Jorge Cadete

Jorge Cadete
Personal information
Full name Jorge Paulo Cadete Santos Reis
Date of birth (1968-08-27) 27 August 1968
Place of birth Pemba, Mozambique
Height 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Playing position Striker
Youth career
1983–1984 Académica Santarém
1984–1987 Sporting CP
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1987–1995 Sporting CP 164 (62)
1988–1989Vitória Setúbal (loan) 29 (8)
1994–1995Brescia (loan) 13 (1)
1996–1997 Celtic 37 (30)
1997–1998 Celta 36 (8)
1999–2003 Benfica 19 (3)
2000Bradford City (loan) 7 (0)
2000–2001Estrela Amadora (loan) 28 (2)
2004 Partick Thistle 5 (0)
2004–2005 Pinhalnovense 4 (0)
2005–2007 São Marcos
Total 342 (114)
National team
1989 Portugal U21 2 (0)
1990–1998 Portugal 33 (5)

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.


Jorge Paulo Cadete Santos Reis (born 27 August 1968), known as Cadete, is a retired Portuguese footballer who played as a striker.

Born to Portuguese settlers, he was groomed in Sporting's prolific youth system, and later was noted while at Celtic, as he led the goalscoring charts in 1996–97.

Cadete amassed Primeira Liga totals of 233 games and 73 goals over the course of 12 seasons. A Portuguese international throughout the 90s, he represented the nation at Euro 1996.

Club career

Early career / Sporting

Born in Pemba, Portuguese Mozambique, Cadete began his footballing career with Associação Academica de Santarém at age 15, scoring a highly impressive 43 goals in just 18 games. His exploits alerted first division giants Sporting Clube de Portugal and S.L. Benfica, with the former winning the race to sign the promising youngster.[1]

Cadete broke into the senior team in the 1987–88 season, starting in four of his six appearances and subsequently being sent on loan to fellow top-divisioner Vitória F.C. for the following campaign, helping the Setúbal-based side to the fifth place. He thus returned to Lisbon, where he would play for the following five years uninterrupted and in the 1992–93 season he was the national championship's top-scorer with 18 goals.[1]

Towards the end of his time at Sporting, Cadete was loaned out again in November 1994, this time to Italian club Brescia Calcio. He spent the rest of the season with the Serie A club,[1] but only managed one goal in thirteen appearances during his stint there.[2] He returned to Sporting for the following season, and played in the first leg of the Supertaça against F.C. Porto in August 2015.[3] However by November he had made only a further three appearances from the substitutes bench.[4]

By early 1996, Cadete was completely out of favour at Sporting and played no more games for them. He finished his Sporting career with 70 goals in over 180 appearances.[1]

Celtic

On 24 February 1996, Cadete was introduced at Celtic Park, Glasgow to supporters before Celtic's league match against Partick Thistle.[5] However, due to lengthy negotiations between Celtic and Sporting Lisbon and issues with registering the player, Cadete's transfer was not finalised until April. His transfer to Celtic turned out to be controversial. Despite being signed prior to the transfer deadline, the Scottish Football Association delayed processing his registration in time for the Scottish Cup semi-finals against Rangers at Hampden Park. Following a complaint from Celtic chairman Fergus McCann, SFA chief Jim Farry was eventually relieved of his duties after being found guilty of deliberately holding back the player's registration.[6][7] His eventual debut came against Aberdeen at Celtic Park as he came off the bench to score Celtic's fifth goal in a 5–0 win, thus becoming an instant hit.[8] The loud roar generated by the Celtic fans celebrating Cadete's goal blew out BBC Radio 5's microphones, who had been covering the game UK wide on radio, and they went off air for a short time until it was repaired.[9]

Cadete's only full season in Scotland was unarguably the greatest of his career, with the player finishing the year as the country's top scorer with 33 goals in 44 appearances in all competitions, without the aid of penalty kicks. Despite this, his team lost the league championship to arch-rivals Rangers. Cadete played his last match for Celtic against Dundee United, bowing to the Celtic fans before kissing the turf.

Along with Pierre van Hooijdonk and Paolo Di Canio, Cadete became embroiled in contractual disputes with the club, and was labelled as one of the "Three Amigos" by Fergus McCann. Cadete remained a Celtic player over the summer but fled back to Portugal citing mental health issues and a failure to adjust to life in Scotland without his family. His requests for a transfer were eventually granted.

To Spain and beyond

After failing to show for pre-season training, Cadete was transferred to Celta de Vigo in La Liga for a fee of around £3,500,000, playing one full season for the Galicians and moving to Benfica alongside former Celtic teammate van Hooijdonk in January 1999. Exactly one year later he returned to the United Kingdom, joining newly promoted Premier League side Bradford City on loan until the end of the campaign. He made his debut for the club coming on as a substitute in a 1–1 draw against Aston Villa at Valley Parade, and amassed a further four games in the same predicament (plus two starts), without scoring.

