Ricardo Alexandre Martins Soares PereiraOIH (Portuguese pronunciation:[ʁiˈkaɾðu]; born 11 February 1976), known simply as Ricardo, is a Portuguese retired footballer who played as a goalkeeper.
He spent most of his professional career with Boavista and Sporting CP, helping the former to its only Primeira Liga title and appearing in 158 official matches with the latter, winning one Taça de Portugal. He moved abroad in his 30s, representing mainly Betis.
Born in Montijo, Setúbal, Ricardo started his career at hometown club Montijo, signing with Boavista in 1995.[4] After initially battling for first-choice status with William Andem he became first-choice,[5] and appeared in 28 matches in the Chequereds2000–01 conquest of the Primeira Liga championship, the club's only title in its history.[6][7]
Ricardo was one of the latter team's most influential players in their 2002–03 campaign in the UEFA Cup, in a run that would only stop in the competition's semi-finals.[8] On 9 May 2003, through a penalty kick, he scored the only goal of the home win against Beira-Mar.[9]
In the following off-season, Ricardo joined Sporting CP for a fee of €7 million and 20% from the value of any future transfer.[10] An undisputed starter from his beginnings, he backstopped the side to the final of the 2004–05 UEFA Cup, a 3–1 loss to CSKA Moscow (the game was played at the Estádio José Alvalade).[11]
Betis
On 9 July 2007, Ricardo was linked with a transfer to Real Betis and, two days later, he signed a four-year contract with the La Liga club.[12] His league debut took place against Recreativo de Huelva on 26 August, a 1–1 away draw;[13] having started the season as first-choice, he eventually lost the position to trainee Casto, but would regain his status for two of the last three games as the Andalusians avoided relegation.
In 2008–09, as manager Paco Chaparro, who arrived midway through the previous season, started on the bench, Ricardo lost the battle for first-choice, having to settle with Copa del Rey matches, a situation which would revert midway through the campaign[14][15] as Betis eventually suffered relegation. The following year he was backup to Iñaki Goitia, and made no appearances as his team finished fourth and were not promoted.[16]
Ricardo was not given any shirt number for 2010–11, being limited to training with the Pepe Mel-led squad, and later released from his contract in January 2011 – it was due to expire in June of that year.[16]
On 21 May 2011, Leicester confirmed it would not renew Ricardo's contract, due to expire on 30 June.[21] In mid-August, he signed for Vitória de Setúbal, returning to his country after four years.[22]
Ricardo retired in 2014 after two years with Olhanense. He remained on the Algarve, settling in Vilamoura and setting up R1 Real Estate.[23]
"I felt that I had to do something after conceding three penalties all in the centre of the goal. Taking the gloves off was what occurred to me at that moment and I did it to try and motivate myself and to put Vassell off."
At UEFA Euro 2004, played on home soil, Ricardo helped Portugal to defeat England in the quarter-finals on penalties: with the score at 5–5, he first saved the shot of Darius Vassell with his gloves off, and then scored the deciding penalty.[27] In the final against Greece, however, he misjudged a corner when coming for the ball, and Angelos Charisteas headed the only goal of the game.[28]
Ricardo kept two clean sheets in the 2006 World Cup group stage, only being beaten by Mexico's Francisco Fonseca as the national side won all three matches. They once again knocked out England in the quarter-finals of a major tournament on penalties, as he saved from Frank Lampard, Steven Gerrard and Jamie Carragher in a 3–1 shootout victory after a 0–0 draw with extra time, becoming the first keeper to save three times in a World Cup shootout;[29] the country finished fourth, and he was named to the tournament All-Star team as one of the three best goalkeepers.[30]
Despite some criticism, Ricardo remained first-choice in Euro 2008, playing all of the matches as Portugal was eliminated by Germany 3–2 in the quarter-finals, where he misjudged two clearances which led to headed goals.[31] After he lost his position at Betis he was not called up for the 2010 World Cup qualifiers, being replaced by S.L. Benfica's Quim and later Eduardo.[32]
In March 2023, Ricardo was named the national team's new goalkeeper coach alongside Iñaki Bergara, following the appointment of Roberto Martínez.[33]
^A. Lopes, Norberto (16 October 2000). ""Não esperava sair da baliza", diz William" ["I did not expect to leave the goal", says William] (in Portuguese). Mais Futebol. Retrieved 14 March 2023.