Carlos Linazza

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Carlos Linazza
Personnel
Surname Carlos Abel Linazza
birthday September 29, 1933
place of birth Saladillo , Buenos AiresArgentina
date of death December 1, 2007
Place of death Punta del EsteUruguay
position midfield
Juniors
Years station
Estudiantes de La Plata
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1954 All boys
1955 Quilmes AC
1956-1959 Centro Iqueño
1960 Club Atlético Peñarol
1961 Unión Española
1965 Danubio FC
1 Only league games are given.

Carlos Linazza , full name Carlos Abel Linazza , (born September 29, 1933 in Saladillo , Buenos Aires , Argentina , † December 1, 2007 in Punta del Este , Maldonado , Uruguay ) was an Argentine football player .

Career

society

Midfielder Linazza first played in the youth department of Estudiantes de La Plata . He was at the beginning of his career in 1954 in the ranks of the All Boys in Primera B. In 1955 he was part of the squad of Quilmes , who competed in the same league. In the last two clubs, however, he completed only eight league games and scored three goals. In 1956 he moved to Peru to Centro Iqueño . In the 1957 season he became champions with the team trained by his compatriot Roberto Scarone . In the game that was decisive for the championship, Universitario was defeated 2-1 on January 5, 1958. After coach Scarone left the club, the success could not be repeated with a 6th or 3rd place in the following years. This career station in Peru lasted until 1959. In that year his path leads him towards the end of the season to Europe, where a contract with Real Betis de Sevilla failed due to the lack of approval from the Federación Española de Fútbol . In 1960 he joined the Montevideo- based Club Atlético Peñarol . This engagement came about through his former coach Scarone, who was now responsible for Peñarol. The Uruguayan press were opposed to this transfer, however, as they saw in Linazza just as much a nameless Argentine as in the Ecuadorian Alberto Spencer, who was signed at around the same time, a not really helpful player from an exotic footballing country. Already on his debut for the Montevideans on March 8, 1960 against Club Atlético Atlanta he contributed one and his critically criticized team-mate Spencer three goals for the 6-2 win. Four days later, both met in a 5-0 win over CA Tigre . With the "Aurinegros" he won the final of the Uruguayan Championship in 1959 about a week later, the final of which was played on March 20, 1960. With a converted penalty, he made the 2-0 final score there. His club also won the national championship Primera División in the 1960 season that year. In 1960, his club also won the Copa Libertadores, which at the time was still known as the Copa Campeones de América . In the 1960 competition , coach Roberto Scarone put him in the starting line- up in both finals against Club Olimpia . He also played from the start in the two games for the 1960 World Cup , which was ultimately left to opponents Real Madrid . In 1961 he continued his career in Chile with Unión Española . In 1965 he returned to Montevideo, this time under contract with Danubio FC . After retiring he stayed in Uruguay. He worked as a porter in a building in Punta del Este , where he finally lived on the Atlantic coast called Playa Brava and died in December 2007.

successes

  • Copa Campeones de America: 1960
  • Peruvian champion: 1957
  • Uruguayan champions: 1959 , 1960

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f Carlos Linazza: Con Linazza sabe mejor (Spanish) on dechalaca.com from February 5, 2009, accessed on May 9, 2015
  2. a b c Profile on playerhistory.com ( memento from June 24, 2015 in the Internet Archive ), accessed on May 9, 2015
  3. ^ A b Marcos Silvera Antúnez : Club Atlético Peñarol - 120, Ediciones El Galeón, Montevideo 2011, p. 110 - ISBN 978-9974-553-79-8
  4. Planteles Históricos ( Memento of the original from January 1, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (Spanish), accessed May 9, 2015 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / campeondelsiglo.com