For 2000–01, Cadete was loaned to Lisbon-based C.F. Estrela da Amadora.[10] As newly promoted St Mirren looked for a striker to bolster its chances of top flight survival, he almost made a return to the country, but the proposed January switch fell through and he remained in Estrela, subsequently seeing out his Benfica contract without any impact whatsoever.

Retirement / Return to football and Scotland

Following his release from Benfica, Cadete found himself without a club. After failing to find a new team he retired from football at the relatively young age of 33, going on to make an appearance on the celebrity version of the Big Brother reality TV show.[11]

At the start of 2003–04 season, aged 35, Cadete decided to return to active. He returned to Scotland to make a guest appearance on Tam Cowan's Scottish football show "Offside", where he spoke of his love for Celtic and how he regretted leaving; he also invited Celtic boss Martin O'Neill to give him a trial for his former club.

Cadete's return to the public eye in Scotland prompted rookie co-managers Gerry Britton and Derek Whyte to take a gamble on the striker. He signed a short term contract for top division relegation battlers Partick Thistle in late January 2004, ending his 18-month exile from the game; the move was controversial however, as he had already agreed to sign for Raith Rovers, even being photographed in the team shirt by the media.

Cadete made his debut for the Jags on 22 February against former club Celtic, and received a mixed reception, with jeers from some Celtic fans as he came off the bench due to the manner of his departure six years earlier.[12] Shortly after, he returned to old ways when he reported back for training 24 hours late, and was subsequently disciplined by the club;[13] he did not manage to score for Thistle in four months, and was not offered a contract extension.[14]

Later years

Cadete returned to his country in the 2004–05 campaign, joining third division's C.D. Pinhalnovense. He cited the major factor in signing for the club was working with coach Paco Fortes.

In the following two years, Cadete played amateur football in the Beja region, with FC São Marcos in São Marcos da Ataboeira, Castro Verde, being rejoined by some former professionals in the country, including Benfica and S.C. Farense's Hassan Nader.

International career

Cadete gained 33 caps for the Portuguese national team scoring five goals, 22 while at Sporting, nine while at Celtic and two as a Celta player. His first game came on 29 August 1990, in a 1–1 friendly draw with Germany.

Cadete was chosen for the UEFA Euro 1996 finals by António Oliveira, after playing the decisive last match in the qualifying rounds against Republic of Ireland and netting the last in a 3–0 win as a substitute. His final appearance was a 0–3 defeat to England on 22 April 1998, in another friendly.

Jorge Cadete: International goals
Goal Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition
1 20 February 1991 Estádio das Antas, Porto, Portugal  Malta 5–0 5–0 Euro 1992 qualifying
2 28 April 1993 Estádio da Luz (1954), Lisbon, Portugal  Scotland 2–0 5–0 1994 World Cup qualification
3 28 April 1993 Estádio da Luz (1954), Lisbon, Portugal  Scotland 5–0 5–0 1994 World Cup qualification
4 19 June 1993 Estádio do Bessa, Porto, Portugal  Malta 4–0 4–0 1994 World Cup qualification
5 15 November 1995 Estádio da Luz (1954), Lisbon, Portugal  Republic of Ireland 3–0 3–0 Euro 1996 qualifying

Honours

Player

Sporting

Individual

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Jorge Cadete". Ya Jugue en El Celta. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  2. "Cadete: Jorge Paulo Cadete Santos Reis". BD Futbol. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  3. "Jorge Cadete 1995/96". The Final Ball. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  4. "Cadete". Fora De Jogo. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  5. Dick, David (25 February 1996). "Celtic's four sight". The Independent. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  6. Football SFA boss suspended; BBC Sport, 1 March 1999
  7. "Farry's Fall from Grace". The Scotsman. 21 February 2009. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  8. McKinney, David (1 April 1996). "Cadete boosts Celtic title chase". The Independent. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  9. "Debut Days - Jorge Cadete". The Celtic Underground. 19 November 2016. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  10. "Cadete e Luís Carlos assinam pelo Estrela da Amadora" [Cadete and Luís Carlos sign for Estrela da Amadora] (in Portuguese). Record. 23 June 2000. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  11. Cadete luta contra falta de dinheiro (Cadete struggles against shortage of money); Correio da Manhã, 29 November 2008 (Portuguese)
  12. Partick Thistle 1–4 Celtic; BBC Sport, 22 February 2004
  13. Cadete back with Thistle; BBC Sport, 3 March 2004
  14. Thistle let Cadete go; BBC Sport, 20 March 2004
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