Name: Adrián Carlos Czornomaz
Nickname: "Pirata"Country:
ArgentinaClub:
Los Andes /
Universitario /
Sporting Cristal /
Tigres UANLShirt Number:
9Position:
★CFSide: RF/BS
Age:
27-30 years (30/03/1968)
Height:
188 cmWeight:
82 kgAttack:
78Defence:
33Balance:
83Stamina:
73Top Speed:
72Acceleration:
70Response:
79Agility:
69Dribble Accuracy:
72Dribble Speed:
68Short Pass Accuracy:
73Short Pass Speed:
69Long Pass Accuracy:
67Long Pass Speed:
65Shot Accuracy:
78Shot Power:
81Shot Technique:
82Free Kick Accuracy:
61Swerve:
67Header:
84Jump:
76Technique:
73Aggression:
88Mentality:
75Goalkeeper Skills:
50Team work:
69Injury Tolerance:
ACondition/Fitness:
5Weak Foot Accuracy:
4Weak Foot Frequency:
5Consistency:
7Growth type:
Standard/LastingCARDS:P19 - Fox In The Box
S04 - PK Taker
S05 - 1-Touch Play
SPECIAL ABILITIES: Positioning - Scoring - Lines - Centre - Penalties - 1-Touch Pass
Attack/Defence Awareness Card:
Attack-MindedINFO:Adrián Czornomaz is an Argentinian former footballer who played as a center-forward. Born in Avellaneda, Buenos Aires (30/03/1968), Czornomaz started his professional career at Argentino de Quilmes in the year 1986, playing in the Third Division. One year later, he was sold to C.A. Independiente, the club of which he is a fan, though he did not succeed. It was in 1989 that Czornomaz would begin his career as a great scorer when he was sold to Cobreloa in Chile: that year he would score 13 goals in the Chilean Cup and in the Chilean League he would score 5 goals in the same match against Huachipato.
'The Pirate' as he was called, played for more than 20 teams throughout his career: after Cobreloa he would play for C.A. San Lorenzo, SK Rapid Wien, Banfield, and Belgrano de Córdoba in what would be his last experience in the First Division of Argentina. In 1994, Czornomaz was sold to Quilmes A.C., beginning his extensive and prolific career in the Primera B Nacional, the second division of Argentine football. The peculiarity that Czornomaz had was that he never lasted more than one season in the same team: since his arrival in Quilmes, his career was based on going to a team, being crowned their top scorer, and being sold to another club that required his scoring services. His most glorious time came at the end of the '90s, playing for Los Andes, where he became the top scorer in the Primera B Nacional 1995/96 with 26 goals (and again scoring 5 goals in the same game). His good performances led him to Peru, to play for Universitario Deportes, a club for which he is still pleasantly remembered despite having played the following year for their rival, Sporting Cristal (with whom he played in a Copa Libertadores final). His scoring abilities in Peru sold him to Mexico to play for Tigres UANL in 1997, but because the team already had the quota of foreigners full, he could only play one game, so they decided to return him to Los Andes and once again he would become the top goalscorer of the Primera B Nacional. In the 1999/00 season, Czornomaz would play for Atlético Tucumán, a club with which - once again - he would establish himself as the top goalscorer of the season in the Primera B Nacional. Czornomaz's career would continue in Tigre, Independiente Rivadavia, Tristán Suárez, Defensa y Justicia, Argentino de Quilmes, and Talleres de Remedios de Escalada, where he would retire from professional activity in 2006 at the age of 38. Adrián Czornomaz holds the apparently unbreakable record of the all-time top scorer in the Primera B Nacional, with 160 goals, and throughout his entire career, Czornomaz scored more than 260 goals.
A very classic center forward: tall, strong, and a good finisher. Czornomaz scored almost all of his goals inside the six-yard box, both with his head and with his great right-footed shot: he was capable of scoring the strangest goals since he did not hesitate for a second when finishing the ball with a single touch. He was not technical, fast, nor skillful; When it came to running with the ball he even seemed a little clumsy, but he had almost perfect positioning. Czornomaz used to stand at the far post because he believed that this way he could analyze the whole playing area better. Without a doubt the most lethal striker that the Argentine second division has seen, and remembered with great affection in two of the biggest teams in Peru.
Partial career statistics: (some stats are missing) Argentino de Quilmes (1986 - 1987) -
unknown C.A. Independiente (1987 - 1989) - 12 games, 3 goals
C.D. Cobreloa (1989 - 1991) - 40 games, 35 goals
C.A. San Lorenzo (1991 - 1992) - 29 games, 8 goals
S.K. Rapid Wien (1992) - 4 games, 1 goal
C.A. Banfield (1992) - 8 games, 7 goals
C.A. Belgrano (1993) - 7 games, 1 goal
Quilmes A.C. (1993 - 1994) - 6 games, 3 goals
All Boys (1994 - 1995) - 40 games, 27 goals
Los Andes (1995) - 38 games, 26 goals
Universitario (1996) - 30 games, 21 goals
Sporting Cristal (1997) - 20 games, 9 goals
Tigres UANL (1997) - 1 game, 0 goals
Los Andes (1998) - 42 games, 27 goals
Atlético Tucumán (1998 - 1999) - 33 games, 26 goals
Quilmes A.C. (1999) - 38 games, 21 goals
Gimnasia y Esgrima (J) (1999 - 2001) - 28 games, 13 goals
C.A. Independiente (2001 - 2002) - 0 games
C.A. Tigre (2002) - 13 games, 5 goals
Independiente Rivadavia (2002 - 2003) - 13 games, 3 goals
Tristán Suárez (2003 - 2004) - 31 games, 11 goals
Defensa y Justicia (2004) - 25 games, 2 goals
Argentino de Quilmes (2004 - 2005) - 28 games, 11 goals
Talleres (RdE) (2005 - 2006) - 13 games, 1 goal