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{{short description|Honduran footballer and coach (born 1968)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2024}}
{{Infobox football biography
{{Infobox football biography
| name = Denilson Costa
| name = Denilson Costa
| image =
| image =
| fullname = Denilson Costa de Oliveira
| fullname = Denilson Costa
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1968|6|10|df="yes"}}
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1968|6|10|df=yes}}
| birth_place = [[São João de Meriti]], [[Brazil]]
| birth_place = [[São João de Meriti]], [[Brazil]]
| height =
| height = 1.79 m
| position = [[Forward (association football)|Forward]]
| position = [[Forward (association football)|Forward]]
| currentclub = [[Club Deportivo Necaxa|Necaxa]] ([[Coach (sport)|Coach]])
| currentclub = [[Club Deportivo Necaxa|Necaxa]] ([[Coach (sport)|Coach]])
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| youthyears1 =
| youthyears1 =
| youthclubs1 =
| youthclubs1 =
| years1 = 1990-1991 | clubs1 = [[Asociacion Deportiva Limonense|Limonense]] | caps1 = | goals1 = 9
| years1 = 1990–1991 | clubs1 = [[Asociacion Deportiva Limonense|Limonense]] | caps1 = 12 | goals1 = 9
| years2 = 1991–1995 | clubs2 = [[C.D. Olimpia|Olimpia]] | caps2 = 67 | goals2 = 32
| years2 = 1991–1995 | clubs2 = [[C.D. Olimpia|Olimpia]] | caps2 = 67 | goals2 = 32
| years3 = 1995 | clubs3 = [[A.D. Belén|Belén]] | caps3 = | goals3 =
| years3 = 1995 | clubs3 = [[A.D. Belén|Belén]] | caps3 = | goals3 =
| years4 = 1995–1997 | clubs4 = [[C.D. Motagua|Motagua]] | caps4 = 50 | goals4 = 20
| years4 = 1995–1997 | clubs4 = [[F.C. Motagua|Motagua]] | caps4 = 50 | goals4 = 20
| years5 = 1997–2002 | clubs5 = [[C.D. Olimpia|Olimpia]] | caps5 = 195 | goals5 = 67
| years5 = 1997–2002 | clubs5 = [[C.D. Olimpia|Olimpia]] | caps5 = 195 | goals5 = 67
| years6 = 2003–2005 | clubs6 = [[C.D. Marathón|Marathón]] | caps6 = 91 | goals6 = 24
| years6 = 2003–2005 | clubs6 = [[C.D. Marathón|Marathón]] | caps6 = 91 | goals6 = 24
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| years10 = 2007 | clubs10 = [[C.D. Necaxa|Necaxa]] | caps10 = 16 | goals10 =
| years10 = 2007 | clubs10 = [[C.D. Necaxa|Necaxa]] | caps10 = 16 | goals10 =
| nationalyears1 = 2003–2005 | nationalteam1 = [[Honduras national football team|Honduras]] | nationalcaps1 = 5 | nationalgoals1 = 0
| nationalyears1 = 2003–2005 | nationalteam1 = [[Honduras national football team|Honduras]] | nationalcaps1 = 5 | nationalgoals1 = 0
| manageryears1 = 2011– | managerclubs1 = [[C.D. Necaxa|Necaxa]]
| manageryears1 = 2011| managerclubs1 = [[C.D. Necaxa|Necaxa]]
| medaltemplates =
| medaltemplates =
| pcupdate = 2007
| pcupdate = 2007
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}}
}}


'''Denilson Costa''' (born 10 June 1968 in [[São João de Meriti]]) is a [[Brazil]]ian and naturalized [[Honduras|Honduran]] [[Association football|football]] coach and former player.
'''Denilson Costa''' (born 10 June 1968) is a Brazilian and naturalized [[Honduras|Honduran]] [[Association football|football]] coach and former player.


