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Offline Stussy

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Fabio Aurelio profile
« on: November 25, 2008, 01:31:25 AM »
Cracking interview with Fabio in today's Independent, talks about Rafa and comparisons between us and Benitez era Valencia.

++++++++++++++++

Fabio Aurelio: action replay

Liverpool's Brazilian full-back played under his manager, Rafael Benitez, when Valencia ended a 31-year wait for La Liga glory. He tells Ian Herbert how Anfield can learn from that experience in their 19th season of agony

Tuesday, 25 November 2008
 
He's the player who doesn't get mobbed when he's strolling with his family along Otterspool Promenade on the banks of the Mersey – his son's well-established Scouse accent giving the lie to any impression that dad might be a Brazilian international and Liverpool full-back. Fabio Aurelio's presence hardly screams "superstar" either, as he arrives on a bitter autumnal day at a school in the south of the city. No Rolex the size of a brick, no Latin American personality, just jeans as modest as the shoes and, as he moves around a sports hall filled with children whose troubles put football into its proper context, a slight sense that he is pleased to have received the invitation.

Appearances can be deceptive, of course. Though the Kop end has not been known to yearn for a "team of Fabios" – the song it reserves for one James Carragher, who lines up alongside him – Aurelio is the man perhaps best placed to answer the Premier League's most burning question: does Rafael Benitez truly have what it takes to deliver the title to Liverpool in May, 19 years after they last won one?

Aurelio is not among the knot of Spanish speakers like Pepe Reina, Xabi Alonso and Javier Mascherano, whom you will find in fast, animated conversation with Benitez at airports during Liverpool's Champions League journeys, but he has watched him at close quarters for longer than any player. It is seven years since Benitez made Aurelio one of his first signings at Valencia and so convinced was the Liverpool manager by what he had to offer that within two years of arriving at Anfield he had shipped him over here, too. It means that Aurelio has seen the changes in Benitez since he arrived at the Mestalla, fresh from having taken modest Tenerife into Liga 1. It also furnishes him with first-hand experience of the Liverpool manager's two titles at Valencia. Can he do it again?

Aurelio's answer is yes, of course. But in the 29-year-old's recollections of how Benitez secured Valencia's legendary 2000-01 La Liga title, a pinnacle the club had waited 31 years for, he has grounds for observing that Liverpool would be served well by other teams setting the pace. "We were running from the back in 2001 and that was good for us," Aurelio recalls. "Nobody is expecting you to fight for the title so you don't have the pressure that the teams at the top of the table have – to win every game. If you're top, you have to win, or otherwise you come down one position, or two positions. That was good for us at Valencia and maybe there are lessons for us now, at Liverpool."

Benitez was a different individual – less calm, more authoritative – back then. "He needed to show authority and was more authoritative as he was coming from a lowly team to a top team that hadn't won the league for so long. I clearly see him here as calmer."

Benitez was more determined to intrude in aspects of the Valencia players' lives where he was not always wanted – his insistence that they eat their rice plain, rather than seasoned with vegetables was a source of controversy in the rice-producing environs of Valencia. But for all that intensity, unwelcome at times, Aurelio presents the events of a freezing night in the shadow of Barcelona's Montjuic mountain, in December 2001, as evidence that Benitez will also show grace under pressure if and when the pips start to squeak for Liverpool, this spring.

"We were playing the local side, Espanyol," he recalls, "and there were question marks because the team wasn't very good and we found ourselves losing 2-0." He is actually understating it. Benitez faced the sack if the side he had just taken over lost, having battled through a snowstorm to reach the stadium late. Aurelio insists Benitez said nothing particularly memorable at half-time – "there was no shouting, nothing special I remember apart from, 'You can go out and do it" – but the events of the 45 minutes which followed changed everything. "We won 3-2 and everybody remembers that, because after that we went up and away and won the league," Aurelio says. "The pressure on him [Benitez] was amazing and if you've overcome that maybe you can overcome anything."

Just as Benitez – the man who bluntly told Aurelio when he arrived from Sao Paulo's Morumbi stadium that he must put aside his Brazilian wing-back instincts and learn to defend better – has faced undoubted tribulations on Merseyside, Aurelio has struggled too, his development stunted by two hateful injuries. Such was the force of the Achilles tendon snap he suffered in a Champions League game against PSV Eindhoven in April last year that video replays show him looking behind him to discover the source of what he believed had hit him. It was the end of his season and, having re-established himself as Liverpool's first-choice left-back, he also found the last campaign ended prematurely by a torn abductor muscle in that fateful Champions League semi-final first leg with Chelsea at Anfield. "They've been some of my hardest times in the game," says Aurelio, whose 2003-4 campaign with Valencia was also cut short – by a broken leg.

