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2241
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45
https://www.brownholleyfuneralhomes.com/obituary/Jerry-Roberts
en
Jerry Roberts Obituary
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[ "Brown-Holley Funeral Homes", "Brown Holley Funeral Homes" ]
2020-03-27T15:32:35-04:00
Obituary for Jerry Ray Roberts | Memorial services for Jerry Ray Roberts, 83, of Archibald, LA will be held at a later date at Cedar Baptist Church under the direction of Brown-Holley Funeral Home, Rayville, LA. Mr....
en
Jerry Roberts Obituary | March 26, 2020 | Rayville, LA
https://www.brownholleyfuneralhomes.com/obituary/Jerry-Roberts
Memorial services for Jerry Ray Roberts, 83, of Archibald, LA will be held at a later date at Cedar Baptist Church under the direction of Brown-Holley Funeral Home, Rayville, LA. Mr. Jerry was born June 4, 1936 in Archibald and passed away Thursday, March 26, 2020 in Monroe, LA. He is preceded in death by his parents, Doss and Myrtis Miller Roberts; and six half sisters and four half brothers. Survivors include his wife of 60 years, Thelma Free Roberts of Archibald, LA; brother-in-law, James Free of Bastrop, LA; sisters-in-law, Dorothy Stakes of Crowley, LA and Alice Gildersleeve of Leesburg, VA; and a host of nieces, nephews, and cousins. Jerry was a former member of the Archibald Water Board, Oder of the Eastern Star Mangham Chapter #152, and committee member for the Archibald Beautification Program, also he was a member of DMA Senior Citizen’s Group. He is a member of the W. M. Baker Masonic Lodge #388 in Mangham, LA. Jerry had a great love and concern for people, and one of the ways he expressed this concern was by visiting the nursing homes and hospitals and also he visited the sick and shut-in’s at their homes. He always received as big a blessing from visiting the people as they received from his visit. For fifty years Jerry was a brick layer, and taught others the trade. He always took great pride in his work because he wanted it to look good. After retiring from laying bricks he became a custodian for the Mangham Elementary School. He enjoyed this job very much, because he got to visit with people. He was recognized for his good job by being chosen Outstanding School Support Employee for a year, and was recognized by the State Board of Elementary and Secondary Education (BESE) in Baton Rouge, LA. Most recently Jerry was honored by Cedar Baptist Church for his good and faithful service to the church and community. Jerry will be greatly missed by all that knew and loved him.
2241
dbpedia
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10
https://www.thetimesherald.com/obituaries/ppet0856862
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Port Huron
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Port Huron Michigan News - thetimesherald.com is the home page of Port Huron Michigan with in depth and updated Port Huron local news. Stay informed with both Port Huron Michigan news as well as headlines and stories from around the world.
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Times Herald
https://www.thetimesherald.com/
‘I want it to exist always’: City to celebrate River Walk’s enduring promise
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https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/10727735/Jerry-Roberts-obituary.html
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Jerry Roberts - obituary
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2014-03-27T19:01:00+00:00
Jerry Roberts was a Bletchley Park codebreaker who cracked Hitler’s secret messages and warned of an attack on Kursk
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The Telegraph
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/10727735/Jerry-Roberts-obituary.html
Jerry Roberts, who has died aged 93, was one of a small group of Bletchley Park codebreakers who read Hitler’s messages to his generals, providing unprecedented details of the German preparations for the D-Day landings. The German High Command’s teleprinter messages, which were broken in part with the help of Colossus, the world’s first large-scale electronic digital computer, also provided the German plans for the Battle of Kursk, now seen as the turning point of the war. “I can remember myself breaking messages about Kursk,” Roberts recalled. “We were able to warn the Russians that the attack was going to be launched and the fact that it was going to be a pincer movement. We had to wrap it all up and say it was from spies, that we had wonderful teams of spies, and other sources of information. We were able to warn them what army groups were going to be used, and most important, what tank units were going to be used.” Provided with the information by the British, the Red Army was able to rebuff the German attack, before launching an all-out assault that destroyed the German forces aligned against them in what led to a Soviet advance that did not stop until it reached Berlin. Raymond Clarke Roberts (always known as Jerry) was born in Wembley on November 18 1920. His father was a pharmacist, his mother the organist in the local chapel. He was educated at Latymer Upper School, Hammersmith, before studying German and French at University College, London. His ambition was to join the Foreign Office, but his German professor, Leonard Willoughby, who had been a leading member of the Admiralty’s First World War code-breaking unit Room 40, put him forward for “work of a secret kind” which could not be discussed in advance. Roberts found himself facing an enigmatic recruitment process at a War Office building just off Trafalgar Square during which he was asked by an anonymous major if he played chess. When he responded in the affirmative, the major asked if he could also “tackle crosswords”. Another nod of the head was sufficient to see him sent to the codebreakers’ “War Station” at Bletchley Park in Buckinghamshire, where John Tiltman, the chief cryptographer, recruited him into his research section, warning him that “absolute silence must be preserved” about what happened there. Roberts was initially put to work breaking the Double Playfair hand cipher used by German police troops operating on the Eastern Front. The deciphered messages revealed the early stages of what would become known as the Holocaust, with German generals seemingly vying with each other to tell Berlin about the tens of thousands of Jews their men were killing. Churchill requested a special series of reports on the atrocities and, despite the danger that it might lead to improved German cipher security and hinder Bletchley’s successes, publicly denounced the killings as “a crime without a name”. The team working on the police messages was headed by Ralph Tester; and in July 1942 Tester and his team were put to work on a new problem — the enciphered teleprinter messages being sent between Hitler and his generals. German teleprinter messages had first been intercepted in the second half of 1940, but little had been done with them until it became clear, in late 1941, that they were being used more frequently. The messages were enciphered with the Lorenz SZ40 system, which had two sets of five cipher wheels, making it even more complex than the most difficult of the Enigma ciphers, which had one set of four. Tiltman looked at the early messages, trying to find a way into them, initially without success. In August 1941, however, a German operator sent the same message twice on the same settings, shortening some of the text in the second message to save time. This allowed Tiltman a way in; and in an extraordinary piece of code breaking he worked out the texts of the messages, giving a stream of 4,000 plain text letters and their cipher equivalents which might help to reconstruct the operation of the Lorenz machine. For two months the research section tried without success to use Tiltman’s decrypt to break the enciphered teleprinter messages, which were code-named Fish by the codebreakers. Then, in October, it was given to the young chemistry graduate Bill Tutte. “He used to sit staring into the middle distance, twirling a pencil about in his fingers,” Roberts recalled. “I used to wonder whether he was getting anything done. My goodness, he was.” In a stroke of genius, Tutte managed to find a way in, allowing the research section to reconstruct the Lorenz machine. The combined efforts of Tiltman and Tutte were described in an internal GCHQ history as “one of the outstanding successes of the war”, not least because of the high standard of intelligence the Fish messages produced. The teleprinter links ran between all the major German front line headquarters and Hitler’s command posts in Berlin or at the Wolf’s Lair, his forward command post for the Eastern Front at Rastenburg in East Prussia. Tester and his team, including Roberts, by now commissioned into the Intelligence Corps, were put to work on breaking the Fish messages on a regular basis in July 1942. “The people the messages were going to and coming from would be given at the beginning of the message,” Roberts recalled. “So you would have General so-and-so sending to Army HQ in Berlin.” The Testery, as it was known, began with Roberts and five others actually breaking the messages, but grew to be 118-strong, including among its numbers Peter Benenson, who later founded Amnesty International, and Roy Jenkins, who went on as a Labour politician to become Chancellor of the Exchequer and was subsequently Chancellor of the University of Oxford. One of its early members was Max Newman, who had been Turing’s tutor at Cambridge. Newman realised that one part of the code-breaking process for the Fish ciphers could be done by the kind of machine Turing had described in their discussions. That belief led to the creation, by the GPO telecommunications engineer Tommy Flowers, of Colossus, which greatly speeded up the breaking of the Fish ciphers ahead of the D-Day landings, when the codebreakers were able to read details of Hitler’s conversations with Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt, the German commander in France. “Some were signed by Hitler,” Roberts said. “I can remember myself deciphering at least one message − he called himself: 'Adolf Hitler, Führer’. I suppose I should have been unhappy that I wasn’t fighting the true fight. But this never bothered me. One knew that this was immensely more important than any other single contribution that you could make as a soldier, or as an officer.” After the war Roberts spent two years in Germany with the War Crimes Investigation Unit before being demobilised in 1947 and beginning a career in market research which would take him all over the world. In 1970 he set up his own companies, working for a number of high-profile clients including British Gas, Reebok, DuPont, American Airlines, Chrysler and Holiday Inn. Roberts sold his companies in 1993 and retired. Two years later, he married Mei Li, an artist and book illustrator. He spent his later years campaigning for greater recognition for Flowers and Tutte, which led to a BBC documentary on the latter’s work breaking the Fish ciphers, and for the preservation of Bletchley Park. He was appointed MBE in the 2013 New Years Honours “for services to the work of Bletchley Park and to code breaking”. Jerry Roberts was thrice married. He is survived by his third wife and by a daughter of his first marriage, a son and daughter of his second, and by four stepchildren. This week on The Deadline, Katriona MacGregor tells tales of working in the kitchen with Clarissa Dickson Wright and reveals CDW's yardstick for alcoholism. Sally Peck has your brilliant letters, and Sarah Rainey tells of her terror cooking under the studio lights when she went into the Masterchef studio (she set it on fire). You can contact us via Twitter on @telegraphobits and email us with your suggestions and comments on thedeadline@telegraph.co.uk
2241
dbpedia
2
69
http://www.visaliatimesdelta.com/story/news/local/2015/02/26/visalia-man-linked-fathers-death/24096055/
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Visalia Times
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[ "Allison Gatlin, Visalia Times-Delta" ]
2015-02-26T00:00:00
Jerry Roberts was a retired Correctional Training Facility officer, a former coworker said.
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http://www.visaliatimesdelta.com/story/news/local/2015/02/26/visalia-man-linked-fathers-death/24096055/
John Batiz recalled running into Jerry Roberts several weeks ago at the Creekbridge Safeway in Salinas. Small talk turned to the topic of Matthew Roberts, the 70-year-old man’s son, Batiz said. “He told me he was having problems with his son,” Batiz said. “They would get into physical fights.” That was the last time Batiz says he saw his former coworker, a Visalia native. Jerry Roberts’ body was found decomposed Feb. 16 in a trailer on his Inglewood Street property, Police Cmdr. Vince Maiorana said. The 70-year-old suffered a broken neck at the time of his death, according to preliminary autopsy findings. Salinas police officers, including several veteran cops, responded about 9 p.m. to a call requesting a check on Roberts’ safety. “When an officer started walking around the premises he encountered a brief, quick smell, which he equated with death,” Maiorana said. Inside the trailer, Salinas police made the grisly discovery, Maiorana said. Later that night, officers arrested 34-year-old Matthew Roberts, who has since been charged with murder and felony elder abuse. He’s being held at the Monterey County Jail on $1.5 million bail and awaiting formal arraignment. A subsequent probation violation case has also been filed. Bail was set at $10,000 last week in that misdemeanor case. Investigators have pinpointed the last time Jerry Roberts was seen alive, but Maiorana said he won’t yet release that information. Neighbors told The Salinas Californian newspaper they had last seen Jerry Roberts a week or two before his body was discovered. The cause and time of his death haven’t yet been confirmed. “The preliminary findings by the pathologist show he died of unnatural causes,” Maiorana said. “It was not falling down the stairs, an accidental death. This is death by another [person].” Jerry Roberts was born in Visalia and graduated from Redwood High School there. He enlisted in the U.S. Army when he was 18 or 19 years old, a family member said. The family member, a Salinas resident, asked that her name be witheld, fearing she might be mobbed for information at work. While in the Army, Jerry Roberts was stationed in North Carolina and Germany. He was ordered twice to go to war, but the orders were twice changed, the family member said. After his Army career, Jerry Roberts served 24 years as a correctional officer for Soledad Correctional Training Facility, said Lt. Roland Ramon, public information officer for the prison. He started work at CTF in 1986 and retired in April 2010. “He was well-respected and a hard worker,” Ramon said. “Kind of a quiet guy.” Ramon said he was working on putting together a “Now Hear This” announcement for CTF staff regarding Jerry Roberts’ memorial and funeral services. In his retirement, Jerry Roberts enjoyed fishing, hunting and carpentry, she said. Batiz recalled working with Jerry Roberts in the east dorm at the low- and medium-security prison in southern Monterey County. After retiring, Batiz said he ran into Jerry Roberts from time to time in Salinas. When Jerry Roberts aired his concern regarding Matthew Roberts, Batiz said the 70-year-old seemed to feel a sense of obligation for his 34-year-old son. “He told me, ‘I have to take care of him, he’s my son,’” Batiz recalled. The family member confirmed as much: Jerry Roberts loved his children. “He loved [Matthew],” the family member said. “That’s what makes it so hard, you know? He loved him so much.” Family members knew Jerry Roberts was having difficulty with his son, she said. “But he didn’t want his son to be out [of prison] and have nowhere to go,” she explained. Matthew Roberts previously served six years in prison for shooting and wounding his step-father, now-retired Monterey County Sheriff’s Detective Larry Bryant. A judge referenced Matthew Roberts’ methamphetamine habit during the 2006 sentencing. The whole ordeal “was such a nightmare for [Jerry Roberts],” Batiz said. In the ensuing years, Jerry Roberts made a point to visit his son in prison. “He (Matthew Roberts) was in a few riots and he had to face the consequences,” Batiz said. Jerry Roberts told him his son had the word “Roberts” tattooed on his back, Batiz said. Other inmates often “picked on him,” to hear Jerry Roberts tell it. In 2013, Matthew Roberts was convicted of assault causing great bodily injury and battering a peace officer in separate cases. Both cases carried allegations of a previous prison commitment, a previous felony and a prior strike. He was sentenced to a year in jail and three years’ probation, respectively, for the cases. The 34-year-old had recently moved in with his father, Batiz said. Jerry Roberts referred to his son as “unpredictable.” If Jerry Roberts declined to turn his car keys over to Matthew Roberts, the younger Roberts would become very irate, Batiz said. “He was like a little kid,” Batiz said Jerry Roberts told him. Jerry Roberts is survived by four siblings, Barbara Balding, Ray Roberts, Phil Roberts and Jimmy Roberts; two children and seven grandchildren, the family member said. He is preceded in death by his youngest brother, Roger Roberts. Jerry Roberts’ family is asking for prayers. His daughter, who just arrived in Salinas, is making discoveries at the Inglewood Street residence, the family member said. “She found his Bible,” the family member said. “And all his grandchildren’s names are written in his Bible. [His daughter] said, ‘My dad didn’t talk much, but you could tell by little things he had around his house how much he cared about everyone.’” Jerry Roberts was a “soft-spoken man” who didn’t express his emotions through words. Rather, he would perform “actions of love,” the family member said. She recounted Jerry Roberts’ overhearing that she and her husband were seeking a bathroom vanity. “He had an old bathroom vanity and he gave it to me,” she said. “He just came and dropped it off without us ever asking.” She added, “Now, I look at that vanity and I smile.” Batiz recalled Jerry Roberts having “the best laugh.” “He was a nice man who had a son who took advantage of him,” Batiz said. “I feel bad I didn’t look more deeply into it.” Jerry Roberts’ body was turned over to his family Monday, Sheriff’s Cmdr. John Thornburg said. He will be buried Friday at the San Joaquin Valley National Cemetery in Santa Nella, Ramon said. A memorial service will follow, tentatively set for March 10 at Echoes from Calvary Church, the family member said. Matthew Roberts will return to court March 5.
2241
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Everybody_Loves_Raymond_characters
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List of Everybody Loves Raymond characters
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This is a list of fictional characters from Everybody Loves Raymond, an American sitcom, originally broadcast on CBS from September 13, 1996, to May 16, 2005. The show revolves around the life of Italian-American Ray Barone, a sportswriter from Long Island, and his wife, Debra Barone. Other main characters include Ray's parents, Frank and Marie Barone, Ray's children Ally, Michael, and Geoffrey Barone, and Ray's brother Robert Barone, with his wife Amy Barone. Some of the main characters had crossover appearances in other sitcoms, including The King of Queens, The Nanny, Becker, and Cosby. Character Portrayed by Episode count Everybody Loves Raymond 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Raymond "Ray" Barone Ray Romano 210 Main Debra Barone Patricia Heaton 209 Main Marie Barone Doris Roberts 210 Main Francis "Frank" Barone Peter Boyle 206 Main Robert Barone Brad Garrett 209 Main Alexandra "Ally" Barone Madylin Sweeten 154 Main Amy MacDougall Monica Horan 64 Recurring Main Geoffrey Barone Sullivan and Sawyer Sweeten 130 Recurring[a] Michael Barone Recurring[a] Fictional character Ray BaroneFirst appearance"Pilot"Last appearance"The Finale" King of Queens – "Raygin' Bulls" (Final character appearance)Created byRay Romano & Philip RosenthalPortrayed byRay RomanoNumber of episodes210In-universe informationGenderMaleOccupationSportswriter Futon repairman (former)Family Frank Barone (father) Marie Barone (mother) Robert Barone (brother) Joe Barone (grandfather)[1] Sal Barone (great-grandfather)[1] SpouseDebra BaroneChildrenRelatives Gerard (maternal cousin) Stacey (maternal cousin) Mel (great-uncle) Alda (aunt) Coletta (third cousin) Sarina Barone (great-aunt)[2] Mario Barone (great-uncle)[2] Ciccio Barone (great-uncle)[2] Federico Barone (great-uncle)[2] ReligionRoman Catholicism Raymond Albert "Ray" Barone (Ray Romano) is the protagonist of the sitcom. He lives on Long Island, with his wife, Debra Barone, and their three children, daughter Ally Barone and twin boys Michael and Geoffrey Barone. The family lives across the street from Raymond's parents, Marie and Frank. Ray attended St. John's University in Queens, New York. He is well known in his community as a result of his profession as a sportswriter for Newsday. He is also promoted to chief sports writer. In the early episodes, he is sometimes seen interviewing a famous sportsperson, but this happens less frequently in the later seasons. Due to the nature of his work, Ray is often seen on the couch, watching sports, rather than assisting Debra with household duties and the children. His attempts to have sex with Debra are a recurring theme of the show. Raymond is an introvert who wants to be liked by everyone. As a result, he finds it difficult to confront people, especially his mother, Marie Barone. Parts of his backstory explain Raymond's attitude and personality. Raymond and his older brother, Robert Barone, were spoiled by Marie. Their father, Frank Barone, worked long hours and rarely showed them affection. Ray sometimes displays a similar pattern of behavior. Raymond's laziness and sometimes childish behavior as a result of his mother's coddling is a running gag in the show. Very often, to defend himself to Debra, he goes to his mother for advice and protection. He is also very scared of her and often sides with her instead of Debra. Despite him constantly trying to avoid his obnoxious parents who interfere with his life on a daily basis, it is perfectly clear that he still loves and cares for them. In 2004, TV Guide ranked Ray Barone number 10 on its '50 Greatest TV Dads of All Time' list.[3] The character has made several crossover appearances: 1997: Cosby – "Lucas Raymondicus" 1998: The Nanny – "The Reunion Show" 1998–2005: The King of Queens (4 episodes) 1999: Becker – "Drive, They Said" Ray Barone made his final character appearance in an episode of King of Queens that aired after Everybody Loves Raymond ended. Fictional character Debra BaroneFirst appearance"Pilot"Last appearance"The Finale"Portrayed byPatricia HeatonNumber of episodes209In-universe informationGenderFemaleOccupationHousewife Public relations correspondent (former)FamilySpouseRay Barone (1988–)ChildrenReligionRoman Catholicism Debra Louise Barone (Patricia Heaton) is Ray Barone's wife. She was raised by wealthy parents, Lois and Warren Whelan, and grew up in an upper-class background, unlike the other major characters in the sitcom. She has a sister, Jennifer Whelan, who is only seen once in the entire series. Following her graduation from high school, she travelled a lot and dated a few famous sportsmen. Before marrying Ray, she worked in public relations for the New York Rangers hockey team. Debra is vulnerable and emotionally sensitive. She is sometimes unhappy as a housewife, having to put up not only with Ray's immature jokes and lazy behavior, but more with his intrusive family members, who often barge in uninvited, leaving havoc in their wake. Though Ray's parents frustrate her, she rarely shows her feelings to them, resulting in occasional bursts in private of yelling, stomping, and throwing objects. Debra has a feud with her mother-in-law Marie Barone, who shows distrust of her ability to be a mother and a wife. Throughout the series, Debra often finds Robert Barone the most patient of the Barones, and at times she is shown to get along well with Frank Barone, who thinks of her as a daughter and understands Debra's resentment of Marie. Despite the frustration she often holds on Ray's parents, it is evident that she still loves and cares for them, as well as Robert and Ray. She is also depressed about her parents when they argue, and she is distraught when she finds out they are divorcing. Even though she grew up in a traditional conservative family, she was a free-spirited and a popular teen in her early years. Ray once noted that, during college, she went to Mardi Gras and flashed her breasts to many people who gave her beads and also ended up topless in the newspaper. The character has also appeared in the King of Queens episode "Dire Strayts". Fictional character Marie BaroneFirst appearance"Pilot"Last appearance"The Finale"Portrayed byDoris RobertsNumber of episodes210In-universe informationGenderFemaleOccupationHomemakerFamilyAlda (sister)SpouseFrank Barone (1957–2006)ChildrenRay Barone (son) Robert Barone (son)Relatives Ally Barone (granddaughter) Geoffrey Barone (grandson) Michael Barone (grandson) Gerard (nephew) Stacey (niece) Coletta (second cousin) ReligionRoman Catholicism Marie Janella Barone (Doris Roberts) is the wife of Frank, and matriarch of the Barone family. As a housewife, she excels in household duties, including cooking, cleaning, and generally keeping and maintaining a good household. She is very nosy, snobbish, arrogant, and insulting, and has a strong hold over her family, bullying those around her with guilt and a victim complex to get her way. Her penchant for this type of behavior becomes a focal point of many episodes of the show. She has very high self-esteem and regards herself as a positive example of what every wife, mother and woman should be, but in reality is responsible, at least in part, for much of the misery and conflict within the Barone family. She takes special pride in her Italian background and even arranges a tour of Italy for the whole family out of her own savings. Throughout the series, she is shown to have favorites with certain people, with her younger son, Raymond, being the first and her daughter-in-law, Debra being possibly the last. Other than Frank, nearly everyone has a hard time standing up to Marie due to her ability to make people feel guilty, although Debra does occasionally take a stand. She is well aware of Raymond's reluctance to stand up to her, and in many situations takes advantage of this to achieve her own interests. It is established in the flashbacks of "How They Met" that she has never liked Debra, even back when Ray and Debra were dating. Marie has never admitted her dislike of Debra outright and is careful about not saying it out loud, but she jumps at most every chance to annoy her or indirectly insult her on many occasions just for her own pleasure. She has saved a little money on the side every day and admitted to Debra that she collected over $46,000 since her wedding. She also sends money to South America for a fundraiser. She is also shown to actually control the family's finances in front of Frank, who always thought he was the one in charge and remained oblivious to much of her savings or expenses. As her boys were growing up, she spoiled her younger son while completely cutting Robert out of the picture. In a later episode, she claims that this was because Robert was able to take care of himself and was independent, in contrast to Ray who was a sensitive, timid, needy little boy. For example, in the season 7 episode "The Disclipinarian", Robert remembers how Marie always let Ray play and always put him on chores. However, this was just said to manipulate Robert into getting Amy MacDougall pregnant. Marie then winks to Ray, indicating this is another manipulation. In some cases, however, she is shown to care and be overprotective of Robert as well. This includes when he had nightmares growing up, when his first wife announced her intention to divorce him and Marie threw her out of the house, when he was attacked by a bull on the job, when he was interviewing for an FBI position, and her frequent attempts to get Robert out of the police force in an effort to keep him safe. Marie is also seen constantly arguing with Frank in nearly every episode, with them constantly fighting and annoying each other. However, in some situations, there have been times when they do evidence their love for one another, despite their reluctance to be open with it. Much to Debra's annoyance, even Debra's parents find them more interesting, since they are honest to each other. Her catchphrase is "I don't like that, [insert name]." whenever anyone says anything inappropriate. The final episode reveals that her birthday is December 9 (this was one of Frank's classic "one-liners" as he adds "1802"). The character has also appeared in the King of Queens episode "Rayny Day". Fictional character Frank BaroneFirst appearance"Pilot"Last appearance"The Finale"Portrayed byPeter BoyleNumber of episodes206In-universe informationGenderMaleOccupationSoldier (former) Bookkeeper (retired)Family Joe Barone (father)[1] Sal Barone (grandfather)[1] SpouseMarie Barone (1957–2006)ChildrenRay Barone (son) Robert Barone (son)Relatives Ally Barone (granddaughter) Geoffrey Barone (grandson) Michael Barone (grandson) Mel (great-uncle) Sarina Barone (aunt)[2] Mario Barone (uncle)[2] Ciccio Barone (uncle)[2] Federico Barone (uncle)[2] ReligionRoman Catholicism Francis Oscar "Frank" Barone (Peter Boyle) is the husband of Marie Barone and a retired bookkeeper and veteran. In the episode "The Gift" (season 2), it is Frank's 65th birthday, making his year of birth 1932. He can be seen as aggressive, selfish, uncaring, and masculine. Although it is briefly mentioned that he has a sensitive side, Frank refuses to accept it. In episodes like "Pet the Bunny", "Christmas Present", "Fathers Knows Least" and "Frank Goes Downstairs", he indicates that, though capable of patience and kindness, he deliberately cultivates a tough guy persona. However, Frank is sometimes shown to be a good family man, such as taking the fall for Debra Barone when Marie's prized canister goes missing or even trying to console Robert Barone after he becomes upset from a breakup. He is almost always seen at Ray Barone and Debra's house on the black armchair with his pants unbuttoned and zipper open watching sports or at home ordering Marie to prepare his meals while sitting and reading the paper. During his sons’ childhood, Frank was virtually absent and had refused to show any sign of affection and love to either boy. He was constantly at odds with his wife Marie concerning how the boys were to be raised. He is very opinionated, outspoken, and has no problem insulting family members and strangers out in the open (this applies in particular to his wife, Marie). He calls men names like "Nancy", "Shirley", "Peaches", and "Mary" when they do not live up to his standards for what it takes to be a man. Throughout the sitcom, Frank is shown to have socially conservative values, particularly regarding minority groups such as gays and lesbians, and ethnic groups such as the Koreans, Chinese and Japanese – he occasionally mutters "Japanese crap" when having trouble with various electronics. He does not follow or accept anything outside the social norms, to which Marie proclaims "Frank lives in blissful ignorance". Despite Marie's constant self-regard, she is accepting of these minority groups. Much to other characters' dismay, he's not above engaging in illegal or immoral activities such as gambling, extortion, or stealing cable from Ray. In his spare time, Frank is a skilled handyman and a history buff, with a particular interest in the American Civil War. He's frequently seen making repairs in Ray and Debra's house, and in "Frank Goes Downstairs" is injured while fixing their staircase. His regular get-away activity is having naked pool bath with his elderly friends at a community center, referred to as "the lodge". On every other Saturday, he takes Raymond's children to The Happy Zone. Frank survived through World War II and fought in the Korean War. He often uses this as a reference for recounting stories of survival and how he came to be a "man". In one particular incident, where all three Barone men were pretending to go to counselling sessions it was revealed that Ray and Robert had a long line of physically disciplinarian grandparents, with Frank's father, Joe, and his grandfather, Sal, hitting him often. However, Frank vowed to never be physically abusive towards his sons, never enforcing corporal punishment on them and never engaging in anything more than yelling at them. His main catchphrase on the show is "Holy crap," which is often said after he sees or hears something surprising. He is brutally honest in his relationships with others, and is often depicted as the only member of the family who is not only unafraid of Marie, but the only one who will put his foot down and stand up to her, much to the combined relief and horror of the other characters. Many of their arguments revolve around trivial and even irrational subjects, such as who invented the lawn and literally comparing apples and oranges. They also come into conflict over Debra, whom Frank, unlike Marie, overwhelmingly loves, and even tends to be more affectionate with than he is with either of his sons. He often says to Debra that he sees her as his daughter, as mentioned in “Debra at the Lodge” when he sticks up for her when she comes to help increase membership for the lodge and all of the lodge members start ogling her. True to his blunt personality, in one episode in which the entire family (the adults) were at a counselling session with their Church priest, Father Hubley, he yelled out in front of everyone that the main reason why Marie looks down on Debra – "She [Debra] married him [Raymond], and [Marie] still can't deal with it." For the American economist, see Robert N. Barone. Fictional character Robert BaroneFirst appearance"Pilot"Last appearance"The Finale"Portrayed byBrad GarrettNumber of episodes209In-universe informationGenderMaleOccupationPolice Officer (NYPD)FamilySpouseJoanne Glotz (1993–1995) Amy MacDougall (2003–)Relatives Ally Barone (niece) Geoffrey Barone (nephew) Michael Barone (nephew) Gerard (maternal cousin) Stacey (maternal cousin) Mel (great-uncle) Alda (aunt) Coletta (third cousin) Sarina Barone (great-aunt)[2] Mario Barone (great-uncle)[2] Ciccio Barone (great-uncle)[2] Federico Barone (great-uncle)[2] ReligionRoman Catholicism Robert Charles Barone (Brad Garrett), called Robbie by Marie Barone, is Ray Barone's older brother by four years and the first-born son of Marie and Frank. His birthday is April 6. At 6 ft 8.5 in (2.045 m), he is the tallest Barone. Robert has several quirks, the biggest being a nervous habit of touching food to his chin before eating it, commonly known as the "Crazy Chin", which he developed to cope with anxiety which started when Raymond was born and all of Marie's attention turned to Raymond. Robert is a loving uncle and still deeply cares for his little brother Raymond. Robert has been a police officer with the NYPD for 27 years, eventually attaining the rank of Sergeant and then, by the end of the series, Lieutenant. His height, appearance and demeanor are the source of much humor, but despite his imposing size, Robert is a very skilled dancer. After divorcing his first wife, Joanne Glotz, in 1995, Robert moved back in with his parents, became a workaholic, and was acknowledged by the NYPD for not missing one day of work for three years. Robert's advanced skills as a police officer even earned him an interview with the FBI, but his mother intentionally interfered in the interview process. Robert was passed over but simply because the other candidates were more qualified. Once, he was injured on the job when he was gored in the bottom by a bull while breaking up an illegal rodeo. When he returned from his injuries, he briefly left the police force out of a lack of self-confidence, and nearly became a telemarketer. In a later episode, he took a side job as an alarm salesman and considered retiring from the force to join the alarm company full-time. He returned to the NYPD both times, mainly with Raymond's help. Robert dated his sister-in-law's, Debra Barone's, best friend, Amy MacDougall, for several years, despite a number of breakups. After a bad date with another woman, Robert ran into Amy in a bar and they soon got back together and married in 2003. In 2004, they purchased Frank and Marie's home for $26,000, but had to welcome the elder Barones back in when they were kicked out of a retirement community in New Jersey in the episode "Not So Fast." In the Season 2 episode "Good Girls", it is revealed that Robert was conceived out of wedlock. His impending birth drove Frank and Marie into marriage. Because of the relatively socially conservative values of the United States in the 1950s which viewed premarital sex as a sin, Frank and Marie were forced to lie to friends and family that Robert was two months premature. According to Frank, this was a hard thing to do, as Robert's birth weight was 12 lb (5.4 kg). Robert is very envious of his brother Raymond, who was favored by their mother, and though Robert is four years older than Ray and much taller, he constantly feels as if he's stuck in Ray's shadow. Despite the obvious favoring of Ray, Marie has claimed that there was never any favoritism. He has a very dark sense of humor and will make fun of Raymond to no end to get a little belated revenge. He is also known for being very passive-aggressive. While he enjoys taunting Ray himself, Robert is very protective of his younger brother; in one episode, he overhears a radio sports show host insulting Ray at length and angrily humiliates the man in retaliation. He also respects Ray as a well-meaning, if generally absent, father, in the pattern of Frank. Robert serves as the moral conscience in the family, as the most virtuous of the characters, and often pleads with others when they are considering doing something morally questionable. Robert's catchphrase in the show is when he finds the family gathered together silent and says: "Is this about me?" Robert also appears in the King of Queens's episode "Road Rayge". Fictional character Amy MacDougallFirst appearance"Pilot"Last appearance"The Finale"Portrayed byMonica HoranNumber of episodes66In-universe informationGenderFemaleFamilyHank MacDougall (father) Pat MacDougall (mother) Peter MacDougall (brother) Russel McDougall (brother)SpouseRobert Barone (2003–)RelativesJudy (aunt)[4]ReligionPresbyterianism Amy Louise MacDougall (Monica Horan) is Robert Barone's on-and-off girlfriend, and eventual wife. They met because Amy is Debra Barone's best friend. She and Debra share the same middle name. Although Amy marries Robert in the Season 7 finale "Robert's Wedding", she also appears in the previous seasons. Many issues have caused Amy and Robert to break up in the first six seasons, with one being blamed on Raymond Barone and another happening because Robert was seeing other women, one of whom was his ex-wife. Frequently, Amy apologizes to someone even if she didn't do anything wrong. She is a bubbly and confident woman who was raised in a family of devout Protestants, who live in Pennsylvania. She describes her parents as "people who wouldn't yell if they were on fire." Amy was a virgin when she met Robert, which Ray had a hard time understanding, as Amy was 33 at the time. She eventually lost her virginity to Robert before they were married, but they were spotted having sex by Robert's neighbors, causing them to sign a sheet mandating bedroom curtains in the apartment building. Like Debra, she also at times gets into conflict with Marie Barone (albeit less frequently). Although she is known for her cheerful personality, she has shown herself to not be afraid to push back against Marie's manipulation. Notable examples of this are found in "Robert Moves Back", "Thank You Notes", and "A Job for Robert". Alexandra "Ally" Barone (154 episodes; played by Madylin Sweeten) – Ray and Debra Barone's only daughter. She is six years old at the beginning of the series, and is fourteen by the series finale. She was named after Ray Romano's real-life daughter who made a cameo appearance in the series. In the beginning, she is somewhat mischievous and naughty much like her brothers, but becomes loyal and helpful by the end. However, she still occasionally fibs and mouths off to her parents if she doesn't get what she wants, such as a $250 silk dress which would only be worn once. Geoffrey and Michael Barone (130 episodes; played by Sullivan and Sawyer Sweeten respectively) – Ray and Debra's identical twin sons. They are two years old at the beginning of the series and are ten years old by the show's finale. Learning that Debra was pregnant with twins is what prompted Ray and Debra to move out of their apartment and into the house across the street from Frank and Marie. A running joke is Frank Barone's insistence that Geoffrey may have homosexual tendencies, such as when he walks in on the two boys rehearsing to play fairies in a school production. The two are playful, energetic, and prone to causing chaos even without trying but in general are well-behaved. In the pilot episode, they were played by a set of triplets and were called "Gregory" and "Matthew" after Romano's real-life twin sons. Their names were then changed to Geoffrey and Michael respectively. Episode count Character Actor Circumstances 26 Andy Andy Kindler[5] A fellow sportswriter and friend of Ray's, and a bachelor. He is known to have bad luck with women and is often made fun of for being short and overweight. 25 Gianni Jon Manfrellotti[6] A contractor, ex-futon repairman, and friend of Ray's. He briefly dated Amy, much to Robert's consternation, and is disliked by Debra as she considers him immature. He worked with Ray when they were younger. He also appeared on The King of Queens. Manfrellotti first appeared as a cable guy in Season 1. 