Paulo Renato Rebocho FerreiraOIH (Portuguese pronunciation:[ˈpawlufɨˈʁɐjɾɐ]; born 18 January 1979) is a Portuguese former footballer who played as a full-back.
After starting out at Estoril, he went on to spend the vast majority of his 16-year professional career with Porto and Chelsea, signing with the latter in 2004 for €20 million. He won several major titles with both clubs, including two Primeira Liga titles, three Premier League trophies and the 2004 and 2012 editions of the Champions League.
Ferreira signed with Vitória de Setúbal for 2000–01, scoring two goals in 33 games during the campaign to help his team promote to the Primeira Liga after finishing in third place. His first appearance in the competition took place on 13 August 2001, in a 3–1 away loss against Marítimo.[3]
Porto
Ferreira moved to Porto in the summer of 2002, signed by coach José Mourinho[4] who converted him from right midfielder to right-back. He only missed two league games over his two-year stint, as the club won back-to-back national championships.[5][6]
On 22 June 2004, Ferreira joined Chelsea for €20 million (£13.2 million),[11][4] reuniting at Stamford Bridge with both Mourinho and former Porto teammate Ricardo Carvalho, both of whom were also signed in the off-season. He impressed greatly in his first year, appearing in 42 competitive matches and helping to the Premier League title after a 50-year wait.[12]
Ferreira scored his first competitive goal for the Blues on 19 February 2006, in a 3–1 home victory over Colchester United in the FA Cup's fifth round.[13] On 30 April, as his team wrapped up a second successive league title with a 3–0 win over Manchester United, his tackle on Wayne Rooney fractured the England striker's metatarsal and jeopardised his chance's of going to June's World Cup.[14] Rooney admitted in 2022 that this injury was caused in part by his choice to wear longer studs on his boots, ironically in order to hurt others.[15]
In 2006–07, Ferreira lost his importance in the squad, first being overtaken in his position by Khalid Boulahrouz and then midfielders Lassana Diarra and Geremi;[16] he did play the full 120 minutes of the 1–0 FA Cup win against Manchester United on 19 May 2007, the first final to be played at the new Wembley.[17]
Following physical problems that afflicted José Bosingwa, Ashley Cole and Branislav Ivanović, Ferreira was given a more consistent role as a starter as Yuri Zhirkov featured in the other defensive wing, most significantly in the 7–1 rout of Aston Villa[23] and the 2–1 victory at Manchester United.[24][25] He still contributed with 20 official appearances, helping his team win the double.
Ferreira appeared in his 200th game for Chelsea on 20 April 2011, playing the entire 3–1 home win against Birmingham City.[26] He was once described by Mourinho as "a player who will never be Player of the match but will always score 7/10 for his individual display".[27]
Ferreira featured often under Carlo Ancelotti but, after his sacking and his replacement with André Villas-Boas, found it hard to find a place in the squad as the latter manager opted for a younger squad in detriment of several veterans.[28] His first game of the 2011–12 campaign was on 21 September 2011, on a penalty shootout win over Fulham for the League Cup.[29] His first league appearance occurred on 22 December, after coming on for injured Ivanović in a 1–1 draw away to Tottenham Hotspur;[30] in the final minutes of that match, he suffered a fractured cheekbone in a clash with Gareth Bale.[31]
Ferreira's contract ran through the summer of 2013, and both player and club confirmed that they would not renew it upon its expiration.[34] He made his last appearance in a league fixture with Everton on 19 May 2013, coming on as a late substitute to a round of applause as the 2–1 win secured the hosts a spot in the Champions League group stage.[35] Afterwards, teammate Frank Lampard addressed the crowd and praised the 34-year-old defender, who announced he was retiring from professional football and thanked the fans for their continued support;[36] over nine seasons, he appeared in 217 official games.[37]
Ferreira was selected by coach Luiz Felipe Scolari for the UEFA Euro 2004 tournament. He started their opening match against Greece, but a series of mistakes in the 1–2 loss saw him dropped for Miguel for the rest of the tournament.[39] Following an injury to the latter late into the first half of the final, however, he returned to action in another defeat to the same opponent, now 1–0.[40]
Ferreira made two appearances for Portugal in the 2006 World Cup: in the 0–1 semi-final loss against France, he replaced injured Miguel during the second half,[41] and started the third place play-off against the host country Germany (1–3 defeat).[42] Subsequently, he faced competition from Bosingwa and Miguel for the right-back slot, and was often deployed at the opposite flank following the retirement of Nuno Valente.[43][44]
Ferreira was named in the squad for the Euro 2008.[45] He started all four games as a left-back, in an eventual quarter-final exit.[46]
On 30 August 2010, Ferreira announced he would be also retiring from the national team, shortly after Simão Sabrosa did.[49]
Post-retirement
After retiring, Ferreira worked for Chelsea as an ambassador and assistant loan player technical coach.[50][51] On 5 July 2023, he was appointed assistant manager at French Ligue 1 club Lille, joining his compatriot Paulo Fonseca's staff.[52]
Career statistics
Club
Appearances and goals by club, season and competition[53]
^"Facto relevante" [Relevant fact] (PDF) (in Portuguese). FC Porto. 22 June 2004. Archived from the original(PDF) on 5 December 2010. Retrieved 25 September 2010.
^Matias, Jorge Miguel (8 June 2008). "A selecção portuguesa até os feriados muda" [Portuguese national team even change holidays]. Público (in Portuguese). Retrieved 18 October 2019.