José Calado

José António Calado da Silva (born 1 March 1974), known as Calado, is a Portuguese former footballer who played as a central midfielder.

José Calado
Personal information
Full nameJosé António Calado da Silva
Date of birth (1974-03-01) 1 March 1974 (age 50)
Place of birthLisbon, Portugal
Height1.79 m (5 ft 10 in)
Position(s)Central midfielder
Youth career
1987–1988Belenenses
1988–1989Casa Pia
1989–1990Belenenses
1990–1991Casa Pia
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1991–1992Casa Pia
1992–1995Estrela Amadora53(3)
1995–2001Benfica138(4)
2001–2004Betis20(1)
2003–2004Poli Ejido (loan)30(8)
2004–2007Poli Ejido70(7)
2007–2008APOP26(3)
2008–2010AEP39(2)
Total376(28)
International career
1994–1996Portugal U2114(2)
1996Portugal U236(2)
1995–1998Portugal4(0)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

After coming to prominence in his home country with Benfica, he spent the rest of his 19-year professional career with two teams in Spain and two in Cyprus. He amassed Primeira Liga totals of 184 games and seven goals over eight seasons.

Club career

Calado was born in Lisbon. He started his career with local Casa Pia AC, representing C.F. Estrela da Amadora and S.L. Benfica afterwards and reaching international status with the latter club.

In the summer of 2001, Calado signed for La Liga side Real Betis alongside his teammate João Tomás,[1][2] but both failed to settle, with the midfielder only totalling 22 competitive matches in two seasons.[3] He spent 2003–04 on loan to Segunda División team Polideportivo Ejido,[4] and the move was subsequently made permanent.[5][6][7]

After 102 overall appearances with 15 goals (he missed the entire 2006–07 campaign due to injury), Calado moved to Cyprus, first with APOP Kinyras FC,[8] joining AEP Paphos FC for 2008–09. He featured regularly for both clubs during his Cypriot First Division spell, leaving the latter in early 2010 and retiring at age 36.

International career

Calado won four caps for the Portugal national team over three years.[9] He also represented the nation at the 1996 Summer Olympics.[10]

Honours

Benfica

References