17 Bernie Gruenfelder Tom McGowan[7] A married couple, who are friends of Ray and Debra Barone. Ray and Debra request that they become their children's caretakers in the event they die, but Bernie and Linda decline due to Ray's parents. They later talk to Ray and Debra about their experience in marriage counselling. They have one child. 11 Linda Gruenfelder Maggie Wheeler[7] 14 Warren Whelan Robert Culp[8] Debra's parents. They are from Connecticut. They are also an upper class couple and have different beliefs from the middle class Barones. Lois and Warren have a huge amount of respect for Marie and Frank Barone to start to imitate them, angering Debra. Lois is a housewife and traveled around on fundraisers. She is friendly and patient, but easily insulted. She acts nervously around Robert, who also acts nervously around her. Warren is a businessman and a caring, happy father. He is very passionate about antiques, and, in a running joke on the show, is often referred to as having a problem with alcohol. Lois and Warren have a struggling relationship and go to marriage counselling in New Jersey. Warren eventually files for a divorce, since neither of them can find love in their marriage any more. Debra is distraught and furious with Lois, believing that she filed it, but Warren later tells her that it was him. Debra believes her parents are getting back together when they are spotted having sex a few years later, but they reassure her that they are staying divorced. 11 Lois Whelan Katherine Helmond[8] 13 Hank MacDougall Fred Willard[9] Amy and Peter MacDougall's parents. They first appear in Season 7. Devout conservative Presbyterians, they oppose their daughter's marriage to Robert due to his previous marital status and Catholic faith. This is not helped by the fact that the Barones and MacDougalls are not the most compatible of families, although the Barones have always loved Amy, and the MacDougalls come to accept Robert. Hank is a former professor and now a high school deputy principal. He is known to be opposed to smoking. Pat is a housewife, and has a high-pitched, gentle voice. She is shown to be a protective and loving mother. In the second to last episode of the show, it is revealed Pat has a smoking addiction to Hank's disappointment. Pat MacDougall Georgia Engel[9] 10 Peter MacDougall Chris Elliott[9] Amy's older brother. He has a strange and psychologically unstable personality and a duplicitous, quick-witted mind. Opposed to his sister's marriage, he insists that he will keep trying to break it up. Peter is single and lives with his pet house cat, Miss Puss. At first, Peter and Robert hate each other, but the two later find common ground in the fact that they both suffered from being the overshadowed older sibling and living with their parents. He is fond of Ray, although the feeling isn't mutual. Peter was originally introduced as "Russell", the owner of a comic book shop (played by comedian Paul Reubens) in a one-time appearance. 9 Garvin Len Lesser[10] A friend of Frank's. He is always seen with Stan. Whenever Garvin notices Ray, he shouts, "Hey, Ray's here! Ha-ha-ha!", while shaking his arms in the air. Lesser used a similar gag on Seinfeld when he portrayed Uncle Leo, enthusiastically yelling, "Jerry! Hello!", while holding out his arms every time he greeted his nephew, Jerry. Judy Potter Sherri Shepherd[11] Robert's partner on the New York Police Department. She takes him out to a black bar and helps Debra and Marie mend their relationship. Shamsky II Uncredited Robert's pet bulldog he keeps after having him neutered and later finding out he was a purebred, used for breeding stock. Shamsky II, named after baseball player Art Shamsky, makes brief cameos in other episodes. In one episode, Robert is seen saying, "Beat it, Shamsky", to order his dog out of the room he is in. Stan Victor Raider-Wexler[10] A friend of Frank and Marie's, and the husband of Lee. Stan is almost always seen with Garvin. 8 Doug Heffernan Kevin James[5] The announcer for the New York Mets, and a friend and golf buddy of Ray's. He is also the co-host of "Sports Talk with Roy Firestone". The character has originally named "Kevin Daniels" in his first six appearances, but the name was revised to Doug Heffernan after Kevin James' show The King of Queens began. 7 Nemo Joseph V. Perry[10] Robert Ruth[13] The owner of Nemo's Pizzaria. Nemo is not seen again in the series after Marco Fogagnolo takes over his pizzeria and calls it Marco's. For his final two appearances, Nemo was played by Robert Ruth. Suzy Susan Varon[7] A waitress at Nemo's Pizzaria. 6 Father Hubley Charles Durning[14] The local parish priest. He loves Marie's lasagna. He is very wary of his long-time parishioners, the Barones, but often gives helpful advice. Marco Fogagnolo David Proval[15] The intimidating and threatening Italian father of Stefania, who takes over Nemo's Pizzeria after he moves to the United States.. Although he dislikes Robert for dating his daughter, he befriends Robert's parents. Marie and Frank Barone end up fighting for Marco's friendship. Molly Ardolino Alexandra Romano[16] Peggy Ardolino's daughter and Ally's best friend. Alexandra Romano was first seen in the show as an unnamed flower girl in a flashback of Ray and Debra's wedding. Ray Romano's real life daughter. Stefania Fogagnolo Alex Meneses[15] Robert's beautiful ex-girlfriend. They met while Robert was vacationing with the Barone clan in Italy. Stefania later comes to America, but Robert breaks up with her after realizing that the two have little in common. Stefania befriends Robert's other ex-girlfriend, Amy MacDougall, after she discovers Robert was cheating on Amy with her. 4 Angelina Tina Arning[17] A waitress at Nemo's Pizzeria. Ray, Robert, Andy, Gianni, Berny and Doug often go to the restaurant to fantasize about Angelina's beauty. Mel Barone Phil Leeds[14] Frank's uncle. Mel is sometimes mean and always seems agitated. Due to never being married, and sometimes showing up to family functions with other men, he feels a need to remind people that he's not gay. Mel is also seen taking a liking to Sarina Barone, despite believing she is a relative. 3 Albert Albert Romano[18] A lodge friend of Frank's, who often appears alongside Stan, Garvin and Max. He is played by the father of Ray Romano. Bill Parker David Hunt[19] Ray's nemesis neighbor. Bill intentionally trades Hackidu cards with Ray's daughter, Ally, on behalf of his own son, to show that he is a better father than Ray. Bill and his wife later catch Ray trying to take their babysitter. Ray often jokes that Debra wishes she had married him instead, the in-joke being that he is played by Patricia Heaton's real-life husband. Bill has two children. Gerard Fred Stoller[14] Ray and Robert's unintelligent and hypochondriacal maternal cousin. He stays with Barone, his aunt, briefly and plays the accordion (mostly the first notes of Deep Purple's "Smoke on the Water" or The Carpenters' "(They Long to Be) Close to You"). Jerry Jerry Lambert[16] One of the parents of Ally Barone's class. Jerry sides with Ally's father, Ray, and the other parents when they get angry at their children's form teachers. Jerry and Ray also protest against Peggy Ardolino. Although clearly stating his morals in every situation, Jerry is too scared to speak up with Ray and allows him to do the talking. Lee Debra Mooney[20] Stan's wife, and Frank and Marie Barone's friend. She celebrates her wedding anniverdary at Frank and Marie's house, and later thanks Marie for helping to choose out Robert's wedding gift. Max Max Rosenthal[20] A lodge friend of Frank's, who often appears alongside Stan, Garvin and Albert. He is played by the father of the show's executive producer, Philip Rosenthal. Peggy Ardolino Amy Aquino[16] Molly Ardolino's mother and the leader of a girl scouts troop, who bullies Ray Barone when he tries to help the girl scouts group. When Debra finds Peggy beating Ray up, she scares Peggy off. Peggy admits to Ray that she became mean when she kicked her lousy husband out of the house. Peggy later becomes Peter MacDougall's girlfriend. Peggy's characteristics are similar to Adolf Hitler, according to Ray. Sally Parker Tess Oakland[21] Bill and Carrie Parker's young daughter, who is scared of Ray Barone and is classmates with Ally Barone. 2 Bryan Trenberth Dan Castellaneta[22] The coach of a junior tee-ball and basketball team, who is disliked by Ray and Debra for his snacks policy. Aunt Colletta Silvana De Santis[15] Marie Barone's second cousin. Colletta and her husband, Giorgio, allow the Barones to stay at their house in Italy. Coletta washes Ray to his embarrassment. Dave Dave Attell[5] A friend of Ray's and a member of the Nemo's Pizzaria sponsored basketball team. Ray's wife, Debra, does not like Dave because he smokes. Giorgio Pierrino Mascarino[15] Coletta's husband, who gets along with Frank when they make fun of their wives. Harry Stipe David Byrd[12] An elderly man who, with his wife Rita Stipe, rents their attic out to Robert Barone. Harry uncannily resembles Robert's father, Frank, and after Ray makes Robert realize this, he moves out. Harry gets mad at Ray for convincing Robert to leave, because he is then been left alone with his wife, like Frank is with Marie. Harry and Rita later meet up with Frank and Marie, and leave Robert jealous as they are fond of Ray. Joanne Glotz Suzie Plakson[23] Robert's first wife, who is depicted as a domineering and mean woman. She and Robert divorced before the beginning of the series. After their divorce, she initially hooked up with a man Robert had previously arrested. She formerly worked as a stripper in Atlantic City named Cinnamon. Marie knew about her former job since she appeared on the show, but kept quiet for Robert's sake until Joanne asked for a divorce. Years later, Joanne greets the Barones when she sees them in a restaurant and leaves Robert her number. Robert contacts her and they go on a date, but Joanne leaves when she realizes he wants a relationship and not just sex. Miss Puss[24] Uncredited Peter MacDougall's pet cat. She lives with him at his parents house and later moves to Long Island with him. Nester[25] Uncredited A bull that gores Robert in the buttocks and injures him. Nestor is first seen on television in a replay of the accident and Robert later confronts the animal at a petting zoo when he is fully recovered. Rita Stipe Anna Berger[12] An elderly woman who, with her husband Harry Stipe, rents their attic out to Robert Barone. Rita uncannily resembles Robert's mother, Marie, and after Ray makes Robert realize this, he moves out. Rita later befriends Marie and Frank Barone, before becoming very fond of Robert's brother, Ray. Scott Preman Bob Odenkirk[26] Ray's high school friend and Warren's best friend, who meets up with Ray and his wife, Debra at their high school reunion. Scott and Ray attended the same school as Fran Fine and Valerie Toriello. In a later episode, Scott and Walter give a presentation to Ray and Debra, pitching for funds for a go-carting business. Traffic Cop Timmy[27] Unapplicable Robert Barone's plastic ventriloquy doll, which he uses to teach road safety and later to cheer people up in the hospital. Warren Walter Brian Posehn[26] As Warren, Ray's high school friend and Scott Preman's best friend, who see Ray at the reunion of their graduating class, which Fran Fine and Valerie Toriello were also in. In a later episode, as Walter, he and Scott give a presentation of their prospective go-carting business to Ray and his wife Debra. Warren was originally credited as Walter. The following is a list of characters who only had one appearance. They are listed by seasons. Episode number Character Actor Circumstances 1 Leo Stephen Lee[28] A friend of Ray's, who comes to his house. Leo is only seen in the first episode. 3 Ancient Guy Carmen Filpi[29] A war veteran and battle companion of Gus, who attends his funeral and gets scared when he sees a toothbrush moustache painted on one of Ray Barone's children. Alda Jean Stapleton[29] Marie Barone's sister, who attends Gus' funeral. She and Marie constantly bicker. Funeral Director Hugh Holub[29] The director of Gus' funeral, who announces Ray Barone up to read Gus' elegy. Member of Family Marlene[29] A relative of the Barones. She attends Gus' funeral and complains about Marie's cooking at Ray and Debra Barone's wedding reception. Audience Member Joey Dente[29] A man at Gus' funeral. He starts a crowd-wide dispute about Marie Barone's behavior at her son's wedding. 6 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Himself[30] A professional basketballer, who goes to Ray Barone's house to meet Debra. Japanese Woman Kotoko Kawamura[30] Frank Barone's acquaintance, spotted reading a magazine with Frank. 8 Maitre'd Wayne Dvorak[8] A worker at a fancy restaurant that Warren and Lois Whelan take the Barones to. Gerard Richard Stegman[8] A waitress, who serves the Barones and Debra's parents at a fancy restaurant. 9 Eddie Murray Rubin[10] Frank Barone's friend, who plays poker with Ray, Stan and Garvin. 10 Emma Pearl Shear[31] A friend of Mel Barone, who attends his family's Thanksgiving lunch uninvited with her dog, Maggie. Maggie[31] Uncredited Emma's pet chihuahua. 11 Tom Tom Paris[5] One of the players of Nemo's Pizzaria basketball team. 13 Parent #1 Cynthena Sanders[32] The mother of a ten month old child, who brings him to the doctor's. Parent #2 Jonathan Chapin[32] A parent of a child at the doctor's. He is stunned when he sees Terry Bradshaw enter the room. Terry Bradshaw Himself[32] A professional footballer. When Ray is forced to take his children to the doctor's, he invited Terry to the waiting room to discuss a book Ray wants to write. Little Kid Hannah Swanson[32] A girl in the doctor's waiting room, who asks to touch Terry Bradshaw's bald head. Staring Kid Curtis Blanck[32] A boy in the doctor's waiting room on his Game Boy, who stares at Ray Barone. 15 Lisa Kristin Bauer van Straten[33] Ray Barone's ex-girlfriend seen in a flashback. 16 Barry Bonds Himself[34] A professional baseball player, who talks with Ray. 17 Cable Guy Jon Manfrellotti[35] A cable guy from Lynbrook, who comes to fix Ray Barone's television. It was Manfrellotti's first character on the show, his second being Gianni. 18 Katarina Witt Herself[36] A professional figure skater, who sees Ray and Debra Barone at the Sportswriter of the Year Awards ceremony. Announcer Tom Paris[36] The announcer of the Sportswriter of the Year Awards ceremony. Marv Albert Himself[36] A famous sportscaster, who announces the winner of the Sportswriter of the Year Award. 19 Kristi Yamaguchi Herself[37] A professional figure skater, who watches Ray Barone's interviews. Phylis Patience Cleveland[37] A dog breeder and Shamsky II's original owner. When she comes to pick up Shamsky from the Barones, she refuses to take him after seeing the "fixes" they made to him, so Robert keeps him. 20 Tommy Lasorda Himself[38] A professional baseball player, who visits Ray Barone's house and tells him how to cook properly after tasting his sauce. Arthur Steven Hack[38] One of Ray and Debra Barone's neighbors, who visits their house to complain about Ray's parents, however he joins Lisa, Mack, Ruth Greene and Robert for lunch at Ray's parents' house the following day. Lisa Cathy Ladman[38] One of Ray and Debra Barone's neighbors, who visits their house to complain about the noise Frank makes. She pulls back from her complaints when Frank invites her over for lunch. Mack Lance E. Nichols[38] One of Ray and Debra Barone's neighbors. He joins the other nearby residents in protesting against Ray's parents and complains about the rubbish he receives on his lawn from Barone. He reveals that he has been taping Frank in his front yard for a few weeks and presents the meeting with a recording that captures Frank's behavior. He later attends Frank and Marie's lunch. Ruth Greene Patricia Belcher[38] One of Ray and Debra Barone's neighbors, who expresses her concerns over Ray's parents by calling a meeting between all the neighbors. She is later invited to Ray's parents' house for lunch. The Pope Gene Greytak[38] Ray imagines Pope John Paul II expressing his anger in the mirror when Ray feels guilty for betraying his parents by hosting a meeting about them behind their backs. He is played by Gene Greytak, a professional impersonator of Pope John Paul II. Priest Don Perry[38] A local parish priest, who Ray has a counselling session with to discuss his guilt over his parents. The priest forgives Ray when he discovers his parents are Frank and Marie Barone. 21 Bartender Lorraine Shaw[39] A bartender, who serves Ray when he is talking to Desmond Howard. Desmond Howard Himself[39] A professional football player, who talks with Ray Barone at a sports bar. Dr. Nora Mary Kay Adams[39] A radio psychotherapist, who Debra Barone meets with. Nora ends up speaking with the rest of the Barones as well. Episode number Character Actor Circumstances 1 Roy Firestone Himself[40] A professional sports commentator, who is on a talk show with, Ray Barone, Kevin Daniels and James Worthy. James Worthy Himself[40] A professional sports commentator, who is on a talk show with Ray Barone, Kevin Daniels and Roy Firestone. 2 Celia Linda Kash[41] The instructor of a parenting class that Ray and Debra Barone attend. She tells Ray to be softer with his children and refrain from shouting. 5 Dr. Sundram Iqbal Theba[42] A doctor who treats Ray Barone and suggests he plays more golf to alleviate stress. 6 Young Ray Daniel Hansen[43] Ray and Robert Barone when they were children. They are only ever seen in a flashback of when their parents temporarily separated. Young Robert Ethan Glazer[43] 7 Pat O'Brien Himself[44] A professional sports commentator, who is commentating Ray and Andy's paper football game at work. Guy Christopher Michael Moore[44] A delivery guy, who brings Ray's stuff to his house when he decides to work from home. 9 Wo-Hop John Lee[45] The owner of Wo-Hop's Chinese Takeout restaurant. 10 Jessica Bell Pamela Bowen[26] A pretty girl that Ray Barone, Scott Preman and Warren went to school with. Ray, Scott and Warren see her at their high school reunion. Pete Marty Rackham[26] A bully at Ray Barone's old high school, who used to push Ray into the girls' bathroom. Robert Barone later reveals that he once pushed Pete into the girls' bathroom. Cool Guy Andrew Williams[26] One of Ray Barone's popular old classmates. Ray sees him at their high school reunion. 11 Gayle Kristen Trucksess[6] A friend of Debra's, who goes to Debra's house for a Tupperware party. Gayle is mentioned numerous times throughout the sitcom. Helen Nora Dunn[6] A lady running a Tupperware party at Debra's house. 12 Erin Christine Cavanaugh[46] A lady at Ray Barone's work, who speaks to Ray and Andy about women being in the mood for sex. 13 Harry John F. O'Donohue[47] A friend of Frank Barone's, who enjoys participating in war reenactments. He, Frank, Robert and Ray participate in an American Civil War reenactment. 14 Sarina Barone Argentina Brunetti[2] Zia Sarina Barone comes to Long Island to stay with the Barones, believing Frank Barone is her nephew. She is proud of her grandnephew, Ray, when she sees his sportswriting awards. However, when Zia Sarina and Frank realize that they are not actually related, Anna Barone comes to pick Sarina up. Cab Driver Mike Batay[2] A taxi driver, who drops Sarina Barone off at Ray and Debra Barone's house. He asks for a tip from Debra. Anna Barone Stella Farentino[2] Sarina Barone's grand niece, who comes to pick her up. She explains the Barones that there a lot of people with the last name Barone and that one family moved to the United States and named themselves Barones, the family being Frank's father and uncles. 16 Old Woman Martha Faulkner[48] An old woman waiting in the ATM line. Ray Barone goes in front of her, so she goes to find a policeman and gets Robert to tell Ray off. 17 Hold-Up Guy Stephen Bruno[49] A criminal who holds up Ray, Robert, Nemo, Suzy and Angelina in Nemo's Pizzaria. Robert and Judy Potter then arrest him. 20 Lisa Trenberth Jenny Buchanan[22] Bryan Trenberth's wife and the junior tee-ball team's healthy snacks coordinator. Parent Jerry Hauck[22] The parent of a child in a junior tee-ball team. He shouts out in encouragement for the team. Teacher Yolanda Snowball[22] One of Geoffrey and Michael Barone's teachers at their junior tee-ball game. 23 Mrs. Scarpula[50] Unknown Ray and Debra Barone's neighbor. She is only seen once at Frank Barone's garage sale, but is often mentioned in the earlier seasons of the sitcom. Pregnant Woman Susan Segal[50] A pregnant woman at Frank Barone's garage sale, who is interested in buying a crib. Wendell Nick DeGruccio[50] A man at Frank Barone's garage sale, who overhears Ray and Debra talking about having another child. Don Richard Marion[50] A man at Frank Barone's garage sale, who is interested in buying his sofa. Woman Sarah Rush[50] A woman at Frank Barone's garage sale, who asks Robert Barone if photos of him as a child dressed in a skirt are for sale. 25 Duddie Michael Duddie[14] One of Ray's groomsmen at his wedding. Duddie is only ever seen in a flashback. Lewis Al Romano[14] A friend of Mel Barone's, who attended Ray's wedding. Lewis is only ever seen in a flashback. Ray Ramano's real father.
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https://www.facebook.com/unityofthewoodlands/videos/unity-of-the-woodlands-5222022/575187894196611/%3Flocale%3Dms_MY
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Jerry Roberts' Retirement Celebration!
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https://scontent.xx.fbcd…jzrg&oe=66BF2871
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Jerry Roberts' Retirement Celebration!
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https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-26759034
en
Bletchley Park codebreaker Jerry Roberts dies, aged 93
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[ "BBC News", "www.facebook.com" ]
2014-03-26T18:38:30+00:00
Raymond "Jerry" Roberts - one of the last surviving codebreakers to work at Bletchley Park on high-level Nazi communications - dies, aged 93.
en
BBC News
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-26759034
Raymond "Jerry" Roberts - one of the last of a top World War Two codebreaking team at Bletchley Park - has died, aged 93, following a short illness. Capt Roberts, from Liphook, Hampshire, was part of a group that cracked the German High Command's Tunny code at the British codebreaking centre. Their decrypts made it possible to read Hitler's own messages during the war. The team is credited with helping to shorten the war by at least two years. Capt Roberts joined Bletchley Park, in Buckinghamshire, as a German linguist and was among four founder members of the Testery section - named after its head Ralph Tester. Their target was to crack a system known as Tunny, which carried the messages of Hitler's top generals and even the Fuhrer himself. The system used four times as many encryption wheels as the famous Enigma machine - which carried military communications. Reminiscing years after WW2 - when he could finally talk about his work - Capt Roberts said he had taken delight in reading Hitler's messages, sometimes even before the intended recipient. He described the intelligence the team had gathered as "gold dust" in a 2013 BBC interview. "We were breaking 90% of the German traffic through '41 to '45", Capt Roberts recalled in one interview. "We worked for three years on Tunny material and were breaking - at a conservative estimate - just under 64,000 top-line messages." He added it had been "an exciting time" whenever the team "started getting a break on a message and seeing it through".
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21
https://www.georgebrothersfuneral.com/obituary/Jerry-Roberts
en
Jerry Roberts Obituary
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[ "George Brothers Funeral Service" ]
2022-06-14T11:44:00-04:00
Obituary for Jerry R. Roberts | Jerry R. Roberts, 75, of Julian died Monday, June 13, 2022, at Wesley Long Community Hospital. Graveside service with...
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Jerry Roberts Obituary | June 13, 2022 | Greensboro, NC
https://www.georgebrothersfuneral.com/obituary/Jerry-Roberts
Jerry R. Roberts, 75, of Julian died Monday, June 13, 2022, at Wesley Long Community Hospital. Graveside service with military honors will be 11:00 AM Friday, June 17, 2022, at Gilmore Memorial Park in Julian. Jerry was a graduate of Page High School, Class of 1964. He served four years with the United States Air Force. Jerry went on to retire from Dow Corning Corporation following thirty years of employment. He is preceded in death by his son, Erik Roberts. Jerry is survived by his wife of fifty-two years, Susan Roberts; grandson, Adam Roberts; daughter-in-law, Tina Roberts both of Climax; and sister, Gayle Ward of Greensboro. In lie of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to AuthoraCare Collective, 2500 Summit Avenue, Greensboro, NC 27405.
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https://www.facebook.com/jerry.roberts.39589149/
en
Facebook
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Sieh dir auf Facebook Beiträge, Fotos und vieles mehr an.
de
https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/yv/r/B8BxsscfVBr.ico
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https://www.desmoinesregister.com/obituaries/dmr120296
en
Home
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0001-01-01T00:00:00+00:00
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The Des Moines Register
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FBI looking for missing 17-year-old who may be in the Des Moines area
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https://247sports.com/article/jerry-roberts-linebacker-return-arizona-199491088/
en
Jerry Roberts announces return to Arizona
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[ "Jason Scheer" ]
2022-12-04T04:18:03+00:00
Arizona linebacker Jerry Roberts has announced his return for one more season.
en
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247Sports
https://247sports.com/college/arizona/article/jerry-roberts-linebacker-return-arizona-199491088/
Arizona got a bit of a surprise on Saturday night when linebacker Jerry Roberts announced that he is returning for one more season. Roberts has another year of eligibility because he received a medical redshirt, regular redshirt, and an extra year due to Covid. Last season, Roberts broke his leg, but he came back strong this season and did not miss any time due to injury. "There’s a lot of ups and downs," Roberts said. "You kind of get down on yourself like ‘Am I ever going to be the same again? or ‘Will I ever run the same speed I did?’ It’s all part of, like Coach Fisch says, trusting the process. "With my injury, that’s what I did. I trusted the entire process. I bought in and we had winter break and I stayed here the entire six weeks. I was doing everything I can to get back to my old self.” Not a subscriber? Sign up now to get all the great information on the premium boards and all of the premium stories on WildcatAuthority.com! Click here to subscribe! Roberts took on a leadership role this season and is expected to do the same with what should be a young defense next season. "He asks me to take control of the defense and continue to lead the defense as a middle linebacker should," Roberts said. "Also, show the young guys the right way to do things and continue to excel my game so I can obviously compete at the next level.” Considering he is one of the older linebackers on the roster, Roberts has had no issues with becoming a leader. "Being one of the older guys in the room and watching those young guys progress from the spring until now has been good," he said. "We’re moving in the right direction for sure. I tell them to treat every play like a full speed play. You literally can’t take any plays off because the minute you take a play off an injury might happen or you might get blindsided.” Roberts started all 12 games at MIKE linebacker and was second on the team with 78 total tackles. He was also fourth on the team with 34 solo tackles and first on the team with 44 assisted tackles. Arizona will return Roberts and freshman linebacker Jacob Manu, but is expected to be aggressive in the transfer portal. The coaching staff has already reached out to a handful of graduate transfers and when the portal opens on Monday, there will likely be more names. Still, the return of Roberts allows Arizona to have a reliable veteran and a player that is well-respected in the locker room and a voice of leadership with his teammates.
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https://eng.vt.edu/about/distinguished-alumni/academy-of-engineering-excellence/raymond-g-curry-jr.html
en
Raymond G. Curry, Jr.
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2019-07-02T17:11:28+00:00
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Civil Engineering Class of 1954, BS Ray Curry Jr. started in the family construction business at age 14 working during summers and holidays, and later helped lead his father’s company before breaking out on his own by founding two more companies, all in the Washington, D.C., area, where he still resides. He helped build the Market Square Project and the Watergate Complex, a project controversial for its building style and design. He has worked on more than 300 high-rise concrete construction projects in the Washington, D.C., area. Mr. Curry was the first to attend college in his family. “I was the first person [in my family] to have that opportunity,” he says. “I thought I should take full advantage of it.” But college was not his first plan. Many of his construction coworkers were World War II veterans who encouraged the high school teen to further his education. “I never really had an interest,” Mr. Curry says. “They told me to go to college and make something of myself.” He graduated from Virginia Tech in 1954 with a bachelor’s degree in civil engineering. After college, Mr. Curry served in the Army Corps of Engineers from 1955 until 1957 as a project engineer in Okinawa in the continuing post-World War II rebuilding efforts in Japan. He supervised the building of air fields, highways, radar bases, fire stations, water and sewage treatment facilities, and apartment buildings. When Mr. Curry returned to the States, he also returned to the family business, MOSES-ECCO, a high-rise concrete construction company. His father co-owned the company with three other men, purchased from a man with the surname Moses. The men kept the name Moses as a sign of respect, while “ECCO” comes from the initials of each of the owner’s last names. Mr. Curry worked his way his way up from engineer to superintendent and shareholder. One of his earliest projects was the Watergate Complex, a series of office buildings, condos and a hotel, plus shopping center that sported a then-groundbreaking post-tension concrete job, and was designed — by Italian architect Luigi Moretti — as a series of curved buildings, with no straight angles. He poured 17,500 square feet of concrete per day and completed a floor every four days. “It was all built on radials, constantly changing curves,” Mr. Curry says. “It was very difficult putting in post-tension cables in something like that.” In 1970, Mr. Curry broke out on his own and formed SMC Concrete Construction Inc. He chose the high-rise concrete industry in keeping with his education and prior family work experience. He spanned his business clientele south to Richmond, Virginia, and north to Baltimore, Maryland. His career-favorite project is the 1-million-squarefoot Market Square in Washington, D.C., located directly across from the National Archives, and designed to blend in as a historical building. Other landmarks he was involved with: The Library of Congress’s National Audio Visual Conservation Center in Culpeper, Virginia, and Tyson’s Corner Shopping Mall — one of the nation’s larger shopping malls, and Jefferson Square, a multi-use high-rise complex. The Conservation Center features curved, cast-in-place exposed architectural concrete walls, and an environmentally green roof system, which helps filter pollutants and carbon-dioxide out of the air; it also reduces heating and cooling loads on the structure. His buildings have won numerous awards. Mr. Curry started Curry Development Inc. during the 1980s, focusing on the office and apartment sectors, townhouses, single-family houses, retail centers, and an industrial park. His company built what he calls the first affordable housing projects in Fairfax, Virginia, for lower-income families. The company also renovated abandoned apartment buildings inside the Beltway. He then jumped into banking in the 1990s with Bank of Alexandria, first as a stockholder and buyer, then as president and chairman of the board. It was a different way to learn a business. He grew the bank and then sold it to F&M Bank. Mr. Curry’s post-military work also had him traveling abroad. During the late 1960s, he spent time examining concrete industry products in Europe. His task: look at then-innovative applications of pouring concrete to see if their design systems could translate overseas to America. He also traveled to Saudi Arabia several times in the late 1970s, working as a consultant for Aeromaritime Ltd., on precast plants and precast houses along the Yemen border. But as late 1970s Middle East turmoil grew tumultuous, his work there was abruptly stopped and he returned home. Mr. Curry and his wife, Madelyn, are members of the Ut Prosim Society, and have given several donations to scholarship funds, established the Raymond and Madelyn Curry Graduate Fellowship, and helped fund the expansion of the university’s structural engineering lab, originally opened in 1990 and expanded several times. Mr. Curry’s donation helped build offices and meeting rooms for graduate students working in the lab. The facility was rededicated as the Ray and Madelyn Curry Education Wing and the Thomas M. Murray Structural Engineering Laboratory in 2009. “Students get to experience the practical side of structural design, because they typically have to design and construct their own specimens,” says Carin Roberts-Wollmann, the lab’s director and a professor of civil engineering. “They build formwork, tie reinforcing steel and cast concrete.” Thomas Murray, a member of the National Academy of Engineering, and a retired professor from the College of Engineering who founded the lab, says the facility’s impact on students is immediate. “I have had happy employers ask, ‘What have you done directly with these guys because they have a different outlook on how to put things together.’ And that comes from working in the lab,” he said. Mr. Curry is a member of the Virginia Chapter of Associated Builders & Contractors, the D.C. Metropolitan Subcontractors Association, Alexandria Chamber of Commerce, Fairfax County Chamber of Commerce, Alexandria Building Industry Association, District of Columbia Building Industry Association, National Association of Industrial and Office Parks, American Society for Concrete Construction, American Concrete Institute, Concrete Reinforcing Steel Institute, and Metropolitan Washington Chapter of Associated Builder and Contractors. He is starting his second term on the Alumni Board of the Charles E. Via Jr. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Department at Virginia Tech. He was inducted into the department’s Academy of Distinguished Alumni in 2007. Mr. Curry retired from SMC Concrete Construction, Inc. in June 2011. He lives in Alexandria, Virginia, and has four daughters and seven grandchildren.
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https://ohiobobcats.com/honors/hall-of-fame/eddie-roberts/151
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Eddie Roberts (1987) - Hall of Fame
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Eddie Roberts, Class: 1973 Induction: 1987 Sport(s): Men's Soccer - Eddie Roberts was a two-time All-American soccer player in 1970 and 1971. He was an All-Midwest
en
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Ohio University
https://ohiobobcats.com/honors/hall-of-fame/eddie-roberts/151
Thanks for visiting ! The use of software that blocks ads hinders our ability to serve you the content you came here to enjoy. We ask that you consider turning off your ad blocker so we can deliver you the best experience possible while you are here. Thank you for your support!
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https://www.edhat.com/news/what-does-das-williams-have-to-hide-supervisor-chickens-out-of-newsmakers-interview-again/
en
What Does Das Williams Have to Hide? Supervisor Chickens Out of Newsmakers Interview — Again
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[ "Edhat Staff", "Edhat Reader", "Jerry Roberts", "Joe DeLise" ]
2024-02-11T12:13:55-08:00
The greatest braggarts are usually the biggest cowards. - Jean-Jacques Rousseau
https://www.edhat.com/wp…t-logo-32x32.png
edhat
https://www.edhat.com/news/what-does-das-williams-have-to-hide-supervisor-chickens-out-of-newsmakers-interview-again/
The greatest braggarts are usually the biggest cowards. – Jean-Jacques Rousseau At 7:58 p.m. on Thursday, Supervisor Das Williams sent a peculiar email, cancelling a long-scheduled appearance on Newsmakers TV — the second time this year the re-election candidate cut and ran from an interview at the last minute. We’ve been trying since 2024 began to get Williams to sit down and answer questions on camera about his record on the Board of Supervisors, as part of an ongoing series of conversations with candidates in key March 5 election races, in partnership with our colleague Josh Molina and his “Santa Barbara Talks” podcast. Williams, who’s seeking a third term as SB’s First District Supervisor, first agreed that he’d come on the show on Jan. 26. Two days before, however, his campaign manager called it off saying Das had “a family matter come up,” while agreeing to a makeup date of Feb. 9. Then last night came word, from no less a figure than the Great Man himself: not only was he standing us up again, but he’d decided not to come on at all. Because…something: I have a lot of respect for what you did at the News-Press. However, you do not appear to be able to be objective when it comes to my work in office, and you have made it clear to your audience that you disdain everything about me. I can’t pretend that this show engages in balanced journalism – which I deeply believe in, and think that deep down, you do too. I will be doing an energy efficient water heater inspection and trying to help someone who is losing their home find a new place to live during our scheduled time tomorrow, but I do not pretend it is merely a scheduling snafu. I don’t believe that appearing on the program is in service of the public good. I apologize for any inconvenience. Um, okay. Energy efficient water heater inspection, indeed. What is Das afraid of? Look, we stipulate that Newsmakers has been tough on Williams, not least for his epically disastrous county cannabis ordinance. It is the most brazenly, pro-industry such local law in California, which he cooked up in secret with a few lobbyist pals and credulous colleague Steve Lavignino, blindsiding local residents and dropping it like a noxious stink bomb on the good citizens of Carpinteria. It is also true, however, that an “objective” view of that policy debacle, along with other of his political misadventures, aligns more closely with our media watchdog perspective, than with the scornful, sneering, and triumphalist take peddled by the candidate and his posse of sycophants. (Secret teleological memo to Das: in looking for an “objective” view of yourself, it’s generally best not to bank on your own view of, you know, yourself). Consider: A career politician and policy shape shifter who’s been feeding at the public trough since 2003, Williams has not been subject to sustained, day-in-day-out coverage of his actions in office since 2006, when the morning paper melted down and began its long, slow slide to bankruptcy. Now, during a “campaign” without a single face-to-face forum with his challenger, Carp City Council member Roy Lee, Das blanches at the prospect of answering a few tough questions from truth-to-power journalists who’ve had the temerity to criticize him. Williams evidently is intimidated by the mere notion of speaking with a couple of interlocutors disinclined to accept at face value his glib political spin and overweening self-regard — unlike fellow local libs who’ve taken a few shots from the Newsmakers TV gang, but still graciously accepted invites to come on the show (viz. Salud Carbajal, Monique Limon, Gregg Hart, Laura Capps, Joan Hartmann, Eric Friedman, Meagan Harmon, Kristen Sneddon, and Oscar Gutierrez, to name a few) – let alone national stature lefties like Gov. Gavin Newsom, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg and Senator Bernie Sanders, all of whom have cheerfully and effectively braved hostile questioning on the ignoble Fox News Channel. As Williams seeks yet another term beyond more than two decades in office, he seems to think the election should be more coronation than campaign. “His basement strategy is not working out,” said one veteran local pol, granted anonymity because of Das’ well-earned reputation for retribution, referring to Joe Biden’s Covid campaign of 2020. “He still should (win big), but he just can’t believe everyone doesn’t bask in his wonderfulness.” Loyal readers and viewers may be sure that, despite this shameful retreat from accountability by a self-entitled local politician, Newsmakers will soldier on to publish analyses and commentaries on the issues about which we’d hoped to have a conversation with him — starting today, asJosh and the genial host discuss the Great Das Williams Wimp Out. Plus: All the latest from the Third District race, and decoding a mystifying ballot measure confronting city voters. All this, and more, right here, right now on Newsmakers TV.