He is currently the second all time top scorer in the [[Liga Nacional de Fútbol de Honduras|Honduran Liga Nacional]] and was also the first to reach 150 goals.<ref>{{cite news |title = El adiós de un grande |url = http://www.laprensahn.com/ediciones/2007/11/27/el_adios_de_un_grande |publisher = Diario La Prensa |date = 2007-11-27 |accessdate = 2007-11-28 |language = Spanish |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20071129185613/http://www.laprensahn.com/ediciones/2007/11/27/el_adios_de_un_grande <!-- Bot retrieved archive --> |archivedate = 2007-11-29}}</ref> Now he is a teacher in Honduras. Costa along with Marcelo Ferreira are among the only naturalized Honduran nationals to have played for the [[Honduras national football team]].
He is currently the second all-time top scorer in the [[Liga Nacional de Fútbol de Honduras|Honduran Liga Nacional]] and was also the first to reach 150 goals.<ref>{{cite news|title=El adiós de un grande |url=http://www.laprensahn.com/ediciones/2007/11/27/el_adios_de_un_grande |publisher=Diario La Prensa |date=2007-11-27 |access-date=2007-11-28 |language=es |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071129185613/http://www.laprensahn.com/ediciones/2007/11/27/el_adios_de_un_grande |archive-date=2007-11-29 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Now he is a teacher in Honduras. Costa along with Marcelo Ferreira are among the only naturalized Honduran nationals to have played for the [[Honduras national football team]].


==Club career==
==Club career==
Born in Brazil, Denilson moved to Honduras in 1991 and made his league debut in September 1991 for [[C.D. Olimpia|Olimpia]] against [[Súper Estrella]], scoring the only goal of the game. He spent his entire career in Honduras, except for short spells in Costa Rica with [[Asociacion Deportiva Limonense|Limonense]]<ref>[http://wvw.nacion.com/ln_ee/2000/abril/12/deportes4.html Artilleros verdes] - Nación {{es|icon}}</ref> for whom he scored the fastest goal in Costa Rica's premier division history in December 1990<ref>[http://wvw.aldia.cr/ad_ee/2003/agosto/11/ovacion3.html Nuevo desafío] - Al Día {{es|icon}}</ref>and [[A.D. Belén|Belén]] and in Guatemala with Heredia. He finished his playing career at Necaxa to become the club's manager a few seasons later.<ref>[http://m.diez.hn/Ediciones/2011/02/28/Noticias/Denilson-Costa-es-el-nuevo-tecnico-del-Necaxa Denilson Costa es el nuevo técnico del Necaxa] - Diez {{es icon}}</ref>
Born in Brazil, Denilson moved to Honduras in 1991 and made his league debut in September 1991 for [[C.D. Olimpia|Olimpia]] against [[Súper Estrella]], scoring the only goal of the game. He spent his entire career in Honduras, except for short spells in Costa Rica with [[Asociacion Deportiva Limonense|Limonense]]<ref>[http://wvw.nacion.com/ln_ee/2000/abril/12/deportes4.html Artilleros verdes] - Nación {{in lang|es}}</ref> for whom he scored the fastest goal in Costa Rica's premier division history in December 1990<ref>[http://wvw.aldia.cr/ad_ee/2003/agosto/11/ovacion3.html Nuevo desafío] - Al Día {{in lang|es}}</ref> and [[A.D. Belén|Belén]] and in Guatemala with Heredia. He finished his playing career at Necaxa to become the club's manager a few seasons later.<ref>[https://archive.today/20130217201929/http://m.diez.hn/Ediciones/2011/02/28/Noticias/Denilson-Costa-es-el-nuevo-tecnico-del-Necaxa Denilson Costa es el nuevo técnico del Necaxa] - Diez {{in lang|es}}</ref>


He played 481 matches is Honduran professional football, which is still a record.<ref>[http://www.laprensa.hn/Secciones-Principales/Deportes/Liga-de-Honduras/Isaula-el-nuevo-caballo-de-hierro Isaula, el nuevo caballo de hierro] - La Prensa {{es icon}}</ref>
He played 481 matches is Honduran professional football, which is still a record.<ref>[http://www.laprensa.hn/Secciones-Principales/Deportes/Liga-de-Honduras/Isaula-el-nuevo-caballo-de-hierro Isaula, el nuevo caballo de hierro]{{Dead link|date=January 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} - La Prensa {{in lang|es}}</ref>


