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・ Fernando Cordero Cueva
・ Fernando Corena
・ Fernando Cornejo
・ Fernando Cornejo Miranda
・ Fernando Coronil
・ Fernando Correa
・ Fernando Correa (cyclist)
・ Fernando Correia
・ Fernando Corrêa de Oliveira
・ Fernando Cortez
・ Fernando Cortés
・ Fernando Cos-Gayón
・ Fernando Costa
・ Fernando Costilla
・ Fernando Coto Albán
Fernando Couto
・ Fernando Crosa
・ Fernando Cruz
・ Fernando Cruz (cyclist)
・ Fernando Cuenca
・ Fernando Cuerda
・ Fernando Curcio
・ Fernando Currás Gallego
・ Fernando Cuéllar Reyes
・ Fernando Cuéllar Ávalos
・ Fernando Cáceres
・ Fernando Cámara
・ Fernando Cárdenas
・ Fernando César de Souza
・ Fernando d'Avalos


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Fernando Couto : ウィキペディア英語版
Fernando Couto

Fernando Manuel Silva Couto, OIH ((:fɨɾˈnɐ̃du ˈko(w)tu); born 2 August 1969) is a Portuguese retired footballer who played as a central defender.
During a 21-year professional career he played in a number of top teams in Portugal, Spain and Italy (12 seasons in the latter country), appearing in nearly 600 official games and winning the double in each country, as well as three other UEFA club trophies.
At international level, Couto represented the Portuguese national team in 110 games, taking part in the 2002 World Cup as well as three European Championships.
==Club career==
Born in Espinho near Porto, Couto joined FC Porto's youth system at the age of 17. On 2 June 1988 he made his first-team – and Primeira Liga – debut, playing 90 minutes in a 1–0 away win against Académica de Coimbra in what would be his only appearance of the season for the national champions. He was then released by the club, playing one year apiece with F.C. Famalicão and Académica.
Couto returned to Porto in 1990, being an instrumental defensive unit in the conquest of six titles during his four-year spell. He subsequently moved to Italy with Parma AC, scoring a career-best four goals in 27 games in his first season and adding the campaign's UEFA Cup, in a 2–1 aggregate win against fellow Serie A side Juventus FC.
In summer 1996 Couto joined FC Barcelona in Spain, alongside former Porto teammates Vítor Baía and manager Bobby Robson, as Luís Figo was also playing for the La Liga club. Regularly used by the English manager, he was less played by his successor Louis van Gaal, but managed to appear in one of the two European finals the Catalans won, the 1996–97 edition of the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup.
After two seasons at the Camp Nou, Couto left ''Barça'' and moved to Rome's SS Lazio in late June 1998, alongside teammate Iván de la Peña. He appeared in 22 matches in his first year to help the club to the second place in the league, and appeared one minute in the final of the last Cup Winners' Cup, in a 2–1 win against RCD Mallorca at the Villa Park in Birmingham.
In 2001, Couto failed a doping test for the steroid nandrolone. He denied having taken forbidden substances, but his "B" test confirmed the finding and he eventually served four months out of a nine-month worldwide ban for the offence. He continued to appear regularly for Lazio in the following seasons.
In 2005, aged 36, Couto returned to Parma after eleven years, as Lazio was unable to match his wage demands for a contract renewal. After two seasons of regular use he only appeared in 17 games in 2007–08, with the Emilia-Romagna team also suffering top flight relegation; as his contract expired, he decided to retire from football.
In June 2010, two years after his retirement, Couto was named director of football at S.C. Braga. He was named the club's assistant manager for the 2012–13 campaign.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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