Name:
Ricardo CenturiónNickname:
"Ricky",
"Wachiturro"ERA:
2016-2019Country:
ArgentinaClub:
Boca Juniors /
Racing ClubPosition:
★WF,
SS,
AMF,
SMFSide: RF/BS
Age:
23-26 (19/01/1993)
Height:
174 cmWeight:
65 kgAttack:
77Defence:
48Balance:
73Stamina:
81Speed:
85Acceleration:
88Response:
78Agility:
91Dribble Accuracy:
87Dribble Speed:
86Short Pass Accuracy:
75Short Pass Speed:
74Long Pass Accuracy:
74Long Pass Speed:
73Shot Accuracy:
74Shot Power:
78Shot Technique:
73Free Kick Accuracy:
71Swerve:
78Heading:
66Jump:
69Technique:
84Aggression:
81Mentality:
70GK Skills:
50Team work:
72Injury Tolerance:
BCondition/Fitness:
5Weak Foot Accuracy:
7Weak Foot Frequency:
6Consistency:
4Growth type:
Early/PeakSPECIAL ABILITIES: Dribbling - Tactical Dribble - Side - 1-Touch Pass
CARDS:P03 - Trickster
P04 - Darting Run
P05 - Mazing Run
S05 - 1-Touch Play
S15 - Shoulder Feint Skills
S16 - Roulette Skills
S19 - Scissors Skills
S21 - Step On Skills
Attack/Defence Awareness Card:
Attack MindedINFO:Ricardo Centurión is an Argentinian winger, who can also play as an advanced midfielder, second striker, or side midfielder. Born in Avellaneda, Buenos Aires (19/01/1993), Ricky started his career in Racing Club in 2012, aged 19. He was considered one of the great stars of the Racing youth team, being part of a famous class of players composed of Rodrigo de Paul, Luciano Vietto, Luis Fariña, Valentín Viola, and Bruno Zuculini. After a brief spell in Genoa, Italy in the 2013-14 season, he returned to the
Academy in the second half of 2014 and became champion of the Torneo Transición, being instrumental in many games. In 2015 he would have a spell with São Paulo in the Brazilian First Division, before arriving at Boca Juniors in 2016, where he would win the 2016-17 Primera División. He managed to receive the popular nickname of
"the Argentine Neymar" due to his similarity to the Brazilian footballer when dribbling his rivals. After another brief frustrated instance in Europe (also for Genoa), he would return to Racing Club in 2018. Although he managed to be key in many matches in the local league and Copa Libertadores, he was not at the championship ceremony won by the Academy in the 2018 season due to a bad gesture he had with the manager Eduardo Coudet days before. He would arrive at Vélez Sarsfield in 2020 after his time in Mexican football at San Luis. He would lose minutes as time went by, so he was transferred on loan to San Lorenzo in 2022, where he only lasted 2 months. He would be away from the fields during the second half of 2022 due to missing Vélez's training sessions and being punished by the club. After spending 6 months training by himself, in January 2023 he signed a contract with Club Atlético Barracas Central. He only played 10 games for the
guapo, and then he was dismissed from the squad by manager Sergio Rondina.
He was considered one of the most skillful players Argentina had produced due to his ability to dribble past players, but he never reached his full potential due to off-court reasons; as he is recognized for his extra-football and non-disciplinary controversies that he had throughout his career. In 2013, Centurión was described by the BBC as a "whippy, quick, skillful support striker whose elusive dribbling made a big impact in the recent Argentine championship". His dribbling ability often leads him to undertake individual runs or pull off elaborate feints and moves in one-on-one situations, in order to challenge or beat opponents, such as the step over. His style of play drew early comparisons to compatriot Ángel Di María, and later to Brazilian star Neymar in the media. Regarded by pundits as a highly promising yet undisciplined player, due to his turbulent and controversial lifestyle off the pitch, in a 2017 interview with La Repubblica, Italian former playmaker Roberto Baggio described Centurión as his potential "heir" and as the player whose characteristics currently most resembled his own playing style. Despite his talent, and the praise that he earned in the Italian media for his creativity, as well as his explosive and unpredictable dribbling, he also drew criticism over his disappointing performances and poor positional sense on the pitch during his time in Serie A. Italian journalist Gianluca Sartori highlighted the contrast, noting that while Centurión was a highly talented young player, gifted with an incredible change of pace, technique, the ability to get past his opponents, and the capacity to attack from either side of the pitch, he also had an immature character, a poor mentality, and a low work-rate, which is why he believed that the Argentine winger struggled to adapt to the more physical and tactical brand of football played in Italy.
Racing Club (2012 - 2014) - 55 games, 7 goals
↪ Genoa CFC (2013 - 2014) - 12 games, 0 goals
São Paulo (2015 - 2017) - 58 games, 7 goals
↪ Boca Juniors (2016 - 2017) - 24 games, 8 goals
Genoa CFC (2017 - 2018) - 3 games, 0 goals
Racing Club (2018 - 2020) - 38 games, 12 goals
↪ Atlético San Luis (2019) - 12 games, 1 goal
↪ Vélez Sarsfield (2020) - 21 games, 2 goals
Vélez Sarsfield (2020 - 2023) - 41 games, 6 goals
↪ San Lorenzo (2022) - 12 games, 2 goals
↪ Barracas Central (2023) - 10 games, 0 goals