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http://www.thecalifornian.com/story/news/local/2015/02/25/friend-jerry-roberts-complained-fights-son/24005841/
en
Salinas Californian
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[ "Allison Gatlin, Salinas Californian", "Allison Gatlin" ]
2015-02-25T00:00:00
Jerry Roberts was a retired Correctional Training Facility officer, a former coworker said.
en
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http://www.thecalifornian.com/story/news/local/2015/02/25/friend-jerry-roberts-complained-fights-son/24005841/
John Batiz recalled running into Jerry Roberts several weeks ago at the Creekbridge Safeway in Salinas. Small talk turned to the topic of Matthew Roberts, the 70-year-old man's son, Batiz said Tuesday. "He told me he was having problems with his son," Batiz said. "They would get into physical fights." That was the last time Batiz, of Salinas, says he saw his former coworker. Jerry Roberts' body was found decomposed Feb. 16 in a trailer on his Inglewood Street property, Police Cmdr. Vince Maiorana said Wednesday. The 70-year-old suffered a broken neck at the time of his death, according to preliminary autopsy findings. Salinas police officers, including several veteran cops, responded about 9 p.m. to a call requesting a check on Roberts' safety. "When an officer started walking around the premises he encountered a brief, quick smell, which he equated with death," Maiorana said. Inside the trailer, Salinas police made the grisly discovery, Maiorana said. Officers arrested 34-year-old Matthew Roberts that night. Matthew Roberts has since been charged with murder and felony elder abuse. He's being held at the Monterey County Jail on $1.5 million bail and awaiting arraignment. A subsequent probation violation case has been filed. Bail was set at $10,000 last week in that misdemeanor case. Investigators have pinpointed the last time Jerry Roberts was seen alive, but Maiorana said he won't yet release that information. Neighbors told The Californian they had last seen Jerry Roberts a week or two before his body was discovered. An autopsy conducted last Friday revealed Jerry Roberts suffered a broken neck at the time of his death. The cause and time of his death haven't yet been confirmed. "The preliminary findings by the pathologist show he died of unnatural causes," Maiorana said. "It was not falling down the stairs, an accidental death. This is death by another (person)." Jerry Roberts was born in Visalia and graduated from Redwood High School there. He enlisted in the U.S. Army when he was 18 or 19 years old, a family member said Wednesday. The family member, a Salinas resident, asked that her name be witheld, fearing she might be mobbed for information at work. While in the Army, Jerry Roberts was stationed in North Carolina and Germany. He was ordered twice to go to war, but the orders were twice changed, the family member said. After his Army career, Jerry Roberts served 24 years as a correctional officer for Soledad Correctional Training Facility, said Lt. Roland Ramon, public information officer for the prison. He started work at CTF in 1986 and retired in April 2010. "He was well-respected and a hard worker," Ramon said. "Kind of a quiet guy." On Wednesday, Ramon said he was working on putting together a "Now Hear This" announcement for CTF staff regarding Jerry Roberts' memorial and funeral services. Army and CTF officials are likely to attend Jerry Roberts' memorial service, the family member said. In his retirement, Jerry Roberts enjoyed fishing, hunting and carpentry, she said. He was pivotal in helping construct Echoes from Calvary Church on Post Drive in north Salinas, where the family still attends services, the family member said. Batiz recalled working with Jerry Roberts in the east dorm at the low- and medium-security prison in southern Monterey County. After retiring, Batiz said he ran into Jerry Roberts from time to time in Salinas. When Jerry Roberts aired his concern regarding Matthew Roberts, Batiz said the 70-year-old seemed to feel a sense of obligation for his 34-year-old son. "He told me, 'I have to take care of him, he's my son,'" Batiz recalled. The family member confirmed as much: Jerry Roberts loved his children. "He loved [Matthew]," the family member said. "That's what makes it so hard, you know? He loved him so much." Family members knew Jerry Roberts was having difficulty with his son, she said. "But he didn't want his son to be out (of prison) and have nowhere to go," she explained. Matthew Roberts previously served six years in prison for shooting and wounding his step-father, Monterey County Sheriff's Detective Larry Bryant. A judge referenced Matthew Roberts' methamphetamine habit during the 2006 sentencing. The whole ordeal "was such a nightmare for him (Jerry Roberts)," Batiz said. In the ensuing years, Jerry Roberts made a point to visit his son in prison. "He (Matthew Roberts) was in a few riots and he had to face the consequences," Batiz said. Jerry Roberts told him his son had the word "Roberts" tattooed on his back, Batiz said. Other inmates often "picked on him," to hear Jerry Roberts tell it. In 2013, Matthew Roberts was convicted of assault causing great bodily injury and battering a peace officer in separate cases. Both cases carried allegations of a previous prison commitment, a previous felony and a prior strike. He was sentenced to a year in jail and three years' probation, respectively, for the cases. The 34-year-old had recently moved in with his father, Batiz said. Jerry Roberts referred to his son as "unpredictable." If Jerry Roberts declined to turn his car keys over to Matthew Roberts, the younger Roberts would become very irate, Batiz said. "He was like a little kid," Batiz said Jerry Roberts told him. Jerry Roberts is survived by four siblings, Barbara Balding, Ray Roberts, Phil Roberts and Jimmy Roberts; two children and seven grandchildren, the family member said. He is preceded in death by his youngest brother, Roger Roberts. Jerry Roberts' family members are asking for prayers. His daughter, who just arrived in Salinas, is making discoveries at the Inglewood Street residence, the family member said. "She found his Bible," the family member said. "And all his grandchildren's names are written in his Bible. [His daughter] said, 'My dad didn't talk much, but you could tell by little things he had around his house how much he cared about everyone.'" Jerry Roberts was a "soft-spoken man" who didn't express his emotions through words. Rather, he would perform "actions of love," the family member said. She recounted Jerry Roberts' overhearing that she and her husband were seeking a bathroom vanity. "He had an old bathroom vanity and he gave it to me," she said. "He just came and dropped it off without us ever asking." She added, "Now, I look at that vanity and I smile." Batiz recalled Jerry Roberts having "the best laugh." "He was a nice man who had a son who took advantage of him," Batiz said. "I feel bad I didn't look more deeply into it." Jerry Roberts' body was turned over to his family Monday, Sheriff's Cmdr. John Thornburg said. He will be buried Friday at the San Joaquin Valley National Cemetery in Santa Nella, Ramon said. A memorial service will follow, tentatively set for March 10 at Echoes from Calvary Church, the family member said. Matthew Roberts will return to court for arraignment March 5. Follow Allison Gatlin on Twitter @allison_salnews #salinas.
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https://www.lexingtonky.gov/homicide-investigations
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Homicide investigations
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https://www.lexingtonky.gov/homicide-investigations
Detectives in the Lexington Police Department's Robbery/Homicide Unit handle death investigations for Lexington-Fayette County. They work closely with officers in Patrol, the Forensic Services Unit, other investigative units, and the public to help solve these crimes. If you have information about a murder case, please call Lexington Police at (859) 258-3600. Anonymous tips can be submitted through Bluegrass Crime Stoppers by calling (859) 253-2020 or online at bluegrasscrimestoppers.com. 2024 homicides No. Date Location Victim's Name Age Cause of Death Status of Case Suspect(s) 1 2/3/24 Winchester Road Chadrick Boone 31 Gunshot CBA Kyshawn Owens 2 3/8/24 Rockaway Place Kenlon Johnson 17 Gunshot OPEN 3 4/4/24 Carlisle Avenue Dennis Ruiz-Trujillo Jr. 18 Gunshot CBA Wilmer Romero 4 4/30/24 Shropshire Avenue Devin Chenault 37 Gunshot CBA Jerrico Roberts 5 5/17/24 Dakota Street Russell Houston 50 Gunshot CBA Sheri Phillips 6 6/4/24 Newtown Pike Antonio Taylor 48 Gunshot CBA Shawnika Gill 7 6/21/24 W. Second St. / Old Georgetown St. Charles McDowell 57 Blunt Force CBA Roger Wiley ll 8 7/19/24 Liberty Road Caveyoun Robinson 16 Gunshot OPEN 2023 homicides No. Date Location Victim's Name Age Cause of Death Status of Case Suspect(s) 1 2/6/2023 Toner St Marquis A. Tompkins Jr. 24 Gunshot OPEN 2 3/17/2023 N. MLK Blvd Justin R. Cooke 43 Gunshot CBA Marquan King 3 4/20/2023 Chestnut St Timonte D. Harris 43 Gunshot CBA Corry Jackson 4 4/20/2023 Chestnut St Lakeisha Hill 32 Gunshot OPEN 5 4/30/2023 Castlewood Park Damar L. Weathers 18 Gunshot OPEN 6 5/5/2023 Pine St Clinton B. Brown 23 Gunshot CBA Jamierion Allen 7 5/5/2023 Summerhill Dr Michael R. Stinnett 16 Gunshot CBA Stewart Watson 8 5/23/2023 Florence Ave Jalen Henderson 19 Gunshot OPEN 9 5/28/2023 Short St. / N. Limestone Kevin Reel 35 Gunshot CBA Scott Lawless 10 7/5/2023 Tazewell Dr Christopher Valdez 16 Gunshot CBA Emmanuel Contreas & *Juvenile suspect* 11 7/11/2023 St. Michael Dr Beverly Keesecker 68 Gunshot OPEN 12 7/13/2023 Whitney Ave Stacey Marshall 30 Gunshot CBA Courtney Wrenn 13 7/25/2023 Whitney Ave Sy'Kia Epps 0 Blunt Force CBA Syied Epps 14 8/15/2023 Creek Path Lane Willie Y. Dixon 42 Gunshot OPEN 15 8/27/2023 Winchester Rd Malik Sleet 26 Gunshot OPEN 16 9/19/2023 Marshall Ln Arliss Stewart 80 Gunshot CBA Jim Bradburn 17 9/23/2023 South Broadway Dametrius Hampton 18 Gunshot CBA Jacolby Williams 18 9/23/2023 Hollow Creek Rd Christina Fikes 23 Gunshot CBE Sami Younus 19 9/24/2023 W. Main St Ty'Juan Pearson 38 Gunshot CBE 20 9/29/2023 Trade St Kristopher Lewis 28 Gunshot OPEN 21 9/30/2023 Centre Parkway Trevon Cummins 23 Gunshot OPEN 22 10/15/2023 Race Street Estaud Lopez 47 Gunshot OPEN 23 2/26/2023 Bracktown Road Brighton Hendron 4 Overdose CBA Anderson George Briana Turpin Raven Houston 24 12/27/23 Pemberton Street Devon Dockery Jr 34 Gunshot CBA Luquan Hayes 2022 homicides No. Date Location Victim's Name Age Cause of Death Status of Case Suspect(s) 1 01/03/2022 Anniston Dr D'Andre M. Green 24 Gunshot Open 2 01/07/2022 Cantrill Dr Kobby L. Martin 27 Gunshot CBA Deonte Carter 3 02/6/2022 Upper St Landon Hayes 10 Gunshot CBE 4 02/7/2022 Hollow Creek Rd Cornelius Allen 44 Gunshot CBA *Juvenile suspect* 5 2/17/2022 Cambridge Drive Jimmy Medlock 39 Sharp Trauma CBA Jennifer Kashuba 6 3/5/2022 W Short St Michael Yocum 36 Gunshot CBA Juan Linares 7 3/9/2022 Chase Pl Darian Webb 18 Gunshot CBA Darryl Russell 8 3/19/2022 Stratford Dr Leslie Bales 54 Sharp Trauma CBA Justus Bales 9 4/8/2022 W. New Circle Rd William Ashby 64 Blunt / Sharp Trauma CBA Alysha Noel & Danny Sims 10 4/12/2022 Russell Cave Rd Armond W. Lukes Jr. 40 Gunshot OPEN 11 5/1/2022 Versailles Rd Ricky A. Williams Jr. 40 Gunshot CBA Jerry Price 12 5/2/2022 Rogers Rd Deon M. Williams 13 Sharp Trauma CBA Nikki James 13 5/2/2022 Rogers Rd Skyler L. Williams 5 Sharp Trauma CBA Nikki James 14 5/7/2022 La Salle Rd James Bost Jr. 49 Gunshot OPEN 15 5/7/2022 La Salle Rd Amaya Taylor-Sandifer 20 Gunshot OPEN 16 5/17/2022 Meadow Lane / New Circle Rd Eric E. Boone 42 Gunshot OPEN 17 5/21/2022 Florence Ave Todd A Kenion 34 Gunshot OPEN 18 5/24/2022 Locust Ave Malcom X. Long 29 Gunshot OPEN 19 5/25/2022 Caywood Dr Lisa Wilson 65 Gunshot CBA Steven Wilson 20 5/25/2022 Caywood Dr Bryonny Wilson 42 Gunshot CBA Steven Wilson 21 5/25/2022 Caywood Dr Bronwyn Wilson 38 Gunshot CBA Steven Wilson 22 6/04/2022 Haggard Ct Joseph Richardson 35 Gunshot OPEN 23 6/19/2022 Charles Ave Randy Wise 55 Gunshot CBA DeMonte Cowan 24 7/17/2022 Hedgewood Ct Edward Studvent 33 Gunshot OPEN 25 7/20/2022 Quinton Ct Kadage Byishimo 38 Gunshot CBA Keith Denton 26 7/27/2022 Victoria Way Kendall Berry 34 Gunshot OPEN 27 8/5/2022 Augusta Dr James A. Palmatier 44 Gunshot CBA Sean Smith 28 8/13/2022 Centre Parkway Demetris Shelton 19 Gunshot OPEN 29 4/30/2022 Nicholasville Road James A. Morris 97 Aspiration Pneumonia CBA Eyvette Hunter 30 8/17/2022 Linden Walk Ashley D. Stamper 35 Gunshot CBA Yovany Chaple-Chaple 31 8/31/2022 Dakota Street Dietrich Murray 29 Gunshot CBA James Catlett 32 9/2/2022 Devonport Drive Mondono-Fonseca, Juan 26 Gunshot CBA *Juvenile suspect* 33 9/8/2022 Devonia Avenue Clarence E. Adams 57 Gunshot CBA Steven Smith 34 9/12/2022 W Sixth Street Doricky J. Harris 22 Gunshot CBA Bobby Hubbard 35 9/22/2022 Jennifer Road Raymond B. Brooks 51 Gunshot CBA Jonathan Lockhart 36 9/25/2022 Oxford Circle Adetokundo Okunoye 25 Gunshot CBA Woody LaPierre 37 10/14/2022 Bryan Avenue Robert S. Wallace 53 Sharp Trauma CBA Don Marshall 38 10/25/2022 Maple Avenue Nicole Morton 32 Gunshot CBA Courtney Young 39 11/12/2022 Darby Creek Road William L. Edwards 34 Gunshot OPEN 40 11/15/2022 Yellowstone Parkway Brandon Walker 37 Gunshot OPEN 41 11/20/2022 Alumni Drive Zy'Aire Waide 2 Overdose CBA Alashia Brown 42 11/23/2022 Bay Colony Lane Talina Henderson 47 Gunshot CBA Stephon Henderson 43 12/10/2022 Colonnade Drive Elaina Q. Mammen 19 Gunshot CBA Hubert Riley & *Juvenile suspect* 44 12/30/2022 Bradley Court Tyron Z. Shaw 21 Gunshot OPEN 2021 homicides No. Date Location Victim's Name Age Cause of Death Status of Case Suspect(s) 1 1/9/2021 Cove Lake Dr John Harris 28 Gunshot CBA Mercedes Childress / Davontae Cobb 2 1/21/2021 (died 2/4/21) Breckenridge St Wesley Brown III 32 Gunshot CBA Kenneth Wadkins 3 1/23/2021 N. Upper St Dominico Cloyd 18 Gunshot Open 4 1/25/2021 (died 2/25/21) Harvard Drive Kobe Persley 20 Gunshot Open 5 1/30/2021 Alumni Drive Bryan Green 26 Gunshot CBA Juanyah Clay 6 1/31/2021 Vine Street Lonnie Oxendine 22 Gunshot CBA Jacouri Burns 7 2/9/2021 Dakota St Lazarus Parker 38 Gunshot CBA (KSP case) Cecil Russell / Martae Shanks 8 3/4/2021 De Porres Ave Jesse Averitt 28 Gunshot Open 9 3/11/2021 Augusta Drive Montaye Mullins 18 Gunshot CBA *Juvenile suspect* / Michael Roland 10 4/7/2021 Dalton Ct Lowell Washington 35 Gunshot Open 11 4/7/2021 Colchester Dr Herbie Booker 20 Gunshot Open 12 4/9/2021 Winchester Rd Cyrus Davis 35 Gunshot Open 13 4/18/2021 Alumni Dr Hayden Nash 17 Gunshot CBA *Juvenile suspect* 14 4/18/2021 Pennebaker Dr Devante Bell 28 Gunshot CBA Carl Munford 15 5/9/2021 Florence Avenue Mar'Quevion Leach 17 Gunshot Open 16 6/8/2021 Hedgewood Ct Shon Davis 28 Gunshot Open 17 6/9/2021 Winchester Rd Ali Robinson 43 Gunshot CBA Kamond Taylor 18 6/17/2021 Winnie St Jocko Green 38 Gunshot CBA Danzell Cruse 19 6/19/2021 W. Short St Raymar Webb 30 Gunshot Warrants Brandon Dockery 20 7/4/2021 Danielle Ln Shaquille Newby 27 Gunshot Open 21 7/4/2021 Danielle Ln Tyler Sandusky 26 Gunshot Open 22 7/20/2021 Lancelot Ln Daymarcus Williams 14 Gunshot CBA *Juvenile Suspect* 23 8/2/2021 Delong Road Jamar Patterson Jr 22 Gunshot Open 24 8/13/2021 Ohio Street Cameron Martin 27 Gunshot Open 25 8/22/2021 S. Broadway Jaimesha S. Beattie 22 Gunshot Open 26 8/22/2021 Pemberton Ln Berkley Parks 17 Gunshot CBA *Juvenile Suspect* 27 9/3/2021 Chestnut St Tony Lyvers 41 Gunshot Open 28 10/5/2021 Liberty Rd Jayontai A. McCann 23 Gunshot Open 29 10/13/2021 Centre Parkway Andre L. Holloway 45 Gunshot Open 30 10/25/2021 W. Short Street John T. Abner 31 Blunt Force CBA Benjamin Call 31 10/28/2021 Breathitt Ave Sergio Villarados 17 Gunshot Open 32 11/5/2021 W. Main St Jesse Jimenez 32 Gunshot CBA Robert Okorley 33 11/20/2021 E. Fifth St Pietro Swain 28 Gunshot Open 34 11/25/2021 Sandalwood Dr Eric Sweat 36 Gunshot CBA *Juvenile Suspect* 35 12/7/2021 Hill St Ramon Pennie 51 Gunshot Open 36 12/17/2021 Oak Hill Dr Devon Sandusky 21 Gunshot CBA Deonte Carter 37 12/30/2021 Betsy Ln Larry Perez-Morales 14 Gunshot Open Information about this chart All victim names are released by the Fayette County Coroner's Office Click on the address and/or suspect name for the most recent press release about the case The Lexington Police Department does not name juvenile suspects CBA = Cleared by Arrest; CBE = Cleared by Exception Investigations determined to be unfounded / justifiable homicides are not included on this list Suspects are named when investigators obtain a warrant or an arrest is made Does not include the judicial outcome of a case 2020 homicides No. Date Location Victim's Name Age Cause of Death Status of Case Suspect(s) 1 1/8/2020 Rambling Creek Dr Gregory Miller, Jr. 20 Gunshot CBA Jaquan St. Louis 2 1/31/2020 Lima Drive La Monte Sellers 31 Gunshot Open 3 2/10/2020 Alexandria Drive Elaine Castillo 33 Sharp trauma CBA Kevin Velasco-Gomez 4 2/11/2020 Nancy Hanks Rd Antwan Roberts 15 Gunshot Open 5 2/20/2020 Shaftsbury Rd Crystal Howard 35 Gunshot CBA Joseph Gonzalez 6 3/3/2020 Fairmont Ct Robert Clay 63 -- CBA Quentin Love 7 3/6/2020 Smith St Larry Rose, Jr. 44 Gunshot CBA Seantel Watson 8 3/29/2020 Second Street Zion Clark 20 Gunshot Open 9 4/5/2020 Rand Ave Richard B. Williams 54 Gunshot Open 10 4/21/2020 Hedgewood Court Ladonya Bennett 16 Gunshot CBA *juvenile suspect* 11 5/27/2020 Augusta Drive Lowell A. Johnson 55 Gunshot CBA *juvenile suspect* 12 5/28/2020 Augusta Drive Bruce Trice 58 Gunshot CBA *juvenile suspect* 13 6/10/2020 Martha Court Eugenia Keens 48 Blunt force trauma CBA Jacquetta Perry 14 6/16/2020 Atiya Place Gregory L. Fisher 30 Gunshot CBA Cameren Fisher 15 6/23/2020 Newtown Court James A. White 40 Gunshot CBA Dontate Burruss Darica Lynem 16 7/11/2020 Chestnut Street Darrell Price 31 Gunshot CBA Anthony King 17 7/27/2020 Speigle Street Miguel Diaz 19 Gunshot CBA Isaac Suastequi 18 7/27/2020 Warwick Court Karen Rae Greenup 57 Trauma CBA James Aubrey 19 7/28/2020 N. Broadway Angel Marcum 26 Gunshot CBE 20 8/16/2020 Newtown Pike Mykel Waide 18 Gunshot Open 21 8/21/2020 McClain Drive Micheal Proctor 17 Gunshot CBA *juvenile suspect* 22 8/23/2020 Nicholasville Rd Kenneth Bottoms, Jr. 17 Gunshot CBA Xavier Hardin 23 8/23/2020 Centre Pkwy Patrick Stover 19 Gunshot CBA Jarred Lockard 24 8/24/2020 Lindy Ln Aaron Leach 32 Gunshot CBA Jameel Cox 25 8/31/2020 Majestic View Walk Sabel Jallow 56 -- CBA Dalton Carpenter 26 9/29/2020 Larkwood Drive Daniel Nantz 38 Gunshot Warrant Dana Caldwell 27 10/2/2020 Victoria Way Ava Creech 62 -- CBA William P. Brown 28 10/21/2020 Fifth Street Alice Carter 82 Gunshot Open 29 11/05/2020 Nicholasville Rd Jermaine Barber 23 Gunshot CBA Jessin Stateman 30 11/20/2020 Wrenn Court Akeem Lyvers 24 Gunshot CBA Raekwon Burse 31 11/20/2020 Winchester Rd DeShawn Jimerson 37 Gunshot CBA Theodrick Tillman 32 11/29/2020 Payne St Madilyn Grisham 20 Gunshot Open 33 12/23/2020 Centre Pkwy Ocean Moore 9 months CBA Sammantha Moore 34 12/28/2020 Woodhill Drive Jaquis Ray 20 Gunshot CBA Caelan Gills Information about this chart All victim names are released by the Fayette County Coroner's Office Click on the address and/or suspect name for the most recent press release about the case The Lexington Police Department does not name juvenile suspects CBA = Cleared by Arrest; CBE = Cleared by Exception Investigations determined to be unfounded / justifiable homicides are not included on this list Suspects are named when investigators obtain a warrant or an arrest is made Does not include the judicial outcome of a case
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https://www.mourning.com/obituaries/Jerry-Marvin-Roberts%3FobId%3D31529452
en
Martin & Castille Funeral Home
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Martin & Castille Funeral Home in Lafayette, Scott, LA provides funeral, memorial, aftercare, pre-planning, and cremation services... Learn More
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https://www.mourning.com:443/
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https://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/california/journalist-biographer-jerry-roberts-talks-feinsteins-legacy/3330510/
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Journalist, biographer Jerry Roberts talks Feinstein's legacy
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2023-09-29T17:40:03
NBC Bay Area’s Janelle Wang speaks with journalist and Dianne Feinstein’s biographer Jerry Roberts on Feinstein’s stories and legacy following her death.
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NBC Bay Area
https://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/california/journalist-biographer-jerry-roberts-talks-feinsteins-legacy/3330510/
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerry_Roberts
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Jerry Roberts
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2005-12-27T20:04:10+00:00
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerry_Roberts
British businessman and wartime codebreaker (1920–2014) For the American football player and coach, see Jerry Roberts (American football). Problems playing this file? See media help. Captain Raymond C. "Jerry" Roberts MBE (18 November 1920 – 25 March 2014) was a British wartime codebreaker and businessman. During the Second World War, Roberts worked at the Government Code and Cypher School (GC&CS) at Bletchley Park from 1941 to 1945. He was a leading codebreaker and linguist, who worked on the Lorenz cipher system – Hitler's most top-level code.[1] Jerry Roberts was born in Wembley, London. His father Herbert, had trained as a pharmacist, but worked for Lloyds Bank head office in the City for the rest of his 40-year career, since coming to London from Wales in 1915. His mother, Leticia, was a pianist and an organist who played in the local chapel. He was educated at Latymer Upper School, Hammersmith in London 1933–39 and University College London 1939–41.[2] He gained a degree in German and French.[2] War service [edit] Early in the Second World War, his tutor at University College London, Prof. Leonard Willoughby, who had worked during the First World War in Room 40, the main cipher-breaking unit of that time,[3] recommended the twenty-year-old Roberts as a German linguist to the Government Code and Cypher School at Bletchley Park where he was interviewed and accepted by Colonel John Tiltman as a codebreaker and linguist.[2] Roberts was one of the four founding members of the Testery at Bletchley Park; the other two senior cryptanalysts were Major Denis Oswald and Captain Peter Ericsson, whilst head of the unit, Major Ralph Tester, was a linguist but not cryptanalyst. The Testery was tasked with breaking the Lorenz cipher code, named "Tunny" by the British. This was the Nazis' highest-level communications cipher system, which was used for communications between the Germany Army High Command in Berlin and their Army Commands in the field throughout occupied Europe, some of which were signed "Adolf Hitler, Führer". The cipher was Adolf Hitler's most secret code system and had 12 wheels against well-known 3 wheel Enigma; it was declassified in 2002, compared with Enigma in the 1970s. Roberts worked in the Testery until the end of the war, by which time it had grown to nine cryptanalysts, a team of 24 ATS women, and a total staff of 118. Work was organised in three shifts working round the clock. Roberts was one of the three shift-leaders[5] For the first year, the messages that were broken by hand amounted to 1.5 million pieces. The Newmanry, which became active in July 1943, developed and used machine methods to help speed up one stage – breaking of the chi-wheels but the psi-wheels and motor-wheels were still broken by hand in the Testery. From mid-1943 onwards, the Testery is credited with breaking over 90% of Lorenz traffic. Tens of thousands of Lorenz messages were intercepted by the British and broken at Bletchley Park by Roberts and his fellow code-breakers in the Testery. These messages contained much vital insight into top-level German thinking and planning. Tunny provided vital information that changed the course of the war in Europe and saved tens of millions of lives at critical junctures – such as the Battle of Kursk in the Soviet Union, and D-Day. General Dwight Eisenhower (later the U.S President 1953–61) said after the war "Bletchley decrypts shortened the war by at least 2 years".[2] Post-war [edit] After the war, Roberts was a member of the War Crimes Investigation Unit. There he employed his fluency in the German and French languages while working in the British Zone, interviewing witnesses and victims for various cases and taking legal statements from them for use in court. Thereafter, from 1948, Roberts pursued a new career in market research for 50 years. He initially worked for Market Information Services (MIS), a leading market research firm, in London. Between 1954 and 1959 he was based in Caracas, Venezuela, where he set up the first general research company in South America, learned to speak fluent Spanish and developed the company DATOS. Roberts spent 1960 in New York as a manager representing a major international advertising agency (CPV). Then, from 1961 to 1969, he was based in London as board director of M.I.S. In 1970, Roberts formed his own market research companies (one for the UK, one for the rest of Europe). These were sold to GfK NOP (National Opinion Polls) in 1993. He continued working as a consultant to NOP assisting with multi-country studies until he was nearly 80. He used his skill in languages in his work, pioneering multi-country market research studies across Europe for leading UK and multinational companies. He carried out market research for a wide range of leading UK and international clients in the fields of product marketing, public opinion and media research. His clients included British Gas, Reebok trainers, DuPont Teflon, Lycra, American Airlines, Chrysler cars, Holiday Inn hotels and many others. In retirement [edit] Roberts was the last survivor of the nine cryptanalysts who worked on Lorenz cipher. For the last six years of his life, he campaigned for proper recognition for Bletchley Park's "4Ts" — for his colleagues in the Testery, and especially for its three "heroes": Alan Turing who broke the naval Enigma, Bill Tutte who broke the Lorenz cipher to help shorten the war, and Tommy Flowers who designed and built the Colossus, the world's first large-scale electronic, digital, programmable computer — to vastly speed up the chi-wheel stage of the breaking of Tunny traffic. The other five stages of the work were performed by hand in the Testery by codebreakers and support staff. Roberts was honoured several times for his achievements. In July 2011, he was presented to Queen Elizabeth II at Bletchley Park.[7] Roberts was featured in a BBC Timewatch Special titled Code-Breakers: Bletchley Park's Lost Heroes,[8] first broadcast on BBC Two on 25 October 2011. In 2013, he received an MBE New Years Honours List and awarded a University College London Honorary Fellowship. The same year, he was also honoured with an investiture stamp, which is available through Bletchley Park Post Office.[9] Roberts accepted all of these accolades as acknowledgment not of his own accomplishments, but of the work of his teammates at Bletchley Park, most of whom died unrecognised, before Tunny was declassified.[10] Roberts' autobiography was published in March 2017, titled Lorenz: Breaking Hitler's top secret code at Bletchley-Park.[11] Notes [edit] References [edit]
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https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0574219/
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"Alle lieben Raymond" Robert's Wedding (TV Episode 2003)
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null
[]
2003-05-19T00:00:00
Robert's Wedding: Directed by Jerry Zaks. With Ray Romano, Patricia Heaton, Brad Garrett, Madylin Sweeten. Robert and Amy finally get married. But it's not the wedding they expected.
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IMDb
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0574219/
[Marie has given a speech about pushing Robert into marriage] Amy MacDougall: [Turning to Debra] Did she do this to you?
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Jerry Roberts on LinkedIn: Such an enjoyable event, it was fun to watch so many talented colleagues…
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[ "Jerry Roberts" ]
2024-02-15T03:12:33.588000+00:00
Such an enjoyable event, it was fun to watch so many talented colleagues at Regeneron.
en
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https://www.linkedin.com/posts/jerry-roberts-794b6643_such-an-enjoyable-event-it-was-fun-to-watch-activity-7163731786550755328-Q9A7
🌟 Impressive Digital Day in Rotkreuz! 🌟 I had the privilege of attending the Digital Day in Rotkreuz this week, and I must say, it was an incredible experience! The program was complete, and the schedule was well-organized. Digital Day 2024 at Rotkreuz was an inspiring gathering of industry leaders, experts, and enthusiasts. We explored the latest trends, technologies, and opportunities to leverage the power of digital in our ever-evolving world. The event moderated by amazing Dr. Heiko Visarius featured engaging keynotes, interactive activities, and insightful sessions: One of the highlights was the keynote by Prof. em. Dr. rer. nat. Lutz Jäncke from the University of Zurich. His insights into the transition from the Stone Age to the digital world were truly fascinating. Another captivating keynote focused on the future of Oncology Care. Matthias Bodmer , Healthcare Solutions Lead. We also had the pleasure of hearing from Paul Strijbos, Senior Principal Neurotech Innovation Leader, who discussed the development and use of fit-for-purpose digital health technology. If this topic sparks your interest, be sure to stay tuned for more information. Last but not least, Dr. Caroline Lustenberger from ETHZ and Herencia delivered a captivating keynote on Sleep Research and its applications in Alzheimer's and Cardiovascular diseases. If this piques your curiosity, you can find more details on our program subsite. One highlight was the presence of Thomas H. Zurbuchen , Ex NASA Associate Administrator, who shared invaluable lessons on navigating high-risk environments and drawing parallels between space exploration and healthcare advancements. 🌌 The focus and concept of the Digital Day were truly inspiring. We are in a time where digital technology is evolving rapidly, and by discussing these topics, we are paving the way for innovative solutions. It's an opportunity to make a digital impact, upskill ourselves, and create value for Roche. #DigitalDay2024 #DigitalInnovation #RocheImpact #DigitalDay #Innovation #Roche #Networking #Rotkreuz As we orbit into a new year, we reflect on the incredible journey we've travelled together. 🌟Some of the Past Year's Highlights: 💠The historic size of the Slovak Space Ecosystem: the largest-ever space ecosystem in Slovakia, with growing engagement and interest in European & international collaboration. 💠Emerging Space Conference & European Industry Summit: Bringing together hundreds of professionals from around the world, particularly advancing collaboration between the emerging and well-established space ecosystems of Europe. 💠Spaceport Incubator: The successful 2nd batch of our incubation program led to the creation of seven innovative projects. The third batch is coming soon! 💠Spaceport Hackathon: Talented teams tackling challenges related to development aid, contributing fresh ideas and solutions, and showcasing the broad use of satellite data. 💠Eastern Slovak Space Cluster: Start of creation of a new cluster designed to attract talent and connect space-focused companies, scientists, institutions, and investors. None of these would have been possible without the fruitful cooperation with our local and international partners. 🥂 Here's to another year of innovation! #happynewyear Slovak Investment and Trade Development Agency 📢 We are thrilled to announce our partners for the Space and Global Health Hackathon organized by the Geneva Digital Health Hub (gdhub) and the European Space Agency - ESA | 31 May - 1 June, 2024 | Geneva, Switzerland. 1️⃣ United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs (UNOOSA) : the United Nations office promoting international cooperation in the peaceful use and exploration of space. 2️⃣ Space and Global Health network (https://sgh.network/) : promoting effective collaboration on space and global health issues among Member States, United Nations entities, other international organizations and relevant actors. This unique opportunity ensures engagement with ALL space agencies worldwide on the health theme. 3️⃣ Space Generation Advisory Council : The largest global network for students and young professionals interested in the space industry. 4️⃣ Group on Earth Observations (GEO): a global collaboration dedicated to understanding the Earth in all its complexity. 5️⃣ Open Geneva : an association that promotes and stimulates open innovation by bringing together a large community of over 4000 innovators, bringing their ideas to life, communicating their projects and supporting their development. 🏃🏼♂️ Get ready to innovate with us. 🖇 More information here: https://lnkd.in/dJJHv9_U #Space #GlobalHealth #Hackathon #DigitalHealth 🐉🎉 Happy Lunar New Year of the Dragon! 🎉🐉 As we embrace the vibrant traditions and cultural celebrations of the Lunar New Year, the powerful symbolism behind the Year of the Dragon represents a time of strength, wisdom, growth and transformation. In the spirit of renewal and growth, as a "disruptor and visionary" as I've been called lately (yes, I'm taking on these titles as a badge of honour! 😁), I'm thrilled to share that alongside celebrating the Lunar New Year, we're also embarking on a journey of transformation in healthcare. Just as the dragon symbolizes vitality and resilience, our commitment to revolutionizing healthcare, echoes these qualities. 🚀 Today, we're not just marking a new lunar cycle; we're also training our very own "healthcare dragon" – a metaphor for our dedication to innovation, collaboration, and excellence in healthcare information management. Just like taming a dragon requires skill, patience, and courage, navigating the complexities of healthcare demands a similar approach. Together, we're cultivating a culture of continuous learning and improvement, where every challenge is an opportunity to soar to new heights. Whether it's embracing cutting-edge technologies, fostering interdisciplinary collaboration, or championing patient-centric care, our aim is clear: to empower individuals and communities to lead healthier, happier lives. 🌟 MY911 Inc. (Canada) wishes you a new year of amazing health, prosperity, good fortune, and boundless possibilities! #LunarNewYear #YearOfTheDragon #HealthcareInnovation #Transformation #Empowerment #awareness #peaceofmind #convenience #emergencypreparedness #healthfirst To celebrate the Lunar New Year, we've asked a couple of teammates to share their traditions with us, namely, Natalie Lam and Anastasia Krecklow. Natalie, Senior Analyst of Investments, explains, "The day consists of everyone passing around red envelopes to spread good luck and fortune. Typically, the whole family wears red to represent good fortune and success. Family traditions consist of eating vegetarian food, holding a tea ceremony for parents and grandparents, and spending the evening enjoying each other’s company." Anastasia, District Team Lead, recounts, "Ukrainians have a lot of superstitious beliefs about what actions bring luck to our lives and what actions can scare luck away. We always know the lunar symbols of the upcoming year. Modern Ukrainians believe having an item associated with the Lunar New Year animal will bring good luck to their homes." Read more: https://lnkd.in/gyJtrTyE Will you be celebrating the Lunar New Year? What traditions stand out to you? #lunarnewyear #TeamExtraSpace 🚨 [#Supporter2024 MedFIT] ⚗ The Tuscany Life Science Cluster - Toscana Life Sciences Foundation mission is to support, mantain and keep growing the Tuscany life science ecosystem in terms of innovation and business opportunity for all the regional stakeholders (research, companies, institutions, health system). 🚀 To this purpose, its actions aims to: • facilitate networking activities, animation, monitoring, stimulation of collaboration and the creation of partnerships • facilitate technology transfer and exploitation of research results; • stimulate and support the creation of innovative start-ups; • simplify the access to regional infrastructure, facilities and expertises for local and extra-regional players • support internationalization processes; • dialogue with institutions, at every level, to trasmit the needs of companies within the political and economic development of the sector; 🌟 The Cluster gather together all the main regional stakeholders (companies, universities, institutions), and it is managed by Fondazione Toscana Life Sciences 🎤 "As cluster we support the development of research and business opportunities for all the regional stakeholders involved in the life science field, one of the pillars of Tuscan economy"- Dr. Francesco Mazzini, cluster manager. 🔥 Values of Toscana Life Sciences Foundation: #ecosystem facilitator - #research as a value - #innovation mediator 📨 If you wish to join them as a partner, contact: Célestine Fillon - Yingjie WENG A very enjoyable afternoon at the Bisnow UK Life Sciences summer event yesterday with two very thought-provoking panel discussions (one of which was expertly moderated by my colleague Chris Xitsas!) It was interesting to hear from experts what the (current) key criteria are to create a successful life sciences cluster, including: access to teaching hospitals, academia, research institutions, transport links, affordable housing, power (and backup power) supply. The need for investment into the wider infrastructure for the players in UK life sciences to thrive is clearly a hot topic and it will be interesting to see what the new Labour government can promise (and deliver!) to encourage this. Some other key takeaways from the event: the influence of AI and data centres on the advances of UK life sciences and tech will be huge; it’s no longer “location location location” but more like “infrastructure infrastructure infrastructure” with a growing interest in areas outside the golden triangle (so don’t ignore the corridors that link Oxford and Cambridge to London); UK life sciences players need space - space to grow into, space to store, space to collaborate; and the main theme of the day was flexibility at all levels, from incubators to developers to landlords to investors, this is a growing and changing industry and what was important to occupiers even two years ago is different today. There is a real need for connection and collaboration within UK life sciences and tech to create thriving ecosystems. What a great way to start the week, with the huge privilege of attending and speaking at the Health from Space conference in Cannes, France. This conference in its 2nd year aims to bring these sectors closer together, discussing key opportunities in sectors like pharmaceutical, cosmetics, bioprinting and more, hearing about sector needs to drive innovation, new platform and engagement mechanism developments and common challenges. Well done to the organisers (Paul Kamoun, PhD and SpacePharma team), sponsors and speakers for an inspiring start to the day. Thank you to the speakers for your contribution this morning including: Josef Aschbacher, Audrey Berthier, Francoise Bruneteaux, Massimo C Comparini, Daniel Neuenschwander, Toni Tolker-Nielsen, Lisa Alter, Molly K. Mulligan, PhD, Azita Djalilvand, M.D., Yossi Yamin, Lucia Zaccardi, Alexandre Mencik, Isabelle Castiel-Higounenc, Magda CARRASCO, Pierre Diebolt, Didier Bensadoun – looking forward to the afternoon! You can view the whole agenda here: https://lnkd.in/eCB2wRQD #healthfromspace Don't forget there is the ESA BSGN | Business in Space Growth Network working to bridge sectors together https://bsgn.esa.int/ as well other key mechanisms. In my talk I mentioned the UK will be hosting for the first time the ELGRA Conference (3-6th September 2024) - the call for talks to this International Space & Gravity Related Research conference is now live until the 11th April 2024 Link to Call for talks panel here: https://lnkd.in/eamaZ4_E Link to ELGRA (European Low Gravity Research Association) here: https://lnkd.in/eEYVEFRX If you are looking to engage the UK more, the UK Space Agency, Satellite Applications Catapult, working with ecosystems across the UK, has set up the UK Space Ecosystem landing page. Learn more about this here: https://lnkd.in/ervejMRN or drop me a note. Finally I mentioned the position papers launched to support the engagement and understanding between space with other sectors, these are below Position Paper: Why Space? The opportunity for Health and Life Science Innovation (available to download, published 2021): https://lnkd.in/gRgpZqJp Position Paper: Why Space? The opportunity for Materials Science and Innovation (available to download, published 2024): https://lnkd.in/ei5uD2Df
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Port Huron
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Port Huron Michigan News - thetimesherald.com is the home page of Port Huron Michigan with in depth and updated Port Huron local news. Stay informed with both Port Huron Michigan news as well as headlines and stories from around the world.