He has borne these troubles with the kind of forbearance and good nature which make him one of Liverpool's most receptive players when it comes to events like the recent launch of the club's "Respect 4 All" disability coaching centre in south Liverpool. The centre, for children aged 12 to 16 of all nationalities and ethnicities with learning and physical disabilities and visual impairments, has recently received £120,000 of funding from the Premier League and Professional Footballers' Association Community Fund, and was being supported through the Premier League's "Creating Chances" programme.

Aurelio weaves around the hall, joining in with wheelchair football, football for the visually impaired, who use a ball which emits a noise, and takes up a place in a goal as a queue of children with learning difficulties prepare to test him out. "It can be difficult just when your children have a small cold," says Aurelio, reflecting on it all. "To see the problems these children have come through is a tribute to those who have worked with them."

The importance of Aurelio's family, who are settled in Woolton, to the south of the city, is all the greater because of the personal tragedy he encountered as he was preparing to leave Brazil to make his way in Europe. His father, Mario, died in a car crash in March 2000, which meant he never lived to see his son – then aged 20 – play in the Olympics for Emerson Leao's Brazil side that year, nor enjoy his success at the Mestalla.

"It had always been a dream for my father to see me playing for a European club. There have been many times things I have wished he could have seen," he reflects.

At least Aurelio's development, making his debut for Sao Paulo in 1997, aged 17, helped him buy Mario, a plastics worker, a better home before he died. The absence of cash certainly made for long bus trips home from the Morumbi. "I had a godfather, Jose du Prado, who was the one who helped me and my family a lot and my parents did all that they could," he says.

Visits to Brazil are limited to the close season, though Aurelio's mother, Neide, is in Europe more often, either to see him, or his sister, who is married to Real Betis' Brazilian midfielder Edu. Aurelio and his wife, Elaine, married three months before his father died and, though adapting to a European life took them time, he finds his Spanish-born children – Fabio, seven next month, and two-year-old Victoria – take everything in their stride. "They amaze me," he says.

With one year left on his contract, Aurelio hopes he can continue a career on Merseyside which has not always demonstrated the attacking wing play and eye for the spectacular goal – a spectacular volley brought his only goal for Liverpool at Bolton last March –which Benitez has always seen in him.

For now, the key is to remember the lessons of 2001, he believes. "The fans here are amazing but it is a long way if you are fighting for the title. We know the pressure we have because of the time Liverpool has waited, but we have to keep our feet on the floor as we are doing now – and wait."

Off The Pitch: Cathedrals and parks

"Strange though it may seem, getting to know Liverpool has taken up quite a lot of my time outside of the game. Elaine and I really like the two cathedrals and we also like walking in Sefton Park and along Otterspool Promenade with the children. They're that age when we can drag them along. That aside, it's hard to have much of a life with two little ones and a career. I like to play football with my son, Fabio, when I can and I get to his games for the school team as much as possible. We also get to the cinema – no particular favourite films, anything that's showing – and I've got fairly general musical tastes too. Just don't give me heavy rock!"


http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/news-and-comment/fabio-aurelio-action-replay-1033835.html
« Last Edit: November 25, 2008, 02:09:56 AM by Barney_Rubble »

Offline Rotation

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #1 on: November 25, 2008, 02:30:17 AM »
Class act that Fabio. If he can stay fit will contribute very positively this season as he has done so far.
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Offline Tomo-the-red

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #2 on: November 25, 2008, 02:32:29 AM »
Great read. Fab seems such a nice guy, sad about his dad not being able to see him play for Valencia :(, Just wish he would get more consistant on the pitch again.
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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #3 on: November 25, 2008, 02:41:03 AM »
Really like this man and is showing himself to be a very good left back, when fit. Hope he starts having more luck when it comes to injuries
I feel the exact same. But the polar opposite.

Offline SallyCinnamon

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #4 on: November 25, 2008, 03:02:53 AM »
Quote
and I've got fairly general musical tastes too. Just don't give me heavy rock!"

I hear you brother.
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Offline kopindian

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #5 on: November 25, 2008, 03:41:45 AM »
Thanks for posting it.Our squad is filled with nice characters.
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Offline TomG

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #6 on: November 25, 2008, 03:44:28 AM »
I have admired Fabio for a while now. A good honest toiler.

He's not that flashy but just an honest football player who is prepared to work hard.

