlos Serrão (born October 12, 1950) is a Brazilian manager and former football player.

José Carlos Serrão
Personal information
Full name José Carlos Serrão
Date of birth (1950-10-12) October 12, 1950
Place of birth São Paulo, Brazil
Playing position(s) Left winger
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1969–1977 São Paulo
1977 Botafogo-PB
1978 Joinville
1979 Santo André
1979 Anapolina
1980 Cúcuta Deportivo
Teams managed
1983–1987 São Paulo (assistant)
1987 Santo André
1988–1989 XV de Piracicaba
1990–1991 Francana
1991 Rio Branco-MG
1992 XV de Piracicaba
1992 Central
1993 Nacional-SP
1993 Marília
1994 Juventus
1994 CRB
1995 Paysandu
1995 Londrina
1995 Mogi Mirim
1996–1997 Francana
1997 Araçatuba
1998 Rio Branco-MG
1999 Mogi Mirim
2000 Corinthians (Youth-interim)
2000 Ceará
2001 Portuguesa Santista
2002–2004 Suwon Bluewings (assistant)
2005 Guarani
2005 União Barbarense
2005–2006 Pogoń
2007 Mogi Mirim
2008 Rio Preto
2008 Anapolina
2009 Marília
2010 Sertãozinho
2010–2011 Mogi Mirim
2011 São Bento
2011 América-SP
2011 Central
2012 Itapirense
2012 Gamba Osaka
2012 Icasa
2012–2013 São Carlos
2013 Juventus
2014–2015 Sertãozinho
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

On 27 March 2012, Jose Carlos Serrao having lasted only five games as Gamba Osaka manager, the former Asian champions sacked the Brazilian and replaced him with one of the club's former midfielders, Masanobu Matsunami.[1]

Managerial statistics

[2]

Team From To Record
GWDLWin %
Gamba Osaka 2012 2012 3 0 0 3 000.00
Total 3 0 0 3 000.00

Honours

Player

São Paulo
Botafogo-PB
Joinville

Manager

Rio Branco-MG

Minas Gerais Campeonato Mineiro - Módulo II: 1998

gollark: Especially on the https://dragcave.net/view/n/Trade%20Hub%20Feedback%20Thread
gollark: People: Inconsistent and Weird.
gollark: (as I said on the thread)
gollark: It'd be fine if they just changed the capitalization a bit.
gollark: Ah, fuzzbucket, bringer of nonsense.

References

  1. Kyodo (March 27, 2012). "Gamba sack Serrao after five defeats". The Japan Times Online. Retrieved May 8, 2012.
  2. J.League Data Site(in Japanese)
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