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Times Herald
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‘I want it to exist always’: City to celebrate River Walk’s enduring promise
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https://www.vvmf.org/Wall-of-Faces/43775/JERRY-L-ROBERTS/
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THE WALL OF FACES
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2018-11-09T16:10:33+00:00
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Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund
https://www.vvmf.org/Wall-of-Faces/43775/JERRY-L-ROBERTS/
The Vietnam Veterans Memorial stands as a symbol of America's honor and recognition of the men and women who served and sacrificed their lives in the Vietnam War. The vision of VVMF is to ensure a society in which all who have served and sacrificed in our nation's Armed Forces are properly honored and receive the recognition they justly deserve. The mission of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund (VVMF) is to honor and preserve the legacy of service and educate all generations about the impact of the Vietnam War. Your donation to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund will help expand our mission to honor, educate and heal. Together, we can make sure our heroes will get the reverence they deserve and the stories and sacrifices of our heroes will never be forgotten.
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https://www.facebook.com/jerry.roberts.39589149/
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Facebook
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Sieh dir auf Facebook Beiträge, Fotos und vieles mehr an.
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https://arizonawildcats.com/sports/football/roster/jerry-roberts/14769
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University of Arizona Athletics
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Jerry Roberts (48) Linebacker - 2022: Started all 12 games at MIKE linebacker… Made 78 total tackles which was second on the team… Fourth on the team with 34 solo
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University of Arizona Athletics
https://arizonawildcats.com/sports/football/roster/jerry-roberts/14769
2022 Football Roster Choose a Player: Isaiah Willhoite / Arizona Athletics 48 Jerry Roberts Position Linebacker Height 6-2 Class Redshirt Senior Hometown Erie, Pa. High School Cathedral Prep Instagram robertsjerry Bio Related Stats Historical Biography 2022: Started all 12 games at MIKE linebacker… Made 78 total tackles which was second on the team… Fourth on the team with 34 solo tackles… First on the team with 44 assisted tackles… Posted 2.5 tackles for loss, one pass breakup, one fumble recovery, and one forced fumble… Has made 112 total tackles including 6.5-career tackles for loss, and 1.5 sacks in 20 games with the Wildcats. 2021: Appeared in nine games with six starts at the Mike linebacker position...Tallied 32 total tackles, 3.5 tackles for loss, and one sack...Logged a career-high 10 tackles and 1.5 TFL against Utah...First career sack came against Washington...Major contributor to an Arizona defensive unit that ranked second in the Pac-12 with an average of 5.8 tackles for loss per game. Before Arizona: Played 20 games at Bowling Green from 2018-20 … Started all five games for the Falcons in 2020 … Was third on the team with 32 tackles, adding one tackle for loss … Had a season-best 10 tackles at Toledo. High School: Named all-state and to District 10 All-Star team following junior and senior seasons … As a senior, made 90 tackles (11 for loss) and hauled in two interceptions … As a junior, posted 110 tackles (13 for loss) with another two interceptions … Scored three defensive touchdowns … Helped lead 2016 team to 14-0 record and PIAA Class 4A state championship … Had team high 12 tackles (3.5 for loss) in title game. Personal: The son of Jerry Roberts and Tameki Tarver … Has two brothers, Jyree and Tarion and one sister, Tais … Is cousins with Pro Football Hall of Famer Ty Law. Related Content There is no related content available. Related Headlines Related Press Clips Related Videos Related Photos Statistics Season: 2022 2021 2022 Season Statistics Season Statistics No statistics available for this season. Career Statistics There are no statistics available for this player. Historical Player Information 48 2021Redshirt Junior Linebacker 6'2" 226 lbs 48 48 2022Redshirt Senior Linebacker 6'2" 230 lbs 48
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https://www.lemleyfuneral.com/memorials/jerry-roberts/2915497/share-with-friend.php
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Jerry Roberts Share With Friend - Atkins, Arkansas
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Jerry D. Roberts, 67, of Atkins, passed away Thursday, May 4, 2017, at the Atkins Nursing and Care Center. He was born June 9, 1949, in Pope County, son of the late Kenneth and Ima Faye Lewallen Roberts. He was preceded in death by his parents; and two grandchildren, Mickey Ketchum, Jr., and Sally Ann Ketchum. He is survived by a son, Jeff Roberts; daughter, Becky and husband Mickey Ketchum; 3 grandchildren, Bridgett Ketchum, Azzy Ketchum, and Malachi Ketchum; brother, Kenny Roberts and wife Kay; and 2 sisters, Sue Brents and Peggy Britton. A memorial visitation will be held from 5:00-7:00 PM, Monday, May 8, 2017, at Lemley Chapel in Atkins. A private family burial will be held in Shiloh Cemetery at a later date. The family wishes to extend a special thank you to the nurses and staff of Atkins Nursing and Care Center and Kinder Hospice Care. In lieu of flowers, memorials in his honor may be made to the Jerry D. Roberts memorial expense fund, c/o Lemley Funeral Service, P.O. Box 126, Atkins, AR, 72823. Online obituary and condolences are available at www.lemleyfuneral.com.
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Message One Hello *Friend's Name*, I'm sending you this notice to let you know that our friend Jerry Roberts has passed away. If you wish to sign the online guestbook and leave your condolences please follow this link. Sincerely, *YOUR NAME* Message Two Hello *Friend's Name*, It is with deep regret that I'm e-mailing to inform you that Jerry Roberts has passed away. If you would like to view the funeral details and leave your words of condolence please click here. Sincerely, *YOUR NAME*
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Jerry Roberts on LinkedIn: Such an enjoyable event, it was fun to watch so many talented colleagues…
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2024-02-15T03:12:33.588000+00:00
Such an enjoyable event, it was fun to watch so many talented colleagues at Regeneron.
en
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🌟 Impressive Digital Day in Rotkreuz! 🌟 I had the privilege of attending the Digital Day in Rotkreuz this week, and I must say, it was an incredible experience! The program was complete, and the schedule was well-organized. Digital Day 2024 at Rotkreuz was an inspiring gathering of industry leaders, experts, and enthusiasts. We explored the latest trends, technologies, and opportunities to leverage the power of digital in our ever-evolving world. The event moderated by amazing Dr. Heiko Visarius featured engaging keynotes, interactive activities, and insightful sessions: One of the highlights was the keynote by Prof. em. Dr. rer. nat. Lutz Jäncke from the University of Zurich. His insights into the transition from the Stone Age to the digital world were truly fascinating. Another captivating keynote focused on the future of Oncology Care. Matthias Bodmer , Healthcare Solutions Lead. We also had the pleasure of hearing from Paul Strijbos, Senior Principal Neurotech Innovation Leader, who discussed the development and use of fit-for-purpose digital health technology. If this topic sparks your interest, be sure to stay tuned for more information. Last but not least, Dr. Caroline Lustenberger from ETHZ and Herencia delivered a captivating keynote on Sleep Research and its applications in Alzheimer's and Cardiovascular diseases. If this piques your curiosity, you can find more details on our program subsite. One highlight was the presence of Thomas H. Zurbuchen , Ex NASA Associate Administrator, who shared invaluable lessons on navigating high-risk environments and drawing parallels between space exploration and healthcare advancements. 🌌 The focus and concept of the Digital Day were truly inspiring. We are in a time where digital technology is evolving rapidly, and by discussing these topics, we are paving the way for innovative solutions. It's an opportunity to make a digital impact, upskill ourselves, and create value for Roche. #DigitalDay2024 #DigitalInnovation #RocheImpact #DigitalDay #Innovation #Roche #Networking #Rotkreuz As we orbit into a new year, we reflect on the incredible journey we've travelled together. 🌟Some of the Past Year's Highlights: 💠The historic size of the Slovak Space Ecosystem: the largest-ever space ecosystem in Slovakia, with growing engagement and interest in European & international collaboration. 💠Emerging Space Conference & European Industry Summit: Bringing together hundreds of professionals from around the world, particularly advancing collaboration between the emerging and well-established space ecosystems of Europe. 💠Spaceport Incubator: The successful 2nd batch of our incubation program led to the creation of seven innovative projects. The third batch is coming soon! 💠Spaceport Hackathon: Talented teams tackling challenges related to development aid, contributing fresh ideas and solutions, and showcasing the broad use of satellite data. 💠Eastern Slovak Space Cluster: Start of creation of a new cluster designed to attract talent and connect space-focused companies, scientists, institutions, and investors. None of these would have been possible without the fruitful cooperation with our local and international partners. 🥂 Here's to another year of innovation! #happynewyear Slovak Investment and Trade Development Agency 📢 We are thrilled to announce our partners for the Space and Global Health Hackathon organized by the Geneva Digital Health Hub (gdhub) and the European Space Agency - ESA | 31 May - 1 June, 2024 | Geneva, Switzerland. 1️⃣ United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs (UNOOSA) : the United Nations office promoting international cooperation in the peaceful use and exploration of space. 2️⃣ Space and Global Health network (https://sgh.network/) : promoting effective collaboration on space and global health issues among Member States, United Nations entities, other international organizations and relevant actors. This unique opportunity ensures engagement with ALL space agencies worldwide on the health theme. 3️⃣ Space Generation Advisory Council : The largest global network for students and young professionals interested in the space industry. 4️⃣ Group on Earth Observations (GEO): a global collaboration dedicated to understanding the Earth in all its complexity. 5️⃣ Open Geneva : an association that promotes and stimulates open innovation by bringing together a large community of over 4000 innovators, bringing their ideas to life, communicating their projects and supporting their development. 🏃🏼♂️ Get ready to innovate with us. 🖇 More information here: https://lnkd.in/dJJHv9_U #Space #GlobalHealth #Hackathon #DigitalHealth 🐉🎉 Happy Lunar New Year of the Dragon! 🎉🐉 As we embrace the vibrant traditions and cultural celebrations of the Lunar New Year, the powerful symbolism behind the Year of the Dragon represents a time of strength, wisdom, growth and transformation. In the spirit of renewal and growth, as a "disruptor and visionary" as I've been called lately (yes, I'm taking on these titles as a badge of honour! 😁), I'm thrilled to share that alongside celebrating the Lunar New Year, we're also embarking on a journey of transformation in healthcare. Just as the dragon symbolizes vitality and resilience, our commitment to revolutionizing healthcare, echoes these qualities. 🚀 Today, we're not just marking a new lunar cycle; we're also training our very own "healthcare dragon" – a metaphor for our dedication to innovation, collaboration, and excellence in healthcare information management. Just like taming a dragon requires skill, patience, and courage, navigating the complexities of healthcare demands a similar approach. Together, we're cultivating a culture of continuous learning and improvement, where every challenge is an opportunity to soar to new heights. Whether it's embracing cutting-edge technologies, fostering interdisciplinary collaboration, or championing patient-centric care, our aim is clear: to empower individuals and communities to lead healthier, happier lives. 🌟 MY911 Inc. (Canada) wishes you a new year of amazing health, prosperity, good fortune, and boundless possibilities! #LunarNewYear #YearOfTheDragon #HealthcareInnovation #Transformation #Empowerment #awareness #peaceofmind #convenience #emergencypreparedness #healthfirst To celebrate the Lunar New Year, we've asked a couple of teammates to share their traditions with us, namely, Natalie Lam and Anastasia Krecklow. Natalie, Senior Analyst of Investments, explains, "The day consists of everyone passing around red envelopes to spread good luck and fortune. Typically, the whole family wears red to represent good fortune and success. Family traditions consist of eating vegetarian food, holding a tea ceremony for parents and grandparents, and spending the evening enjoying each other’s company." Anastasia, District Team Lead, recounts, "Ukrainians have a lot of superstitious beliefs about what actions bring luck to our lives and what actions can scare luck away. We always know the lunar symbols of the upcoming year. Modern Ukrainians believe having an item associated with the Lunar New Year animal will bring good luck to their homes." Read more: https://lnkd.in/gyJtrTyE Will you be celebrating the Lunar New Year? What traditions stand out to you? #lunarnewyear #TeamExtraSpace 🚨 [#Supporter2024 MedFIT] ⚗ The Tuscany Life Science Cluster - Toscana Life Sciences Foundation mission is to support, mantain and keep growing the Tuscany life science ecosystem in terms of innovation and business opportunity for all the regional stakeholders (research, companies, institutions, health system). 🚀 To this purpose, its actions aims to: • facilitate networking activities, animation, monitoring, stimulation of collaboration and the creation of partnerships • facilitate technology transfer and exploitation of research results; • stimulate and support the creation of innovative start-ups; • simplify the access to regional infrastructure, facilities and expertises for local and extra-regional players • support internationalization processes; • dialogue with institutions, at every level, to trasmit the needs of companies within the political and economic development of the sector; 🌟 The Cluster gather together all the main regional stakeholders (companies, universities, institutions), and it is managed by Fondazione Toscana Life Sciences 🎤 "As cluster we support the development of research and business opportunities for all the regional stakeholders involved in the life science field, one of the pillars of Tuscan economy"- Dr. Francesco Mazzini, cluster manager. 🔥 Values of Toscana Life Sciences Foundation: #ecosystem facilitator - #research as a value - #innovation mediator 📨 If you wish to join them as a partner, contact: Célestine Fillon - Yingjie WENG A very enjoyable afternoon at the Bisnow UK Life Sciences summer event yesterday with two very thought-provoking panel discussions (one of which was expertly moderated by my colleague Chris Xitsas!) It was interesting to hear from experts what the (current) key criteria are to create a successful life sciences cluster, including: access to teaching hospitals, academia, research institutions, transport links, affordable housing, power (and backup power) supply. The need for investment into the wider infrastructure for the players in UK life sciences to thrive is clearly a hot topic and it will be interesting to see what the new Labour government can promise (and deliver!) to encourage this. Some other key takeaways from the event: the influence of AI and data centres on the advances of UK life sciences and tech will be huge; it’s no longer “location location location” but more like “infrastructure infrastructure infrastructure” with a growing interest in areas outside the golden triangle (so don’t ignore the corridors that link Oxford and Cambridge to London); UK life sciences players need space - space to grow into, space to store, space to collaborate; and the main theme of the day was flexibility at all levels, from incubators to developers to landlords to investors, this is a growing and changing industry and what was important to occupiers even two years ago is different today. There is a real need for connection and collaboration within UK life sciences and tech to create thriving ecosystems. What a great way to start the week, with the huge privilege of attending and speaking at the Health from Space conference in Cannes, France. This conference in its 2nd year aims to bring these sectors closer together, discussing key opportunities in sectors like pharmaceutical, cosmetics, bioprinting and more, hearing about sector needs to drive innovation, new platform and engagement mechanism developments and common challenges. Well done to the organisers (Paul Kamoun, PhD and SpacePharma team), sponsors and speakers for an inspiring start to the day. Thank you to the speakers for your contribution this morning including: Josef Aschbacher, Audrey Berthier, Francoise Bruneteaux, Massimo C Comparini, Daniel Neuenschwander, Toni Tolker-Nielsen, Lisa Alter, Molly K. Mulligan, PhD, Azita Djalilvand, M.D., Yossi Yamin, Lucia Zaccardi, Alexandre Mencik, Isabelle Castiel-Higounenc, Magda CARRASCO, Pierre Diebolt, Didier Bensadoun – looking forward to the afternoon! You can view the whole agenda here: https://lnkd.in/eCB2wRQD #healthfromspace Don't forget there is the ESA BSGN | Business in Space Growth Network working to bridge sectors together https://bsgn.esa.int/ as well other key mechanisms. In my talk I mentioned the UK will be hosting for the first time the ELGRA Conference (3-6th September 2024) - the call for talks to this International Space & Gravity Related Research conference is now live until the 11th April 2024 Link to Call for talks panel here: https://lnkd.in/eamaZ4_E Link to ELGRA (European Low Gravity Research Association) here: https://lnkd.in/eEYVEFRX If you are looking to engage the UK more, the UK Space Agency, Satellite Applications Catapult, working with ecosystems across the UK, has set up the UK Space Ecosystem landing page. Learn more about this here: https://lnkd.in/ervejMRN or drop me a note. Finally I mentioned the position papers launched to support the engagement and understanding between space with other sectors, these are below Position Paper: Why Space? The opportunity for Health and Life Science Innovation (available to download, published 2021): https://lnkd.in/gRgpZqJp Position Paper: Why Space? The opportunity for Materials Science and Innovation (available to download, published 2024): https://lnkd.in/ei5uD2Df
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https://www.vvmf.org/Wall-of-Faces/43775/JERRY-L-ROBERTS/
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THE WALL OF FACES
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2018-11-09T16:10:33+00:00
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Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund
https://www.vvmf.org/Wall-of-Faces/43775/JERRY-L-ROBERTS/
The Vietnam Veterans Memorial stands as a symbol of America's honor and recognition of the men and women who served and sacrificed their lives in the Vietnam War. The vision of VVMF is to ensure a society in which all who have served and sacrificed in our nation's Armed Forces are properly honored and receive the recognition they justly deserve. The mission of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund (VVMF) is to honor and preserve the legacy of service and educate all generations about the impact of the Vietnam War. Your donation to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund will help expand our mission to honor, educate and heal. Together, we can make sure our heroes will get the reverence they deserve and the stories and sacrifices of our heroes will never be forgotten.
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https://www.edhat.com/news/what-does-das-williams-have-to-hide-supervisor-chickens-out-of-newsmakers-interview-again/
en
What Does Das Williams Have to Hide? Supervisor Chickens Out of Newsmakers Interview — Again
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[ "Edhat Staff", "Edhat Reader", "Jerry Roberts", "Joe DeLise" ]
2024-02-11T12:13:55-08:00
The greatest braggarts are usually the biggest cowards. - Jean-Jacques Rousseau
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edhat
https://www.edhat.com/news/what-does-das-williams-have-to-hide-supervisor-chickens-out-of-newsmakers-interview-again/
The greatest braggarts are usually the biggest cowards. – Jean-Jacques Rousseau At 7:58 p.m. on Thursday, Supervisor Das Williams sent a peculiar email, cancelling a long-scheduled appearance on Newsmakers TV — the second time this year the re-election candidate cut and ran from an interview at the last minute. We’ve been trying since 2024 began to get Williams to sit down and answer questions on camera about his record on the Board of Supervisors, as part of an ongoing series of conversations with candidates in key March 5 election races, in partnership with our colleague Josh Molina and his “Santa Barbara Talks” podcast. Williams, who’s seeking a third term as SB’s First District Supervisor, first agreed that he’d come on the show on Jan. 26. Two days before, however, his campaign manager called it off saying Das had “a family matter come up,” while agreeing to a makeup date of Feb. 9. Then last night came word, from no less a figure than the Great Man himself: not only was he standing us up again, but he’d decided not to come on at all. Because…something: I have a lot of respect for what you did at the News-Press. However, you do not appear to be able to be objective when it comes to my work in office, and you have made it clear to your audience that you disdain everything about me. I can’t pretend that this show engages in balanced journalism – which I deeply believe in, and think that deep down, you do too. I will be doing an energy efficient water heater inspection and trying to help someone who is losing their home find a new place to live during our scheduled time tomorrow, but I do not pretend it is merely a scheduling snafu. I don’t believe that appearing on the program is in service of the public good. I apologize for any inconvenience. Um, okay. Energy efficient water heater inspection, indeed. What is Das afraid of? Look, we stipulate that Newsmakers has been tough on Williams, not least for his epically disastrous county cannabis ordinance. It is the most brazenly, pro-industry such local law in California, which he cooked up in secret with a few lobbyist pals and credulous colleague Steve Lavignino, blindsiding local residents and dropping it like a noxious stink bomb on the good citizens of Carpinteria. It is also true, however, that an “objective” view of that policy debacle, along with other of his political misadventures, aligns more closely with our media watchdog perspective, than with the scornful, sneering, and triumphalist take peddled by the candidate and his posse of sycophants. (Secret teleological memo to Das: in looking for an “objective” view of yourself, it’s generally best not to bank on your own view of, you know, yourself). Consider: A career politician and policy shape shifter who’s been feeding at the public trough since 2003, Williams has not been subject to sustained, day-in-day-out coverage of his actions in office since 2006, when the morning paper melted down and began its long, slow slide to bankruptcy. Now, during a “campaign” without a single face-to-face forum with his challenger, Carp City Council member Roy Lee, Das blanches at the prospect of answering a few tough questions from truth-to-power journalists who’ve had the temerity to criticize him. Williams evidently is intimidated by the mere notion of speaking with a couple of interlocutors disinclined to accept at face value his glib political spin and overweening self-regard — unlike fellow local libs who’ve taken a few shots from the Newsmakers TV gang, but still graciously accepted invites to come on the show (viz. Salud Carbajal, Monique Limon, Gregg Hart, Laura Capps, Joan Hartmann, Eric Friedman, Meagan Harmon, Kristen Sneddon, and Oscar Gutierrez, to name a few) – let alone national stature lefties like Gov. Gavin Newsom, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg and Senator Bernie Sanders, all of whom have cheerfully and effectively braved hostile questioning on the ignoble Fox News Channel. As Williams seeks yet another term beyond more than two decades in office, he seems to think the election should be more coronation than campaign. “His basement strategy is not working out,” said one veteran local pol, granted anonymity because of Das’ well-earned reputation for retribution, referring to Joe Biden’s Covid campaign of 2020. “He still should (win big), but he just can’t believe everyone doesn’t bask in his wonderfulness.” Loyal readers and viewers may be sure that, despite this shameful retreat from accountability by a self-entitled local politician, Newsmakers will soldier on to publish analyses and commentaries on the issues about which we’d hoped to have a conversation with him — starting today, asJosh and the genial host discuss the Great Das Williams Wimp Out. Plus: All the latest from the Third District race, and decoding a mystifying ballot measure confronting city voters. All this, and more, right here, right now on Newsmakers TV.
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Jerry Roberts
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Jerry Roberts. Self: Science Britannica. Jerry Roberts was born on 18 November 1920 in Wembley, London, England, UK. He was married to Mei Li. He died on 25 March 2014 in Liphook, Hampshire, England, UK.
en
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IMDb
https://www.imdb.com/name/nm4817981/
He was awarded an MBE in the New Years Honours in December 2012 for the work he carried out in breaking the Germans' Enigma and Tunny codes at Bletchley Park during World War II. He is still campaigning for his colleagues Alan Turing, Bill Tutte and Tommy Flowers to be given posthumous honours.
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https://www.clarksvillefuneralhome.com/obituary/Jerry-Roberts
en
Obituary for Jerry Lynn Roberts
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[ "Clarksville Funeral Home" ]
2020-11-30T12:10:58-05:00
Obituary for Jerry Roberts | Clarksville, TX | Jerry Lynn Roberts, age 78, of Clarksville, passed... Learn More
en
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Obituary for Jerry Lynn Roberts | Clarksville Funeral Home
https://www.clarksvillefuneralhome.com/obituary/Jerry-Roberts
Jerry Lynn Roberts, age 78, of Clarksville, passed away, Sunday, November 29, 2020, at his residence. Jerry was born January 10, 1942, in Dimple to Earl and Velma Seay Roberts. Jerry was an accomplished woodworker. One of the last things he did was build solar powered lighted yard crosses for his friends and neighbors of Clarksville. Jerry also enjoyed building and updating houses. From time to time he was known for his gardening skills, especially his tomatoes. Jerry loved his children and grandchildren. His family was important to him and always looked forward to family gatherings at the Roberts' Place each year. He was a “one of a kind man” and will be missed by his friends and family. Preceding him in death are his parents; and his 8 brothers and sisters, Lucy Helen Huckabay, Bud Roberts, Kenneth Roberts, Mildred Caughman, Glenn Roberts, Doug Roberts, Judy Lamon and Sherry Ensor. The family will receive friends one hour before service time at Clarksville Funeral Home. Funeral services are set for 2:00 p.m. Thursday, December 3, 2020, in Lindeman Chapel of Clarksville Funeral Home with Rev. James Brown and Rev. Mark Williams officiating. Burial will follow in Annona Cemetery under the direction of Clarksville Funeral Home. Covid-19 regulations apply. Pallbearers are: Tim Lamon, Ray Lamon, Wyatt Barger, Matthew Roberts, Atlee Roberts and Keith Roberts. Honorary pallbearers are: Billy Mitchell, Johnny Jamison, Roy Maye, Mike Childress and Burl Moore. Survivors include his wife of 51 years, Kathy Roberts of Clarksville; his son, Ricky Roberts and wife, Leigh of Clarksville; his daughter, Tonya Lynn Barger and husband, Tim of DeKalb; his brother, Howard Roberts and wife, Karen of Dimple; 6 grandchildren, Mallory Reed, Bailey Barger, Wyatt Barger, Kayleigh Pettiet and husband, Devon, Jady Roberts and Atlee Roberts. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to New Haven Missionary Baptist Church, C/O Brenda Rodriguez 235 CR 2349, Clarksville Tx. 75426.
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https://www.randallroberts.com/obituaries/donald-mcpherson-1
en
Donald Raymond McPherson Obituary 2020
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[ "Randall & Roberts Funeral Home" ]
2022-04-29T18:30:53
Donald Raymond McPherson, 82, of Westfield, passed away on December 9, 2020 at Copper Trace in Westfield. He was born on March 19, 1938 in the village of Sewickley, a suburb of...
en
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Randall & Roberts Funeral Home
https://www.randallroberts.com/obituaries/donald-mcpherson-1
Donald Raymond McPherson, 82, of Westfield, passed away on December 9, 2020 at Copper Trace in Westfield. He was born on March 19, 1938 in the village of Sewickley, a suburb of Pittsburgh, PA, to Fosie (McMahan) and Richard C. McPherson, Sr. Don always described his hometown as an ideal place to grow up, a picturesque community, providing easy access by bike or on foot to explore the hills and valleys of the Allegheny Mountains, but still just a short trolley or bus ride to the sports and cultural activities of a major city. Don attended the University of Pittsburgh where he was a member of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. Throughout his life, Don was a devoted follower of Pitt's football and basketball teams, as well as the Pittsburgh Steelers and Pirates. Following his education at Pitt, Don accepted a management training position with the American Casualty Company and was transferred to Indianapolis Indiana in 1961. Although he had expressed an interest in an assignment to one of their "western branches" he had in mind something further west than Indianapolis. But it all worked out for the best. He was an avid golfer, achieving two holes in one (and a third one, unfortunately not witnessed by anyone else) and he developed a keen interest in the Civil War during his retirement and had traveled to Gettysburg, Antietam, Shiloh/Corinth and Harper's Ferry in recent years. He had many friends and acquaintances, was known for his sometimes corny one-liners, and was very proud of his Scottish heritage and had visited Scotland. After buying a house in Indianapolis, he became active in his neighborhood association, working to improve city services, which led to his committed involvement in local Republican politics, disappointing his mother who was a lifelong Democrat back in Pittsburgh. In 1967 Don was elected to the Indianapolis City Council and then was re-elected to the City-County Council in 1972 and 1976. In 1980, Don resigned from the Council seat to accept the position of Director of Administration in the cabinet of Mayor William H Hudnut III. In 1998, Don became the Director of the Aging and Disability Resource center at CICOA Aging & In-Home Solutions, a position he held until his retirement in July of 2011. Don's professional career also included Business Manager of Curtis Publishing Company, Publishing Director of Holiday Magazine (a national travel magazine) and General Manager of Commercial Laundry Company. He also provided consulting services to the Professional Fire Fighters Union and the Fraternal Order of Police under a professional service contract. Don was predeceased in death by his parents; a brother, Richard C. McPherson Jr.; and his Siberian Husky, Wilbur. Survivors include his ex-wives, Marga and Colleen; his daughters, Debra (Kurt) Shaver, Paula (Kyle) Kantz and Stacia (Robert) Burger; three grandchildren, Brittany, Bryce and Chase Burger; sister-in-law, Suzanne Wylie McPherson of Pittsburgh; as well as his longtime companion, Suzanne Graham. Services will be held in the spring of 2021. Randall & Roberts Funeral Home has been entrusted with Don’s care. Condolences: www.randallroberts.com
2241
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https://www.newsmakerswithjr.com/
en
newsmakerswithjr
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Newsmakers with JR Space Force to Coast Agency: Drop Dead; Secret Camera Scandal Hits SB Charter School, Sea Lions Sickened Hilda Speaks With all the courtesy and tact of an occupying army, brass hats from Vandenberg Space Force Base this week bullied and browbeat... Newsmakers with JR How SB Housing Crunch Hammers Seniors; Gavin Goes Militant on Homeless; Gophers vs Owls; Viva La Fiesta! If demographics is destiny, Santa Barbara planners, pols and non-profit plotters who endlessly obsess about housing are well-advised to... Newsmakers with JR Space Force Spurns State Coastal Fears on Elon's Rockets; City-Chamber Contract Mystery; SB Election Updates The U.S. military's indifference to the environmental impacts of rockets that blast off from Vandenberg Space Force Base keeps...
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https://www.georgebrothersfuneral.com/obituary/Jerry-Roberts
en
Jerry Roberts Obituary
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[ "George Brothers Funeral Service" ]
2022-06-14T11:44:00-04:00
Obituary for Jerry R. Roberts | Jerry R. Roberts, 75, of Julian died Monday, June 13, 2022, at Wesley Long Community Hospital. Graveside service with...
en
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Jerry Roberts Obituary | June 13, 2022 | Greensboro, NC
https://www.georgebrothersfuneral.com/obituary/Jerry-Roberts
Jerry R. Roberts, 75, of Julian died Monday, June 13, 2022, at Wesley Long Community Hospital. Graveside service with military honors will be 11:00 AM Friday, June 17, 2022, at Gilmore Memorial Park in Julian. Jerry was a graduate of Page High School, Class of 1964. He served four years with the United States Air Force. Jerry went on to retire from Dow Corning Corporation following thirty years of employment. He is preceded in death by his son, Erik Roberts. Jerry is survived by his wife of fifty-two years, Susan Roberts; grandson, Adam Roberts; daughter-in-law, Tina Roberts both of Climax; and sister, Gayle Ward of Greensboro. In lie of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to AuthoraCare Collective, 2500 Summit Avenue, Greensboro, NC 27405.
