Thiago Silva is in the throes of a brilliant comeback, having joined upwardly mobile Chelsea on a free transfer at the age of 35 – but he will never be able to forget the worst days of his life.
Fifteen years ago, the Brazilian star nearly died of tuberculosis in a Moscow hospital, and was rescued by Russian doctors. He spent nearly six months alone in a room, fearful that he wouldn’t ever be able to play football again. It could have been much worse.
You might wonder how Silva found himself in Moscow in 2005 in the first place. The answer is simple, even though few remember that he was signed by Dinamo Moscow from Porto in January of that year.
The then-20-year-old defender was virtually anonymous at the time, and hadn’t played a single minute for the Portuguese giants, instead turning out for their reserves in the second division. But agent Jorge Mendes recommended him as a rising star, and the Russian club readily paid €4m.
In fact, the Brazilian youngster was just a tiny part of a huge project. Dinamo’s new president Alexei Fedorychev wanted to take the league by storm, Mendes wanted to sell as many players as possible, and thus the Moscovites acquired no fewer than seven players from Portugal in January 2005 – then five more in the summer. Among them were some big names – midfielder Costinha and Brazilian striker Derlei, who were instrumental in winning the Champions League with Porto in 2004, as well as Greek Euro 2004 champion Georgios Seitaridis.
A lesser-known figure was goalkeeper Nuno; these days, Wolves’ manager and continuing a very long and fruitful cooperation with Mendes.
The only player to succeed in Russia was Portugal’s Danny, who became a legend at Zenit. All of the others failed miserably, and some had serious attitude issues that ruined the ambitions Dinamo project.
As for Silva, Dinamo fans didn’t hear his name at all – he never actually played for the club.
That could have been different. Oleg Romantsev, the famous former Spartak and Russia coach who is considered one of the finest specialists in the country, was chosen to coach the Portuguese colony by Fedorychev, and was mightily impressed by the defender during his first training session. “The guy is brilliant,” Romantsev remarked afterwards. The doctor was less delighted, because Thiago tired quickly.
It turned out that all of the players were signed without undergoing medical checks, and the Brazilian looked sick. The symptoms didn’t go away: high temperature, coughing, sweating. At first, the medical team assumed it was just a heavy cold. A few days later, they became truly worried and sent him for thorough checks in the clinic.
The results were frightening: Thiago was ill with tuberculosis, and suffered for around nine months. “If the disease had been discovered a couple of weeks later, you would have died,” the doctor told the Brazilian in hospital.
Death indeed seemed a possibility at one stage. The end of the defender’s career was much more likely, though, because the medical staff advised that most of his right lung should be cut out in order to improve chances of survival. Thiago refused, but spending time at the hospital was extremely tough. His mood improved when his parents and girlfriend arrived and practically lived with him in Moscow.
Dinamo paid all the bills, but never counted on the player. His contract was ripped up when he was out of the hospital, and the defender duly returned to his homeland. He decided to quit football, only to be persuaded to continue by his mother.
It took time, but Silva managed to regain his self-confidence and become a key player at Fluminense. Eventually, it turned out that Romantsev was absolutely right about him – Silva was brilliant. After moving to Milan in 2009, he gradually became one of the top players in the world in his position, and was even compared by some to the great Franco Baresi.
He would go on to join Paris Saint-Germain in 2012 where he spent eight hugely successful seasons.
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