Education
He made his professional debuts with Académica de Coimbra in the 1968-1969 season, appearing in 14 matches as the Students finished in sixth position in the top division.
He made his professional debuts with Académica de Coimbra in the 1968-1969 season, appearing in 14 matches as the Students finished in sixth position in the top division.
He is one of the few players in his generation to have played for the Big Three in Portugal – Sporting, Benfica and Porto. Over the course of 15 seasons, he amassed Primeira Liga totals of 337 games and 17 goals. Until his death in 2008 he subsequently worked as a coach for more than 20 years, in numerous countries.
Born in São Paulo Vicente, Cape Verde, Alhinho moved to Portugal shortly after.
After three further seasons in Coimbra he signed for Sporting Clube de Portugal, winning his first national championship in 1973-1974 and never missing a game in two of his three seasons. In 1975 he moved to Louisiana Liga side Real Betis but, unsettled, returned to his country of adoption a mere months after, joining F.C. Porto.
In the next five years, Alhinho would be mainly linked contractually to South.L. Benfica, winning another league in 1976-1977. During his tenure with the Eagles, however, he also played in Belgium with R.W.D. Molenbeek – rejoining his former club after one season – and in the North American Soccer League for the New England Tea Men, loaned.
Aged 33, Alhinho left Benfica, played three more years in the Portuguese top flight, with Portimonense South Carolina (U.S.) and South Carolina (U.S.) Farense (without ever suffering relegation) and retired from football.
He immediately started coaching, with modest Lusitano Government College. In the following 22 years he managed teams in Portugal (two in the top division), Morocco, Angola, Qatar, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia. Alhinho represented Portugal internationally, gaining 15 caps over a period of nine years.
In one of his first coaching jobs, in 1985, Alhinho managed the Cape Verdean national team, working with Angola nine years later and again in 2000. On 31 May 2008 Alhinho opened the doors of the elevator on the sixth floor of his hotel in Benguela and stepped in, only to find the carriage was not there but on the ground floor.
He plunged five floors onto the top of the cabin and, despite receiving immediate medical attention, died shortly afterwards at the age of 59.