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Paulo Turra

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Paulo Turra
Personal information
Full name Paulo César Turra
Date of birth (1973-11-14) 14 November 1973 (age 50)
Place of birth Tuparendi, Brazil
Height 1.84 m (6 ft 0 in)
Position(s) Defender
Youth career
1990 Caxias
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1994–1997 Caxias
1997–1998 Botafogo
1998–2000 Caxias
2000–2001 Palmeiras
2001–2004 Boavista 72 (2)
2004–2006 Vitória de Guimarães 19 (0)
2007 Sertãozinho
2007 Avaí
Managerial career
2009 Novo Hamburgo
2010 Esportivo
2010 Glória
2010–2011 Brusque
2011 Brasil de Farroupilha
2011–2013 Cianorte
2013 Operário Ferroviário
2013 Marcílio Dias
2014 Avaí
2015 Caxias
2016 Cianorte
2016–2017 Guangzhou Evergrande (assistant)
2018–2019 Palmeiras (assistant)
2020 Cruzeiro (assistant)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Paulo César Turra, known as Paulo Turra (born 14 November 1973), known as Paulo Turra, is a Brazilian football manager and former player who played as a defender.

Career as a coach

Turra's first club as a coach was Novo Hamburgo (2009). His second job was Esportivo (2010) also in his state of birth, Rio Grande do Sul. Paulo Turra started his career in other states when accepted to train Brusque of Santa Catarina (2011).

His first team in state of Paraná was Cianorte (2012).[1] The club finished the Paranaense Championship in 4th place. The result gave to the club a spot in Brazil Cup 2013. At Operário (2013), Turra finished the Paranaense Championship at the same 4th place.[2]

Paulo Turra was near to a work opportunity in Daegu FC of South Korea (2014), but directive changes didn't allow it.[3] At February 14, he replaced Emerson Nunes at Avaí Futebol Clube.[4]

Career as a player

Paulo Turra started playing football in SER Caxias. By loan, he played at Botafogo where he won the Carioca Championship (1997). Back to SER Caxias, he helped his first club to win its first Gaúcho Championship (2000). His coach at that year was Tite.

Thanks to Luis Felipe Scolari, Palmeiras's coach in 2000, Turra went to the green club at that year. In one year, the defender was Champions Cup and Mercosul Cup champion. Turra also got Brasileirão 2000 quarter finals and Libertadores 2001 semifinal.

In 2001, Turra went to Portuguese football where he played four seasons: three at Boavista and one at Vitória de Guimarães. At Boavista, he got runner-up of Portuguese Liga once and played against young Cristiano Ronaldo, Sporting's player at that time. He played for Boavista in a 2002–03 UEFA Cup semi-final against Celtic.[5]

Honours

Player

Botafogo

Caxias

Palmeiras

References

  1. ^ FutebolParanaense.Net: Paulo Turra é o novo técnico do Cianorte
  2. ^ Gazeta do Povo: Paulo Turra assume comando do Operário
  3. ^ "Peleia FC: Técnico Paulo Turra não vai mais para Coreia do Sul". Archived from the original on 2014-02-12. Retrieved 2014-02-03.
  4. ^ Globoesporte.com: Diretoria age rápido e Paulo Turra é o novo técnico do Avaí
  5. ^ "Turra and Konde given Hibs trial". BBC Sport. BBC. 10 January 2006. Retrieved 20 January 2017.