{| class="wikitable" border="1"
{| class="wikitable" border="1"
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|-
|-
| width="100" | '''Total'''
| width="100" | '''Total'''
| align="center" | 1992-1995
| align="center" | 1992–1995
| align="center" | '''67'''
| align="center" | '''67'''
| align="center" | '''32'''
| align="center" | '''32'''
|-
|-
| width="100" | [[Club Deportivo Motagua]]
| width="100" | [[F.C. Motagua]]
| align="center" | [[1995-96 Honduran Liga Nacional|1995-96]]
| align="center" | [[1995-96 Honduran Liga Nacional|1995-96]]
| align="center" | 23
| align="center" | 23
| align="center" | 6
| align="center" | 6
|-
|-
| width="100" | [[Club Deportivo Motagua]]
| width="100" | [[F.C. Motagua]]
| align="center" | [[1996-97 Honduran Liga Nacional|1996-97]]
| align="center" | [[1996-97 Honduran Liga Nacional|1996-97]]
| align="center" | 27
| align="center" | 27
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==International career==
==International career==
Denilson made his debut for his adopted homecountry [[Honduras national football team|Honduras]] in an October 2003 [[friendly match]] against [[Bolivia national football team|Bolivia]] and has earned a total of 5 caps, scoring no goals.
Denilson made his debut for his adopted home country [[Honduras national football team|Honduras]] in an October 2003 [[friendly match]] against [[Bolivia national football team|Bolivia]] and has earned a total of 5 caps, scoring no goals.


His final international was a March 2005 friendly against the [[United States men's national soccer team|USA]].
His final international was a March 2005 friendly against the [[United States men's national soccer team|USA]].


==Managerial career==
==Managerial career==
On 6 March 2011, Costa made his professional debut as coach with [[C.D. Necaxa]] in the 0–1 home defeat against [[C.D. Motagua]].<ref>[http://www.latribunadeportiva.hn/2011/03/06/min-2-necaxa-0-motagua-0/ LaTribunaDeportiva.hn – Motagua bautizó a Denilson Costa] – 6 March 2011</ref>
On 6 March 2011, Costa made his professional debut as coach with [[C.D. Necaxa]] in the 0–1 home defeat against [[F.C. Motagua]].<ref>[http://www.latribunadeportiva.hn/2011/03/06/min-2-necaxa-0-motagua-0/ LaTribunaDeportiva.hn – Motagua bautizó a Denilson Costa] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110721094737/http://www.latribunadeportiva.hn/2011/03/06/min-2-necaxa-0-motagua-0/ |date=2011-07-21 }} – 6 March 2011</ref>


==Personal life==
==Personal life==
Denilson married Costa Rican Mirta Yorleni Ortiz whom he met while playing in [[Limón]]. She is a niece of former Costa Rican international [[Enrique Rivers]]. He became a Honduran citizen in 2002.
Denilson married Costa Rican Mirta Yorleni Ortiz whom he met while playing in [[Limón]]. She is a niece of former Costa Rican international [[Enrique Rivers]]. He became a Honduran citizen in 2002.

==Honours==

===Player===
;C.D. Olimpia
*'''[[Liga Profesional de Honduras]]:''' [[1992–93 Honduran Liga Nacional|1992–93]], [[1998–99 Honduran Liga Nacional|1998–99]], [[2000–01 Honduran Liga Nacional|2000–01 A]], [[2002–03 Honduran Liga Nacional|2002–03 A]]
;C.D. Marathón
*'''[[Liga Profesional de Honduras]]:''' [[2002–03 Honduran Liga Nacional|2002–03 C]], [[2004–05 Honduran Liga Nacional|2004–05 A]]


