Francileudo Santos


Francileudo Silva dos Santos Lima, is a Tunisian retired professional footballer who played as a forward.
Born in Brazil, he became a naturalised Tunisian citizen before their hosting of the 2004 Africa Cup of Nations, and was joint top scorer as they won it. He also played at two more such tournaments, and the 2006 FIFA World Cup.

Club career

Born in Zé Doca, Maranhão, Brazil, Santos began his professional career with Standard Liège in Belgium, before spending two years with Étoile Sportive du Sahel in Tunisia. He then moved to FC Sochaux-Montbéliard in France in 2000, and was top scorer with 21 goals and player of the season as they won Ligue 2 in his first season. He played as they won the 2004 Coupe de la Ligue Final; in the last 32 he scored in a 3–2 extra-time home win over ASOA Valence. In February 2004, he was removed from the squad to avoid a doping ban due to his corticoid use, as the club awaited a facsimile of his prescription from Tunisia.
After nine goals in his final Ligue 1 season, Santos turned down a new two-year contract to sign for fellow league team Toulouse FC on a three-year deal in May 2005. Having played only four times under manager Élie Baup in his second season, he was loaned to FC Zürich of the Swiss Super League in February 2007 for the rest of the season. In May, he opened a 2–0 win against city rivals Grasshopper Club Zürich to take the title.
On 1 July 2008, Santos returned to Sochaux on a one-year deal. He then had a season at FC Istres before going back to Étoile Sportive.
Santos returned to Franche-Comté in September 2013, to sign for ASM Belfort of the fourth-tier CFA. In June 2015, he signed for a year at Swiss amateurs FC Porrentruy.

International career

Santos was naturalised as a Tunisian citizen in 2003, before the country was due to host the 2004 Africa Cup of Nations. He debuted for the Carthage Eagles on 17 January in a 2–1 friendly win over Benin in Sfax, in which he scored after eight minutes. In the first two group games, he scored a goal in a 2–1 win against Rwanda and two in a 3–0 victory against DR Congo. He opened the scoring after five minutes in the final, a 2–1 win over rivals Morocco at the Stade Olympique Hammadi Agrebi . With four goals, he was one of five joint top scorers.
In June 2004, Santos apologised for having draped himself in the Brazilian flag when celebrating Sochaux's Coupe de la Ligue win. He was Tunisia's top scorer with five goals in qualification for the 2006 FIFA World Cup; this included four on 26 March 2005 as they beat Malawi 7–0 at home. He was also part of the squad that were eliminated from the group stage at the 2005 FIFA Confederations Cup in Germany, where he scored both goals of a win over Australia in their last game.
At the 2006 Africa Cup of Nations in Egypt, Tunisia reached the quarter-finals. Santos scored a hat-trick in a 4–1 win over Zambia in the first game and another in a 2–0 victory against South Africa in the next. Manager Roger Lemerre called him up for the 2006 FIFA World Cup, where he only played the last ten minutes of a group stage elimination by Ukraine at the Berlin Olympiastadion, as a substitute for Adel Chedli.
Santos also went to the 2008 Africa Cup of Nations in Ghana, another quarter-final finish. He scored twice in a 3–1 win over South Africa in the second group game.

Career statistics

No.DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
117 January 20041–02–1Friendly
224 January 2004Stade 7 Novembre, Radès, Tunisia2–12–12004 Africa Cup of Nations
328 January 2004Stade 7 Novembre, Radès, Tunisia1–03–02004 Africa Cup of Nations
428 January 2004Stade 7 Novembre, Radès, Tunisia3–03–02004 Africa Cup of Nations
514 February 2004Stade 7 Novembre, Radès, Tunisia1–02–12004 Africa Cup of Nations
64 September 2004Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium, Rabat, Morocco1–01–12006 FIFA World Cup qualification
726 March 2005Stade 7 Novembre, Radès, Tunisia2–07–02006 FIFA World Cup qualification
826 March 2005Stade 7 Novembre, Radès, Tunisia3–07–02006 FIFA World Cup qualification
926 March 2005Stade 7 Novembre, Radès, Tunisia5–07–02006 FIFA World Cup qualification
1026 March 2005Stade 7 Novembre, Radès, Tunisia6–07–02006 FIFA World Cup qualification
114 June 2005Botswana National Stadium, Gaborone, Botswana2–13–12006 FIFA World Cup qualification
1221 June 2005Red Bull Arena, Leipzig, Allemagne1–02–02005 FIFA Confederations Cup
1321 June 2005Red Bull Arena, Leipzig, Allemagne2–02–02005 FIFA Confederations Cup
1411 November 2005Stade Sébastien Charléty, Paris, France2–12–2Friendly
1522 January 2006Haras El Hodoud Stadium, Alexandria, Egypt1–14–12006 Africa Cup of Nations
1622 January 2006Haras El Hodoud Stadium, Alexandria, Egypt3–14–12006 Africa Cup of Nations
1722 January 2006Haras El Hodoud Stadium, Alexandria, Egypt4–14–12006 Africa Cup of Nations
1826 January 2006Haras El Hodoud Stadium, Alexandria, Egypt1–02–02006 Africa Cup of Nations
1930 January 2006Stade 7 Novembre, Radès, Tunisia2–03–0Friendly
209 September 2007Khartoum Stadium, Khartoum, Sudan2–32–32008 Africa Cup of Nations qualification
2127 January 2008Tamale Stadium, Tamale, Ghana1–03–12008 Africa Cup of Nations
2227 January 2008Tamale Stadium, Tamale, Ghana2–03–12008 Africa Cup of Nations

Honours

Sochaux
FC Zürich
Tunisia
Individual