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https://tricycle.org/magazine/avalanche-zen/
en
Avalanche Zen
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[ "Leath Tonino", "Clark Strand", "Cortland Dahl", "Henry Shukman", "Trinity University Press" ]
2016-07-31T22:00:42+00:00
Leath Tonino interviews avalanche forecaster Jerry Roberts
en
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Tricycle: The Buddhist Review
https://tricycle.org/magazine/avalanche-zen/
Some folks sit on a cushion and count their breaths as though it were a matter of life and death. Others, like 68-year-old Jerry Roberts, a retired avalanche forecaster for the Colorado Avalanche Information Center, meditate wholeheartedly on the intricacies of snow. I do not use that word “meditate” lightly. As a forecaster, Roberts’s job was to rigorously and relentlessly observe the snowpack. That involved studying everything from weather systems swirling in the Pacific to the structure of ice crystals out the back door. His special awareness was then tapped by the Colorado Department of Transportation to help determine when to shut down the mountain roads around Telluride and Durango. Winter in the San Juan Mountains begins in October and ends in June, and the range often receives 300 inches of snow in a single season. It is a notoriously dangerous place. Currently, Roberts does part-time consulting work with Mountain Weather Masters, an outfit he cofounded. The group’s logo—a sword-wielding samurai backed by a white cloud—reflects his longtime interest in Japanese culture. Roberts’s house in Ridgway, Colorado, is cluttered equally with avalanche maps and anthologies of haiku by Issa, Buson, and Basho. I met him there on a bright winter morning, and we sat by the fireplace, drank coffee, and talked. He showed me homemade chapbooks of his own free-verse haiku, many of which braid the languages of snow science, skiing, and mountain geography with the language of Zen. Enlightenment? Roberts wouldn’t claim to know much about such an exalted state of being. Self-deprecating and quick to laugh, he jokingly referred to our conversation as “bullshitting.” Nevertheless, I could tell from his warmth and sincerity that talking about snow and poetry was, for him, an immensely valuable pastime. After my second cup of coffee, when I rose to leave, instead of offering a handshake, he smiled and told me, “Keep on enjoying life.” –Leath Tonino How did you first get interested in snow and avalanches? Living inside was never an option for me. I grew up at the foot of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, here in Colorado, and as a kid I was constantly outdoors. A big part of my life was climbing peaks and skiing off them. Digging nature. Enjoying the turn. Feeling the wind on my face. Those experiences in the wild can be so vivid. You become them. For some of us, there’s no turning back. Spending so much time in the backcountry, sometimes going out for weeks on end, I saw my share of avalanches. Pretty soon I was thinking, Hmm, I better learn a bit about this huge power I’m edging up against. The air blast created by an avalanche can reach 200 miles per hour. In some cases we’re talking hundreds of thousands of cubic yards of snow on the move. So in the early seventies I found my way to the San Juans and took an avalanche course. Within a few years I’d moved into an abandoned miner’s cabin in the subalpine and was collecting data for the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research. It was a simplified, almost ascetic existence—skiing a bunch, learning the snowpack. The locals down in town called me and another buddy who lived up there “the snow monks.” We were hooked. Who would have ever thought looking at snow could be so exciting? What exactly does “looking at snow” entail? It all starts with the weather. Back then, forecasters weren’t using the Internet. What Internet? It was more like a finger in the air: Okay, it’s coming from the southwest. Might be a big one. Get ready. Wind is the architect of avalanches, so you’re tracking the storm’s movements, gauging speed and direction. You’re monitoring temperatures, too. Did the storm come in warm and then cool down, bonding the new snow to the old snowpack’s surface? Or did it come in cold and then warm up, creating a dangerous upside-down cake, a heavy, wet slab sitting atop a low-density base? You’re constantly interpreting. Is it a hard block or a soft block? What got loaded with snow, north faces or northeast faces? Small world becomes big world—that’s how I like to sum it up. A forecaster observes things at two scales, the micro and the macro. You look at a snow crystal under a hand lens and see all the beautiful angles, and then you think about how a hillside loaded with these things can all of a sudden fracture, come down and cover the highway, and sweep you into oblivion. I’m reminded of a line from the Soto Zen teacher Taisen Deshimaru: “You must pay attention as if you had a fire burning in your hair.” Yeah, you’re afraid to go shopping at the supermarket an hour away because you might miss a wind event. You can’t be absent from your place. You have to be totally present. Forecasting is not just a job; it’s a lifestyle. You don’t think about Christmas or your wife’s birthday. You don’t go on vacation. One storm in ’05 lasted four days, and I got maybe eight hours of sleep. From November through May, paying attention is what you do. It’s who you are. There’s no difference between on and off. Over the years, I learned so much by just being out there. A friend of mine says, “Experience is a series of nonfatal errors.” Every winter I added something new to the list of what I knew. You develop a daily mantra, your daily prayers: Look for this, note this, pay attention to this. If you don’t, somebody is going to get hurt. Maybe you. As you immerse yourself in the observation of these massive forces—storms and avalanches and the like—you must become increasingly aware of your own smallness, your own fragility. There’s a quote attributed to Miles Davis that says, “If you’re not nervous, you’re not paying attention.” I used to joke that it was my job to worry for half the year. That sounds negative, but it’s not. The worry is itself a kind of meditation. You worry from the first storm to the last storm. Why hasn’t that slope avalanched? It’s got to avalanche soon. Our mortality is with us through all stages of life, whether we’re aware of it or not. As a snow viewer, out in the middle of the storm, you know that the possibility of the end is always present. Mortality isn’t an abstract concept—it’s right in your face. The sky is falling! How am I going to get home without being killed? At times it was dangerous driving the road in “full conditions,” snow coming down so hard you could barely see past the steering wheel. Over the years, small avalanches took me for some rides while I was out skiing. For much of my life I’ve had a daily, maybe an hourly appreciation of my own impermanence—a heightened sense of how delicate things really are. Because no matter how much expertise you have, no matter how keen your focus and diligence are, the big one can still slide on you unexpectedly, right? One has to be comfortable living with uncertainties—that’s just part of the deal. In the worlds of snow and weather, but also in the rest of life, there are so many unknowns. Our job is to try to reduce some of the uncertainties while simultaneously learning to live with them. Some days are better than others, and every day is another invitation to try. Without mindfulness, my job living with the uncertain nature of snow would have been impossible. Sitting, walking, skiing, they all lead to the same place: Mindfulness. Mindfulness of what is. How does haiku fit into all of this? I’ve always been drawn to the counterculture, so naturally I spent some time in the Bay Area in the sixties. I was interacting with the Beat poets, going to readings at bookstores. That was my first eye-opener. All of a sudden I was thinking on that plane—the haiku plane. The Zen aesthetic relies on the fewest possible words to express a situation, a feeling, a view. It shaped how I looked at everything, including snow. Alongside the more scientific approach to the snowpack, I began to understand it through these little descriptive bursts: “Wind slab layers / thick as Van Gogh / brush stroke.” I’d pull off the road during a blizzard, or stop at the end of a ski run, and scribble something about the mood in my notebook. Some of my haiku are okay, some aren’t. That’s fine with me. The importance lies in the attempt, the effort at catching a moment. The poet Jorie Graham has described poetry as a way of going through life, as opposed to accidentally slipping around it. Even if you’re serious about not going around it, you do. We all do. Searching for the right words to make a haiku, skiing a perfect line through the trees—these can get you going through life, at least for a little while. The haiku is both a meditation and an expression. You disregard the nonessential and focus on the essential. There’s a discipline to it. It’s similar to writing a good avalanche forecast or weather forecast with a minimum of words—less room for confusion or misinterpretation. It’s also an attempt to share some space with the masters, to walk the mountain paths with traveling monks and roshis, begging bowl in hand. There’s a haiku by Basho that I love: “Come, let’s go / snow-viewing / till we’re buried.” Buried in what? In snow? I wonder if it isn’t also something else. As you put it a minute ago, maybe by viewing snow we get buried in “what is.” One of the great things about snow is that its meanings are infinite. It melts and becomes ditchwater for ranchers or drinking water for city dwellers. It has significance for an avalanche forecaster today and for Basho back in the 17th century. It can be a dream or a nightmare. And yet it’s all the same, just different crystals that have bonded together—needles, columns, stellars. After six-plus decades in the Colorado Rockies, what would you say are the lessons that stand out in your mind? It might sound trite, but what I’ve learned is that the mountain always leads in the dance. It’s hard to say much more about it than that. You do what you are allowed, nothing more. You wander around above the trees, knowing all the while that you are a temporary trespasser. I don’t want to be a downer, but people are going to die. Avalanches will take us out. It will happen. Years ago, a friend said to me that in the San Juans we’ve got a “tiger of a snowpack.” That always stuck with me because of its animistic sensibility. Rocks, snowfields, clouds—I see them as alive. That mountain outside the window is a living, breathing thing. And it’s bigger than you are! It’s in charge. If you’re not careful, you’re going to get bit in the ass by the tiger. You’re going to suffer. It’s a big tiger. As you said earlier, though, for some folks there’s no turning back. It’s a risk worth taking. Right, so you learn all you can, pay attention, and then learn some more. Nature has this draw, whether it’s the ocean, the desert, the river, or the mountain. For me, it’s the sound of wind from Arizona and Utah carrying desert dust that will become the snowflake nuclei here in the San Juans. It’s that smell: “Aaaaaah, the turn / I can smell it / in the air.” It’s the feel of powder snow blowing up into your chest as you round your turn on a beautifully angled slope. There’s stillness at the heart of that motion. Gravity is pulling you down, the same force that wants to collapse the entire snowpack and send it to the valley floor. Steep skiing is just one controlled fall after another.
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https://umassathletics.com/sports/football/roster/jerry-roberts-jr-/14429
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University of Massachusetts Athletics
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Jerry Roberts Jr. (48) Linebacker - 2023 • Redshirt Senior • Phil Steele Preseason Independent Team (First Team - LB) • College Football Network All-Independ...
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/favicon.ico
University of Massachusetts Athletics
https://umassathletics.com/sports/football/roster/jerry-roberts-jr-/14429
2023 • Redshirt Senior • Phil Steele Preseason Independent Team (First Team - LB) • College Football Network All-Independent Defense Team (Honorable Mention - LB) • Made 10 appearances for the Minutemen on the season, accumulating 36 tackles (13 solo, 23 assisted), two tackles for loss an a pass breakup • Recorded a season-high seven total tackles, including two solo, while adding a TFl for four yards and a pass deflection at Penn State (10/14) • Had at least two tackles in all 10 games played • Posted a season-high four solo takedowns vs. UConn (11/25) • Had 0.5 TFLs both at Eastern Michigan (9/16) and vs. Toledo (10/7) Before Massachusetts
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https://billtuttememorialfund.wordpress.com/2014/06/05/captain-jerry-roberts-a-person-of-real-quality/
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Captain Jerry Roberts: A person of Real Quality
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2014-06-05T00:00:00
Captain Jerry Roberts 1920-2014 Captain Jerry Roberts was a senior cryptographer at Bletchley Park and worked on Tunny (the Lorenz cipher).  In recent years, Jerry campaigned tirelessly for recognition of the Testery, including the great intellectual feat demonstrated by Bill Tutte. Yesterday I had the privilege to attend the memorial service for Jerry, who passed away in…
en
https://secure.gravatar.com/blavatar/9cb188b0eedaed11d2b3802239424c2d8d30d5761c252732fb696a9320c5c45c?s=32
Bill Tutte Memorial Fund
https://billtuttememorialfund.wordpress.com/2014/06/05/captain-jerry-roberts-a-person-of-real-quality/
Captain Jerry Roberts 1920-2014 Captain Jerry Roberts was a senior cryptographer at Bletchley Park and worked on Tunny (the Lorenz cipher). In recent years, Jerry campaigned tirelessly for recognition of the Testery, including the great intellectual feat demonstrated by Bill Tutte. Yesterday I had the privilege to attend the memorial service for Jerry, who passed away in March. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/10727735/Jerry-Roberts-obituary.html. The service was held at St Martin-in-the-Fields church, Trafalgar Square, a perfect setting in the heart of London. It was a lovely service organised by Jerry’s devoted wife, Mei. Moving tributes were paid by Sir John Scarlett, Lord Charles Brocket and Professor Susanne Kord. Jerry’s daughters Dora and Chao gave beautiful readings and his talented grandsons Ben and Sammy provided music and song. Following the news of Jerry’s death back in March, Tweets went out across the globe in many languages. Jerry was described in these Tweets as a ‘hero’, ‘one of the greats’, ‘incredible’, ‘remarkable’, ‘amazing’, a ‘genius’, ‘warm’, ‘funny’, ‘brilliant’ and ‘modest’. It is the description of Jerry as modest that I find most apposite. Jerry was always quick to turn attention away from himself and talk about the Testery as a team. Those long forgotten colleagues who were of equal importance. In December 2013, I spent the day with Jerry and his wife Mei. We discussed Tunny (of course) and what it was like to read messages sent by Hitler. Jerry said that it was quite exciting the first time he saw a message signed “Adolf Spacer Hitler Spacer Führer” but after that he became very blasé about it. “And another one”, he said chuckling as he gestured flinging an imaginary message (signed by Hitler) over his shoulder into a pile of discarded messages. We laughed a lot that day. Jerry had a great sense of humour and a sharp mind. He didn’t stop talking about his Bletchley Park colleagues and wanting to promote the hand methods of the Testery. “It is all about the machines” Jerry complained in response to the long-awaited publication of the General Report on Tunny in 2000. A true gentleman who said he never had a day of boredom in his life, Jerry was grateful for every single day. He spoke of the lovely people he had met through telling his code-breaking story, and the difference that it had made to his and Mei’s lives. Jerry also spoke of how he treasured every month in the garden, even the winter because everything looked so tidy. If you were liked by Jerry, you were considered “A person of real quality” and I am honoured to have been included in this group. Jerry admired the people of Newmarket for their recognition of Bill Tutte and I know that Jerry will be smiling down on us when we unveil Tutte’s memorial on 10th September this year. At the age of 93, I asked Jerry what advice he could offer to young people today. Jerry responded with these wise words: “Don’t be afraid to take risks. Sensible risks. Because something will work out. If you’ve got talent, something will work out. But if you say, as I could have said, my father went in to the bank and what’s good enough for him is good enough for me…you can’t live life like that.” Si dios quiere (as Jerry would say) we all have happy and fulfilling lives. Rest in peace Jerry, you truly were a person of real quality. Author: Claire Butterfield
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https://afbic.com/
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Farm Bureau Insurance of Arkansas, Inc.
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2017-08-24T21:22:29+00:00
We are a multi-line insurance company offering competitive products and services in personal lines, commercial lines, life insurance, and annuities.
Farm Bureau Insurance of Arkansas, Inc.
https://afbic.com/
Local Agents Farm Bureau’s local agents live where you live and are invested in your community. Competitive Rates We love helping customers save money through a variety of discounts. Fast, Friendly Service Farm Bureau’s courteous agents efficiently provide what you need. Staying in Touch As a member/policy holder, Farm Bureau’s mission is to serve you. In times of uncertainty—like now, with Coronavirus—you’re more than just a policyholder, you’re part of our family. To that end, we want to provide options to keep in touch; like conducting your business virtually through your 24/7 online account or over the phone with your local agent. Read more about the ways that Farm Bureau is keeping you connected →
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https://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/02/world/europe/jerry-roberts-last-of-team-of-british-code-breakers-dies-at-93.html
en
Jerry Roberts, 93, Code Breaker for Britain
https://static01.nyt.com…983&k=ZQJBKqZ0VN
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[ "Paul Vitello", "www.nytimes.com", "paul-vitello" ]
2014-04-02T00:00:00
Mr. Roberts, a German linguist, was part of a top-secret team gathered to decipher messages between Hitler and his field commanders.
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/vi-assets/static-assets/favicon-d2483f10ef688e6f89e23806b9700298.ico
https://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/02/world/europe/jerry-roberts-last-of-team-of-british-code-breakers-dies-at-93.html
Jerry Roberts, the last surviving member of the British code-breaking team that cracked strategic ciphers between Hitler and his top generals, helping to hasten the end of World War II, died on March 25 in Hampshire, England. He was 93. His death was confirmed by the Bletchley Park Trust, a nonprofit group that administers the Victorian estate north of London where the British government lodged Mr. Roberts and hundreds of other code breakers during the war, among them linguists, mathematicians and puzzle masters of various backgrounds. Mr. Roberts, a German linguist, was part of a small top-secret group assembled in 1941 to help decrypt messages picked up in radio signals between Hitler and his field marshals on the front. The team’s very existence remained a secret until 2006, when the British government declassified wartime intelligence files. By 1941, Bletchley Park cryptographers had already deciphered thousands of messages transmitted by lower-level German commanders in the field, thanks to the work of the mathematician Alan Turing, who in 1940 cracked the daunting German secret code that the British called Enigma. But they were stumped by the even more complex ciphered messages being transmitted among Hitler and the generals Erwin Rommel, Wilhelm Keitel, Gerd von Rundstedt and Alfred Jodl. Code breakers initially called the system Fish, taking the name from a German code operator who, in an unguarded moment, had referred to the code as “sägefisch” (sawfish). Mr. Roberts and his group nicknamed it Tunny — as in tuna fish — and they were able to crack it. Mr. Roberts eventually served as the head cryptologist for the team, which grew to more than 100. The messages the team deciphered enabled the British government to warn Soviet leaders in 1943 about a major German offensive planned at Kursk that summer. The Soviet Army’s repulse of the attack in the Battle of Kursk was a turning point of the war. Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times. Thank you for your patience while we verify access. Already a subscriber? Log in. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
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https://www.history.navy.mil/research/library/research-guides/navy-personnel-a-research-guide.html
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Navy Personnel: A Research Guide
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This research guide provides a general understanding of how to find information on US Navy personnel within the Naval History and Heritage Command and other government institutions. There are many resources available in the command; however, the information may be varied due to the era in which the resource was created. It is generally easier to research officers who served in the Navy than enlisted men and women.
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http://public2.nhhcaws.local/research/library/research-guides/navy-personnel-a-research-guide.html
This research guide provides a general understanding of how to find information on US Navy personnel within the Naval History and Heritage Command and other government institutions. There are many resources available in the command; however, the information may be varied due to the era in which the resource was created. It is generally easier to research officers who served in the Navy than enlisted men and women. How do I begin? I’m looking for a person by name. I’m looking for a person by timeframe. I’m looking for a person by office. I’m looking for a person by school, training, or ship. I’m looking for a person by award or casualty information. I’m looking for information on Civilians. Other Sources By Name Searching for a military member by name is often the easiest method of finding the information you seek. It is helpful to know the full name of the individual in question, their birth date, and the years in which they served. Official Service and Medical Records - A good first step in locating information is to request the individual’s official service and medical records. This link provides further information on what these records contain and specifically how to request the records. You will need to request these records from the National Archives and Record Administration. Register of the Commissioned and Warrant Officers of the United States Navy and Marine Corps - Officer Registers are annually published lists of Officers and Warrant Officers. The registers generally provide name, rank, and varied military service information. The older registers provide more detailed information and the Registers between the 1920s and 1970s provide Service Numbers, a key piece of information when requesting service records from this time period. The Navy Department Library holds the following US Naval Officer Registers. Active Duty 1814 – 1994 in print Reserve Register 1917- 1992 sporadic volumes Retired Register 1962- 1990 Navy and Marine Corps Directories - Navy and Marine Corps Directories are similar to Officer Registers in that they provide lists of officers, however they also provide Officer location information. The Directories give information on the officer assignments, whether they are on a ship or at a shore establishment, and can also give squadron assignments for aviators. The Navy Department Library holds Directories from 1908 to 1942. Annual Report of the Secretary of the Navy - Several of the older Secretary of the Navy Reports contain lists of widowers and pensioners of the United Stated Navy. These provide no more than a name and how much the individual received. Official Register of the United States - This is a listing of persons employed by the Federal Government, organized by branch, department, agency and office. In addition to civilians, commissioned officers are listed, but the information provided corresponds generally with what can be found in the Register of the Commissioned and Warrant Officers of the United States Navy and Marine Corps. This source is particularly valuable for identifying officers assigned as naval attaches. The Navy Department Library has a collection ranging from 1831 to 1959. Callahan, Edward W., ed. List of Officers of the United States Navy and of the Marine Corps, 1775-1900. New York: L.R. Hammersly & Co, 1901. - This compiled work provides a starting point for progressive rank information for commissioned, warranted, and appointed officers in the Navy and Marine Corps for the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Hammersly, Lewis R. Records of Living Officers of the US Navy and Marine Corps Hammersly 1878-1902.7th edition. New York: L.R. Hammersly & Co, 1902.- This revised edition with numerous additions to the original contains short biographical entries for the living officers of the Navy and Marine Corps for the time period 1878 to 1902. Biographies in Naval History - This digitized collection of brief biographies covers US Navy personalities of note throughout the history of the Navy. ZB files - This series contains biographical information pertaining to US naval officers, a few enlisted, and some civilians, especially those serving during the 19th century. Coverage of a number of outstanding officers of the late 18th and early 20th centuries, as well as some enlisted personnel, also is provided. It is estimated that the careers of 35,000 separate individuals are documented to some extent in these files. The contents of individual files include such items as: (1) compiled service chronologies; (2) biographical summaries; (3) service data cards (Civil War period); (4) letters of recommendation for appointment or promotion; (5) pay vouchers (Civil War period); (6) fragmentary personal and official letters; (7) official Office of Naval Records and Library, and Naval History Division correspondence providing information on specific officers. The contents of individual files range from extensive to sparse, sometimes only containing a single piece of paper. A listing of names in the ZB files is available in the Navy Department Library. Modern Biography files - The Modern Biography collection consists of biographical information from the 1920s to the present pertaining to US naval officers, primarily Admirals and Captains, and prominent Navy affiliated civilians. The contents of individual files include official biographies written by the Office of Naval Information, Change of Command or Retirement programs from special events held on the Washington Navy Yard, and a few obituary notices from the Washington Post. A listing of names for the Modern Biography files in in the Navy Department Library is available. It should be noted that this collection derives from a considerably larger collection of officer biographies held by the Operational Archives of the Naval History and Heritage Command. The general rule for the division of the two collections is World War II, with the Navy Department Library having the older biographies and the Operational Archives having the more recent biographies. However, there is considerable temporal overlap between the two collections. Accordingly, if one collection does not have a biography, the other collection might. Historical Manuscripts - The Navy Department Library has a historical manuscript collection consisting of original letters, documents, and manuscripts from the 18th to the 20th century. A full listing of the manuscript collection is available through this link. Archives - The Archives of the Naval History and Heritage Command is the primary repository of the US Navy's official post-World War II operational and administrative history records. Along with these official records, they are a resource for Oral Histories and a collection of personal papers of prominent naval personalities. Below are links to information on Oral Histories and Personal Papers. Oral Histories Personal Papers US Naval Academy Nimitz Library - The Special Collections and Archives division of the Nimitz Library also has a manuscript collection that includes the personal papers of a select few naval personalities. JAG Court Martial records @ NARA or JAG - Court martial cases may be of particular interest to individuals. This link will provide information on who to contact for court martial records and board of review records. By Timeframe Many of the resources in this section are described in greater detail in other sections of this guide; however it is helpful to know a general outline where records may be found by timeframe. Early Navy to World War I National Archives and Record Administration I - Official service records for Navy commissioned officers separated in or before 1902, and Navy enlisted personnel in or before 1885, are held by the National Archives and Records Administration at their Washington, DC, location. Of particular interest to those searching for US Navy records are Record Group 24 Bureau of Naval Personnel. You may also find an Abstract of Officer Service Records and the Records of Living Officers of the US Navy and Marine Corps 1870-1902 within these files. Many items are available on microfilm. United States. Naval War Records Office.; United States. Office of Naval Records and Library. Official Records of the Union and Confederate Navies in the War of the Rebellion. 31 vols. Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office, 1894-1922. - These 31 volumes are the official documents of the Union and Confederate Navies during the Civil War. They are available in print in many academic libraries and have been digitized as a part of the Making of America collection at Cornell University. Above is the link to the collection. World War I Some military documents may be found at the National Archives Washington, DC location, but personnel records for this timeframe are held at the National Personnel Record Center. World War II The National Archives College Park, Maryland location houses many of the documents related to World War II, such as deck logs and unit histories. Personnel Records are found at the National Personnel Record Center. Korea and Vietnam The National Archives College Park, Maryland location houses many of the documents related to Korea and Vietnam, such as deck logs and unit histories. Personnel Records are found at the National Personnel Record Center. Present The Naval History and Heritage Command holds 30 years worth of documents, such as deck logs and unit histories. These are held as part of the Archives in the Ships' History, Deck Logs, and Aviation sections. Personnel Records are found at the National Personnel Record Center. Navy World Wide Locator - The Navy World Wide Locator, maintained by Navy Personnel Command, maintains current address information for retired Navy service members. Information regarding this service may be found on the Navy Personnel Command website. By Office Searching for individuals by the office they held can be difficult; however the Navy Department Library offers resources both online and in print. Online Sources Lists of Senior Officers - This link provides historical rosters of high level US Navy offices. Both senior military officers and civilian officials are represented in the lists. Organizational charts and Directories - Several Key Personnel charts for the Department of Defense and Navy Department are available both online and in the Navy Department Library. These charts date from the 1950s to the 1980s. They provide little more than a name and the office they occupied, but are a wealth of resources for organizational structure. Fleet Admirals - Biographies of the US Navy’s four Fleet Admirals are available online along with information pertaining to the creation of the position. Print Sources United States. Official Register of the United States. Washington, 1831-1959. Coletta, Paolo. American Secretaries of the Navy. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1980. Love, Robert, ed. The Chiefs of Naval Operations. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1980. Reynolds, Clark. Famous American Admirals. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1978. Cogar, William. Dictionary of Admirals of the U.S. Navy. 2 vols. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1989. [covering the period from 1862-1918]. By School, Training, or Ship Often you may find pictures of individuals in yearbooks or cruise books. Below is a listing of the resources available in the Navy Department Library. Lucky Bags 1894-2005 - Lucky Bags are yearbooks from the US Naval Academy. These annual publications contain photos of the midshipmen and often a short description of their time at the academy. US Naval Academy Alumni Register - The US Naval Academy Alumni Association published registers of alumni annually until 2008. Various years are held in the Navy Department Library. The Alumni Association website offers a locator service to members of their online community. NROTC yearbooks - Many colleges and universities with NROTC training programs published yearbooks for their cadets. A complete description of the collection is available through this link. Recruit Schools (The Keel, Bainbridge, The Anchor) - US Navy Enlisted Recruit Schools in Great Lakes, San Diego, and Bainbridge published yearbook type books for their recruits. They are arranged by year and company. A description of the collection and our holdings can be found in this link. Cruise Books - Cruise books are a pictorial history documenting the daily life and voyages of a ship's crew. The Navy Department Library has a large collection of cruise books from the Spanish American War to the present. Use this link to determine if the library has a particular ship's cruise book, you may review our list of holdings and/or search the catalog (in the library). In addition to ships cruise books the library also holds many SeaBee unit cruise books as well as Aviation Squadron cruise books. These books are not available for purchase. Crew List and Muster Rolls - This link provides further information on obtaining crew lists and muster rolls from ships. By Award or Casualty Information Searching for award or casualty information may be done through either online resources or in print resources. The military service records obtained through the National Personnel Records Center will also contain information on the awards earned by the individual. Online Sources U.S. Navy Awards - The U.S. Navy Awards website is a resource for both individual and unit awards. The website offers a Personal Awards History database that may be queried by name and either social security number for those who served after 1979 and serial or service number who served prior to 1979. Medal of Honor - Full text citations of Medal of Honor recipients are available through the US Army Center of Military History. They are conveniently categorized by war or conflict, and the site also provides additional information on the Medal of Honor. American Battle Monuments Commission - The American Battle Monuments Commission is charged with building and maintaining memorials and monuments to United States Armed Forces overseas. This website features a database that may be searched by name for those who lost their lives and are buried overseas from World War I to Vietnam. Veterans Affairs Grave Locator - The United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Cemetery Administration offers a gravesite locator where you may search for the burial location of veterans and their family member in National VA cemeteries, state veteran’s cemeteries, various other military and Department of Interior cemeteries, and for veterans buried in private cemeteries when the grave is marked with a government grave marker. Archives - The Naval History and Heritage Command Archives hold Award Citation Cards for individuals dating from World War II to the Vietnam conflict. The collection consists of copies of citations on index sized cards. They are filed alphabetically by name and categorized by war or conflict. Print Sources Combat Connected Naval Casualties World War II by States. 2 vols. Washington, DC: Department of the Navy, 1946. - Arranged by home state these volumes list name, rank and rate, home address, and next of kin. Karig, Walter. Battle Report. Vols. 1-5. New York: Published for the Council on Books in Wartime by Farrar & Rinehart, 1944. Vol. 1 Pearl Harbor to Coral Sea lists KIA, MIA, POW, recipients of Distinguished Service Cross and Silver Medal. Vol. 2 Atlantic War lists Medal of Honor, Navy Cross, Distinguished Service Medal, and Legion of Merit. Vol. 3 Pacific War, 1942-1943 list of casualties. Vol. 4 Pacific War, Dec 1943 - Nov 1944 list of casualties. Vol. 5 War in Korea list of KIA,MIA, wounded. Medal of Honor, Navy Cross, Silver Star, Distinguished Flying Cross, Distinguished Service Medal, Legion of Merit, Air Medal, Bronze Star, Letter of Commendation, and Army Awards for Navy Personnel. Stringer, Harry R. The Navy Book of Distinguished Service; An Official Compendium of the Names and Citations of the Men of the United States Navy, Marine Corps, Army and Foreign Governments Who Were Decorated by the Navy Department for Extraordinary Gallantry and Conspicuous Service Above and Beyond the Call of Duty in the World War. Washington, D.C.: Fassett publishing company, 1921. Wise, James E. Jr., and Scott Baron. The Navy Cross: Extraordinary Heroism in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Other Conflicts. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 2007. _____. Silver Star: Navy and Marine Corps Gallantry in Iraq, Afghanistan and Other Conflicts. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 2008. Navy Casualty Listings, held in the Navy Department Library's Rare Book Room, list casualties from 1801 to 1941. They are categorized by types of death and year. These listings contain the names, rank, ship or shore station they were assigned upon death, and the location of the incident. Some volumes provide more details regarding the incidents. The library also holds bound copies of excerpts from the hard copy World War II casualty cards held at the National Archives and Record Administration. These bound copies are categorized by Armed Guard casualties by operation and chronologic order, High-Speed Destroyer casualties, and Destroyer Escort casualties. Civilians To locate information on the Civilian Personnel Records of those who may have worked for the US Navy you may contact the National Personnel Record Center. Official Register of the United States - This is a listing of persons employed by the Federal Government, organized by branch, department, agency and office. The Navy Department Library has a collection ranging from 1831 to 1959. Other Sources In addition to this research guide you may wish to look at this guide to Research in Military Records from the National Archives and Record Administration as well as this guide from the Congressional Research Service, Military Service Records and Unit Histories: A Guide to Locating Sources. Library of Congress Veteran’s History project - The Library of Congress Veteran’s History Project through the American Folklife Center collects first hand accounts of veterans from World War I to the present. The project offers a database that may be searched by name and seven other categories, including branch of service and war. Ancestory.com - Ancestory.com is a commercial database that offers many resources for genealogical research. Among various records the databases include draft cards for World War I and World War II, and many US Navy cruise books are available on the website as well. HomeofHeroes.com - Homeofheroes.com is another commercial website that includes information on military awards and lists of recipients.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerry_Roberts_(American_football)
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Jerry Roberts (American football)
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2018-12-26T04:59:06+00:00
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerry_Roberts_(American_football)
American football player and coach (1940–2017) Jerome S. Roberts (April 28, 1940 – August 17, 2017) was an American football player and coach. He served as the head football coach at Saint Francis University in Loretto, Pennsylvania for one season, in 1980, compiling a record of 2–7.[1] Roberts played college football at Lock Haven University of Pennsylvania from 1959 to 1962.[2] Head coaching record [edit] Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs Saint Francis Red Flash (NCAA Division III independent) (1980) 1980 Saint Francis 2–7 Saint Francis: 2–7 Total: 2–7 References [edit]
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https://cp.spokanecounty.org/detentionservices/inmateroster.aspx
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Detention Services
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https://www.eberlefisherfuneralhome.com/obituary/Jerry-Roberts
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Jerry Roberts Obituary
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[ "Eberle Fisher Funeral Home & Crematory" ]
2020-12-28T19:20:39-05:00
Obituary for Jerry Lynn Roberts | ROBERTS Jerry Lynn Roberts, 79, of South Vienna, died December 18, 2020 in his residence. Born July 5, 1941 in Springfield; he was a son of Isaac Loring and Helen Margaret...
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Jerry Roberts Obituary | December 19, 2020 | London, OH
https://www.eberlefisherfuneralhome.com/obituary/Jerry-Roberts
ROBERTS Jerry Lynn Roberts, 79, of South Vienna, died December 18, 2020 in his residence. Born July 5, 1941 in Springfield; he was a son of Isaac Loring and Helen Margaret (Lensman) Roberts. A US Navy veteran, Jerry had worked and retired from Navistar in Springfield. He was a member of the US Trotters Association and loved his horses. Survivors include Richelle Kay (Kelly); sister and brother in law Sharon (Robert) Reynolds; several nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his mother, father and twin brother Larry Roberts. Per Jerry’s wishes, no visitation nor funeral services will be observed. The family is being served by the EBERLE-FISHER FUNERAL HOME AND CREMATORY, 103 N. Main Street, London where online condolences for the family may be sent to www.eberlefisherfuneralhome.com. Memorials in Jerry's name may be made to either the Ohio Chapter of Parkinson's Association or the Standard Bred Retirement Foundation.
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https://www.wichmannfuneralhomes.com/obituaries/raymond-c-barlow
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Raymond C. Barlow Obituary 2008
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2022-03-03T15:44:25
Barlow, Raymond C."Ray"AppletonAge 66, passed away with his family at his side at Manor Care in Appleton on Friday, February 8, 2008. He was born in New London on December 31,...
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Wichmann Funeral Homes
https://www.wichmannfuneralhomes.com/obituaries/raymond-c-barlow
Barlow, Raymond C. “Ray” Appleton Age 66, passed away with his family at his side at Manor Care in Appleton on Friday, February 8, 2008. He was born in New London on December 31, 1941 the son of Raymond and Eunice (Tellock) Barlow. He was proud to serve in the United States Air Force from 1959 to 1961. Ray was active in Drum Corps, coached T-ball, baseball and little league. He was also active in the Boys and Girls Brigade including ARC in Neenah. Recently, he was involved in the Boys and Girls Club of Appleton, was a board member of the Appleton Housing Authority, on the board of directors for Project Home, volunteer for the Outagamie Outreach Center and the Appleton Salvation Army where he was on the board of directors. He was honored to have received the Janet Berry “Volunteer of the Year” Award for 2003. Ray is survived by his children: Kelly Weber, Jeff Schend, Heather (fiance, Alan Vestal) Barlow, Jon Barlow, and Sara (Matt) VandeCastle; grandchildren: Marty and Macey Kay; mother; Eunice Timmins; brothers and sisters: Norman Barlow, Karen Barlow, Terry Barlow, Lynn Timmins, Lori (special friend, Mike) Timmins-Chambers, and Tommy Timmins, Jr., and many nieces and nephews; special friend, Jean Long-Manteufel. He is preceded in death by his fathers: Raymond John Barlow and Thomas Timmins, Sr. The funeral service will be at 11:00 a.m. on Wednesday, February 13, 2008 at the WICHMANN FUNERAL HOME, 537 N. Superior St., Appleton with Rev. Norm Krutzik officiating. Friends will be received at the funeral home on Tuesday from 4:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m. and on Wednesday from 10:00 a.m. until the time of the service. Burial will be in Riverside Cemetery, Appleton. The family extends a special thank you to the caring staff at Manor Care Health Care Center. In lieu of flowers, a memorial fund in Ray's name is being established.
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https://www.desmoinesregister.com/obituaries/dmr111669
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Home
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FBI looking for missing 17-year-old who may be in the Des Moines area
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https://www.woodfuneralhome.com/obituary/GeraldJerry-Roberts
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Gerald "Jerry" Roberts Obituary
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[ "Wood Funeral Home & Crematory" ]
2024-01-08T15:00:07-05:00
Obituary for Gerald "Jerry" Roberts | Gerald “Jerry” Roberts, 81, of Idaho Falls, Idaho, passed away January 7, 2024, at Eastern Idaho Medical Center from health complications. Jerry was born to Jess and Murell...
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Gerald "Jerry" Roberts Obituary | January 7, 2024 | Idaho Falls, ID
https://www.woodfuneralhome.com/obituary/GeraldJerry-Roberts
Gerald “Jerry” Roberts, 81, of Idaho Falls, Idaho, passed away January 7, 2024, at Eastern Idaho Medical Center from health complications. Jerry was born to Jess and Murell Roberts on October 3, 1942, in Dillon, Montana. He was raised mostly between Dillon and Melrose, Montana. Upon graduating from high school, Jerry entered the Air Force. After three years, he moved to Oregon and then back to Dillion. He worked in many different fields, such as being a meat cutter, bartender, Idaho State Potato Inspector (in his later years), but his main occupation was a hard rock miner. After retirement, he focused on his growing family. Jerry is survived by his wife, Joan; daughters, Jerri Lynn Devlin of Dillion, MT, Helen LaMere of Butte, MT, and Dominique Roberts of Idaho Falls, ID; sons, Charles (Shorene) Roberts of Dillon, MT, Ray Roberts of Missoula, MT, and Frank Crowley of Spokane, WA; brother, Jim (Cori) Roberts of Virginia; great grandson, whom he was raising, Kaden Allen; 21 grandchildren, several other great grandchildren, and many nieces and nephews. He is preceded in death by his mother, Murell; father, Jess; brothers, Chuck, Patrick, and Tom Roberts; sisters, Ruth Daltor, Gertie Chelini, and Colleen Roberts. In lieu of flowers, please donate to a charity of your choice. Services are pending.
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https://ghsfha.org/w/Special:SCHSFHS/coach/profile/Jerry_Roberts
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Jerry Roberts ROBERT
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https://ecc.iavalley.edu/admissions/financial-aid/scholarships/
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Ellsworth Community College
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2022-07-11T15:27:43+00:00
At Ellsworth Community College, we're committed to making college affordable for everyone. Learn more about our scholarship and grant programs!
