João Carlos Teixeira

João Carlos Vilaça Teixeira (born 18 January 1993) is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays as an attacking midfielder for Chinese Super League club Shanghai Shenhua.

João Carlos Teixeira
Teixeira playing for Liverpool in 2013
Personal information
Full nameJoão Carlos Vilaça Teixeira
Date of birth (1993-01-18) 18 January 1993 (age 31)[1]
Place of birthBraga, Portugal
Height1.77 m (5 ft 10 in)[2]
Position(s)Attacking midfielder, Winger
Team information
Current team
Shanghai Shenhua
Number10
Youth career
2003–2004Braga
2004–2012Sporting CP
2012–2013Liverpool
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
2013–2016Liverpool2(0)
2013Brentford (loan)2(0)
2014–2015Brighton & Hove Albion (loan)32(5)
2016–2018Porto8(0)
2017–2018Braga (loan)14(0)
2018–2020Vitória Guimarães41(8)
2020–2022Feyenoord19(0)
2022Famalicão11(2)
2022–2023Umm Salal16(4)
2023–Shanghai Shenhua25(6)
International career
2008–2009Portugal U169(0)
2009–2010Portugal U1716(1)
2010–2011Portugal U186(1)
2011–2012Portugal U195(2)
2012–2013Portugal U206(0)
2013–2015Portugal U212(1)
2016Portugal Olympic1(0)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals, correct as of 26 August 2023

After developing at Braga and Sporting CP he joined Liverpool for £800,000 in January 2012. He made eight total appearances for Liverpool, scoring once, and had loans at Brentford in League One and Brighton & Hove Albion in the Championship, winning Player of the Year at the latter. He returned to Portugal in 2016, and made over 70 Primeira Liga appearances for Braga, Porto, Vitória de Guimarães and Famalicão.

Club career

Sporting CP

Teixeira joined Sporting CP from hometown club Braga in 2004 and progressed through the youth teams.[3] He began training with the first team and was given the number 46 shirt for the 2011–12 season.[4] His first involvement for the senior side came in December 2011, when he was an unused substitute for Europa League matches against FC Zürich and Lazio.

Liverpool

Having been a youth player at Braga and Sporting CP, Teixeira joined Premier League side Liverpool in a £830,000 deal during the January 2012 transfer window.[5] He had impressed Liverpool Academy manager Frank McParland with his performances in midfield for Sporting Lisbon against Liverpool during the 2011–12 NextGen Series.[3] The move almost fell through due to a back injury.[3] Upon joining Liverpool, Teixeira was hailed as "the new Deco".[6][7] Teixeira made 20 U21 Premier League appearances for Liverpool during the 2012–13 season, scoring 2 goals as Liverpool reached the competition's semi-finals, where they lost 3–0 to Manchester United.

2013–14 season: Brentford loan and debut

Teixeira made his first U21 appearance of the 2013–14 season on 2 September, scoring the equaliser in a 1–1 draw with Leicester City, and followed it with the concluding goal of a 5–0 rout of Tottenham Hotspur on 7 October.[8]

Amidst interest from Bologna, Teixeira joined League One side Brentford on 10 September 2013 on a youth loan running until 5 January 2014.[9] On 14 September he made the first professional appearance of his career in a 4–3 victory at Tranmere Rovers, coming on as an added-time substitute for George Saville.[10] He then made his second appearance on 23 September as a substitute for Martin Fillo, playing 21 minutes in a 2–0 home defeat to Leyton Orient.[11] However, as Brentford fell further down League One, manager Uwe Rösler admitted that due to the team's downturn in form, he could no longer guarantee the game time Liverpool expected for Teixeira.[12][13][14] The loan was therefore terminated early by Liverpool on 7 October, Teixeira having made just two league appearances.[13]

After returning to the Liverpool Reserves, on 12 February 2014 Teixeira made his senior team debut as an 82nd-minute substitute for Raheem Sterling against Fulham, in a tightly contested 3–2 win at Craven Cottage. He was involved in the buildup play that led to Daniel Sturridge winning the penalty that won Liverpool the game.[15] The young midfielder was praised after the game by manager Brendan Rodgers and captain Steven Gerrard.[16][17]