==References==
==References==
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==External links==
==External links==
*{{NFT player|pid=15011}}
*{{NFT player|pid=15011}}
* [http://www.diarioextra.com/2003/noviembre/08/deportes02.shtml DENILSON COSTA SE CASÓ CON LA SOBRINA DE ENRIQUE RIVERS] - Diario Extra
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20031110013011/http://www.diarioextra.com/2003/noviembre/08/deportes02.shtml DENILSON COSTA SE CASÓ CON LA SOBRINA DE ENRIQUE RIVERS] - Diario Extra


{{Liga Nacional de Fútbol de Honduras Top goalscorers}}
{{Honduran Liga Nacional awards}}


{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| NAME = Costa, Denilson
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = Honduran footballer
| DATE OF BIRTH = 10 June 1968
| PLACE OF BIRTH = [[Rio de Janeiro]], [[Brazil]]
| DATE OF DEATH =
| PLACE OF DEATH =
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Costa, Denilson}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Costa, Denilson}}
[[Category:1968 births]]
[[Category:1968 births]]
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[[Category:People from São João de Meriti]]
[[Category:People from São João de Meriti]]
[[Category:Brazilian emigrants to Honduras]]
[[Category:Brazilian emigrants to Honduras]]
[[Category:Naturalised citizens of Honduras]]
[[Category:Naturalized citizens of Honduras]]
[[Category:Association football forwards]]
[[Category:Men's association football forwards]]
[[Category:Brazilian footballers]]
[[Category:Brazilian men's footballers]]
[[Category:Honduran footballers]]
[[Category:Honduran men's footballers]]
[[Category:Honduras international footballers]]
[[Category:Sportspeople of Brazilian descent]]
[[Category:A.D. Belén players]]
[[Category:Honduras men's international footballers]]
[[Category:Club Deportivo Olimpia footballers]]
[[Category:Belén F.C. players]]
[[Category:C.D. Motagua players]]
[[Category:C.D. Olimpia players]]
[[Category:F.C. Motagua players]]
[[Category:C.D. Marathón players]]
[[Category:C.D. Marathón players]]
[[Category:Platense F.C. players]]
[[Category:Platense F.C. players]]
[[Category:Honduran expatriate footballers]]
[[Category:Atlético Olanchano players]]
[[Category:Expatriate footballers in Costa Rica]]
[[Category:Liga FPD players]]
[[Category:Expatriate footballers in Honduras]]
[[Category:Honduran expatriate men's footballers]]
[[Category:Expatriate footballers in Guatemala]]
[[Category:Expatriate men's footballers in Costa Rica]]
[[Category:Liga Nacional de Fútbol de Honduras players]]
[[Category:Expatriate men's footballers in Honduras]]
[[Category:Expatriate men's footballers in Guatemala]]
[[Category:Liga Nacional de Fútbol Profesional de Honduras players]]
[[Category:Honduran football managers]]
[[Category:Honduran football managers]]
[[Category:Footballers from Rio de Janeiro (state)]]

[[Category:20th-century Brazilian sportsmen]]
[[pl:Denílson (ur. 1977)]]

Latest revision as of 03:04, 28 November 2024

Denilson Costa
Personal information
Full name Denilson Costa
Date of birth (1968-06-10) 10 June 1968 (age 56)
Place of birth São João de Meriti, Brazil
Height 1.79 m (5 ft 10 in)
Position(s) Forward
Team information
Current team
Necaxa (Coach)
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1990–1991 Limonense 12 (9)
1991–1995 Olimpia 67 (32)
1995 Belén
1995–1997 Motagua 50 (20)
1997–2002 Olimpia 195 (67)
2003–2005 Marathón 91 (24)
2005–2006 Platense 32 (11)
2006 Heredia 18 (5)
2007 Atlético Olanchano 30 (1)
2007 Necaxa 16
International career
2003–2005 Honduras 5 (0)
Managerial career
2011 Necaxa
*Club domestic league appearances and goals, correct as of 2007
‡ National team caps and goals, correct as of 2006

Denilson Costa (born 10 June 1968) is a Brazilian and naturalized Honduran football coach and former player.