Can't ask for much more.
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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #7 on: November 25, 2008, 05:04:42 AM »
Yeah great read,

If he stays fit he could be one of the best left backs in the premiership and I mean that.....
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Offline Mother.F

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #8 on: November 25, 2008, 05:33:02 AM »
What a nice interview, love that Fabio. Yet another member of our squad who is a decent person, who seems to be good and honest and hardworking, doing charity work, loving the city, living a low key life. Plus he's been fit for awhile now. Fingers crossed for him to stay that way.


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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #9 on: November 25, 2008, 05:52:51 AM »
Nice interview, I like that they mentioned how his son has a "well-established" scouse accent :D
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Offline Daranoza

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #10 on: November 25, 2008, 07:29:43 AM »
Ah, he's so lovely (melts into girlishness...)
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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #11 on: November 25, 2008, 07:35:05 AM »
Aurelio is a class act, think that he could knock in a few freekicks aswell if he stays fit for a long time. Hard to keep the feeling and the touch on the ball when you have to do rehab every other week.
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Offline nocturnalvin

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #12 on: November 25, 2008, 08:59:19 AM »
I've always loved Fabio, starting from the Valencia days.
Never seen a left back who could pick a pass so well.
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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #13 on: November 25, 2008, 12:01:33 PM »
Lovely interview that, he sounds a genuinely nice guy.
Rafa Benitez: "I'll always keep in my heart the good times I've had here, the strong and loyal support of the fans in the tough times and the love from Liverpool. I have no words to thank you enough for all these years and I am very proud to say that I was your manager. Thank you so much once more and always remember: You'll never walk alone."

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #14 on: November 25, 2008, 12:28:22 PM »
Always admied him since i saw him in the Sapporo using his phone , chatting away and still caught a wedge in his mouth thrown at him by one of the chefs. Footy players eh.
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Offline liverbird_soph

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #15 on: November 25, 2008, 12:29:12 PM »
Great interview. Makes me proud to know we have so many down to earth lads in our team.

I'm a big fan of Fabio. He may have had the odd bad game recently, but he has also had some very good ones with useful assists. At his best I think he is a great left back, it's just a shame injuries have affected him so badly and have often meant he's had to have time out when he has got into a rhythm and started to play his best football.

OK, he's not the 'modern ideal LB' who bombs continually down the wings, but quite a few of these are a lot worse at defending than Fabio is. Also he's great on the ball, has good vision and passing ability and controls the left side really well when he's in good form, so he offers us different things.

Whisper it, but he hasn't broken in a while and so hopefully he may be finding some better luck for once! :) (*touches wood*)
« Last Edit: November 25, 2008, 12:31:08 PM by liverbird_soph »

Offline sivapc

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #16 on: November 25, 2008, 01:02:03 PM »
Always seen him as the best technical leftback in league, but injuries have kept him from showing his true potentials. Glad that he is free of injuries and having a solid season.
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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #17 on: November 25, 2008, 01:17:21 PM »
I forgot all about his broken leg, he is some player to return looking half-decent from those injuries
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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #18 on: November 25, 2008, 01:29:44 PM »
nice one fabio - great player and really starting to show his class this season.

lets hope he can stay injury free for a nice long run.
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Offline Helsinki Red

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #19 on: November 25, 2008, 01:31:29 PM »
Great interview. He sounds really down to earth.

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #20 on: November 25, 2008, 01:40:43 PM »
i must admit i never particularly rated Fabio. I thought his footballing brain wasn't as quick as it should be. I have to be honest though this season he is winning me over. This year has by far been his best he's started showing why Rafa brought him here.

Reading that interview along with the Torres one in another thread makes me quite proud that these two lads have such humility for there status and a love for the city and the people and aren't just hear for the money.

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #21 on: November 25, 2008, 11:55:59 PM »
nice read.... cool, down to earth guy he does seem :D
and a good left back too when fit :D
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Offline liverbird_soph

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #22 on: November 27, 2008, 06:19:27 AM »
Whisper it, but he hasn't broken in a while and so hopefully he may be finding some better luck for once! :) (*touches wood*)

I would like to apologise to Aurelio for jinxing him and obviously not touching enough wood. On reflection it was a stupid thing to say and I will stand in a corner for the rest of the day. (Well I won't, but I should)

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #23 on: November 27, 2008, 07:54:58 AM »
I would like to apologise to Aurelio for jinxing him and obviously not touching enough wood. On reflection it was a stupid thing to say and I will stand in a corner for the rest of the day. (Well I won't, but I should)

Your right you should :D

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #24 on: November 27, 2008, 07:56:22 AM »
Ah he jinxed himself. Every time he expresses pleasure at not being injured it happens again.

