Sporting CP and Porto Born in
Montijo,
Setúbal District, Futre first appeared professionally in
1983–84, as a 17-year-old for
Sporting CP, whose
youth system he had joined at the age of nine. When he requested a pay raise from president
João Rocha, he was turned down and left for
Porto after just one season, as veterans
Jaime Pacheco and
António Sousa moved in the opposite direction as part of the deal. In the following years, Futre collected two
Primeira Liga titles, also helping the northerners to the
1986–87 European Cup, putting on a
Player of the match performance in
the final against
Bayern Munich.
Atlético Madrid After that continental win, Futre was traded to
Atlético Madrid in Spain, earning a reported annual salary of
€650,000. At the
capital club, he quickly rose to fan favourite status, but his physical weakness left him with several knee injuries which tormented his career in the 1990s. with him netting in
the campaign's
Copa del Rey, a 2–0 win over rivals
Real Madrid. During most of his spell with the
Colchoneros, he was also
team captain.
Later years and retirement In January 1993, Futre moved to Porto and Sporting rivals
Benfica, winning a
Taça de Portugal in his short stay (and scoring in the final against
Boavista in a 5–2 victory), as his injury woes persisted. Afterwards, he signed a one-season contract with
Marseille, where he teamed up with countryman
Rui Barros. His time in France was largely disappointing, however, once again due to continual injuries, as well as competition from
Dragan Stojković in his position, which limited him to only two goals in eight league games. Halfway through
1993–94, despite being linked with
AC Milan, Futre eventually transferred to newly promoted
Serie A side
Reggiana. On his debut, on 21 November 1993, he scored a memorable individual goal which opened the scoring in a 2–0 win over
Cremonese and gave the hosts their first ever win in the top flight; during the second half, however, he suffered a serious injury after an aggressive challenge from
Alessandro Pedroni, which kept him out for the rest of the season as his team narrowly avoided relegation. ambassador in 2019 After his time in Italy, Futre agreed to a one-year deal with
West Ham United, where he infamously refused to play until he was given
squad number 10. Finally, he returned to Atlético Madrid (ten
La Liga matches in
1997–98), effectively ending his career with
J1 League club
Yokohama Flügels; he ranked joint-98th in
World Soccer's 100 Greatest Players of the 20th century, published in December 1999. ==International career==