He is currently the second all-time top scorer in the Honduran Liga Nacional and was also the first to reach 150 goals.[1] Now he is a teacher in Honduras. Costa along with Marcelo Ferreira are among the only naturalized Honduran nationals to have played for the Honduras national football team.

Club career

[edit]

Born in Brazil, Denilson moved to Honduras in 1991 and made his league debut in September 1991 for Olimpia against Súper Estrella, scoring the only goal of the game. He spent his entire career in Honduras, except for short spells in Costa Rica with Limonense[2] for whom he scored the fastest goal in Costa Rica's premier division history in December 1990[3] and Belén and in Guatemala with Heredia. He finished his playing career at Necaxa to become the club's manager a few seasons later.[4]

He played 481 matches is Honduran professional football, which is still a record.[5]

Team Season Games Goal
Club Deportivo Olimpia 1991-92 12 11
Club Deportivo Olimpia 1992-93 26 12
Club Deportivo Olimpia 1993-94 24 7
Club Deportivo Olimpia 1994-95 5 2
Total 1992–1995 67 32
F.C. Motagua 1995-96 23 6
F.C. Motagua 1996-97 27 14
Total 1995–1997 50 20
Club Deportivo Olimpia 1997-98 A 21 7
Club Deportivo Olimpia 1997-98 C 24 13
Club Deportivo Olimpia 1998-99 18 10
Club Deportivo Olimpia 1999-2000 A 20 2
Club Deportivo Olimpia 1999-2000 C 21 3
Club Deportivo Olimpia 2000-01 A 22 8
Club Deportivo Olimpia 2000-01 C 14 5
Club Deportivo Olimpia 2001-02 A 19 7
Club Deportivo Olimpia 2001-02 C 18 6
Club Deportivo Olimpia 2002-03 A 18 6
Total 1997–2002 195 67
Club Deportivo Marathón 2002-03 C 22 10
Club Deportivo Marathón 2003-04 A 19 9
Club Deportivo Marathón 2003-04 C 18 2
Club Deportivo Marathón 2004-05 A 18 2
Club Deportivo Marathón 2004-05 C 14 1
Total 2003–2005 91 24
Club Deportivo Platense 2005-06 A 14 3
Club Deportivo Platense 2005-06 C 18 8
Total' 2005–2006 32 11
Atlético Olanchano 2006-07 C 14 0
Atlético Olanchano 2007–08 A 16 1
Total 2007 30 1
Career Total 1991–1995, 1995–2006, 2007 465 155

International career

[edit]

Denilson made his debut for his adopted home country Honduras in an October 2003 friendly match against Bolivia and has earned a total of 5 caps, scoring no goals.

His final international was a March 2005 friendly against the USA.

Managerial career

[edit]

On 6 March 2011, Costa made his professional debut as coach with C.D. Necaxa in the 0–1 home defeat against F.C. Motagua.[6]

Personal life

[edit]

Denilson married Costa Rican Mirta Yorleni Ortiz whom he met while playing in Limón. She is a niece of former Costa Rican international Enrique Rivers. He became a Honduran citizen in 2002.

Honours

[edit]

Player

[edit]
C.D. Olimpia
C.D. Marathón

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "El adiós de un grande" (in Spanish). Diario La Prensa. 27 November 2007. Archived from the original on 29 November 2007. Retrieved 28 November 2007.
  2. ^ Artilleros verdes - Nación (in Spanish)
  3. ^ Nuevo desafío - Al Día (in Spanish)
  4. ^ Denilson Costa es el nuevo técnico del Necaxa - Diez (in Spanish)
  5. ^ Isaula, el nuevo caballo de hierro[permanent dead link] - La Prensa (in Spanish)
  6. ^ LaTribunaDeportiva.hn – Motagua bautizó a Denilson Costa Archived 2011-07-21 at the Wayback Machine – 6 March 2011
[edit]