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Ellsworth Community College
https://ecc.iavalley.edu/admissions/financial-aid/scholarships/
At Ellsworth, we don't want tuition costs to keep you from getting a quality education. We work hard to keep tuition affordable, and we offer close to a million dollars in grants and scholarships to our students each year. (This is financial aid that doesn't need to be paid back.) If you focus on your academic success, we'll work with you to make it affordable. When applying for a scholarship at Ellsworth Community College, students are automatically considered for all applicable scholarships, streamlining the process and making financial support more accessible. If you would like to be considered for scholarships at Ellsworth, you must complete the scholarship checklist below: Submit your Scholarship Application Form. Submit a copy of your high school transcript. *Note: Transcripts can be emailed to ECCinfo@iavalley.edu or mailed to: Ellsworth Community College ATTN: ECC Admissions Office 1100 College Avenue Iowa Falls, IA 50126 Sophomores - We have specific scholarships for returning students! You can apply for a Sophomore scholarship by submitting the Sophomore Scholarship Application Form. CLICK HERE to go to the Ellsworth College Foundation's website. You'll find Endowed Scholarships which you can apply for under the "Endowed Scholarships" tab towards the top of the page. Bob & Arlene Hamilton Endowed Scholarship Twenty $5,000.00 scholarships are awarded to those majoring in Agriculture, Animal Science, or Pre-Vet. The deadline to apply is March 15. Don't delay, apply today! CLICK HERE TO APPLY! Panther Achievement Scholarship Ellsworth Community College is thrilled to announce the launch of the "Panther Achievement Scholarship," a new initiative aimed at recognizing and encouraging the enrollment of high-achieving students. The Panther Achievement Scholarship, valued at $1,000, is exclusively available to graduating seniors (class of 2024) with a cumulative unweighted high school GPA of 3.25 or higher. Upon receipt of the qualifying transcript, students will be notified through a personalized letter, informing them of their upfront scholarship. No additional scholarship application is required. To secure the scholarship, students need to sign and return the award letter to Megan Richtsmeier. Quick Details of the Panther Achievement Scholarship: Eligibility: Exclusively for graduating seniors (class of 2024), not applicable to transfer students or graduates beyond the upcoming academic year. Requirements: Graduating seniors must have an unweighted cumulative high school GPA of 3.25 or higher. An official copy of their high school transcript must be submitted to ECC after graduation to confirm eligibility. Award Distribution: The scholarship will be disbursed over the Fall and Spring Semesters of the 2024-2025 school year. Please note: Students who have already been awarded scholarships for the 2024-2025 academic year from ECC will not be eligible for the Panther Achievement Scholarship. ECC scholarships for qualified students: Ambassador Scholarship Director's Scholarship Sophomore Scholarship Sophomore Achievement Scholarship Activity & Athletic Scholarships Endowed Scholarships ECC Endowed Scholarships Name of Scholarship Requirements 1977 Softball National Champs Softball Ackerman, Elmer Academic Afdahl, Steve & Judy No Restrictions Ahrends, Merrill & Linda Sophomore in Ag or Education GPA > 2.5 Anonymous Equine 2nd Year Equine Student Armstrong, Emma Worthy Students Bartlett, Meade & Phyllis Health Science/Nursing Benning, Jerry No Restrictions Boddy, Edna No Restrictions Bryant, Ida Caine Music; Sing National Anthem at Events or involved in Music in High School Bryarly, Mary No Restrictions Burr, Raymond Liberal Arts Buzzetti Family Endowment STEM students receive a scholarship from the Dr. Ronald D'Orazio endowment Calkins Workshop Emerson & Velma Calkins Sophomore Conservation Tech; selected by committee of Calkins staff & instructors Campbell Supply/Cam Spray/Iowa Power Products Preference to employees & family of Campbells employees. C. John Campbell Family Freshman must have attempted 16 credits & have GPA of 2.5 or better from Fall Semester. Cargill, Inc Ag & Renewable Energy Chaplin, Dorothy Business/Marketing, 2.5 GPA, Iowa grad Christensen, Magnus No Restrictions Consolidated Mgmt. Co. No Restrictions Crawford, Roberta Financial Need/Franklin, Hardin, or Keokuk County Dittmer, Martin Baseball Dolan, John & Dee Sophomore, male or female athlete Dougher, Dorothy & Susan No Restrictions/Exceptional work ethic Dunlay, Dr. Robert & Barbara Nursing Dunn, E. Lucille Academic E-Club Athlete Emery, Eric & Janet College/HS GPA of 3.0. Education major is preferred. Fejfar, Don & Carol Nursing/Music Fischer, Bud Men's Basketball Fisk, Doug Engineering Fitz Family Sophomore Foster, Jean Dow Women; enrich her life Fuller, Mary/Foster, Doris Education/financial need Gehrls, Hugo from Iowa Falls, Business major, or both Gilbert, Gwen Gohring Iowa student, min GPA of 3.0 Givens, Robert Wrestler with outstanding character Glyer, Helen Fulltime, Soph, maintain 3.0 GPA Granzow, Bill & Jean No Restrictions Green Belt Bank & Trust (Spring Only) Financial Need. Hardin, Franklin, Grundy, or Wright Counties GNB (Liberty Bank) Business/ Strong Academic Hamilton, Andrew & Thelma Academic Hamilton, Bob & Arlene CLICK HERE TO APPLY Separate application process. Agriculture majors, some Pre-Vet majors. If 17 Ag specific scholarships cannot be awarded, then Pre-Vet can be given to remaining available rewards. Hamilton, Carl & Ruth Academic Hamilton, Mark & Laura No Restrictions Harris, Craig & Kristi No Restrictions Harris, William & Judy No Restrictions Hecht, Kenneth & Mary Academic Henrich, Donald & Bonnie No Restrictions Hill, Loudine Financial need; responsible; continuing education to pursue career requiring more than a 2 yr degree Hodak, Greg Active duty or Veteran student's living expenses Hoffman, Carol Sophomore student - need based Hoffman, Gary & Karla No Restrictions Hoversten, Dr. Paul & Rita No Restrictions Howard Family (Marilyn) Sophomore with outstanding character. Howard, Steve & Glenda Need Hoy, Grace Nursing Dept. Selects Huibsch, Joe & Gladys Preference to **Barnabus Uplift Program or a Nursing Student. **“Uplift” honors the work and commitment of secular organizations and groups as each works diligently alongside low-income Iowans providing opportunities that would lift them up. Together, Barnabas Uplift encourages individuals, families, and communities to become self-sufficient and to alleviate poverty in Iowa. Iowa Falls Jaycees 2nd year, Non-Traditional Jabusch, Henry Academic Jennings Family (Rebecca) Athlete Jiruska, David No Restrictions Johnson, Max No Restrictions Johnson, Reg Academic Jones, Prof. Sheridan No Restrictions Jorgensen, Jesse No Restrictions Keller Sisters No Restrictions Kessell, Arlene Preference to Fine Arts King, Raymond Education; May be renewed Klotz, Ruth No Restrictions Koon, C.H. Selected by Provost Kruse Family No Restrictions Larson, Dick & Ruth Women's Basketball or Softball Lloyd, Duane & Phyllis No Restrictions Lund, D. Robert Soph. student, engineering with financial need Lynk, Evelyn Graduate of Hardin County High School Lynk, Herb Graduate of Hardin County High School Maddox, Janet No Restrictions Mason, Foster & Madeline Academic Matthews, Liz-Leaders of Promise PTK Donor selected using National PTK Leaders McCord, Robert & Lillian No Restrictions McLeod Fisk, Helen Chosen by English Dept McNemar, John & Marilyn No Restrictions Meyer Family, William & Dorothy Sophomore in Agriculture Meyer, Wilma, Esther, & Elmer Ag or Nursing, Financial need, renewable Meyer, Esther Nursing Student Miller, Darwin & Debra Sophomore in Agriculture Miller, Ervin & Donna Sophomore in Social Sciences from a school district within 50 miles of ECC campus and financial need. Miller, Richard Sophomore, Business Newby, Roland & Oscarolia Men's Baseball Newby, Sam Men's Basketball Nichols, Ira & Irene HS graduate on basis of financial need & previous scholastic record. Nissly, Jack - Trustee Funded Scholarship Ag Student Nissly, Jack & MaryLou Freshman in Ag Nissly, Mike & April Sophomore in Agriculture Nissly, Roger & Cindy Sophomore in Agriculture Ohrlund, Leon Sophomore - Iowa resident 1 Olson, Keith Swine Mgt or Animal Science Pre-Vet students. Based on financial need & academic achievement. Oppold Lawless, Evelyn Chosen by Nursing Dept Osborne, Samuel Teaching & Coaching Endowment Scholarship FT Status, Iowa HS Grad with preference to Hardin County grads w/GPA of 2.75 for greater. Applying students need to write 1-2 page essay on regarding a Coach or Teacher who had a positive impact on their choice of a career in Coaching or Education. Paul, Harry Ag Student Pat Clark Art Collection Art Major; will be a workship student in the foundation office Pederson, Deone Academic Pieper, Mary F. Healthcare Professional Endowment Scholarship FT Status, Iowa HS Grad with preference to Hardin County grads w/GPA of 2.75 for greater. Applying students need to write 1-2 page essay on regarding a healthcare worker that had a positive impact on their choice of a career in healthcare. Rabe, Gordan and Gretchen No Restrictions Rabe, Joe & Lari Endowment Agri-business, Pre-Veterinary Medicine or Swine Managment Randall, Clifton & Leila Financial Need Rastetter, Bruce No Restrictions Reber, Glo Equestrian Soph/Equine Reece, Barry Student w/ fin hold preventing registration Reed, Marvin No Restrictions Richards, Jack Math dept. selects Richtsmeier, James Preference to Sophomore in Ag program Riverside Book & Bible Riverside employees' offspring Rizvi Family 3.5 GPA or higher; outstanding character; strive for success Roberts, Richard & Helen Interest in environment; Conservation Tech; unrestricted Santee, Jean Good Student Athletes Schager, Robert & Joyce No Restrictions Senters, Jerry No Restrictions Evelyn Schiller Nursing Endowment Nursing Evelyn Schiller Sophomore Endowment Sophomore Show, Ethel & Ray No Restrictions Siems Family Endowment No Restrictions Silverbowl Scholarship Football; renewable Stockdale, Elmer & Gwen Academic Stockdale, Raymond T & Katherine A Endowment Ag Student, Pre-Vet; Good student academically and good work ethic Stockdale, Steve & Virgina Academic Straatsma, Stan Academic Strube, William Fire Science; Public Safety; Theology Stucker, Verle & Marie No Restrictions Surls, Jerry Soph Pre-Mortuary Science Thompson, Andrew No Restrictions Thompson, Otis No Restrictions Tordoff, Ida No Restrictions Tracy, Lela Human Services Tystahl, Eugene Athlete Mike Virden Family Endowment Based on need Warford, Glennon Athlete; Prefer Eng or Social St Maj Weaver, Rocky & Christie Athlete Weeks, Mary No Restrictions Welch - Anonymous Financial Need, Iowa Student Welchko, William Iowa Falls student in Business Welden, Jerry & Sue Sophomore (2 non trad awards) Fin need Welden, Robert & Eleanor Academic Scholarship; unrestricted Welden, Todd Deserving students can be sent to the Saxony area for work study, formal classes, cultural exchange or other opportunities that might present themselves and German students can receive support for their studies at Ellsworth. Wessels, DuWayne & Nancy Nursing Students White, Max & Nellie Hardin or Franklin County Graduate Whitehead, Morris No Restrictions Whitesell Family IF Grad; Law,Phar,The,Bus,Coach Wubbena, Willis & Connie Academic; IF Grad; should be awarded to 2nd semester returning student. 125th General Endowment No Restrictions
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https://en.prothomalo.com/sports/cricket/4hlr6uebqe
en
Pele's gilded, turf-lined tomb opens to public in Brazil
https://images.prothomal…rlay_width_pct=1
https://images.prothomal…rlay_width_pct=1
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[ "Pele", "Brazil", "Football" ]
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2023-05-16T10:50:22+06:00
It is a final resting place fit for "The King": six months after the death of the man widely considered the greatest footballer of all time, Brazil opened Pele's gilded, football-turfed tomb to the public Monday.
en
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Prothomalo
https://en.prothomalo.com/sports/cricket/4hlr6uebqe
It is a final resting place fit for "The King": six months after the death of the man widely considered the greatest footballer of all time, Brazil opened Pele's gilded, football-turfed tomb to the public Monday. Pele, who died on 29 December at age 82 after a battle with cancer, was laid to rest at the Ecumenical Memorial Cemetery in Santos, Brazil. It is a high-rise, 14-story mausoleum that holds the Guinness world record for the tallest cemetery on Earth. Fans were greeted by two life-size golden statues of the player nicknamed "O Rei" -- The King -- whose remains rest inside a large golden vault displayed in the middle of a 200-square-meter (more than 2,000-square-foot) room carpeted in artificial turf. "It surpassed my expectations. It's a really beautiful place," said Ronaldo Rodrigues, 44, a businessman who was first in line to visit the tomb, along with his wife. "I hope lots of tourists will come visit and get to know a little about Pele's story, what he represented for Santos, Brazil and the entire world." Born Edson Arantes do Nascimento, Pele is the only player in history to win three World Cups (1958, 1962 and 1970). He scored a world record 1,281 goals during his more than two-decade career with Santos (1956-74), the New York Cosmos (1975-77) and the Brazilian national team. In tears, Pele's son Edinho told reporters who flocked to the southeastern port city that the family was still struggling to cope with their loss. "But we're also very proud and happy at all the affection and reverence that's kept pouring in," he said. The resort-like cemetery also features an auto museum that now includes the Mercedes Benz S-280 the company gave Pele in 1974 to commemorate his 1,000th goal. "It's a place that's rich in detail, all lovingly assembled in tribute, as the 'King' deserves," cemetery manager Paulo Campos told AFP. The mausoleum sits less than a kilometer (0.6 mile) from the Vila Belmiro, the stadium where Pele played most of his storied career.
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https://www.redcafe.net/threads/best-all-time-eleven-consisting-world-players-all-born-in-same-city.450880/page-3
en
Best all time eleven consisting world players all born in same city
https://www.redcafe.net/…e-touch-icon.png
https://www.redcafe.net/…e-touch-icon.png
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[ "cast offs", "back again" ]
2019-09-30T15:11:18+01:00
Den Haag (my home town) Tim Krul Aad Mansveld Guus Haak Martin Jol Dick Jol Dick Advocaat Tscheu La Ling Aad de Mos Eljero Elia Mick Clavan Lex...
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RedCafe.net
https://www.redcafe.net/threads/best-all-time-eleven-consisting-world-players-all-born-in-same-city.450880/page-3
Sep 30, 2019 #81 Bokito Full Member Joined Jun 25, 2014 Messages 171 Den Haag (my home town) Tim Krul Aad Mansveld Guus Haak Martin Jol Dick Jol Dick Advocaat Tscheu La Ling Aad de Mos Eljero Elia Mick Clavan Lex Schoenmaker Fecking hell that was hard. We're not very good at football. Why not throw in a bunch of the type of players, for which The Hague is known in the rest of the country? Edwin Gorter? Lex Immers? Marco Gentile? Tommie Beugelsdijk? But on a serious note: Harry Vos could be in that list, as well as Joop Korevaar? Sep 30, 2019 #82 harms Shining Star of Paektu Mountain Joined Apr 8, 2014 Messages 28,275 Location Moscow Milan: Paolo Maldini.... and erm.... his dad.... and then there's.... probably some more (gotta be a at least one Italian city that can boast a pretty good 11. Rome? Turin? Napoli??) His dad is not even eligible Maldini, Meazza & Bergomi are the standouts if we don't count Greater Milan. Sep 30, 2019 #83 TwoSheds More sheds (and tiles) than you, probably Joined Feb 12, 2014 Messages 13,371 I'm sure Robbo would be disappointed not to have made your cut! I always thought he was Boro, was it Newcastle then? Well I reckon he makes the cut then! Carrick or Milburn drop out I guess? Or maybe I'll stick Shearer in goal actually! Sep 30, 2019 #84 KirkDuyt Full Member Joined Nov 25, 2015 Messages 25,901 Location Dutchland Supports Feyenoord Why not throw in a bunch of the type of players, for which The Hague is known in the rest of the country? Edwin Gorter? Lex Immers? Marco Gentile? Tommie Beugelsdijk? But on a serious note: Harry Vos could be in that list, as well as Joop Korevaar? Ah Gorter is a good shout. I suppose Immers and Beugelsdijk are kind of Iconic now, but they're rather shite. Though I always had a soft spot for Immers at Feyenoord. It may have looked hapless, but he always managed to score in to the double digids. Sep 30, 2019 #85 Arruda Love is in the air, everywhere I look around Joined Apr 8, 2009 Messages 12,585 Location Azores Supports Porto You tend to hear them on local media interviews and commentators like to mention such things. Given the high level of accent diversity in the UK it's easy for natives to identify where players come from. Ashton has statues of the 3 World Cup winners that were born there. There are also resources like this. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Footballers_from_Greater_Manchester There are many clues... I'll have a go with "Greater Porto" (city itself very small, but large metropolitan area). --------‐--------------- Vítor Baía ---------------------------- --------- Jorge Costa - Ricardo Carvalho---------- João Pinto --------------------------------- Bandeirinha -------‐---------------- António André ---------------------- Jaime Magalhães ------------------ António Sousa ---------------------------- Frasco --------‐---------------------- -------------------- João Pinto II -------------------------- ‐-------------------------- Fernando Gomes ------------- You won't have heard of most of them, but it's not bad. Nine of them (all apart from Bandeirinha - a backup as I can't think of anyone else - and João Pinto II) have been European Champioms with Porto, six in 1987 and three in 2004. Sep 30, 2019 #86 Falcow New Member Joined Mar 20, 2019 Messages 1,338 Location Dublin I always thought he was Boro, was it Newcastle then? Well I reckon he makes the cut then! Carrick or Milburn drop out I guess? Or maybe I'll stick Shearer in goal actually! He was born in Chester Lee street according to wiki, 7 miles south of Newcastle....not sure if he qualifies then or not. God what I wouldn't give to have prime robbo in the team now. Sep 30, 2019 #87 pascell Full Member Joined Aug 3, 2012 Messages 14,589 Location Sir Alex Ferguson Stand I think there's another few people from Leyland on here, definitely not many though. Happy days mate, I'm from down the road in Penwortham, can't see many on here being from here either! Sep 30, 2019 #88 Shaw Mee Tah Mané New Member Joined Jan 4, 2019 Messages 160 Tore Andre Flo (Chelsea), Jostein Flo (Sheffield United), Håvard Flo (Wolves) & Per Egil Flo (Molde&Slavia Prague) are all capped for Norway. In the same family you have: Jarle Flo (Sogndal + 1 friendly cap) Kjell Rune Flo (Molde) Ulrik Flo (Sogndal & Silkeborg) Not bad for a family from Stryn (6k inhabitants) Sep 30, 2019 #89 Halds New Member Joined Apr 16, 2016 Messages 737 Location Denmark Supports Liverpool FC Imagine that attacking trio playing together in their prime Yeah, that's a ptetty good attack. And then you have Aldridge from the bench if one of them has an off day. Sep 30, 2019 #90 TwoSheds More sheds (and tiles) than you, probably Joined Feb 12, 2014 Messages 13,371 He was born in Chester Lee street according to wiki, 7 miles south of Newcastle....not sure if he qualifies then or not. God what I wouldn't give to have prime robbo in the team now. I'll give it to him haha! Sep 30, 2019 #91 Tony Banta Last Man Standing champion 2023/24 Joined Sep 2, 2017 Messages 269 I’ll do a team from my county of Essex GK. Nigel Spink RB. Sir Alf Ramsey CB. Bobby Moore CB. Tony Adams LB. John Terry RW. Ray Parlour MF. Paul Ince MF. Frank Lampard LW. Trevor Brooking ST. Neil Harris ST. Gary Cooper Manger. Casey Stoney CEO. Ed Woodward You’d struggle to score against that side, but equally they’d struggle with scoring goals. Looks like Essex hasn’t produced many top strikers! Over 500 England caps there. World Cup Winners, League Winners, European Cup Winners. Sep 30, 2019 #92 TwoSheds More sheds (and tiles) than you, probably Joined Feb 12, 2014 Messages 13,371 Who's gonna have a go at Buenos Aires or some other Argentinean city? Must be some crackers I'd have thought? Montevideo in Uruguay too? Sep 30, 2019 #93 horsechoker The Caf's Ezza. Joined Apr 16, 2015 Messages 54,981 Location The stable I reckon you could field a semi decent side from Copenhagen. Though I wouldn't be able to name all XI positions. Schmeichel and the Laudrup brothers are the first names that come to mind. Sep 30, 2019 #94 VeevaVee The worst "V" Joined Jan 3, 2009 Messages 46,272 You must be only person on here from Leyland? My mum lives in Leyland. Well Clayton-le-Woods technically, which is also where Phil Jones is from. Sep 30, 2019 #95 Eckers99 Michael Corleone says hello Joined Aug 9, 2014 Messages 6,116 Buenos Aires: Di Stefano Maradona - Moreno Simeone - Rossi - Batista Sorin - Placente - Monti - Zanetti Roma​ We have a winner... Sep 30, 2019 #96 VeevaVee The worst "V" Joined Jan 3, 2009 Messages 46,272 Proud Preston: Alan Kelly Mark Lawrenson, Phil Jones, Andrew Flintoff, Edith Rigby Mike Summerbee, Kevin Kilbane, John Inman, Sir Richard Arkwright Sir Tom Finney, Roy Barraclough Actually the more I look at it the more gay it gets, but hey ho, Sir Tom Finney would have won it on his own anyway. I’m jealous of towns/cities that can field a full 11, all we have is Clarke Carlisle and Phil Jones. If we're including the general Preston area/postcode which Jones falls under, we can surely include David Unsworth in Chorley? Sep 30, 2019 #97 pascell Full Member Joined Aug 3, 2012 Messages 14,589 Location Sir Alex Ferguson Stand My mum lives in Leyland. Well Clayton-le-Woods technically, which is also where Phil Jones is from. It is indeed, he went to Balshaws High School, where that slap video was took. People I've spoken to have all said he wasn't that good back then. Sep 30, 2019 #98 711 Amadinho is the goat Joined Dec 10, 2007 Messages 24,612 Location Don't sign old players and cast offs If we're including the general Preston area/postcode which Jones falls under, we can surely include David Unsworth in Chorley? Thanks, I wouldn't mind but I have a very roundabout connection to him too. He can replace Jones I think. With Nick Park sub. Sep 30, 2019 #99 VeevaVee The worst "V" Joined Jan 3, 2009 Messages 46,272 It is indeed, he went to Balshaws High School, where that slap video was took. People I've spoken to have all said he wasn't that good back then. I just missed out on playing footy with him as a lad I was good mates moved to the same estate as him and went on to be good mates with him, but we fell out of touch just before. Would've been interesting to know what he was like first hand. I've heard of pros not seeming anything special as kids/teens before though. Sep 30, 2019 #100 simplyared Full Member Joined Nov 29, 2017 Messages 4,456 Location somewhere ouside the UK Glasgow: GK Jim Leighton RB Alan Hutton CB Willie Miller CB Alex McLeish LB Andy Robertson MF John McGinn MF John Wark MF Pat Nevin FW Kenny Dalglish FW Mo Johnstone FW James McFadden Edinburgh: GK Craig Gordon RB Sandy Jardine CB Dave Mackay CB John Greig LB Arthur Albiston MF Graeme Souness MF Gordon Strachan MF Sandy Robertson FW Lou Macari FW Ralph Brand FW Kenny Miller Sep 30, 2019 #101 1966 Full Member Joined Jul 4, 2018 Messages 418 Location UK Supports England Best teams so far are Amsterdam, London, Buenos Aires, Rio, and maybe Liverpool. Interesting thread. Oct 1, 2019 #102 markhughes Full Member Joined Jul 31, 2016 Messages 867 Location Sheffield, England Sheffield 1st 11 of the top of my head...I'm probably missing a few! Gordon Banks Kyle Naughton Harry Maguire Kyle Walker Chris Wilder Derek Dooley Mel Sterland Howard Wilkinson Jamie Vardy Billy Sharp David Hirst Oct 1, 2019 #103 BigBebe Full Member Joined Mar 10, 2013 Messages 883 Location Are you the ref? Best teams so far are Amsterdam, London, Buenos Aires, Rio, and maybe Liverpool. Interesting thread. Please, have another look at Glasgow. Greater Glasgow would have a belting team, but within Glasgow: Dalglish - McGrory Morton - Auld - Murdoch - Henderson Robertson - Miller - McNeill - McGrain Simpson ​ That's a @Pat_Mustard crafted midfield if ever I saw one. And may I add the manager, Sir Alex Ferguson. Oct 1, 2019 #104 Steve Bruce Full Member Joined Aug 19, 2008 Messages 1,431 Belfast Gk Elisha Scott Rb pat rice Lb George McCartney Cb mal Donaghy Cb Johnny Evans Lm best Rm Bingham Cm mcilroy Cm D blanchflower St Joe bambrick St whiteside Very difficult for Belfast but I got a team Oct 1, 2019 #105 1950 Full Member Joined Jan 10, 2017 Messages 554 Split GK Stipe Pletikosa RB Vilson Džoni CB Igor Tudor CB Slaven Bilić LB Jozo Matošić DM Dražen Mužinić AM Aljoša Asanović AM Jurica Jerković RM Ivan Perišić LM Ivica Šurjak CF Frane Matošić ​ Probably harsh on Luka Peruzović and Zoran Vulić. Not bad for a city with a population of less than 200,000. If players from the county (still less than 500,000, but from a much larger area) were eligible, you'd have Vladimir Beara, Ivan Katalinić, Ivan Buljan, Ivan Gudelj, Zvonimir Boban and Alen Bokšić to choose from as well. Oct 1, 2019 #106 Gio ★★★★★★★★ Joined Jan 25, 2001 Messages 20,532 Location Bonnie Scotland Supports Rangers Please, have another look at Glasgow. And may I add the manager, Sir Alex Ferguson. Shout. Although Kenny might walk out because Hansen wasn't selected. Oct 1, 2019 #107 Chipper Adulterer. Joined Oct 25, 2017 Messages 6,166 Rio (players I've seen) : ---------J.Cesar---------- Jorginho-T.Silva---Juan--Serginho Leonardo -- Allan -- Marcelo Romario Adriano --- Ronaldo That's the state, not the city. Neymar and Djalminha born in Santos. Julio Cesar born in Duque de Caxias, Serginho in Nilópolis, Leonardo in Niterói. Not that I know exactly how Brazil breaks down it's areas exactly and it always depends on how strict we're being of course. They're all part of the metropolitan area though. The first two are good way out on the outskirts. Nilópolis is almost as far away from downtown Rio de Janeiro as Liverpool is from Manchester but then Rio is much bigger than either. Niterói is across the water on the other side of the bay. Last edited: Oct 1, 2019 Oct 1, 2019 #108 Chipper Adulterer. Joined Oct 25, 2017 Messages 6,166 I think you’re onto the winner: Ronaldo - Romario Zico - Jairzinho Alvim - Nelinho Nílton Santos - Carlos Mozer - Thiago Silva - Carlos Alberto Diego Alves​ Rio has to be the winner. Plenty of other good options too. Walter (de Souza Goulart), Castilho, Marcelo, Edinho (Nazareth Filho), Ricardo Gomes, Domingos da Guia, Jorginho (de Amorim Campos), Ademir da Guia, Leonidas da Silva, Adriano Last edited: Oct 1, 2019 Oct 1, 2019 #109 Chipper Adulterer. Joined Oct 25, 2017 Messages 6,166 Sao Paolo is also interesting. Cafu, Roberto Carlos, Neymar, Rivelino, Djalminha, Robinho, etc Cafu is from Itaquaquecetuba which is it's own municipality. If being ultra strict we couldn't have him, but it is part of the Sao Paolo metropolitan area and would be like putting Wigan, Bolton, Oldham, Salford lads in the Manchester one. Of the others only Rivelino is from there. You could have: Felix Cafu - if not being ridiculously strict Marcio Santos Roberto Dias Djalma Santos (out of position) Jose Carlos Bauer Ze Roberto Julinho Juninho Paulista Rivelino Arthur Friedenreich Oct 1, 2019 #110 Denis79 Full Member Joined Nov 2, 2014 Messages 7,868 Buenos Aires: Di Stefano Maradona - Moreno Simeone - Rossi - Batista Sorin - Placente - Monti - Zanetti Roma​ Wow... Oct 1, 2019 #111 robinamicrowave Wanted to be bran, ended up being littlefinger Joined Jul 29, 2013 Messages 2,739 Supports Man City Barcelona (which was much, much harder than I thought it would be) Valdes Montoya, Oleguer, Pique, Alba Xavi, Busquets, Guardiola Fabregas, Tamudo, Tello London Stepney Sansom, Ferdinand, Terry, A. Cole Beckham, Lampard, Hoddle, J. Cole Kane, Wright Oct 1, 2019 #112 Gio ★★★★★★★★ Joined Jan 25, 2001 Messages 20,532 Location Bonnie Scotland Supports Rangers @robinamicrowave You could probably throw Ferrer and Segarra into the defence to get rid of Montoya and Oleguer. Oct 1, 2019 #113 Nobby style Full Member Joined Jul 24, 2009 Messages 6,287 Location Tooting Colombia to Tooting Bec and back again Medellin Rene Higuita Luis Chonto Herrera - Andres Escobar - Ivan Cordoba - Diego Osorio Leonel Alvarez - Mauricio Chicho Serna - Juan Fernando Quintero - Alexis Garcia Juan Pablo Angel - Victor Aristizabal *Owner - Pablo Escobar Oct 1, 2019 #114 Eric's Seagull Full Member Joined Sep 23, 2018 Messages 3,707 Location 4-4-2: The Flat One Budapest --------------------------------------Gyula Grosics----------------------------------------------- Sándor Mátrai --------Ferenc Sipos------------Gyula Lóránt---------------Mihály Lantos --------------------------------------József Zakariás------------------------------------------- ----------------------József Bozsik--------------------Nándor Hidegkuti----------------------- Sándor Kocsis-------------Ferenc Puskas-----------László Kubala Edit: Puskas meant to be in. Last edited: Oct 1, 2019 Oct 1, 2019 #115 BlackShark_80 Full Member Joined Nov 3, 2016 Messages 1,169 Budapest --------------------------------------Gyula Grosics----------------------------------------------- Sándor Mátrai --------Ferenc Sipos------------Gyula Lóránt---------------Mihály Lantos --------------------------------------József Zakariás------------------------------------------- ----------------------József Bozsik--------------------Nándor Hidegkuti----------------------- Sándor Kocsis-------------Alfredo Di Stefano-----------László Kubala 8 Lantos Ferenc Sipos Lorant Grosics No Gyorgy Sarosi, Gyorgy Orth, and Ferenc Puskas? Oct 1, 2019 #116 stepic Full Member Joined Aug 31, 2006 Messages 8,814 Location London Being a Manc I’ll choose (Greater) Manchester: GK Joe Corrigan RB Garry Neville CB Michael Keane CB Wes Brown LB Phil Neville MF Nicky Butt MF Paul Scholes MF Danny Drinkwater MF Phil Foden FW Marcus Rashford FW Francis Lee Subs: Phil Jagielka, Nobby Stiles, Kieron Trippier, Ravel Morrison, Nat Lofthouse. Rashford making an all time 11 in an indictment on Manchester football. Oct 1, 2019 #117 Eric's Seagull Full Member Joined Sep 23, 2018 Messages 3,707 Location 4-4-2: The Flat One No Gyorgy Sarosi, Gyorgy Orth, and Ferenc Puskas? Puskas was in team. I put it in wrong. Apologies, I edited it. Was thinking of putting in Gyorgi Sarosi instead of József Bozsik. Never heard of Gyorgy Orth until now. Oct 1, 2019 #118 harms Shining Star of Paektu Mountain Joined Apr 8, 2014 Messages 28,275 Location Moscow Budapest --------------------------------------Gyula Grosics----------------------------------------------- Sándor Mátrai --------Ferenc Sipos------------Gyula Lóránt---------------Mihály Lantos --------------------------------------József Zakariás------------------------------------------- ----------------------József Bozsik--------------------Nándor Hidegkuti----------------------- Sándor Kocsis-------------Ferenc Puskas-----------László Kubala Edit: Puskas meant to be in. That's fecking amazing, although I'd put the front three like Kubala (played a lot on the right for Barca) - Kocsis - Puskas (preferred left inside channel) No Gyorgy Sarosi, Gyorgy Orth, and Ferenc Puskas? Puskas was in team. I put it in wrong. Apologies, I edited it. Was thinking of putting in Gyorgi Sarosi instead of József Bozsik. Never heard of Gyorgy Orth until now. The beauty of Sarosi is that he played at the highest level as a striker, midfielder and center back (and once got nominated by 3 different journalists in a World XI as a striker, midfielder and defender) — I think you can easily find him a place in defence. Oct 1, 2019 #119 BlackShark_80 Full Member Joined Nov 3, 2016 Messages 1,169 Puskas was in team. I put it in wrong. Apologies, I edited it. Was thinking of putting in Gyorgi Sarosi instead of József Bozsik. Never heard of Gyorgy Orth until now. You can replace Zakarias with Bozsik and put both Sarosi and Orth as B2B. Orth was considered to be one of the most talented Hungarian player ever.
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dbpedia
3
16
http://xtralegend.blogspot.com/2013/05/Brazil.html
en
International Legendary Museum
https://blogger.googleus…no-nu/Brazil.png
https://blogger.googleus…no-nu/Brazil.png
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[ "Naratorn Wirunhchatapant" ]
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“The Selecao” Brazil creates the value of the wonderful beautiful side to the game and have been producing many World legends. However,...
en
http://xtralegend.blogspot.com/favicon.ico
http://xtralegend.blogspot.com/2013/05/Brazil.html
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https://www.academia.edu/32592435/Dicionario_portugues
en
Dicionario portugues
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[ "Alan Barros", "independent.academia.edu" ]
2017-04-22T00:00:00
Dicionario portugues
https://www.academia.edu/32592435/Dicionario_portugues
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dbpedia
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https://www.oneclub.org/awards/theoneshow/-award/33586/ricky-brasil
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Forbes Brasil | Ricky Brasil
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Forbes Brasil | Ricky Brasil, Annual ID: OS_EX19020B, Award: Bronze Pencil , Category: Experiential & Immersive - Craft / Storytelling
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The One Show The One Show is the world's most prestigious award show in advertising and design. For over 50 years, the Gold Pencil has been regarded as one of the top prizes in the creative industry. The One Show has a rich legacy of honoring some of the most groundbreaking ideas, created by some of the most remarkable minds in creativity. 2019 One Show - Experiential & Immersive Ricky Brasil Agency Ogilvy Brasil / São Paulo + Forbes Brasil / São Paulo + Trator Filmes / São Paulo + Nexo.AI / São Paulo Category Craft / Storytelling Annual ID OS_EX19020B About the Work As the most important business magazine in the world, Forbes wanted to raise awareness about the multi-billion-dollar corruption in Brazil. It started on 2017, when Forbes Brazil started pointing out on their richest people list names of billionaires that were investigated from corruption. On 2018 - the year of elections in Brazil, Forbes wanted it to go beyond its regular audience. Forbes wanted an idea that reached all Brazilians who are able to vote on 2018. 2019 Awards Total Points: 10 Bronze Pencil Credits Agency Ogilvy Brasil / São Paulo Client / Brand Forbes Brasil / São Paulo Production Company Trator Filmes / São Paulo Nexo.AI / São Paulo Evil Twin / São Paulo StratoStorm / São Paulo Estúdio Notan / São Paulo Art Director Paulo Engler Chief Creative Officer Claudio Lima Chief Technology Officer Luiz Carvalho Creative Director Eduardo Doss Guiga Giacomo Digital Artist Marcos Sampaio Editor Deydson Rocha Executive Creative Director Felix del Valle Producer Paty Silveira Product Manager Priscilla Saikai Beto Campos Programmer Ariane Camilla User Experience Designer Flávia Goulart Alexander Schevtschenko User Interface Designer Caroline Salles Account Team Juliana Fernandes Juliana Marques Related Awards You are about to delete the record, this procedure is irreversible. Do you want to proceed?
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https://www.worldfootball.net/player_summary/edinho_3/san-lorenzo/3/
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Edinho » Record against San Lorenzo
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Edinho » Matches for San Lorenzo: » Record against San Lorenzo
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https://www.ncronline.org/earthbeat/politics/indigenous-church-activists-fear-amazons-destruction-if-bolsonaro-reelected
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Indigenous, church activists fear Amazon's destruction if Bolsonaro is reelected
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Ahead of the final round of Brazil's presidential election, Catholic social pastoral ministries released a letter repudiating incumbent Jair Bolsonaro's reelection. They cited his "policy of environmental destruction."
