12-3339: Edu or EDU may refer to: People [ edit ] Given name or nickname Edu (footballer, born 1949) , Brazilian footballer named Jonas Eduardo Américo Edu (footballer, born 1974) , Brazilian footballer named Eduardo Araújo Moreira Edu (footballer, born 1976) , Brazilian footballer named Eduardo Godinho Felipe Edu (footballer, born 1978) , Brazilian footballer and football technical director named Eduardo César Daud Gaspar Edu (footballer, born 1979) , Brazilian footballer named Luís Eduardo Schmidt Edu (footballer, born 1981) , Brazilian footballer named Eduardo Gonçalves de Oliveira Edu (footballer, born January 1983) , Brazilian footballer named Eduardo Vieira do Nascimento Edu (footballer, born February 1983) , Brazilian footballer named Eduardo da Silva Escobar Edu (footballer, born 1990) , Portuguese footballer named Eduardo Augusto Cameselle Machado Edú (footballer, born 1992) , Portuguese footballer named Eduardo Marques de Castro Silva Edu (footballer, born 1993) , Brazilian football forward named Eduardo Nascimento da Silva Edu (footballer, born 2000) (Lucas Eduardo Ribeiro de Souza) Edu Albácar (born 1979), Spanish footballer Edu Alonso (born 1974), Spanish footballer Edu Ardanuy (born 1967), Spanish guitarist Eduardo Mello Borges (born 1986), Azerbaijani futsal player Edu Bedia (born 1989), Spanish footballer Edu Caballer (born 1981), Spanish footballer Edu Campabadal (born 1993), Spanish footballer Edu Coimbra (born 1947), Brazilian footballer Edu Cortina (born 1996), Spanish footballer Eduardo Delani (born 1981), Brazilian footballer Edu Dracena (born 1981), Brazilian footballer Edu Espada (born 1981), Spanish footballer Edu Expósito (born 1996), Spanish footballer Edu da Gaita (1916–1982), Brazilian composer and harmonica player Edu García (born 1990), Spanish footballer Edu Gil (born 1990), Spanish footballer Eduard Grau (born 1981), Spanish cinematographer Edu Gueda (born 1998), Brazilian singer Edu Lobo (born 1943), Brazilian musician Edu Manga (born 1967), Brazilian footballer Edu Manzano (born 1955), American-Filipino actor, comedian and politician Edu Marangon (born 1963), Brazilian footballer Edu Moya (born 1981), Spanish footballer Chinedu Obasi (born 1986), Nigerian footballer Edu Oriol (born 1986), Spanish footballer Edu Pinheiro (born 1997), Portuguese footballer Edu Ramos (born 1992), Spanish footballer Edu Roldán (born 1977), Spanish footballer Edu Sales (born 1977), Brazilian footballer Edu Snethlage (1883–1941), Dutch footballer Edu Torres (born 1964), Spanish basketball coach Edu Vílchez (born 1967), Spanish footballer Surname A. J. Edu (born 2000), Cypriot-born Filipino college basketball player Bonifacio Edu (born 1969), Equatoguinean sprinter Eloy Edu (born 1985), Equatoguinean footballer Maurice Edu (born 1986), American soccer player Shafi Edu (1911–2002), Nigerian businessman Other uses [ edit ] .edu , an Internet top-level domain for educational institutions .edu (second-level domain) , used in many countries Edu, Kwara ,
24-559: A Local Government Area in Nigeria EDU FAA Location identifier for University Airport , Davis, California EDU, NYSE symbol for New Oriental , a Chinese Education company 5-ethynyl-2'-deoxyuridine East Delta University , a private university in Bangladesh Eidgenössisch-Demokratische Union ( Federal Democratic Union of Switzerland ) (German: Eidgenössisch-Demokratische Union ),
36-604: A political party in Switzerland Electric distribution utility, an entity engaged in electric power distribution Equivalent Dwelling Unit is one single-family residential household. An EDU is the unit of measure by which the user is charged for sewer services. Ethiopian Democratic Union Ethylene diurea European Defence Union, of the European Union's Common Security and Defence Policy European Democrat Union Andrew Horowitz , released an album under
48-644: Is a Spanish retired footballer who played as a forward , and is a manager . Born in Sabadell , Barcelona , Catalonia , Vílchez graduated from Real Madrid 's youth setup. He made his professional debut on 9 September 1984, aged only 17, starting with the reserves in a 0–4 home loss against FC Barcelona B in the Segunda División championship. In the 1989 summer, after appearing regularly with Castilla, he joined CD Logroñés in La Liga . Vílchez made his debut in
60-620: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Edu (footballer, born 1949) Jonas Eduardo Américo , called Edu , (born 6 August 1949) is a Brazilian former footballer who played as a forward . Edu was born in Jaú , São Paulo . From 1966 to 1985 he played for Santos , Corinthians , Internacional , Tigres UANL (in Mexico), São Cristovão and Nacional Fast Clube . He won five Campeonato Paulista titles (1967, 1968, 1969, 1973, 1977) and received
72-521: The Brazilian Silver Ball Award in 1971. With the Brazilian team he played in 42 matches, from June 1966 to June 1976, and scored eight goals. He was a 1970 World Champion , and was also selected for Brazil at the 1966 and the 1974 FIFA World Cup . He played once in 1970 and once in 1974. He was also called up for the 1966 FIFA World Cup , at 16 years and 339 days of age at the start of
84-435: The main category of Spanish football on 24 September 1989, starting in a 1–0 home win against Athletic Bilbao . He scored his first goal on 12 November, but in a 2–4 loss at FC Barcelona . In September 1990 Vílchez moved to Real Valladolid , also in the top level. After appearing more regularly during the campaign , he signed for RCD Espanyol , but was used rarely by the latter. In 1992 Vílchez joined Palamós CF , in
96-666: The name edu (stylized in lower-case) See also [ edit ] Eduardo Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Edu . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Edu&oldid=1253778601 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Disambiguation pages with given-name-holder lists Disambiguation pages with surname-holder lists Hidden categories: Articles containing German-language text Short description
108-403: The regional leagues. On 31 October 2012 he was appointed Palamós manager, taking the club to a comfortable 12th place. On 12 June 2013 Vílchez signed a contract with UE Olot , being effective on 1 July. He was sacked on 29 December, after a winless run of seven games. On 16 October 2014 Vílchez was appointed UE Figueres manager. He left the club in 2016, and remained nearly a year without
120-463: The second level. He subsequently moved to Elche CF in Segunda División B in 1994, and resumed his career in the same division but also in Tercera División , representing Palamós, FC Palafrugell and CF Peralada ; he retired with the latter in 2002, aged 35. Vílchez began his managerial career at ACD San Marcial in 2002, narrowly avoiding relegation in his second season . On 27 July 2004 he
132-450: The tournament, being the youngest player to ever be called up for the tournament; however, he did not play in any match. More recently Edu played in an all-stars masters team in touring exhibition matches. This biographical article related to a Brazilian association football forward born in the 1940s is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Edu V%C3%ADlchez Eduard 'Edu' Vílchez Ortiz (born 22 September 1967)
SECTION 10
#1732904969019144-667: Was appointed Logroñés manager, but later joined the youth setup after the club's administrative relegation. In November 2004 Vílchez was appointed at CD Linares , but left the club in January of the following year, after a bad run of results. He eventually returned to Logroñés in the 2005 summer, before joining UD Los Barrios in February 2006. On 7 July 2007 Vílchez was appointed at the helm of Peralada. After one season he resigned, and signed for Real Balompédica Linense on 11 June 2009. On 17 August 2010 Vílchez returned to Peralada, now in
#18981