It’s 20 years this month since Porto shocked Manchester United en route to a remarkable Champions League triumph. The star of Jose Mourinho’s team? A magician called Deco, who would later score in the final as Porto beat Monaco 3-0.
At the start of that season, Deco had wanted to fulfil a lifelong dream by joining Barcelona, but Porto snubbed their bid. Things worked out pretty well in the end, just as they did when the midfielder – born in Brazil as Anderson Luis de Souza – won 75 caps for Portugal after moving there aged 19.
Deco joined Barça in 2004 and won the Champions League with them, too, followed by league titles with Chelsea and Fluminense. This season, after a decade as an agent, he returned to Camp Nou as sporting director, eyeing Champions League glory again – Barça take on Napoli in this month’s last 16.
FFT meets the 46-year-old in his office at the training ground, after we have been generously transported by golf cart from the main entrance. The first team train on the pitch outside while Deco answers your questions…
Where did you get the nickname Deco, and what does it mean?
Jesse Bailey, Lincoln [Laughs] Nothing! I’ve been called Deco for as long as I can remember. My uncle called me Deco, or Dequinho, but I don’t know why. Even he doesn’t!
How did your move from Brazil to Benfica come about?
This story is from the March 2024 edition of FourFourTwo UK.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the March 2024 edition of FourFourTwo UK.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
How Liverpool have changed under new manager Arne Slot
The Reds have had to adapt to life without their legendary boss Jurgen Klopp, But their new managers tactical tweaks showed highly promising early signs
Why Cole Palmer is an absolute genius on a football pitch
Chelsea’s attacking star attracts plenty of mirth for his interviews, but he often displays unrivalled intelligence in the heat of Premier League action
CORINTHIANS X SENNA 2018-19
Kit connoisseur Phil Delves looks back at an ultimate 'collab shirt' from South America - one that heralded a black and gold craze
"THE MISSILE SIRENS WOULD START DURING TRAINING, SO WE'D HAVE TO GO INSIDE AND TAKE COVER"
The Welsh international striker recalls growing up in Africa, humiliation at Derby and air strikes in Israel, not to mention a certain hat-tricks record...
"I SWAPPED SHIRTS WITH ETO'O AFTER MY DEBUT HE PROBABLY USED MINE ON HIS WINDOWS"
The lifelong Magpie opens up about earning Sir Bobby’s trust, his new career in the Middle East, and how Ruud van Nistelrooy knew I wanted to kick him”
"SVEN GOT IN TOUCH TO SEE IF I'D BE KEEN ON PLAYING FOR ENGLAND THAT MADE ME SO PROUD"
The former Italian shot-stopper tells FourFourTwo about following in his father’s footsteps at Milan and the game that changed Chelsea forever...
Why Thomas Tuchel is the perfect fit for the England job
The new gaffer might not have been born and bred in Barnsley, but he’s long proved himself to be particularly astute in high-profile knockout competitions
GREEN SHOOTS
Less than two years ago, Saint-Etienne were at real risk of relegation to the semi-professional third tier - unthinkable for a club who were the finest in France throughout the 1960s and '70s. Now Les Verts are back in the big time following last term's Ligue 2 play-off success. Oh, and they're also billionaires...
Why I love Scottish football
The legendary goal-getter recounts his strangest tales, featuring Graeme Souness punch-ups, broken sofas, Duncan Ferguson's errant pigeon and, of course, Gazza...
A MATCH WITH THE MONKS THE GREATEST COMPETITION PRIZE EVER
A globe-trotting FourFourTwo has gone beyond even Tanzania’s borders this month. American fan Matthew Eide of the Far Away Football blog ventured to equally mountainous Bhutan, after winning the most unusual of raffles...