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 José Manuel MORENO 1940-1947 
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Joined: Mon Mar 11, 2013 10:11 am
Posts: 5
STATS BY GODOY2210 * BEIDERBECKE * CHARRÚAN

Name: José Manuel Moreno Fernández

Nickname: "El Charro"


Image

Country: :ARG: Argentina
Club: Club Atlético River Plate (1935-1944, 1946-1948), Real Club España (1944-1946)
Position: *SS, AMF, CF, CMF
Side: RF/BS
Age: 24-31 years (03/08/1916)

Height: 177 cm
Weight: 80 kg

Attack: 92
Defence: 61
Balance: 88
Stamina: 81
Top Speed: 83
Acceleration: 85
Response: 87
Agility: 80
Dribble Accuracy: 92
Dribble Speed: 82
Short Pass Accuracy: 89
Short Pass Speed: 77
Long Pass Accuracy: 85
Long Pass Speed: 75
Shot Accuracy: 89
Shot Power: 86
Shot Technique: 85
Free Kick Accuracy: 73
Curling: 78
Header: 92
Jump: 85
Technique: 92
Aggression: 90
Mentality: 88
Goalkeeper Skills: 50
Team Work: 87

Injury Tolerance: B
Condition: 6
Weak Foot Accuracy: 7
Weak Foot Frequency: 6
Consistency: 6
Growth Type: Early/Lasting

CARDS:
S02 - Passer
S03 - 1-on-1 Finish
P03 - Trickster
P05 - Mazing Run
P18 - Talisman

SPECIAL ABILITIES: Dribbling - Tactical Dribble - Playmaking - Passing - Scoring - 1-1 Scoring

Attack/Defence Awareness Card: Attack Minded



INFO:

Moreno nicknamed "El Charro", was an Argentine football inside forward who played for several clubs in Argentina, Mexico, Chile, and Colombia, and is the first footballer ever to have won first division league titles in four different countries (later players to emulate the feat include Jiri Jarosik and Rivaldo).*

Moreno was part of the River Plate team known as La Máquina ("the machine") which dominated Argentine football in the 1940s, and was also a member of the Argentine national team that won three South American Championships during the same decade.*

In 1999, he was ranked among the 25 best players in the world in the 20th century and among the five best in South America, through a poll by the IFFHS.*

Moreno was born in the neighbourhood of La Boca, in Buenos Aires, and grew up in the surroundings of the club Boca Juniors' stadium, La Bombonera. At the age of 15, he tried out for the lower divisions of Boca Juniors, but did not make the selection. According to the Argentine Football Association archives, he said, frustrated: "some time you will regret it". Moreno then became part of the lower divisions of River Plate, Boca Junior's arch-rival, in 1933, having been recommended by Bernabé Ferreyra, a notable forward for River Plate.*

At the age of 18, Moreno was selected along with other young players from the club by Hungarian manager Emérico Hirschl to make a tour in Brazil. Thus, his first competitive appearance was against Brazilian side Botafogo. He debuted in Primera División on March 17, 1935, in a 2-1 win against C.A. Platense, scoring one goal.[5] He was part of the squad that won league titles in 1936 and 1937, and went on to become a key player on the River Plate squad known as La Máquina, famous for his line of attack composed by Moreno, Adolfo Pedernera Ángel Labruna, Juan Carlos Muñoz, and Félix Loustau, and which dominated Argentine football during the first half of the 1940s decade, winning three national titles (1941, 1942 and 1945).*

In 1944, Moreno was transferred to Mexican first division club España, whom with he won one national title in the 1945-46 season. His time and success in Mexico earned him his nicknamed, Charro, which is also the term used to refer to the traditional cowboy of Mexico. He returned to his homeland and River Plate for the latter part of 1946. His second tenure at River lasted three seasons, and in 1949, he was transferred to Universidad Católica of Chile, where in the same year he won another league title. He returned to Argentina in 1950, this time to play for Boca Juniors, and the following year, he played again for Universidad Católica. He also played one season in Uruguay, with first division team Defensor. In 1953, he went back to Argentina to join Ferrocarril Oeste.*

España finished runner up to Asturias, first Mexican league champions in the 1943-44 season.*

Moreno moved to Colombia in 1954, joining Independiente Medellín, where he would end his playing career. He was both a player and a manager for the club. He won the Colombian championship in 1955, becoming the only footballer to have won league titles in four different countries' leagues, doing so in Argentina, Mexico, Chile, and Colombia. In 1957, he won his last – and 12th overall – first division title. He retired with Independiente Medellín in a friendly match against Boca Juniors in 1961, a match during which he participated both as coach and player. Independiente won the match 5-2, and Moreno scored one goal.*

Moreno was a member of the Argentina national team from 1936 to 1950, earning 34 caps and scoring 19 goals. Moreno was part of the winning squads at the South American Championships (now Copa América) of 1941, 1942 and 1947. He scored the tournament's milestone goal number 500 in an atypical match against Ecuador: he scored five goals in that match, a Copa América record which he shares with Héctor Scarone (Uruguay), Juan Marvezzi (Argentina) and Evaristo (Brazil). That day, Argentina beat Ecuador 12-0, which is also the largest goal difference in a single Copa América match.*

Moreno was the top goalscorer of the 1942 South American Championship with seven goals, along with Herminio Masantonio, and was chosen best player of the 1947 edition. He is also tied for third place among the Copa América's all-time top scorers, with 13 overall goals.*

Honours
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

River Plate:
*Argentinean League: 1936, 1937, 1941, 1942, 1945

Universidad Cátolica:
*Chilean League: 1949

Club Real España:
*Mexican League: 1946

Deportivo Independiente Medellín:
*Colombian League: 1955, 1957

International:
*Copa America: 1941, 1942, 1947

Individual:
*Best South American player of the XX century by IFFHS: 5th place
*Copa América all time top scorer: 3th place 13 goals
*Copa América top scorer 1942: 7 goals


VIDEOS:



Thu Mar 14, 2013 10:20 pm
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Joined: Tue Apr 26, 2016 1:54 pm
Posts: 1286
His COND can be downgrade to 7 or 6 , he sometimes suffers from overweight problems in River and more in his era in Chile.


Mon Oct 31, 2016 9:01 pm
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Joined: Tue Apr 26, 2016 1:54 pm
Posts: 1286
Also his TEC can reach 94 , i don't see a player more technical than him in the 40's at leasy that i know.


Sun Dec 25, 2016 9:42 pm
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Joined: Fri Nov 11, 2016 8:43 am
Posts: 274
Location: 日本(茨城)
TheGreatRossonero wrote:
Also his TEC can reach 94 , i don't see a player more technical than him in the 40's at leasy that i know.

I agree. he was 40's greatest technical player...


Sun Dec 25, 2016 11:29 pm
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Joined: Tue Apr 26, 2016 1:54 pm
Posts: 1286
Since the links in the pirate bay fell I will leave a documentary so that you can internalize with the Argentine football pre 90's




Mon Dec 26, 2016 7:15 pm
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