2014–15 season: Brighton & Hove Albion (loan)

Teixeira preparing a free kick for Brighton against Cardiff City in February 2015

On 15 August 2014, Teixeira joined Championship side Brighton & Hove Albion on a season-long loan deal, signed by former Liverpool defender Sami Hyypiä.[18] Teixeira made his debut the day after joining, coming on as a 64th-minute substitute for Kazenga LuaLua in a 1–0 defeat away to Birmingham City.[19]

On 19 August, he scored his first goal on his first full start for the club, opening a 2–0 victory against Leeds United.[20] He went on to score his second goal for the club just four days later, the winner as they came from behind to defeat Bolton Wanderers 2–1.[21]

Teixeira scored twice in the first half in a 3–2 home win over Ipswich Town on 21 January 2015.[22] A month later, he scored a further two goals for a 4–3 victory against Birmingham.[23] On 14 April, Teixeira suffered a broken leg as a result of a challenge by Huddersfield Town's Nahki Wells during a goalless draw. Ruled out for the remainder of the season, he was recalled by Liverpool.[24] On 20 April, he was voted as Brighton's Young Player of the Year after ending the season as their top scorer in the league with 6 goals.[25] On 19 May, Teixeira was also awarded Liverpool's Academy Player of the Year.[26]

2015–16 season

On 28 October 2015, Teixeira made his first start for Liverpool against Bournemouth in the League Cup and assisted Nathaniel Clyne to score the only goal of the game.[27] On 20 January 2016, in a FA Cup Third round replay, Teixeira scored his first competitive goal for Liverpool, the last to round off a 3–0 victory over Exeter City.[28]

Later career

On 12 June 2016, Teixeira announced that he had agreed to join Porto following the expiration of his contract with Liverpool.[29] His departure was confirmed by Liverpool two days later, with the club due £250,000 compensation.[30][31]

Teixeira was loaned back to his hometown club Braga on 31 August 2017, for the season.[32] He played 23 times, scoring once, an equaliser in a UEFA Europa League 2–1 win at Hoffenheim on 14 September.[33]

In a surprise move on 26 July 2018, Teixeira joined Braga's local rivals Vitória S.C. on a three-year deal.[34] He did not score until 13 months later, when he netted in home wins over Jeunesse Esch and Ventspils in Europa League qualifiers;[35] 2019–20 was the most prolific league season of his career with eight goals.[36]

On 4 September 2020, Teixeira went back abroad on a two-year deal with the option for a third at Feyenoord in the Dutch Eredivisie; no fee was disclosed.[37] Having not scored in 24 appearances, mostly as a substitute, he returned to his country's top division on 31 January 2022 with Famalicão.[38]

Teixeira signed a two-year deal at Umm Salal in the Qatar Stars League on 27 June 2022.[39] In April 2023, he joined Chinese Super League club Shanghai Shenhua on a contract until December 2024.[40]

International career

Teixeira represented Portugal at every age group from U16 to U21. He was included in the under-17 squad for the 2010 UEFA European Championship. He made his U21 debut in a friendly against Croatia in June 2013, starting the match and scoring in the 84th minute.[41]

Career statistics

As of match played 26 August 2023[42]
Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
ClubSeasonLeagueLeagueCupLeague CupEuropeOtherTotal
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Liverpool2013–14Premier League10000010
2015–161041101071
Total204110100081
Brentford (loan)2013–14League One20000020
Brighton (loan)2014–15Championship3261020356
Porto2016–17Primeira Liga8000000080
Braga (loan)2017–18140003061231
Vitória de Guimarães2018–19200201000230
2019–202181030523010
Total418304052005310
Feyenoord2020–21Eredivisie180004000220
2021–2210001020
Total190004050002410
Famalicão2021–22Primeira Liga1120000112
Umm Salal2022–23Qatar Stars League1640061225
Shanghai Shenhua2023Chinese Super League17100171
Career total15321811611430019126

Honours

Shanghai Shenhua

Individual

References