J.C. CALVO:
26-06-1906
The missionaries also took the plunge and went abroad, a successful tour of Chile, where they even beat the national team 3-1. In total, nine games were played, with five victories and four draws. The chronicles say that Juan Carlos Calvo was a great success and that earned him a call-up to the national team for the 1930 World Cup.
SOURCE:
https://webcitation.org/6AQijBSIq?url=h ... iones.htmlJuan Carlos Calvo – forward (NOTE: HE WAS NOT FORWARD) from Misiones who was part of the 1930 squad. Born on 06/26/1906, exactly 3 months after the founding of Misiones.
SOURCE:
https://web.archive.org/web/20170519015 ... siones-f-chttps://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%9A%D0 ... 0%BE%D1%81All this as central DMF:
https://atilio.uy/partido:1102https://atilio.uy/partido:1150https://atilio.uy/partido:7338https://atilio.uy/partido:1206https://atilio.uy/partido:1282 (as CB)
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GQ_pz81W4AE ... name=small1,86 cm (aprox)
https://twitter.com/AHIFU2019/status/18 ... 9578649809The NT gave rise to inevitable discussions: I still remember the scandal that arose when Juan Carlos Calvo, black, strong and rough centre-half from Wanderers, was preferred to the virtuoso “Bebe” Romero with his shirt untucked in Bella Vista. Today I think that it was a more aggressive concept of football that led to the choice of Calvo (who, by the way, never played); so I wrote a mocking article that was published in a Montevideo newspaper. It was my first journalistic test and it was a complicated and pseudo-witty nonsense (I was in my first year of high school).
SOURCE: 100 YEARS OF URUGUAYAN FOOTBALL: 26-02-1970