After failing to establish himself at Porto, being loaned several times during his contract, he made a name for himself in Germany with Werder Bremen where he remained for four seasons, reaching the 2009 UEFA Cup final and scoring 63 competitive goals. He also spent several years in Turkey with Beşiktaş, netting 47 times in 109 total games.
Almeida, whose international career with Portugal spanned over a decade, succeeded in becoming a regular after the departures of Pauleta in 2006 and Liédson in 2010. He represented the nation at two World Cups and as many European Championships, earning 57 caps and scoring 19 goals.[2]
Club career
Portugal
Born in Figueira da Foz, Coimbra District, Almeida started playing football for hometown club Naval 1º de Maio, before being signed by Porto still as a junior. He made his Primeira Liga debut in a 2–0 home win over Benfica on 21 September 2003, playing three minutes.[3] Unable to settle at first, however, he had loan spells with União de Leiria (with which he had already played in the previous season, also on loan)[4] and Boavista.[5]
Almeida served another loan stint in 2006–07, with a solid first year at the Bundesliga's Werder Bremen,[7] where he rejoined former Porto teammate Diego. He totalled ten goals in 41 appearances (in all competitions), including one in a 2–1 home loss against Espanyol in the semi-finals of the UEFA Cup, his shot floating over the goalkeeper and into the net in an eventual 4–2 aggregate defeat;[8] after seeing his chances at Porto definitely cut down with the arrival of strikers Edgar and Ernesto Farías in August 2007, he decided to accept Bremen's offer for a permanent switch, penning a four-year deal worth €4 million.[9]
With the departure of Miroslav Klose, who signed for Bayern Munich,[10] Almeida's chances of first-team action improved dramatically, and he started the 2007–08 season in scoring fashion, netting seven times in his first 12 league games, including two goals in a 4–1 victory over defending championsVfB Stuttgart.[11] He would finish the season with 16 goals in all competitions – 11 in the league, as his club finished second behind Bayern – only surpassed in the team by Diego's 17.
Alternating starts with appearances from the bench, Almeida once again scored in double digits in the 2009–10 campaign, netting seven goals in the domestic league for a total of 11, as Bremen finished third and qualified to the Champions League play-off round, with the player assistingClaudio Pizarro in the third goal of the clash against Sampdoria (3–1 home win in the first leg, eventual 3–2 aggregate win).[15]
Almeida started 2010–11 netting six times in the first ten league games. On 28 November 2010 he took his total to nine, after scoring three in a home win against FC St. Pauli (3–0) – in the dying minutes of the fixture, he was sent off after elbowing an opponent.[16]
On 7 October 2014, free agent Almeida signed for Serie A newcomers Cesena.[21] However, he struggled at his new club, managing only seven starts and terminating his contract by mutual consent on 20 January 2015.[22] A week later, he joined Russia's Kuban Krasnodar.[23]
On 16 January 2016, Almeida returned to Germany and signed for Hannover 96 until summer 2017, reuniting with former Werder Bremen boss Thomas Schaaf in the process.[26] He scored in his first appearance seven days later, but in a 2–1 home loss against Darmstadt 98.[27] In February, he received a retrospective three-match ban for an elbow on FC Augsburg's Dominik Kohr,[28] as the season ended with relegation.
Almeida joined AEK Athens from the Super League Greece on 18 July 2016, on a two-year contract.[29] He scored twice in the first 15 minutes of his debut, a 4–1 home win over Xanthi on 11 September.[30]
On 26 April 2017, in the return leg of the semi-finals of the Greek Football Cup against Olympiacos, Almeida played as an emergency goalkeeper for the first time in his career, after Giannis Anestis was sent off in the closing minutes of the game. His team eventually advanced to the final on away goals, after a 2–2 aggregate draw.[31]
Almeida's contract was terminated by mutual consent on 30 August 2017.[32] The following day he signed a one-year deal with Hajduk Split from the Croatian First Football League, with the option for a further season.[33]
Almeida returned to Portugal after an absence of 12 years in July 2018, at the age of 34. Citing family reasons, he agreed to a two-year contract at Académica de Coimbra.[34] He made his LigaPro debut on 18 August, playing 36 minutes in a 1–0 home defeat against Paços de Ferreira and eventually acting as a goalkeeper after Peterson Peçanha was sent off.[35]
On 6 February 2020, Almeida announced his retirement.[36]
Almeida was called for Portugal's final three UEFA Euro 2008qualifiers, starting against Azerbaijan and scoring his first international goal.[39] He also netted in the follow-up, a 1–0 win over Armenia,[40] and these goals eventually proved vital as the nation clinched a tournament spot.
Almeida was picked for the finals in South Africa. After the first match, a 0–0 against Ivory Coast, he replaced Liédson in the starting XI for the following match, with both players finding the net in the 7–0 rout of North Korea on 21 June 2010, in Cape Town.[42]
Almeida was selected by new manager Paulo Bento for his Euro 2012 squad, initially as third choice after Hélder Postiga and Nélson Oliveira. After the former injured himself in the first half of the quarter-finals against Czech Republic, he replaced him,[43] going on to start in the penalty shootout loss to Spain (0–0 after 120 minutes).[44]
After being included in the list for the 2014 World Cup,[45] Almeida started in the first group stage match against Germany, but was injured after just 28 minutes of play in an eventual 4–0 defeat.[46] He went on to miss the second game against the United States[47] with Postiga, who was also stretchered off after only 17 minutes, replacing him in the starting XI.[48]
On 31 March 2015, Almeida captained Portugal for the first time in his final appearance, a 2–0 friendly loss to Cape Verde in Estoril.[49]
Coaching career
Following his retirement from playing, Almeida instantly went into coaching Académica's under-23 team.[36] In 2021–22, he was assistant manager of the first team, serving four head coaches as the season ended with relegation to Liga 3;[50] he left by mutual consent at the end of the campaign and waived his right to compensation or backlogged wages, due to the club's financial situation.[51]
^"Sevilha e Espanyol na final" [Sevilla and Espanyol in the final]. Record (in Portuguese). 3 May 2007. Archived from the original on 10 September 2012. Retrieved 18 October 2010.
^"Hugo Almeida Beşiktaş'ta" [Hugo Almeida a Beşiktaş player] (in Turkish). Beşiktaş JK. 24 December 2010. Archived from the original on 27 December 2010. Retrieved 24 December 2010.
^"Almeida a Villa Silvia" [Almeida to Villa Silvia] (in Italian). Cesena Calcio. 7 October 2014. Archived from the original on 25 July 2015. Retrieved 8 October 2014.
^Анжи и Алмейда расторгли контракт [Аnzhi and Almeida terminate contract] (in Russian). FC Anzhi. 13 January 2016. Archived from the original on 3 November 2018. Retrieved 13 January 2016.
^Propadalo, Karlo (31 August 2017). "SLUŽBENO: Hugo Almeida novi napadač Hajduka" [OFFICIAL: Hugo Almeida is new Hajduk forward] (in Croatian). Nogomet Plus. Retrieved 1 September 2017.