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National Catholic Reporter
https://www.ncronline.org/earthbeat/politics/indigenous-church-activists-fear-amazons-destruction-if-bolsonaro-reelected
Editor's note: This story was updated Oct. 30 at 7:15 p.m., central, with results of Brazil's election. Days ahead of the second, and final, round of Brazil's presidential election, a number of Catholic social pastoral ministries in the country released a letter repudiating the incumbent Jair Bolsonaro's reelection. One of the reasons they cited for their stance: the current president's "policy of environmental destruction." The Oct. 21 letter was signed by dozens of church groups, including committees within the Brazilian bishops' conference that deal especially with vulnerable populational segments. Among them were the Land Pastoral Commission, the Indigenous Missionary Council, or CIMI, and Caritas. Brazilians will return to the polls Oct. 30 for a runoff vote that pits Bolsonaro against former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. In the first round Oct. 2, Lula da Silva led with 48.4% of the votes, while Bolsonaro had 43.2%. A candidate had to exceed 50% of the vote to avoid the runoff election. The most recent polls show that Lula 6 is percentage points ahead, with 53% support, versus Bolsonaro at 47%. After the polls closed and ballots were tallied Oct. 30, Lula was declared the winner by Brazil's election authority, achieving a narrow victory with just over 50% of the vote, per preliminary results. Among their reasons to reject a second Bolsonaro term, the Catholic groups also mentioned his "bad attitudes concerning his handling of issues" connected to different social minorities, including native peoples and traditional communities who often are at the center of the struggle for environmental protections and human rights and whose livelihoods directly depend on the South American country's vast ecosystems. In recent years, Indigenous activists and Catholics have worked together to denounce how Bolsonaro has simultaneously weakened the government's environmental agencies and endorsed the invasion of protected lands, which has led to unprecedented destruction in all Brazilian biomes — especially in the Amazon — and has impacted the lives of thousands of the rainforest's peoples. Environmental experts in Brazil have argued that the Amazon would not survive four more years in the current scenario. Parts of the rainforest — especially in its eastern and southeastern portions — already emit more carbon than they can absorb, according to agronomist Ima Guimarães Vieira, a researcher at the Emilio Goeldi Museum in Belém and an adviser to the Catholic Church's Pan-Amazon Ecclesial Network (REPAM). "The Amazon already had 20% of its area destroyed [in the past five decades]. I think that a new Bolsonaro tenure would result in at least 30% of deforestation," she told EarthBeat. The past four years alone has seen the devastation reach 48,000 square kilometers, she added. Ecologists like Vieira say that Bolsonaro considers environmental issues to be an obstacle to his model of exploitation of the Amazon, which is based on highly environmentally impacting activities like cattle raising and mining. "During his administration, the environmental monitoring and control agencies have been weakened and crimes have not been punished. Actions to combat deforestation were reduced and laws were changed [in order to loosen environmental protections]," she said. A recent report showed that the federal budget for environmental policies has fallen substantially. In 2014, during former President Dilma Rousseff's tenure, government spending on the environment reached its highest levels in history, $2.5 billion. By 2021, Bolsonaro had slashed spending to less than $700 million on environmental protection. "Those organs [agencies] had their teams reduced. Senior workers retired and the government has not hired new ones. The number of monitoring operations and raids declined. At times, inspectors in charge of harsh measures against illegal loggers were fired," said Sr. Jean Ann Bellini, a U.S.-born missionary in Brazil who is part of Land Pastoral Commission. The National Institute for Colonization and Agrarian Reform, or INCRA, the governmental agency in charge of land reform in Brazil, has completely ceased to grant farmlands to landless peasants under Bolsonaro, Bellini added. "At the same time, he endorsed a kind of deed regularization based on the self-declaration of ownership. This way, what happened is that land invaders — especially in the Amazon — have received the right to own areas inside of protected reservations, for instance," she said. Advertisement In Brazil, many lands are owned by the state. Historically, people would occupy them and forge ownership documents, a process called grilagem in Portuguese. The origin of the word is connected to the fact that invaders would put grilos — the Portuguese word for crickets — inside of a box with a fraudulent deed. After a few days, the document would look like an ancient piece of paper and the forger would show it as evidence of his rightful claim to an area. "Bolsonaro's policy officialized grilagem in Brazil," Bellini said. But no crickets are needed now. Illegal land occupiers, or grileiros, usually invade areas and destroy the existing forest so they can sell "cleared lands" to farmers for higher prices. When that process is certified by the government — as Bolsonaro has been doing — agrobusiness companies feel free to buy those areas to expand their operations. Under Bolsonaro, the incentives for illegal land clearing practices have come from many sources, Bellini said. Along with the federal government, local governments supportive of Bolsonaro have also played a role by approving legislation to favor land invaders and economic activities in protected zones. "This way, even lone wolves with no political connections nor financial strength have been feeling empowered to occupy and destroy the rainforest, with the expectation that Bolsonaro will somehow legitimate their actions," she said. Such practices will likely keep advancing even if Bolsonaro is not reelected, Bellini warned. Besides small farmers, Indigenous peoples are the most impacted groups by the land intrusions. Most native peoples worry about a second Bolsonaro term. "Bolsonaro has cut the dialogue with the Indigenous peoples and is boosting a model of occupation in the Amazon, which is extremely contrary to their traditional way of living," Antonio Eduardo de Oliveira, CIMI executive secretary, told EarthBeat. That concern has led many Amazonian Indigenous peoples to take an active role in the presidential campaign, not only demonstrating support to Lula da Silva but also appointing their own candidates to Congress. Only a handful of the Indigenous candidates won offices in the Oct. 2 elections, but de Oliveira said those who did — like Congresswoman Sonia Guajajara, a longtime Indigenous activist — will be strong voices against the destruction of the Amazon during the next four years. "[Guajajara has] a profound knowledge of the Amazonian reality," he said. A recent report published by the progressive newspaper Brasil de Fato found a confluence between environmental destruction in the Amazon and support for Bolsonaro. In general, the most destroyed areas of the rainforest have been the ones where Bolsonaro and his allies received more votes. "That relation is expected," Vieira, the REPAM adviser, said. "In the southeast and southwest regions of Pará State, for instance, where agrobusiness is hegemonic and devastation is terrible, Bolsonaro has been the most voted candidate in the first round." In the city of Novo Progresso, where in August 2019 local farmers and loggers promoted a "day of fire," Bolsonaro had almost 80% of the votes, she added. "The Indigenous peoples know that the rainforest will be destroyed if he is reelected. We are the guardians of nature and he will do anything to take us out of his way," Adriano Karipuna, a member of the Karipuna people from Rondonia State, told EarthBeat. The Karipuna have been facing a vast invasion of their territory over the past years. The invaders have already devastated about a third of the area's Amazon rainforest. "To make things worse, both candidates for state governor support Bolsonaro's policies for the environment," he said. "Even if Lula is elected, we will have to deal locally with such a disaster." In the absence of government action, Indigenous groups all over the Amazon have mobilized in order to monitor invasions of their territories and act when necessary. That is the case of the Indigenous Council of Roraima, an alliance of several local Indigenous peoples that established security bases in different parts of the northern state's Indigenous lands. "There has been a continuous pressure from illegal miners over our lands," coordinator Edinho Macuxi said. "Earlier this year, we had to carry out an operation against them. We set fire to their dredges and destroyed their equipment." Macuxi emphasized that the Indigenous peoples are well organized and ready to keep fighting Bolsonaro if he is elected again. "That would be a fierce battle, but we will never simply allow him to destroy the environment as he wants to do," he said.
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Rita Maria – Música Brasileira
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The Original Maria Rita And then there were two singers with the same name, Maria Rita… The first one, Maria Rita Brandão was born in 1974 in São Paulo and the second one, Maria Rita Mariano, also born in … Continued
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https://www.firstpost.com/sports/football-news/pele-golden-tomb-public-brazil-12601742.html
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Pele's gilded, turf-lined tomb opens to public in Brazil
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Pele, who died on December 29 at age 82 after a battle with cancer, was laid to rest at the Ecumenical Memorial Cemetery in Santos, Brazil.
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It is a final resting place fit for “The King”: six months after the death of the man widely considered the greatest footballer of all time, Brazil opened Pele’s gilded, football-turfed tomb to the public Monday. Pele, who died on 29 December at age 82 after a battle with cancer, was laid to rest at the Ecumenical Memorial Cemetery in Santos, Brazil. It is a high-rise, 14-story mausoleum that holds the Guinness world record for the tallest cemetery on Earth. Advertisement Fans were greeted by two life-size golden statues of the player nicknamed “O Rei” — The King — whose remains rest inside a large golden vault displayed in the middle of a 200-square-meter (more than 2,000-square-foot) room carpeted in artificial turf. “It surpassed my expectations. It’s a really beautiful place,” said Ronaldo Rodrigues, 44, a businessman who was first in line to visit the tomb, along with his wife. “I hope lots of tourists will come visit and get to know a little about Pele’s story, what he represented for Santos, Brazil and the entire world.” Born Edson Arantes do Nascimento, Pele is the only player in history to win three World Cups (1958, 1962 and 1970). He scored a world record 1,281 goals during his more than two-decade career with Santos (1956-74), the New York Cosmos (1975-77) and the Brazilian national team. Advertisement In tears, Pele’s son Edinho told reporters who flocked to the southeastern port city that the family was still struggling to cope with their loss. “But we’re also very proud and happy at all the affection and reverence that’s kept pouring in,” he said. For now, entries to the tomb are limited to 60 people a day, via a sign-up form on the cemetery’s website. Advertisement Topped with a cross, Pele’s golden vault has black etchings on its sides depicting his 1,000th goal and his famous raised-fist goal celebration. The room is wallpapered with images of fans in a football stadium. The resort-like cemetery also features an auto museum that now includes the Mercedes Benz S-280 the company gave Pele in 1974 to commemorate his 1,000th goal. Advertisement “It’s a place that’s rich in detail, all lovingly assembled in tribute, as the ‘King’ deserves,” cemetery manager Paulo Campos told AFP. The mausoleum sits less than a kilometer (0.6 mile) from the Vila Belmiro, the stadium where Pele played most of his storied career. Read all the Latest News , Trending News , Cricket News , Bollywood News , India News and Entertainment News here. Follow us on Facebook , Twitter and Instagram .
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https://www.firstpost.com/sports/football-news/pele-golden-tomb-public-brazil-12601742.html
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Pele's gilded, turf-lined tomb opens to public in Brazil
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2023-05-16T12:07:36+05:30
Pele, who died on December 29 at age 82 after a battle with cancer, was laid to rest at the Ecumenical Memorial Cemetery in Santos, Brazil.
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Firstpost
https://www.firstpost.com/sports/football-news/pele-golden-tomb-public-brazil-12601742.html
It is a final resting place fit for “The King”: six months after the death of the man widely considered the greatest footballer of all time, Brazil opened Pele’s gilded, football-turfed tomb to the public Monday. Pele, who died on 29 December at age 82 after a battle with cancer, was laid to rest at the Ecumenical Memorial Cemetery in Santos, Brazil. It is a high-rise, 14-story mausoleum that holds the Guinness world record for the tallest cemetery on Earth. Advertisement Fans were greeted by two life-size golden statues of the player nicknamed “O Rei” — The King — whose remains rest inside a large golden vault displayed in the middle of a 200-square-meter (more than 2,000-square-foot) room carpeted in artificial turf. “It surpassed my expectations. It’s a really beautiful place,” said Ronaldo Rodrigues, 44, a businessman who was first in line to visit the tomb, along with his wife. “I hope lots of tourists will come visit and get to know a little about Pele’s story, what he represented for Santos, Brazil and the entire world.” Born Edson Arantes do Nascimento, Pele is the only player in history to win three World Cups (1958, 1962 and 1970). He scored a world record 1,281 goals during his more than two-decade career with Santos (1956-74), the New York Cosmos (1975-77) and the Brazilian national team. Advertisement In tears, Pele’s son Edinho told reporters who flocked to the southeastern port city that the family was still struggling to cope with their loss. “But we’re also very proud and happy at all the affection and reverence that’s kept pouring in,” he said. For now, entries to the tomb are limited to 60 people a day, via a sign-up form on the cemetery’s website. Advertisement Topped with a cross, Pele’s golden vault has black etchings on its sides depicting his 1,000th goal and his famous raised-fist goal celebration. The room is wallpapered with images of fans in a football stadium. The resort-like cemetery also features an auto museum that now includes the Mercedes Benz S-280 the company gave Pele in 1974 to commemorate his 1,000th goal. Advertisement “It’s a place that’s rich in detail, all lovingly assembled in tribute, as the ‘King’ deserves,” cemetery manager Paulo Campos told AFP. The mausoleum sits less than a kilometer (0.6 mile) from the Vila Belmiro, the stadium where Pele played most of his storied career. Read all the Latest News , Trending News , Cricket News , Bollywood News , India News and Entertainment News here. Follow us on Facebook , Twitter and Instagram .
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edinho_(footballer,_born_1983)
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Edinho (footballer, born 1983)
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Brazilian footballer In this Portuguese name, the first or maternal family name is Ferreira and the second or paternal family name is Campos. Edimo Ferreira Campos (born 15 January 1983), commonly known as Edinho, is a Brazilian former professional footballer who played as a defensive midfielder. Career [edit] In January 2010, Palmeiras confirmed that the club signed another reinforcement for the team. This season, the club signed the defensive midfielder for 4 years, until December 2013. In January 2011, Fluminense sign the player for peticion by, Muricy Ramalho, coach of the Fluminense. On 19 December 2013, with the end of his contract with Fluminense, transferred to the Grêmio for the 2014 season.[1] On the June 6, 2016, it was involved in a change for player Negueba, in the which Edinho will act for Coritiba.[2][3] Career statistics [edit] As of 2 April 2017[4] Club Season League National Cup Continental Other Total Division Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Lecce 2008-09 Serie A 14 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 0 2009-10 Serie B 17 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 19 0 Total 31 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 33 0 Palmeiras 2010 Série A 30 1 8 1 7 0 14 0 59 2 Fluminense 2011 Série A 33 1 0 0 6 0 11 0 50 1 2012 33 0 0 0 8 0 11 0 52 0 2013 34 0 2 0 10 0 14 0 60 0 Total 100 1 2 0 24 0 36 0 162 1 Grêmio 2014 Série A 10 0 0 0 8 0 13 1 31 1 2015 19 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 24 0 2016 2 0 0 0 5 0 13 1 20 1 Total 31 0 5 0 13 0 26 2 75 2 Coritiba 2016 Série A 20 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 22 0 2017 0 0 1 0 0 0 8 0 9 0 Total 20 0 1 0 2 0 8 0 31 0 Career total 212 2 18 1 46 0 84 2 360 5 Honours [edit] Club [edit] Internacional Campeonato Gaúcho: 2003, 2004, 2005, 2008 Copa Libertadores: 2006 FIFA Club World Cup: 2006 Recopa Sudamericana: 2007 Copa Sudamericana: 2008 Fluminense Campeonato Carioca: 2012 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A: 2012 Coritiba Campeonato Paranaense: 2017 References [edit]
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https://www.alamy.com/stock-photo/edinho.html
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res stock photography and images
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Find the perfect edinho stock photo, image, vector, illustration or 360 image. Available for both RF and RM licensing.
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Alamy
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Alamy and its logo are trademarks of Alamy Ltd. and are registered in certain countries. Copyright © 13/08/2024 Alamy Ltd. All rights reserved.
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https://www.instagram.com/matheusdebuscamara/reel/C6t5tS-LKj-/
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Instagram
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2011 Fluminense Roster Details, All Competitions
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Check out Fluminense's latest scores, goals, shooting, passing, defense, possession stats and more for the 2011 {competition}.
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FBref.com
https://fbref.com/en/squads/84d9701c/2011/roster/Fluminense-Roster-Details
About FBref.com FBref.com launched (June 13, 2018) with domestic league coverage for England, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and United States. Since then we have been steadily expanding our coverage to include domestic leagues from over 40 countries as well as domestic cup, super cup and youth leagues from top European countries. We have also added coverage for major international cups such as the UEFA Champions League and Copa Libertadores. FBref is the most complete sources for women's football data on the internet. This includes the entire history of the FIFA Women's World Cup as well as recent domestic league seasons from nine countries, including advanced stats like xG for most of those nine. In collaboration with Opta, we are including advanced analytical data such as xG, xA, progressive passing, duels and more for over twenty competitions. For more information on the expected goals model and which competitions have advanced data, see our xG explainer.
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https://www.xscores.com/soccer/match/brazil/serie-a/cruzeiro-vs-coritiba/2015-2016/1301686
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Cruzeiro vs Coritiba match
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Here on xscores you can find all detailed information about Cruzeiro vs Coritiba match - 2015-2016, previous match results sorted by their H2H and standings.
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Cruzeiro vs Coritiba match - 2015-2016 Welcome to Xscores, your premier source for live sports scores and updates! Stay connected with all the action on the go by downloading our mobile applications for both Android and Apple iOS devices. Our intuitive and user-friendly apps provide real-time scores, match schedules, team news, and more, right at your fingertips. Whether you're a fan of football, basketball, tennis, or any other major sport, our mobile apps ensure you never miss a moment of the game. Download the Xscores app today from the Google Play Store or Apple App Store to experience the excitement of live sports wherever you are. Don't wait – get instant access to scores and updates with our mobile apps! Real time data feed solutions for sports data statistics, media and Internet companies in JSON or XML format API. For more information about our products and services please Click here For information regarding advertising, employment, results or general enquiries please Contact Us Our app is now available on Google Play and App Store. Download it now for free!
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https://dokumen.pub/the-country-of-football-soccer-and-the-making-of-modern-brazil-9780520958258.html
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The Country of Football: Soccer and the Making of Modern Brazil 9780520958258
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Soccer is the world’s most popular sport, and the Brazilian national team is beloved around the planet for its beautiful...
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dokumen.pub
https://dokumen.pub/the-country-of-football-soccer-and-the-making-of-modern-brazil-9780520958258.html
Table of contents : Contents List of Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction: Serious Play 1. A National Game: Futebol Made Popular, Professional, and Afro-Brazilian 2. When It was Good to be Brazilian: Tropical Modernity Affirmed, 1958–70 3. Playing Modern: Efficiency over Art, 1971–80 4. Risky Beauty: Art and the Opening of Brazil in the 1980s 5. The Business of Winning: Brand Brazil and the New Globalism, 1990–2010 Conclusion: Mega-Brazil Notes Works Cited Index Citation preview
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https://fbref.com/en/squads/84d9701c/2012/roster/Fluminense-Roster-Details
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2012 Fluminense Roster Details, All Competitions
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Check out Fluminense's latest scores, goals, shooting, passing, defense, possession stats and more for the 2012 {competition}.
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FBref.com
https://fbref.com/en/squads/84d9701c/2012/roster/Fluminense-Roster-Details
About FBref.com FBref.com launched (June 13, 2018) with domestic league coverage for England, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and United States. Since then we have been steadily expanding our coverage to include domestic leagues from over 40 countries as well as domestic cup, super cup and youth leagues from top European countries. We have also added coverage for major international cups such as the UEFA Champions League and Copa Libertadores. FBref is the most complete sources for women's football data on the internet. This includes the entire history of the FIFA Women's World Cup as well as recent domestic league seasons from nine countries, including advanced stats like xG for most of those nine. In collaboration with Opta, we are including advanced analytical data such as xG, xA, progressive passing, duels and more for over twenty competitions. For more information on the expected goals model and which competitions have advanced data, see our xG explainer.
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https://blackbraziltoday.com/all-hail-the-king-pele-the-greatest-soccer-player-of-all-time-turns-80/
en
All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80
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[ "Marques Travae" ]
2020-10-25T01:04:02+00:00
All Hail the King of Soccer recently celebrated eight decades, but talking about Pelé offers a glipse of being a black man in Brazilian society.
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https://i0.wp.com/blackb…it=32%2C32&ssl=1
Black Brazil Today
https://blackbraziltoday.com/all-hail-the-king-pele-the-greatest-soccer-player-of-all-time-turns-80/
Note from BBT: I can’t say with any certainty when I first heard the name Pelé, but I do know it was some time in the late 70s. As a child, I was an avid sports fan and prided myself on being a walking sports encyclopedia. I could remember birthdates, points per game averages, batting averages and rushing yards of players in the three most popular American sports as well as any sports journalist. To keep up with stats, teams and players, I always asked my parents to buy me sports books and I remember having at least two subscriptions to Sports Illustrated magazine. I had many favorite sports heroes, but my favorite player was the legendary Julius Erving, better known as Dr. J, the high-flying forward of the Philadelphia 76ers. The first book I remember reading in my life was about Dr.J, and like any black kid growing up in the ‘hood, I wanted to be like The Doctor. I played all three of the big three most popular team sports in the United States, basketball, football and baseball, and when I wasn’t playing, I was glued in front of the television watching the games, both professional and college. (All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80) I also watched boxing matches and was aware of other sports such as soccer, hockey, volleyball, bowling, etc. I reguarly went bowling or watched my father’s weekly bowling events, but sports such as soccer and volleyball I would only play when I was required to participate during my school’s gym classes. I only knew one black family that advidly watched hockey and soccer just didn’t interest me. Even not being into soccer, I still knew who Pelé was. He was the first Brazilian I ever knew of. At such a young age, I hadn’t come to understand how black people ended up in so many countries in the Americas but you didn’t have to know where they were from to recognize that non-American black people looked like people in the family and my neighborhood. (All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80) As soccer wasn’t a sport that caught my attention, I didn’t know anything about Pelé when he began to play for the North American Soccer League with the New York Cosmos, but I couldn’t help but note all of the hoopla there was in the media about his arrival in the US. Pelé would appear on the cover of an issue of Sports Illustrated at that time wearing the green and white of the Cosmos. From the reports I read about him, he was supposed to be like Dr. J of soccer. As I had only seen photos of him and had never actually seen him play, I couldn’t develop an opinion on this. There were at least five things that Dr. J and Pelé had in common and, if I were to really think about it, I would probably find many more. One was playing for teams located in New York. Dr.J had constructed his image as one the most exciting basketball players in history playing for the New York Nets of the old American Basketball Association, the ABA, the rival league of the NBA, the National Basketball Association. Erving’s last year with the Nets was also the ABA’s last year, the league folding in 1976 due to financial issues. Erving was in his prime at the age of 27 when he would join the 76ers for the 1976-77 season. (All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80) On the other hand, Pelé, at age 34, had joined the Cosmos in the twilight of his career. I didn’t know it, but the man whose real name was Edson Arantes do Nascimento had already won three World Cup titles, an incredible feat for a single player. The second thing they shared was, similar to Erving joining the NBA in Philly, Pelé arrived in New York with high expectations from fans and the league. Thinking back, another thing the two had in common, at least for me, was the fact that I had missed the best years of both. Although both athletes were still great, by the time Erving had joined the NBA and Pelé had joined the NASL, I had no way of knowing their prior careers. In Doc’s case, ABA games didn’t gain television exposure and Pelé played his career up to that point in Brazil, plus soccer wasn’t very popular in the US. (All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80) Erving had carried the declining ABA for many years and, as the ABA hadn’t received much media attention, people really hadn’t seen vintage Erving and, with his arrival, it was expected that he would not only bring a championship to Philly, but also revitalize a league whose popularity had declined in the years before he joined the 76ers. Similarly, it was hoped that Pelé could do the same for an NASL that simply couldn’t compete with the big three American sports. This hope that Pelé could make soccer more popular in the US was matched by his salary. Joining the league in 1975, Pelé signed a deal that would pay him nearly $1.5 million per year, a staggering amount of money at the time. For the sake of comparison, consider the fact that Erving didn’t reach the seven-figure mark until sometime in the early to mid-1980s. It’s absolutely mind-boggling to realize that a current athlete like LeBron James earns Pelé’s 1975 salary, which was extremely lucrative for the time, in less than four NBA games! (All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80) Another similarity The Doctor and The King shared was joining star-studded teams. Erving would join a 76ers team that already had higher-scoring all-stars such as fellow ABA collegue, power forward George McGinnis, guard Doug Collins and a host of other players players who had the potential to be all-stars. Pelé’s Cosmos also featured the Italian Giorgio Chinaglia and the West German Franz Beckenbauer. (All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80) After playing a few seasons for the Cosmos, Pelé officially ended his career in 1977. It would only be when I “discovered” Brazil at the close of the 20th century that I began to understand the magnitude of Pelé’s career. He was nicknamed “O Rei”, “The King” of soccer, and at one point or another, EVERY major soccer star, Brazilian or not, would be compared to the great in the same way that a debate rages today over the possibility of anyone unseating Michael Jordan as the “GOAT” (greatest of all-time) in basketball. Coincidentally, Pelé called it quits in 1977, a few weeks before reaching the age of 37, while Erving, 10 years younger, would retire 10 years later, also at the age of 37. As it was the question of race and the history of black Brazilians that attracted me to Brazil in the first place, it would only be a matter of time before the race question in regards to Pelé would come up during my research. What I discovered was intriguing. While black Brazilians hailed him the one of the greatest, if not THE greatest of all-time, like Jordan, Pelé left much to be desired in terms of the race issue. In my two decades of researching things of Brazil, I conclude that Pelé must also be THE most criticized figure in terms of racial politics. He has been criticized for his silence as well as the manner in which he has downplayed the issue for decades. Many have defined Pelé’s comments on race as truly embarrassing. In the 1960s and early 1970s, Nascimento constructed his image as a god on the field of futebol, but at a time when athletes such as Muhammad Ali, Jim Brown, Bill Russell, Kareem Abdul Jabbar, John Carlos and Tommy Smith were taking firm stances on race, society and sports, Pelé was missing in action. (All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80) I remember sometime in the early 2000s having a conversation with a guy named Romeo that I used to work with in a retail store in Michigan. He was also black, but he clearly knew more about soccer than I did. As I had just begun my annual trips to Brazil at the time, we would frequently discuss things about the country. Speaking of Pelé, he remembered once seeing an interview with the soccer great in which a journalist asked him something about being black. (All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80) According to Romeo, Pelé stopped the journalist, put up his index finger and said, “I am Brazilian!” I can’t confirm this statement, but considering Pelé’s non-positioning on the race factor for so many years, I could imagine him saying something like this. At that time, Brazil, was in the middle of a Military Dictatorship and not only had the country been divulging the myth that the country was a racial democracy, at one point, it could actually be considered illegal to speak out against racism. According to the wording of Law 5250/67 of 1967, speaking out on things related to race and class was a national security issue and considered a threat to the politcal and social order. For years, I looked at Pelé as a disgrace as a black man for his silence on the clear existence of racial discrimination that had held black Brazilians in their “place” well after 350 years of slavery. A black man, arguably the most famous Brazilian in the world, had enormous influence on society and he could have used this fame and later fortune to become a voice that black Brazilians desparately needed. In the 1970s, 80s and beyond, it was very common for black Brazilians to deny even being black and believing that racism didn’t exist in their country. There’s no way to know with any certainty how Pelé speaking out on these issues could have affected society, but I now have to see the icon as a simply a product of his time. I consider Pelé’s era, where he came from and where his position as a rich and famous black man placed him. It is a well-known fact that in Pelé’s time, black Brazilians simply didn’t speak on the race issue. Deep down, they knew it existed, but they were taught to deny it or ignore it. Unlike in the US, race wasn’t an issue that black Brazilian families would discuss at their dinner tables, and having been born in that era, in 1940, it would be unrealistic to expect that Pelé would do so. This is yet another difference between the United States and Brazil that puts into question which society was/is better for black people. In the US, the militancy of black Americans had reached a fever pitch in the late 1960s and early 1970s with the rise of numerous exponents of civil rights and black power. There were organizations dedicated to racial equality, student groups, magazines, music featuring lyrics of protest against racism, films that approached the issue and numerous other areas of society in which people boldly spoke out. It was a time of black revolution. In Brazil, it was a different story. The most prominent Afro-Brazilian activist of the time, Abdias do Nascimento, went into exile because of it. It was much easier for him to denounce racism in the United States than it was in his own country. To understand the lengths the Brazilian dictatorship would go to protect its image, it even censored Nascimento when he attempted to expose Brazilian racism during the 1977 Second World Black and African Festival of Arts and Culture (FESTAC) in Nigeria. In Brazil of the 1930s, black political parties were effectively prohibited during the first dictatorship and even by the 1970s, even with black people being excluded from so many areas of society, cultural groups such as Ilê Aiyê were advised not to adopt the name “Black Power”, and countless Afro-Brazilian activists were arrested and interrogated on suspicions that would create a similar black revolution in Brazil. I’m not saying I excuse Pelé’s silence on this issue, but I do wonder how many people would have had the courage to do such a thing at the time. At that time in Brazil, anyone of Pelé stature’s would surely have had to blaze this trail alone. When Ali took a political stance at the height of his career, a number of black athletes stepped forward in support of his cause. I can’t say that at that time, Pelé would have received such support from other Afro-Brazilian athletes. Today, I think this would happen, but Afro-Brazilians have made enormous strides in terms of the race issue in the past few decades that simply wasn’t possible in Pelés time. From various videos and photos, we know that Pelé knew Ali and has to know of the things “The Champ” said in terms of the race issue. I have to wonder what Pelé thought of this in terms of his own politics. But Pelé isn’t a black American and he isn’t Ali. Here was a black man who rose to a position that was nearly impossible for any black Brazilian. He was globally known, rich, was the pitchman for numerous products and was seen meeting various dignitaries around the world. Perhaps these are some of the very reasons that Pelé would not speak out. Like Michael Jordan, Pelé had the choice of having the world laid out at his doorstep or perhaps losing it all do a controversial political stance. If I were a betting man, I would wager that someone pulled Pelé to the side and had a talk with him about what he could say or do publicly. (All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80) Besides presumed pressure from Brazilian authorities authorities at the time, I also wonder what types of conversations Pelé had with the likes of American President Richard Nixon and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. CIA notes document a possible relationship between The King of Futebol and Kissinger and I find it hard to believe that their conversations were only about soccer, even as Kissinger was apparently a key figure in convincing Pelé to take his talents to the US. People don’t like to admit this, but fame and fortune come at a high price, a price that often compromises some of our most admirable public figures. Was Pelé bought and paid for or was he simply not the man to lead a black Brazilian revolution? I think it’s a little of both. Would he be different if he had been born in the 1970s, 80s or 90s? Possibly, but he could have easily been like current star Neymar, another star with origins on the Santos soccer team who has been criticized for his lack of racial politics. As Pelé celebrates his 80th birthday, yesterday, October 23rd, one has to wonder how the man really thinks beneath the public facade. In recent years, due to a hip problem, The King has been seen getting around in a wheelchair and is rarely seen making public appearances. Pelé’s fame and fortune hasn’t shielded him from public scrutiny. Not only has he earned criticism for his lack of posture on racial issues, but the legend’s public image has also taken a beating do to his failure to acknowledge a woman that everyone knew was his daughter as well as accusations that he wasn’t financially supporting his grandchildren. Interestingly, in terms of an illegitimate child, this is another thing he has in common with Erving, although with a different ending. For years it wasn’t publicly known that the NBA superstar had fathered a child through an extra-marital affair. But when this daughter, Alexandra Stevenson, became a famous tennis player, the cat was out of the bag. Fortunately, Erving finally did the right thing and began to form a bound with the daughter he didn’t know for decades. I can’t say the same for Pelé. Everyone wonders why. In the end, as O Rei reaches his eighth decade, my view on the legend is a bit complex. He did great things in the soccer field that I would only see decades after he retired. These accolades would lead to his being named the World Player of the Century by FIFA and Athlete of the Century by the International Olympic Committee and for the BBC, he was second only to Muhammad Ali. Incredible, unbelievable accomplishments for a poor black man from Minas Gerais. But there are other things about The King that I would like to know and possibly never will. But this is also true about my own father. And similar to my father, in terms of Pelé, after many years, I’m cool with that. All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80 Why do we celebrate so little the greatest player in the history of futebol? Talking about Pelé is also looking at the trajectory of a black man in Brazilian society By Kamille Viola He appears on all the lists of the best athletes of the 20th century. For many, he is the greatest of all time. He scored 1,281 goals in 21 years, was São Paulo’s top scorer for ten consecutive years and has more won more than 60 titles, among them, three-time World Cup champion for the Brazilian Seleção, the National Team. It is said that his talent with the ball was able to even stop a war. This Friday, October 23, Edson Arantes do Nascimento, Pelé, turns 80 years old. Why are the tributes not at the height of the grandeur of his career? For journalist Angélica Basthi, author of the book Pelé: uma estrela negra em campos verdes (Pelé: a black star on green fields), some factors contributed to the fact that a negative imaginary about him is so present in Brazilian society today. One of them was the rejection of Sandra, the result of a relationship she had in 1963. She fought in court to be recognized as his daughter, but she never managed to co-exist with her father, having died in 2006, at 42, of breast cancer. “Nobody could understand why Pelé took so long to recognize this daughter. And he also had another daughter outside of marriage, Flávia, whom he recognized. What was his great difficulty? Did you think the girl wanted to take him? But then, with so much evidence that she was his daughter, why did he refuse? This was very controversial and much discussed at the time. It was a mark on his trajectory,” she observes. Another very controversial issue was the player’s refusal to talk about racial issues for much of his life. Angélica observes that, in recent years, he has been reviewing this posture, although “in his own way”: in 2014, when commenting on the racism suffered by the goalkeeper Aranha, during a game for Santos (the team that Pelé also played for), he said that if had he stopped every game in which someone called him “macaco” (monkey) or “crioulo” (nigger), all the games he played in would have to be stopped – admitting, for the first time, that he suffered racial discrimination. In June, he joined the demonstrations for the assassination of George Floyd, Blackout Tuesday, by posting a black square on Instagram. “This is also new in Pelé’s repertoire”, points out the journalist. “That image, in which he invested, of Pelé from the 70s, who never wanted to be linked to the racial issue, still remains”. Professor at the Instituto Brasiliense de Direito Público (IDP) and doctoral student in Law at the University of Brasília (UnB), Marcos Queiroz believes that the little attention to date also has to do with an identity crisis that Brazil is experiencing. “This country has to rebuild itself. Even in relation to what is the nation’s greatest passion, futebol (football/soccer). This erasure in relation to Pelé’s 80 years is part of a Brazil that is looking to find itself, as samba great Candeia says. There is an economic and political crisis, but also, as [historian Luiz Antonio] Simas says, an epistemic crisis,” he reflects. “And, thinking about Pelé’s depression [in February, Edinho, the player’s son, said that Pelé was in recluse and “with some depression” due to his mobility problems], maybe he is depressed because Brazil is also depressed. The world that was built around Pelé and in which he lived does not exist anymore. And it will hardly come back to exist.” The racism of Brazilian society also causes Pelé to be judged relentlessly for all his mistakes. “His figure is interesting to think about the racial issue because he brings together several factors, including the image in which he himself invested as a perfect man. The perfect white man is completely different from the perfect black man. The black man is demanded to be impeccable,” analyzes the journalist Angélica Basthi. “He embraced this idea of the perfect man. Only that he is a black man. So society, when looking at Pelé, looks at this black man. Where’s that perfection? People turn a blind eye to other players, but not to him. The judgment is relentless. And it is relentless with this racial content, yes: the perfect black man that Pelé should be and play: he cannot make mistakes, he must be this man who does not exist.” Sports journalist Martha Esteves believes that the Brazilian’s little memory and Pelé’s seclusion, in addition to the issue with his daughter, contribute to the weak celebration around the player’s eight decades. “I think that the disease was a complicated fact for him. He’s very reclusive. And whoever is not seen, is not remembered, unfortunately. This must be contributing to him receiving few honors, which is unfortunate, right? Because he is and will always be the best in the world. Nobody will ever surpass him. Lionel Messi thinks that,” he says. “You are talking about a world idol, who was welcomed by the Queen of England, who stopped the war, who, if he were active today, in the world of social media, of exhibitionism, would be much more famous than the Beatles, for example. Or anyone who is alive today.” She agrees that racism has also crossed the star’s entire career, influencing judgments about his mistakes. “When black people in futebol reach a level of wealth, of fame, they have a little acceptance, but up to page two. Because if you mess up, if you misbehave, then the beating comes. It comes with force,”he says. The sports journalist believes that even the case of Robinho, who had his contract with Santos suspended after pressure from society over the player’s conviction for rape, could have a different outcome if he were white. “Cristiano Ronaldo was also accused of rape. In order not to go to trial, he called the girl and gave her a lot of money. He’s been playing. It didn’t have the international, worldwide scream that it should have had. Because Cristiano Ronaldo is infinitely more famous, more powerful, richer and more of an ace than Robinho. But, even there in Portugal, there in Europe, it was not that way,”he compares. Angélica sees similarities between the criticisms based on racist stereotypes that Pelé received in his youth and those that Neymar receives today. “And it has to do with the idea of that perfect black man as well as that childish black man, which is the way to infantilize black men to always put them in a place of inferiority. The black man, especially in futebol, is associated with childhood emotions, unpreparedness, lack of maturity and lack of responsibility. It is always childish emotion versus reason, which is within the civilized white man. Even the African continent itself suffers from this stereotype of the childish black man,” she explains. The Paris Saint-Germain player, by the way, was also the target of criticism throughout his career for not taking a position on racial issues – until recently, when he denounced having been called a monkey by Olympique defender Álvaro González, and getting ejected from a game. “People make demands of him, people made demands of Pelé, and, above all, he becomes this reference target. But many times we end up focusing these discussions on a player who has his controversies, instead of having a structural discussion, of how futebol itself and the atmosphere around the sport impel these players to be embarrassed, they often didn’t speak of this, being afraid to take a position,”argues Marcos. “There is no support in the Brazilian media for this. There is not enough discussion about what racism means in the country, the history of futebol in relation to racism, how it was even an instrument of perpetuation of racial inequality in Brazil.” He observes that, at the same time that Pelé was one of the symbols of the country that lived under the myth of racial democracy – the idea that blacks, indigenous people and whites lived integrated and in harmony -, it is necessary to understand the importance of the ace when opening paths for black people. “When he arrived at Vasco, they said that there were several black people just like him, so there was no need. He arrived at Santos and was called Gasolina (gasoline), Crioulo (nigger), that kind of thing. He, as an individual, was surviving, trying to find a place in that context in futebol that came from two recent World Cup traumas,” he says. “At the time, it was said that blacks were incapable, unstable, without discipline. So just playing soccer, getting that space, even if he has an individual trajectory in which he normally does not speak openly about it, has already opened many doors, streamlined many questions in relation to the place that blacks can occupy. Because maybe for us it is natural for the black man to play ball, but in the 1950s it was not.” Marcos recalls that he was the pioneer of a line of players in which young blacks can see themselves. “He has this importance, not only for the Brazilian, but for the world. When he emerges as a futebol player, it is the moment, for example, of the struggle for independence of African countries, it is the moment of an immense discussion about racism in the United States, the aftermath of the struggle for civil rights, it’s the moment sports is desegregating in the United States. He represented a lot, as Moacyr Luz says, this power to be where you want,”he explains. “To travel, to be able to be in various places that were often considered inaccessible to the black population: Pelé did it. And I think that we lose a lot of dimension when we focus only on what was negative or controversial in his life.” (All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80) For Angélica Basthi, the projection that racial discussions have gained in the mainstream media in recent months may be the chance to reflect on the treatment given to Pelé in recent years by society and the press. “This is a very peculiar year, not only because of the pandemic, but because of everything that George Floyd’s death represented, in the United States and worldwide, and so many deaths here in Brazil. At this moment when we started to see some mobilization of the media for these racial issues, the challenge remains, in these 80 years, of the Brazilian press to make a self-reflection,”she says. “We must give Pelé his place in the history of futebol. We must also give him the place he has in the history of the black Brazilian. He is a black man who took unimaginable flights, who made several mistakes, who was one of the symbols of racial democracy, he is a black man who suffered racism, who silenced racism. We have a lot to learn about racism and the trajectory of black men in Brazilian society through Pelé.”