Discomfort in calf. Just a niggle, then. But, the times he has had calf strains they have lasted three or four weeks.
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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #25 on: November 27, 2008, 08:09:29 AM »
Nice read. Seems like a good man our Fabio.


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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #26 on: November 27, 2008, 08:11:31 AM »
cheers stussy - enjoyed that
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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #27 on: November 27, 2008, 11:51:01 AM »
Great read. Underrated player for sure
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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #28 on: November 27, 2008, 12:16:34 PM »
Love Fabio....just hope its precautionary taking him off last night! :)
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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #29 on: November 27, 2008, 12:23:58 PM »
And we are still unbeaten since last March whenever Aurelio starts.

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #30 on: March 23, 2009, 12:51:48 PM »
Lovely interview with him in The Times.

Quote
Fabio Aurelio was smiling – and not just because after the grey slog of a Mersey winter, last week’s weather felt a bit more Brazilian. Thursday was a particularly good day at training. The sun shone and the session began with Rafael Benitez making a speech. After months of will-he-won’t-he, Benitez had agreed to an extension of his contract. He gathered his squad “and said thank you to everyone because at the end of the day he knows what players do on the pitch makes the difference between whether a coach will stay or leave. It’s good for him, good for the club, good for us,” Aurelio said.

“He’s shown he’s getting better [in England] every season and this is a good moment to give him the opportunity to even get bigger. He lives for football and that’s what makes the difference between him and other coaches.”

Aurelio knows Liverpool’s manager better than most, having spent three seasons with him at Valencia and then having been at Anfield since 2006. Both are keen to extend their association. Like Dirk Kuyt, Alvaro Arbeloa and Daniel Agger, Aurelio is a free agent next summer. With his own future settled, Benitez wants to tie up new deals for all four as quickly as possible. “If the club and the boss are happy with my work, for sure I’ll be happy to continue, so it should not be complicated,” Aurelio said.

“I had one talk with the boss at the beginning of the season but he was telling us he would like us to wait until he decided his situation before talking to the players who were finishing contracts. Now he’s staying, it should be easier. But, honestly, I haven’t been thinking about it. I’m very happy in the moment I am in now.”

No wonder. The Brazilian is enjoying the sort of prolonged good health and form for which he has yearned since 2003. Then, having helped Valencia to the first of Benitez’s two Spanish league titles in 2001-02 and scored a remarkable 10 goals while playing largely at left-back, the following season, a knee injury put him out of football for 18 months.

Knocks continued to afflict him but at last looks the player Benitez promised when he signed. “He can cross the ball superbly and he is maybe a better passer of the ball than Xabi Alonso,” said the manager three summers ago. “People will say, ‘Oh really?’ But you will see the quality of his left foot. At set-pieces he is fantastic.”

Edwin van der Sar discovered this last Saturday. Aurelio was one of the main protagonists in Liverpool’s destruction of Manchester United, quelling Cristiano Ronaldo with his canny and nimble defending before scoring with a free kick placed so expertly that Van der Sar did not even dive to try to stop it. Aurelio describes himself as “quite quiet, I don’t talk a lot on the pitch”, but celebrated his strike without inhibition. “Oh yeah,” he blushed. “I was excited. We knew that goal [making it 3-1] killed the game off in our favour. The moment you strike a free kick you know whether you’ve hit it well or not and when you see the keeper doesn’t even move and it’s going in the net, you feel even better.”

He is not the first Brazilian with dead-ball skills [“I think you have to have more or less a good touch” he said by way of explaining this national trait] but his were honed in a quirky milieu. His mentor was Rogerio Ceni, goalkeeper for Aurelio’s first club, Sao Paolo, who not only takes free kicks but has scored almost 50 of them in his career.

“He’s the world record holder for goals as a keeper [with 83] and he kicks really well,” said Aurelio. “As a kid I took free kicks but I didn’t practise. Then, when I was 17 and joined the first team of Sao Paolo, I saw that every day Ceni was practising free kicks and I joined him. I kept it going at Valencia and now here. If you practise 30 free kicks three times a week, the percentage you score in games will be higher.”

Of players who have scored more than once directly from free kicks in this season’s Premier League, Aurelio’s conversion rate is the highest. “I’d like to score more goals for Liverpool and I hope now I’ll have more opportunities to take free kicks. Maybe next time [Steven] Gerrard will be more likely to give me a chance,” he said, laughing, his indignation lighthearted.

Aurelio dreams of claiming what once belonged to another free kick specialist, Roberto Carlos: Brazil’s left-back slot. Aurelio played 42 times for his country at youth and Olympic levels but suffered his serious knee injury days after a first call-up to the full Brazil squad. He was close to being selected again in 2006-07 but damaged his achilles. Now he is receiving hints that he is again being considered for the Selecao.

