Tabaré González (soccer player)

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Tabaré González
Personnel
Surname Pio Tabaré González Buttini
birthday October 4, 1943
position Defense
Juniors
Years station
Club Defensor
Nacional Montevideo
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1966-1969 Club Atlético Peñarol
1971-1972 Club Atlético Peñarol
1972 / 73–1973 / 74 Atlético Español ? (2)
1974 / 75-1976 / 77 Unión de Curtidores at least 25 (1)
1 Only league games are given.

Tabaré González , full name Pio Tabaré González Buttini , (born October 4, 1943 ) is a former Uruguayan football player .

Career

society

Defensive player González, whose parents were killed early in a traffic accident, grew up without siblings in Santa Lucía in the Santiago Vásquez district of the Montevideo department . After initially being active in a club in his neighborhood, he then joined Club Defensor and later Nacional Montevideo . During his youth he also worked as a porter in a casino. He was a member of the Club Atlético Peñarol squad in the Primera División from 1966 to 1969 and again from 1971 to 1972 . At the Copa Libertadores 1966 , his team reached the finals against CA River Plate . While he did not come into play in the first two finals, González was substituted on in the third decisive final game by coach Roque Máspoli and was thus directly involved in winning the title. In the games for the 1966 World Cup , which the Montevideans also secured with two 2-0 victories over Real Madrid , he did not play. His club also won the Uruguayan championship in the 1967 and 1968 seasons. In 1969, his club also triumphed at the Supercopa de Campeones Intercontinentales . In the seasons 1972/73 and 1973/74 he was then active at Atlético Español in Mexico and scored two first division goals. He then moved to Unión de Curtidores within the Mexican Primera División . There he played from the 1974/75 season to the 1976/77 season and ran in at least 25 league games (one goal).

successes

  • World Cup: 1966
  • Copa Libertadores: 1966
  • Supercopa de Campeones Intercontinentales: 1969
  • Uruguayan champions: 1967 , 1968

Individual evidence

  1. a b Profile on playerhistory.com ( memento from June 24, 2015 in the Internet Archive ), accessed on May 10, 2015
  2. Botija González, magia en las canchas de fútbol y el esoterismo (Spanish) on larepublica.pe of January 2, 2013, accessed on May 10, 2015
  3. Planteles Históricos (Spanish), accessed May 10, 2015
  4. ^ Marcos Silvera Antúnez : Club Atlético Peñarol - 120, Ediciones El Galeón, Montevideo 2011, p. 132ff - ISBN 978-9974-553-79-8
  5. ^ Marcos Silvera Antúnez : Club Atlético Peñarol - 120, Ediciones El Galeón, Montevideo 2011, pp. 135f - ISBN 978-9974-553-79-8