Fernando Paternóster

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Fernando Paternóster
Fernando paternoster.jpg
Personnel
birthday May 24, 1903
place of birth Pehuajó , Buenos AiresArgentina
date of death June 6, 1967
Place of death Buenos AiresArgentina
size 179 cm
position Defense
Juniors
Years station
0000-1920 Club Atlético Atlanta
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1920-1921 Club Atlético Atlanta
1922 Sportivo Boedo
1923-1926 Club Atlético Atlanta
1927-1933 Racing Club
1936 Argentinos Juniors
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1928-1930 Argentina 16 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1937 Club Municipal de Deportes
1938 Colombia
1948 America de Cali
1948-1951 Atlético Nacional
1954-1957 Atlético Nacional
1962-1966 CS Emelec
1 Only league games are given.

Fernando Paternóster (born May 24, 1903 in Pehuajó , Buenos Aires , † June 6, 1967 in Buenos Aires ) was an Argentine football player and football coach .

Player career

societies

Born in a small town about 350 kilometers west of Buenos Aires in the province of Buenos Aires and later living in the Argentine capital from the age of seven, Paternóster began his career with his youth club, Club Atlético Atlanta . There he first played low class and was second in both the championship of the fourth division and the Copa Competencia . In the first team of the club he made his debut on April 17, 1921 in the 0-2 lost game against Defensores de Belgrano in the championship of the top division. In the following years he then moved to Sportivo Boedo before returning to Atlanta in 1923 and staying there until 1926. His last game for the club he completed on June 3, 1926 in the goalless draw against Ferrocaril Oeste in the Copa Competencia. He then joined the Racing Club from 1927 to 1932 and won the Copa de Honor Sr. Adrián Beccar Varela with the club in 1932 . At the end of his career he also played a game for the Argentinos Juniors .

National team

The left defender Paternóster, called El Marqués (in German: the Margrave) because of his way of playing , was already part of the squad of the national team of his home country at the Campeonato Sudamericano 1929 , which won the title. He also won the silver medal with Argentina at the 1928 Olympic Games . Paternóster took part in the first football world championship in 1930 with the Albiceleste . He was only missing in the opener against France and formed with José Della Torre in the other four games the defender pair of the vice-world champions. In the insignificant group game against Mexico, he missed a penalty against Óscar Bonfiglio , the first in World Cup history. At that time it was often discussed whether he had done this on purpose, as the referee Ulises Saucedo , actually coach of Bolivia, had made a curious decision and the distance to the goal was wrong. Paternóster completed a total of 16 international matches from 1928 to 1930. A goal was ultimately denied him.

Coaching career

In 1937 he started as a coach in the Colombian capital Bogotá at the newly founded Club Municipal de Deportes, the predecessor of the CD Los Millonarios founded in 1946 . The following year he coached the country's national team for four games at the first Bolivarian Games to be held in Bogotá and was only the second national coach in Colombian history. In the game for second place behind Peru , Colombia defeated Ecuador 2-1.

In the year of the first edition of the professional football championship in Colombia in 1948, he first coached América de Cali , before he took over Atlético Municipal from Medellín , called Atlético Nacional from 1951 , and led the club to sixth place among a field of ten clubs, one behind America. With a short break he stayed with the club until 1951. From 1954 to 1957 he was again coach of the club, where he succeeded in 1954 to break the three-year supremacy of the Millonarios and win the first championship with Atlético Nacional. In the following season it was enough for second place behind local rivals Independiente Medellín .

From 1962 to 1966 he trained in Ecuador the CS Emelec . In 1965 he led the club to the third national championship and in 1962, 1964 and 1966 to win the city championship of Guayaquil . At the time of his death, he had been training the Ecuadorians for five seasons.

Private

Paternóster's son Fernando Félix Paternoster also played in the minor leagues for Atlanta in the 1960s.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Argentina squad at the 1930 World Cup on rsssf.com
  2. Excerpt from Twelve Yards by Ben Lyttleton on Google Books , accessed June 25, 2016
  3. Colombia National Team Coaches (English) on rsssf.com, accessed on June 25, 2016
  4. José Luis Pierrend, Alfonzo Cornejo: Bolivarian Games: Soccer Tournaments , Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation , September 3, 2005
  5. América De Cali - Coaching History (English) on liquisearch.com, accessed June 27, 2016
  6. Master list on rsssf.com , accessed on January 10, 2012
  7. Aurelio Paredes: Directores Tecnicos de Emelec a traves de la historia , emeleXista.com, December 9, 2005 (accessed May 19, 2011)