“They say left-back is not a position which is closed and there’s a Confederations Cup at the end of the season so it would be a good time to get involved. It’s a big frustration I got injured before and I’d like to have at least one chance. I think I could take my opportunity.” The quiet man has quiet belief.

“I’m not as strong as he was physically but, technically, I could be better,” said Aurelio when comparing himself to Carlos. His conviction extends to his team. Valencia’s 2001-02 title was secured after the team came from a long way back to overtake Real Madrid and Aurelio feels Liverpool are capable of doing a similar job against United, who slipped up again with a 2-0 defeat at Fulham yesterday.

“It’s more difficult because United have not been conceding a lot of points like Madrid did that season but if we win all our games we’ll have a chance of them making some mistakes and of winning the league,” he said. “We have had many games when we were losing and got a result, but because we had a good week last week, we’re not the best team in the world. If we lose against Villa, everyone forgets about beating United.”

A sad anniversary has just passed. In 2000 Aurelio’s father, Mario, was killed in a car crash. “It happened on March 8. I miss him for sure. I had just got married, in January 2000, and he died two days before his birthday. That summer I went to the Olympics and then moved to Spain. So everything you do you start to think, ‘If my dad had been there to see that . . . ’,” he said.

Aurelio’s father worked in a plastics factory in Sao Carlos, the small industrial city in Sao Paolo state where Fabio grew up, and abandoned a promising football career to provide for Aurelio, his mother, Neide, and his sister – who is married to the Real Betis midfielder Edu.

“My family had food. Most people where I’m from don’t have food. But we weren’t in a good situation. Football brings me a much better condition for me and my family,” Aurelio said. “When I signed my first contract with Sao Paolo at 17 I got my first car and at the same time I gave a car to my father. He’d never had a car. I helped buy my parents a house. But these were just small things. Never can we pay back what our parents do for us.”

His family are his world. Settled in the village suburb of Woolton in south Liverpool, his great pleasures are his wife Elaine’s cooking, and taking his son, Fabio, and daughter, Victoria, to the cinema. “The last films we saw were Hotel for Dogs and Bolt. That was in 3D and the kids loved it,” he said.

“Valencia’s similar to Brazil . . . the weather, the food . . . and everyone I told about moving to Liverpool said, ‘You’re crazy’. I didn’t expect to feel so comfortable here.

“The problem is my kids know more about English. They say, ‘Daddy, read for me’. I start and they correct. ‘Don’t pronounce it like that ’.”

Aurelio’s English, for the record, is actually very good. And his left foot, just as Benitez promised long ago, is starting to prove most articulate too.

Hoping he stays injury free. He's really a class act.
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Offline Djibriliant

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #31 on: March 23, 2009, 01:05:22 PM »
Nice little read that. Seems a class act, and hope he can be here for another few seasons to help us win trophies.
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Offline Zend...en the clowns

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #32 on: March 23, 2009, 01:05:47 PM »
I honestly think if he had played every minute of every league game this season we would be far better off...

Offline R.A.La

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #33 on: March 23, 2009, 01:19:17 PM »
Top player. Top bloke.
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Offline Momos_righteye

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #34 on: March 23, 2009, 01:30:53 PM »
Great guy, hope he signs a new contract and steers clear of injuries

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #35 on: March 23, 2009, 01:36:44 PM »
I love that Rafa loves players who are real gentlemen off the pitch. We're all proud of the club no matter who plays for us, but it warms my heart to read interviews like this one.
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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #36 on: March 23, 2009, 01:37:01 PM »
“The problem is my kids know more about English. They say, ‘Daddy, read for me’. I start and they correct. ‘Don’t pronounce it like that ’.”

 :D
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Offline vorsprungtorbenpieknik

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #37 on: March 23, 2009, 01:44:31 PM »
I am genuinely pleased to have been proven wrong about Fabio. When he first came here I used to dread him taking free kicks. Not because he was terrible, but because he always seemed to nearly score. I’d never seen a player come so close to scoring so often without actually doing it. It was like watching Rob Jones all over again.

Seems like a humble bloke and one who has finally been given the chance (by his own body) to prove he can live with the physicality of the league here.

Offline redgriffin73

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #38 on: March 23, 2009, 01:57:58 PM »
Thanks for posting, he sounds like a lovely bloke. :)
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Offline jaffod

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Re: Fabio Aurelio profile
« Reply #39 on: March 23, 2009, 02:23:10 PM »
Good interview that. I think Fabio will have a massive part to play in the run in if he can stay fit.