Henrique Maduro signs professional contract | OneFootball

Henrique Maduro signs professional contract | OneFootball

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Portal dos Dragões

·13. Juli 2026

Henrique Maduro signs professional contract

Artikelbild:Henrique Maduro signs professional contract

Henrique Maduro has taken a step that, in youth football, works as a true seal of promise and commitment: he has signed a professional contract with FC Porto and strengthened his bond with the club he considers the one closest to his heart. The 16-year-old midfielder, a native of Figueira da Foz, spoke about growth, sacrifice and ambition, always with his eyes set on a higher level. At the center of it all, one goal repeated without hesitation: “to reach the first team.”

After joining Casa do Dragão in the summer of 2023, Henrique Maduro gradually earned his place and established himself as one of the captains of the under-16 team, in a season in which he scored five goals in 18 matches in the National Championship for his age group. Now, with his first professional contract signed, he delivers a message in line with Porto’s culture: work, high standards and the understanding that every milestone reached is only the beginning of the next one.


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Commenting on the moment of the signing, the young midfielder stressed that it was a goal he had been chasing since his youth contract and framed this step as a natural part of his development.

“It is an important moment and a milestone in my growth. After the youth contract, I had the goal of signing a professional contract this year and I managed to achieve it in the service of my Club.”

In Henrique Maduro’s words, you can sense the satisfaction of someone who has achieved an intermediate goal without turning it into the finish line. The tone is one of accomplishment, but also of continuity, as if the contract represents more of a responsibility than an endpoint.

When recalling his arrival at FC Porto at such a young age, the midfielder went back to the beginning of the journey and explained how adaptation and ambition advanced side by side.

“I left home very young, at 13, and went to Casa do Dragão, but I adapted easily because I’m an outgoing person who likes talking and meeting new people,” he explained. “I came here with ambitions, but it was even more because of the love I have for football and for my club, which is FC Porto. As the years have gone by, that ambition has grown more and more, and my goal is one day to reach the first team.”

The picture he paints of himself combines personal ease with a very concrete bet on the future. Adaptation appears as a stage already overcome; ambition, meanwhile, kept growing until it took center stage in his message.

That idea of progression came up again when he spoke about what he feels has changed since he arrived at the club.

“I’m more mature, I have more responsibilities, more work, more dedication and more pride in what I do,” he stressed. “I have FC Porto’s four pillars firmly in place: competence, rigor, passion and ambition.”

The wording reveals the competitive context in which he operates: more than talent, Henrique Maduro chooses to define himself through standards of behavior. It is a way of presenting himself already within a code, like someone who understands that, at the club, identity is also something that is learned.

Along that path, the midfielder made sure to reserve a central role for his family, pointing to their daily support as the emotional foundation of a demanding journey.

“My family has been a key part of this challenge, because they are the ones who give me the support I need every day and who worry about whether I’m doing well or badly,” he said. “They are there in the good times and the bad times.”

The intimate side of a player’s development is rarely separate from the structure that supports him off the pitch. Henrique Maduro recognizes this clearly, linking competitive demands to an emotional safety net that allows him to handle them.

When trying to define himself as a footballer, he turned to an identity-based image that at FC Porto is almost like a certificate of belonging.

“I’m the typical Porto player: someone who never gives up and who has the grit and the mystique so well known in this city,” he said. “FC Porto is my club and playing here is incredible.”

More than a technical description, the sentence works as a declaration of allegiance. Henrique Maduro wants to be seen less through the aesthetics of his game and more through the way he embodies an idea of competitiveness and resilience.

The same tone appeared when he spoke about the demands required to reach this contract, rejecting any romanticized view of the journey.

“It took a lot of sacrifice. Life isn’t all roses. Since I got here, I’ve had to work very hard,” he acknowledged. “A professional contract is a work contract and, from the name alone, you can already tell that it takes a lot of work with rigor and dedication.”

The message is clear and firm: talent alone is not enough. In the midfielder’s words, professionalism begins before status and is measured by routine, rigor and the ability to keep pushing.

Naturally, the conversation moved on to the goals that motivate him and to the greater ambition that runs through almost all of his answers.

“I have many ambitions, but the main one is to reach the first team, play on the pitch at the Dragão and manage to become champion.”

The individual dream always appears tied to an idea of collective achievement. It is not enough just to get there; you have to get there to win, in tune with the competitive culture he himself invokes.

That view became even clearer when Henrique Maduro spoke about the club’s season and the way he understands success.

“FC Porto is not a club that plays, it is a club that wins. Therefore, this year was just one of those years we are already used to.”

There is total adherence here to a principle of identity: in Porto’s universe, competing cannot be separated from winning. Even coming from a youth player, the sentence shows how the club’s demands already shape the language and ambition of those who grow up within it.

Asked about the national team, the young midfielder widened the perspective and spoke about the pride of being an international, without losing sight of the developmental value of those experiences.

“It is a source of pride to represent the national team. I have already done it at under-15 and under-16 level, and I have the ambition to keep doing it all the way to the senior team and perhaps manage to win the World Cup so desired by the Portuguese,” he said. “The national team tournaments are incredible for our development, because they force us to give more, since we are competing with the best players from every country. This helps us raise our level.”

Call-ups to the national teams therefore appear both as a distinction and as a competitive laboratory. For Henrique Maduro, it is not just a showcase; it is also a place of acceleration, where the level rises and forces you to grow.

That logic of sustained progression appeared again when he mapped out what he intends to do in the next stages of his career.

“I want to grow and, with that, move up through the stages. I want to be able to play for the under-17s, the under-19s, the B team and, who knows, the first-team squad,” he explained. “I believe that with a lot of work and dedication I can get there.”

The plan is clearly defined and without artificial shortcuts: to climb step by step, but always with his eyes fixed on the top. It is the language of ambitious patience, a rare balance for someone who has just signed his first professional contract.

There was also room to talk about role models, and Henrique Maduro pointed to a profile he identifies with because of physical traits and intensity.

“My reference is Victor Froholdt. I like to believe I’m a player similar to him, one who covers many kilometers, is fast and never gets tired. It almost seems like he has an extra lung.”

Here too, the dominant trait is not flair, but the ability to repeat efforts and maintain intensity. It is another clue about how the midfielder sees himself and the kind of player he wants to become.

In the end, he returned to the starting point: his greatest ambition, stated without hesitation and on a grand scale.

“My biggest ambition is to reach FC Porto’s first team, but my dream is to win a Champions League and become a World Champion with Portugal.”

This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇵🇹 here.

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