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https://www.rsssf.org/players/braz-players-in-it.html
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Brazilian Players and Coaches in Italy
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About this document List of Brazilian Players and Coaches in Italy before 1945 Arnoni Vicente Born in São Paulo 18.5.1907 Forward Palestra Italia São Paulo 1935-36 Milan 30 6 1936-37 Milan - - 1937-38 Milan 18 4 Barbuy Amilcar Born in 1879 (or 1893) Died in São Paulo in september 1965 Forward 1931-32 Lazio (player-manager) 1 - Bertini Demostene Born in Rio de Janeiro 17.11.1909 Half Fluminense Rio de Janeiro 1932-33 Torino 15 - 1933-34 Torino 15 - 1934-35 Torino 6 - 1935-36 Sampierdarenese Genova 28 - Canalli Héctor Born in Juíz de Fora 11.5.1909 Botafogo Rio de Janeiro 1933-34 Torino 9 - Castelli José "Ratto" Born in São Paulo 19.8.1908 (or 1903) Midfield Corinthians São Paulo 1931-32 Lazio 28 4 1932-33 Lazio 18 3 1933-34 Lazio 1 - Del Debbio Armando Born in São Paulo 2.11.1904 Died in São Paulo 9.5.1984 Back 1925-26 Lucchese (II) Corinthians São Paulo 1931-32 Lazio 30 4 1932-33 Lazio 28 - 1933-34 Lazio 16 - 1934-35 Lazio 22 - De María Alejandro Born in Saracatro 19.6.1904 Forward Palestra Italia São Paulo 1931-32 Lazio 29 7 1932-33 Lazio 28 7 1933-34 Lazio 26 8 1934-35 Lazio 29 10 Fantoni João "Ninão" (I) Born in Belo Horizonte 24.7.1903 Centerforward 1928-30 Palestra Italia Belo Horizonte 1930-31 Lazio 10 6 1931-32 Lazio 29 8 1932-33 Lazio 30 10 1933-34 Lazio 20 4 1934-35 Lazio 30 6 NB: both his sons (Fernando Fantoni and Benito Fantoni, both backs) played for Cruzeiro and later for Lazio Fantoni Octávio "Nininho" (II) Born in Belo Horizonte 4.4.1907 Died in Roma 20.1.1935 Midfield 1928-30 Palestra Italia Belo Horizonte 1930-31 Lazio 10 - 1931-32 Lazio - - 1932-33 Lazio 3 - 1933-34 Lazio 21 7 1934-35 Lazio 14 - Fantoni Leonízio "Niginho" (III) Born in Belo Horizonte 18.2.1912 Centerforward 1928-30 Palestra Italia Belo Horizonte 1930-31 Lazio 8 - 1931-32 Lazio 27 4 1932-33 Lazio 25 1 1933-34 Lazio 31 1 1934-35 Lazio 25 2 Fantoni Orlando (IV) Born in Belo Horizonte 4.5.1917 1946-49 (?) Lazio Gabardo Eliseu (Elisio) Born in Curitiba (Paraná) 1.7.1911 Midfield Palestra Italia São Paulo 1935-36 Milan 12 2 1936-37 Milan 27 6 1937-38 Milan 23 1 1938-39 Liguria 26 9 1939-40 Genoa 18 7 1940-41 Genoa 10 6 1947-48 Gattinara (III) Giudicelli Fernando (I) Born in Rio de Janeiro 1.3.1906 Defender Fluminense Rio de Janeiro 1931-32 Torino 28 1 1932-33 Torino 12 - Giudicelli Edson (II) Born in Rio de Janeiro Botafogo Rio de Janeiro 1932-33 Torino - - Gelardi "Goliardo" José Born in São Paulo 9.5.1906 Palestra Italia São Paulo 1933-34 Napoli 1 - 1934-35 Padova (II) 11 1 1935-36 Padova (III) 28 4 1936-37 Padova (III) 26 1 Guarisi Marques Anfilogino "Filó" Born in São Paulo 26.12.1905 Forward Corinthians São Paulo 1931-32 Lazio 24 10 1932-33 Lazio 30 5 1933-34 Lazio 33 13 1934-35 Lazio 20 8 1935-36 Lazio 18 5 1936-37 Lazio 2 - Innocenti Paulo Born in São Paulo 11.3.1902 Died in Napoli 13.7.1983 Back 1925-26 Virtus Bologna 1926-27 Napoli 18 1 1927-28 Napoli 18 - 1928-29 Napoli 15 - 1929-30 Napoli 33 - 1930-31 Napoli 34 1 1931-32 Napoli 34 1 1932-33 Napoli 34 1 1933-34 Napoli 22 1 1934-35 Napoli 10 - 1935-36 Napoli 6 - Pennacchi Luís Atílio Born in Mons Sião 4.7.1918 Half 1938-39 Lucchese - - 1939-40 Lucchese (II) 21 1 1940-41 Lucchese (II) 27 - Piantoni Guillermo Born in Boavistas 1.7.1912 Half 1929-30 Torino 3 - 1930-31 Torino 3 - 1931-32 Palermo (II) 1932-33 Palermo 23 - Porta Arnaldo Born 5.10.1896 Centerforward 1914-15 Hellas Verona 1919-20 Hellas Verona 1925-26 Hellas Verona 21 7 1926-27 Hellas Verona 14 7 1927-28 Hellas Verona 14 8 1928-29 Hellas Verona 28 10 Ragusa Gaetano Born in São Paulo 11.5.1909 Forward Palestra Italia São Paulo 1933-34 Napoli 1 - Rizzetti Pedro "Pepe" Born in São Paulo 25.6.1907 Half Palestra Italia São Paulo 1931-32 Lazio 27 - 1932-33 Lazio 3 - 1933-34 Lazio 15 - Salatin Duilio Born in São Paulo 6.8.1906 Palestra Italia São Paulo Half 1933-34 Lazio 12 1 Santillo Juvenal Born in São Paulo 22.10.1910 Back Palestra Italia São Paulo 1933-34 Napoli 2 - Serafini Enzio Enrique Born in Lasongas 1.8.1904 Half Palestra Italia São Paulo 1931-32 Lazio 16 - 1932-33 Lazio 31 1 1933-34 Lazio 27 22 1934-35 Lazio 22 - Sernagiotto Pedro Born in São Paulo 17.11.1908 Died in São Paulo in april 1965 Forward Palestra Italia São Paulo 1931-32 Juventus - - 1932-33 Juventus 24 7 1933-34 Juventus 26 7 Tedesco André Emanuel Born in 1905 Midfield Atlético Santista Santos 1931-32 Lazio 6 1 Vio A. Born in São Paulo in 1918 Goalkeeper 1941-42 Treviso (III) Vitrone Osvaldo Born in São Paulo 5.5.1920 1940-41 Cavese Cava de Tirreni (III) Zacconi Benedicto Born in Rio de Janeiro 10.2.1910 Back Botafogo Rio de Janeiro 1933-34 Torino 29 6 1934-35 Torino 28 1 1935-36 Lazio 26 - 1936-37 Lazio 30 - 1937-38 Lazio 26 - 1938-39 Lazio 28 4 Zanettin Adrián Born in Porto Alegre 8.8.1914 Forward 1935-36 Hellas Verona (II) 1 - List of Brazilian Players and Coaches in Italy after 1945 Adailton Adailton Bolzan Martins Born in Santiago 24.1.1977 Forward 1995 Juventude 19 1 1996 Juventude 16 - 1997 Guarani - - 1997-98 Parma 13 2 1998-99 Paris Saint Germain (France) 19 2 1999-00 Verona 28 7 Adelson Adelson Portela Born in 1939 Forward 1964-67 Cuneo (V) Alberto Alberto Valentim do Carmo Born 22.3.1975 Defender-midfield 1993-95 Guarani Campinas 1996 Internacional Limeira (II) Atlético Paranaense (II) 1997 São Paulo Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte 1998 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro Atlético Paranaense 1999 Atlético Rentistas (Uruguay) 1999-00 Udinese 14 - Aldair Aldair Nascimento dos Santos Born in Ilheus 30.11.1965 Defender 1986 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1987 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1988 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1989 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1989-90 Benfica Lisboa (Portugal) 22 5 1990-91 Roma 29 2 1991-92 Roma 33 3 1992-93 Roma 28 2 1993-94 Roma 12 - 1994-95 Roma 28 1 1995-96 Roma 31 - 1996-97 Roma 32 2 1997-98 Roma 28 3 1998-99 Roma 27 - 1999-00 Roma Alemão Ricardo Rogerio de Brito Born in Lavras 22.11.1961 Midfield 1980-87 Botafogo Rio de Janeiro mar ’87 Atlético Madrid (Spain) 4 1 1987-88 Atlético Madrid (Spain) 31 5 1988-89 Napoli 16 3 1989-90 Napoli 27 2 1990-91 Napoli 21 1 1991-92 Napoli 29 3 1992-93 Atalanta Bergamo 22 2 1993-94 Atalanta Bergamo 18 - 1994 São Paulo 1995 São Paulo 1996 Botafogo Rio de Janeiro Altafini José João Altafini 'Mazzola' Born in Piracicaba 24.7.1938 Height: 1,76 m Weight: 78 kg Centerforward (6 caps and 3 goals in Italy A National Team; 2 caps and 3 goals in Italy Youth Team) União Porto 1954-56 Atlético São Paulo 1956-58 Palmeiras São Paulo 1958-59 AC Milan A 32 28 1959-60 AC Milan A 33 20 1960-61 AC Milan A 34 22 1961-62 AC Milan A 33 22 1962-63 AC Milan A 31 11 1963-64 AC Milan A 30 14 1964-65 AC Milan A 12 3 1965-66 Napoli A 34 14 1966-67 Napoli A 27 16 1967-68 Napoli A 29 13 1968-69 Napoli A 21 5 1969-70 Napoli A 15 8 1970-71 Napoli A 25 7 1971-72 Napoli A 29 8 1972-73 Juventus A 23 9 1973-74 Juventus A 21 7 1974-75 Juventus A 20 8 1975-76 Juventus A 10 1 Total Serie A 459 216 First match in serie A: 21-09-1958: Milan-Triestina 2-0 First match in the italian national team: 15-10-1961: Israel-Italy 2-4 First goal in serie A: 05-10-1958: Milan-Bari 4-2 First goal in the italian national team: 15-10-1961: Israel-Italy 2-4 1976-77 Chiasso (Switzerland) (II) 26 14 1977-78 Chiasso (Switzerland) (II) - - 1978-79 Chiasso (Switzerland) 7 2 1980-81 Mendrisio Star (Swi) (II) Almir Almir Moraes de Albuquerque Born in Recife 25.12.1938 Midfield Boca Juniors Buenos Aires (Argentina) 1962-63 Fiorentina - - nov ’62 Genoa 2 - Amalfi Yeso Amalfi Born in São Paulo 6.12.1925 Midfield Palmeiras São Paulo Boca Juniors Buenos Aires (Argentina) Peñarol Montevideo (Uruguay) 1950-51 OGC Nice (France) 1951-52 Torino 27 2 Monaco (France) Racing Paris (France) Red Star Paris (France) Olympique de Marseille (France) Amaral Amaral Paulo Lima As coach 1962-63 Juventus 1963-64 Juventus (replaced) 1964-65 Genoa Amaral Mariano Alexandre da Silva Born in Capivari 28.2.1972 Midfield 1993 Palmeiras São Paulo 10 - 1994 Palmeiras São Paulo 23 - 1995 Palmeiras São Paulo 20 - 1996-97 Parma 4 - 1999 Corinthians São Paulo 2000 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro Amarildo Amarildo Tavares de Silveira Junior Born in Campos 29.7.1939 Forward As player Botafogo Rio de Janeiro 1963-64 Milan 31 14 1964-65 Milan 27 14 1965-66 Milan 24 2 1966-67 Milan 25 2 1967-68 Fiorentina 17 5 1968-69 Fiorentina 25 6 1969-70 Fiorentina 20 5 1970-71 Roma 21 7 1971-72 Roma 12 3 As coach 1974-78 Fiorentina (youths) 1978-81 Botafogo Rio de Janeiro (youths) 1981-82 Sorso (V) 1982-83 Sorso (V) 1983-84 no club 1984-85 Esperance Tunis (Tunisie) 1985-86 Esperance Tunis (Tunisie) 1986-87 Esperance Tunis (Tunisie) 1987-88 Rondinella Firenze (IV) (sub.) 1988-89 Turris Torre del Greco (IV) 1989-90 Turris Torre del Greco (IV) (replaced) 1990-91 Fiorentina (assistant coach) 1991-92 Fiorentina (assistant coach) jul ’92 Al Ain (United Arabian Emirates) Amarildo Amarildo Souza do Amaral Born in Curitiba 2.10.1964 Centerforward 1982 Toledo 1983 Pinheiro 1984 Botafogo Rio de Janeiro 1985 Botafogo Rio de Janeiro 1986 XV Piracicaba 1987 Internacional Porto Alegre 1988 Internacional Porto Alegre 1988-89 Celta Vigo (Spain) 34 19 1989-90 Lazio 29 8 1990-91 Cesena 29 5 1991-92 Cesena (II) 36 8 Amoroso Márcio Amoroso dos Santos Born in Brasilia 5.7.1974 Forward 1992 Guarani may ’92 Verdy Kawasaki 1993 Verdy Kawasaki 1994 Guarani 26 19 1995 Guarani 1996 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1996-97 Udinese 28 12 1997-98 Udinese 25 5 1998-99 Udinese 33 22 1999-00 Parma 16 4 Andrade Jorge Luis Andrade da Silva Born in Juiz de Fora 21.4.1957 1976 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1977 ULA Merida (Venezuela) 1978 ULA Merida (Venezuela) 1987 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 19 1 1988 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1988-89 Roma 9 - 1989 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro André Cruz André Alves da Cruz Born in Piracicaba 20.9.1968 Defender 1986 Ponte Preta 14 - 1987 Ponte Preta (II) 1988 Ponte Preta (II) 1989 Ponte Preta (II) 1990 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1990-91 Standard Liège (Belgium) 25 2 1991-92 Standard Liège (Belgium) 30 5 1992-93 Standard Liège (Belgium) 16 2 1993-94 Standard Liège (Belgium) 33 9 1994-95 Napoli 30 7 1995-96 Napoli 29 1 1996-97 Napoli 24 5 1997-98 Milan 11 1 1998-99 Milan 2 - feb ’99 Standard Liège (Belgium) 9 1 1999-00 Torino 13 1 jan ’00 Sporting Lisboa (Portugal) 17 4 Antoninho Antonio Benedicto Angeli Born in Lindoia 10.2.1939 Centerforward Botafogo Rio de Janeiro 1960-61 Fiorentina 8 1 1961-62 Fiorentina - - Batista João Batista da Silva Born in Porto Alegre 8.3.1955 Midfield 1973-80 Internacional Porto Alegre 1980-82 Gremio Porto Alegre 1983 Palmeiras São Paulo 1983-84 Lazio 25 1 1984-85 Lazio 18 1 1985-86 Lazio (II) - - oct ’85 Avellino 14 1 1989 Avai Santa Catarina Battaglia Roberto José Battaglia Born in São Paulo 10.11.1940 Forward Corinthians São Paulo 1961-62 Catania - - 1962-63 Catania 11 2 1963-64 Catania 15 4 1964-65 Atalanta Bergamo 6 - Beretta Alexandro Beretta Born 16.10.1968 Forward 1987-88 Caerano (V) 1988-89 Caerano (V) 1990-91 Monfalcone (V) 7 - Bianchezi (Careca III) Carlos Alberto Bianchezi Born in São Paulo 25.8.1964 1985-87 Marilia (II) 1988 Guarani São Paulo 19 - 1989 Palmeiras São Paulo 12 1 1990 Palmeiras São Paulo 19 11 1991 Palmeiras São Paulo 12 7 1991-92 Atalanta Bergamo 29 8 1995 Monterrey (Mexico) 1996 Monterrey (Mexico) 1997 Monterrey (Mexico) Beto Joubert Araújo Martins Born Born in Cujaba 7.1.1975 Midfield 1994 Botafogo Rio de Janeiro - - 1995 Botafogo Rio de Janeiro 24 - 1996 Botafogo Rio de Janeiro - - 1996-97 Napoli 22 4 1999 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 2000 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro Bilica Fabio Alves da Silva Born in Campina Grande 4.1.1979 Defender 1997 Vitoria Bahia 1998 Vitoria Bahia 1998-99 Venezia 12 - 1999-00 Venezia 18 - Bottega Jone César Bottega Born 19.1.1968 Forward 1985-92 Fluminense Rio de Janeiro 1993 Español (II) 1993-94 Ternana Terni (V) 7 1 1995-96 Civitanovese Civitanova Marche (V) 13 1 1996-97 Igea Virtus (V) 2 - Braga Octávio Braga Born in 1973 1998-99 Luzern (Switzerland) (II) 1999-00 Verbania (V) Branco Claudio Ibrahim Váz Leal Born in Bagé 4.4.1964 Defender Guarani 1981-86 Fluminense Rio de Janeiro 1986-87 Brescia 26 3 1987-88 Brescia (II) 24 1 1988-89 Porto (Portugal) 26 1 1989-90 Porto (Portugal) 27 4 1990-91 Porto (Portugal) 7 2 nov ’90 Genoa 24 6 1991-92 Genoa 23 1 1992-93 Genoa 24 1 1993 Grêmio Porto Alegre 1994 Fluminense Rio de Janeiro Corinthians São Paulo 1995 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro jul ’95 Internacional Porto Alegre Cafu Marcos Evangelista de Moraes Born in São Paulo 19.6.1970 Defender Setuba Nacional 1990 São Paulo 20 1 1991 São Paulo 20 1 1992 São Paulo 21 1 1993 São Paulo 18 1 1994 São Paulo 16 2 1994-95 Real Zaragoza (Spain) 16 - 1995 Juventude São Paulo Palmeiras São Paulo 19 - 1996 Palmeiras São Paulo 16 - 1997 Palmeiras São Paulo - - 1997-98 Roma 31 1 1998-99 Roma 20 1 1999-00 Roma 28 2 Caio Caio Ribeiro Decousseau Born in São Paulo 16.8.1975 Forward 1994 São Paulo 17 8 1995 São Paulo 14 6 nov ’95 Inter 6 - 1996-97 Napoli 20 - 1999 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 2000 Santos Camatta Antonio Roberto Camatta Born in Castelho 6.6.1939 Centerforward Botafogo Rio de Janeiro 1962-63 Venezia 3 - 1963-64 Venezia (II) - - Cané Faustinho Jarbas Cané Born in Rio de Janeiro 21.9.1939 As player Forward Olaria Rio de Janeiro 1962-63 Napoli 7 - 1963-64 Napoli (II) 29 8 1964-65 Napoli (II) 29 12 1965-66 Napoli 31 12 1966-67 Napoli 26 7 1967-68 Napoli 19 4 1968-69 Napoli 25 6 1969-70 Bari 22 2 1970-71 Bari (II) 19 2 1971-72 Bari (II) 25 2 1972-73 Napoli 18 - 1973-74 Napoli 28 7 1974-75 Napoli 5 - As coach 1976-77 Napoli (youths) 1977-78 no club 1978-79 Frattese Frattamaggiore (V) 1979-80 Turris Torre del Greco (III) 1980-81 Turris Torre del Greco (III) 1981-82 Afragolese Afragola (V) 1982-83 Afragolese Afragola (V) 1983-84 Afragolese Afragola (IV) 1984-85 Sorrento (IV) (sub.) 1985-86 Sorrento (III) 1986-87 Sorrento (III) (rep./sub.) 1987-88 Afragolese Afragola (IV) 1988-89 Campania Napoli (IV) Careca Antonio de Oliveira Filho Born in São Paulo 5.10.1960 Forward 1977-82 Guarani São Paulo 1983-85 São Paulo 1986-87 São Paulo 31 25 1987-88 Napoli 26 13 1988-89 Napoli 30 19 1989-90 Napoli 22 10 1990-91 Napoli 29 9 1991-92 Napoli 33 15 1992-93 Napoli 24 7 1993 Kashiwa Reysol (Japan) (II) 1994 Kashiwa Reysol (Japan) (II) 19 1995 Kashiwa Reysol (Japan) 1996 Kashiwa Reysol (Japan) Carlinho Carlos Amaro Born 30.7.1959 Forward 1984-85 Suzzara (V) 1985-86 Suzzara (V) 1986-87 Savona (V) 1987-88 Savona (V) Casagrande Walter Casagrande Júnior Born in São Paulo 15.4.1963 Forward 1980 Corinthians São Paulo 1981 Caldense 1982-84 Corinthians São Paulo jun ’84 São Paulo 1985 Corinthians São Paulo 1986-87 Porto (Portugal) 1987-88 Ascoli 27 6 1988-89 Ascoli 8 4 1989-90 Ascoli 24 6 1990-91 Ascoli (II) 37 22 1991-92 Torino 23 6 1992-93 Torino 24 4 Caté Marcos Antonio Lemes Tozze Born in Cruz Alta 7.11.1973 Forward 1992 São Paulo 3 - 1993 São Paulo 6 2 1994 Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte 6 - 1995 São Paulo - - 1996 Universidád Católica de Chile (Chi) 12 2 1997 Universidád Católica de Chile (Chi) 15 4 1998 Universidád Católica de Chile (Chi) - - 1998-99 Sampdoria 15 1 1999-00 Sampdoria (II) 2 - 2000 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro (Toninho) Cerezo Antonio Carlos Cerezo Born in Belo Horizonte 21.4.1955 As player Midfield 1973-74 Atlético Mineiro Belo Horizonte 1975 Nacional Manaus 1976-86 Atlético Mineiro Belo Horizonte 1983-84 Roma 30 6 1984-85 Roma 22 3 1985-86 Roma 18 4 1986-87 Sampdoria Genova 28 3 1987-88 Sampdoria Genova 28 3 1988-89 Sampdoria Genova 29 2 1989-90 Sampdoria Genova 21 2 1990-91 Sampdoria Genova 12 3 1991-92 Sampdoria Genova 27 1 1992 São Paulo 1993 Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte 1994 Necaxa (Mexico) 1995 Jundiai Lousano Paulista (III) aug ’95 São Paulo As coach 1999 Vitoria Bahia Cinesinho Sidney Cunha Born in Rio Grande 28.6.1935 Midfield Palmeiras São Paulo 1962-63 Modena 20 3 1963-64 Modena 30 3 1964-65 Catania 29 2 1965-66 Juventus 31 4 1966-67 Juventus 31 1 1967-68 Juventus 23 3 1968-69 Lane Rossi Vicenza 24 4 1969-70 Lane Rossi Vicenza 24 1 1970-71 Lane Rossi Vicenza 30 5 1971-72 Lane Rossi Vicenza 12 - Clerici Sergio Clerici Born in São Paulo 25.5.1941 Height: 1,75 m Weight: 74 kg Forward Portuguesa São Paulo 1960-61 Lecco 10 2 1961-62 Lecco 20 1 1962-63 Lecco (II) 28 5 1963-64 Lecco (II) 37 10 1964-65 Lecco (II) 37 20 1965-66 Lecco (II) 38 17 1966-67 Lecco 31 4 1967-68 Bologna 22 4 1968-69 Atalanta Bergamo 26 9 1969-70 Verona 25 8 1970-71 Verona 29 10 1971-72 Fiorentina 28 10 1972-73 Fiorentina 24 10 1973-74 Napoli 28 15 1974-75 Napoli 29 14 1975-76 Bologna 28 8 1976-77 Bologna 25 7 1977-78 Lazio 11 1 Total in Serie A 336 103 First match in serie A: 22-01-1961: Bologna-Lecco 0-0 First goal in serie A: 29-01-1961: Lecco-Lazio 2-1 Colella Leonardo Colella Born in São Paulo 13.9.1930 Centerforward Corinthians São Paulo 1955-56 Juventus 21 7 Cribari I (Binho) Fabio Eduardo Cribari Born in Cambara 8.4.1975 Defender 1995-96 Londrina (II) 1997-98 Empoli 9 - 1998-99 Empoli 21 - 1999-00 Empoli (II) Cribari II Sanchez Emilson Cribari Born in Cambara 6.3.1980 Defender 1996-97 Londrina (II) 1998-99 Empoli - - 1999-00 Empoli (II) Curti Davide Curti Born in São Paulo 28.7.1918 Forward Juventus São Paulo 1947-48 Genoa 5 - Da Costa Dino da Costa Born in Rio de Janeiro 1.8.1931 Midfield (1 cap and 1 goal in Italy National Team; 1 cap in Italy “B” Team) 1948-55 Botafogo Rio de Janeiro 1955-56 Roma 34 12 1956-57 Roma 33 22 1957-58 Roma 33 19 1958-59 Roma 27 15 1959-60 Roma 17 2 1960-61 Fiorentina 30 8 1961-62 Roma 5 1 nov ’61 Atalanta Bergamo 19 6 1962-63 Atalanta Bergamo 33 12 1963-64 Juventus 12 3 1964-65 Juventus 31 6 1965-66 Juventus 8 2 1966-67 Verona (II) 31 5 1967-68 Ascoli (III) 10 0 Total in Serie A 282 108 First match in serie A: 18-09-1955: Roma-Vicenza 4-1 First match in the italian national team: 15-01-1958: Northern Ireland-Italy 2-1 First goal in serie A: 18-09-1955: Roma-Vicenza 4-1 First goal in the italian national team: 15-01-1958: Northern Ireland-Italy 2-1 Da Purifição Forward 1982-83 Terranova (V) 1983-84 Terranova (V) Da Silva José Ricardo Da Silva Born in Fortaleza 11.9.1939 Forward Botafogo Rio de Janeiro 1962-63 Sampdoria 28 13 1963-64 Sampdoria 25 9 1964-65 Sampdoria 24 7 1965-66 Roma 12 3 1966-67 Lane Rossi Vicenza 12 4 1967-68 Lane Rossi Vicenza - - nov ’67 Mantova 2 - Da Silva Jorge Alessandro Da Silva (son of José Ricardo Da Silva) Born in Genova 11.6.1970 Defender 1988-89 Entella Chiavari (V) 1990-91 Rapallo (V) 18 1 1991-92 Rapallo (V) 21 - 1992-93 Rapallo (V) 21 - 1993-94 Rapallo (V) 17 1 1994-95 Rapallo (V) 19 - De Andrade Born in 1963 Midfield 1989-90 Colorno (V) De Matos Marcus de Matos Born in 1957 Midfield 1983-84 Giorgione Castelfranco Veneto (V) 1986-87 Sandonà (V) De Mecenas Francisco De Mecenas Born in Rio de Janeiro 29.1.1946 As player Midfield 1966-67 Ascoli (III) 27 8 1967-68 Ascoli (III) 25 3 1968-69 Ascoli (III) 7 2 nov ’68 Lecce (III) 18 4 1969-70 Lecce (III) 18 1 1971-72 Pistoiese (IV) As coach 1980-81 Pescia (V) De Sangro Antonio de Sangro Born 4.2.1965 Forward 1989-90 Rotaliana (V) 25 4 1990-91 Montebelluna (V) 23 2 De Souza Carlos César De Souza Born in Ribeirão Preto 6.9.1938 Midfield Comercial Ribeirão Preto 1962-63 Spal Ferrara 19 - 1963-64 Spal Ferrara 7 - De Vianna Pedro de Vianna Born 8.1.1972 Defender 1996-97 Fiumicino (V) 15 - 1997-98 Fiumicino (V) 14 - Del Vaste Lucas del Vaste Forward 1984-85 Vigevano (V) 1985-86 Vigevano (V) Del Vecchio Emanuele Del Vecchio Born in São Vicente 24.9.1934 Died in São Vicente 9.10.1995 Centerforward Santos 1957-58 Verona 27 13 1958-59 Napoli 25 13 1959-60 Napoli 27 10 1960-61 Napoli 16 4 1961-62 Padova 21 8 1962-63 Padova (II) 4 - november ’62 Milan 9 3 Dida Nélson de Jesus Silva Born in Irará 7.10.1973 Goalkeeper 1992-93 Vitória Bahia 1994-98 Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte 1998-99 Lugano (Switzerland) (II) 1999 Corinthians São Paulo 2000-01 Milan Dido Carlos Feresín Born in Sorocaba 16.7.1928 Centerforward Guarani Campinas 1955-56 Spal Ferrara 24 3 1956-57 Spal Ferrara 24 1 Diogenes Diogenes Fernando Ribeiro Born 23.11.1969 Forward 1991-92 Thiene (V) 13 - Dirceu José Guimarães Dirceu Born in Curitiba 15.6.1952 Died in Rio de Janeiro 15.9.1995 Midfield 1968-71 Curitiba 1972-75 Botafogo Rio de Janeiro 1976-77 Fluminense Rio de Janeiro 68 8 1977-78 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro 1978-79 América Ciudád de México (Mexico) 1979-80 Atlético Madrid (Spain) 24 14 1980-81 Atlético Madrid (Spain) 27 8 1981-82 Atlético Madrid (Spain) 31 4 1982-83 Verona 29 2 1983-84 Napoli 30 5 1984-85 Ascoli 27 5 1985-86 Como 25 2 1986-87 Avellino 23 6 1987 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro 1988 Miami (Usa) 1989 Bangu 1989-90 Ebolitana Eboli (V) 1990-91 Ebolitana Eboli (V) 30 9 1991-92 Sporting Benevento (V) 11 4 Doriva Dorival Guidoni Júnior Born in Mirasol 28.5.1972 Midfield 1991-92 Atlético Goianiense (amateurs) 1993 São Paulo 12 - 1994 São Paulo 15 - 1995 Atlético Mineiro Belo Horizonte 11 1 1996 Atlético Mineiro Belo Horizonte 24 - 1997 Atlético Mineiro Belo Horizonte 24 - 1997-98 Porto (Portugal) 13 1 1998-99 Porto (Portugal) 17 4 jan ’99 Sampdoria 17 1 1999-00 Sampdoria (II) Dos Santos William dos Santos Born in 1973 Forward 1998-99 Crvena Zvezda Beograd (Yug) 1999-00 Potenza (V) Dunga Carlos Caetano Bledorn Verri Born in Ijúi 31.10.1963 Midfield 1980-84 Internacional Porto Alegre 1985 Corinthians São Paulo 1986-87 Santos 1987 Vasco da Gama Rio de J. 17 1 1987-88 Pisa 23 2 1988-89 Fiorentina 30 3 1989-90 Fiorentina 28 - 1990-91 Fiorentina 31 1 1991-92 Fiorentina 33 4 1992-93 Fiorentina - - nov ’92 Pescara 23 3 1993-94 Stuttgart (Germany) 28 4 1994-95 Stuttgart (Germany) 26 3 jun ‘95 Jubilo Iwata (Japan) 1996 Jubilo Iwata (Japan) 1997 Jubilo Iwata (Japan) 1998 Jubilo Iwata (Japan) 1999 Jubilo Iwata (Japan) 1999 Internacional Porto Alegre Edinho Edino Nazaret Filho Born in Rio de Janeiro 5.6.1955 As player Defender 1973-82 Fluminense Rio de Janeiro 1982-83 Udinese 30 7 1983-84 Udinese 29 4 1984-85 Udinese 26 5 1985-86 Udinese 30 3 1986-87 Udinese 23 3 1988-89 Fluminense Rio de Janeiro (total in Flu 358/54) 1989 Gremio Porto Alegre As coach 1993 Fluminense Rio de Janeiro Edmar Edmar Bernardes dos Santos Born in Araxá 20.1.1960 Forward 1977-79 Brasilia 1980 Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte may ’80 Taubaté 1981 Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte 1982 Gremio Porto Alegre 1983 Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte aug ’83 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1984 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1985 Guarani São Paulo 1986 Palmeiras São Paulo 1987 Palmeiras São Paulo sep ‘86 Corinthians São Paulo 1987 Corinthians São Paulo 1988 Corinthians São Paulo 1988-89 Pescara 28 4 1989-90 Pescara (II) 8 - 1990-91 Pescara (II) 18 2 Edmundo Edmundo Neto de Souza Alves Born in Rio de Janeiro 2.4.1971 Forward 1992 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro 24 8 1993 Palmeiras São Paulo 19 11 1994 Palmeiras São Paulo 21 9 1995 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 13 4 1996 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro 16 9 1997 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro 27 29 jan ’98 Fiorentina 9 4 1998-99 Fiorentina 28 8 1999 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro 2000 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro Edson Edson Mendes dos Rios Born in São Paulo 17.7.1977 Defender 1997 Blumenau 1997-98 Genoa (II) 1 - Edu Carlos Eduardo Marangon Born in São Paulo 2.2.1963 Midfield 1984-88 Portuguesa São Paulo 1988-89 Torino 22 2 1989 (Mexico) jan ‘90 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1990 Santos 1991 Palmeiras São Paulo 1992 Santos 1993 ANA Flugels (Japan) 1994 Yokohama Flügels (Japan) 1995 Nacional Montevideo (Uruguay) Eloi Francisco Chagas Eloia Born in Andradina 17.2.1955 Midfield 1975-77 Juventus São Paulo 1978-79 Portuguesa São Paulo 1980 Inter Limeira 1981 Santos 1982 Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte mar ’82 América 1983 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro 1983-84 Genoa 17 - 1984-85 Genoa (II) 17 - 1985 Botafogo Rio de Janeiro 1985-86 Porto (Portugal) 1986-87 Porto (Portugal) 1988-89 Boavista Oporto (Portugal) 21 4 1989-90 Boavista Oporto (Portugal) Emerson Emerson Pereira da Silva Born in São Paulo 21.8.1973 Forward 1993 São Paulo 2 - 1994 São Paulo - - 1995 Colo Colo Santiago (Chile) 7 - 1996 Colo Colo Santiago (Chile) 16 2 1997 Colo Colo Santiago (Chile) 15 1 1998 Colo Colo Santiago (Chile) oct ’98 Perugia 2 - Eneas Eneas de Golviea de Camardo Born in São Paulo 18.3.1954 Died in São Paulo 27.12.1988 Forward 1971-80 Portuguesa São Paulo 1980-81 Bologna 20 3 1981-84 Palmeiras São Paulo Juventude São Paulo XV Piracicaba Desportiva Ferroviaria 1988 Central de Cotia (III) (player-manager) 7 Eriberto Eriberto da Conceição Silva Born in Rio Bonito 21.1.1979 Midfield 1997 Palmeiras São Paulo 6 - 1998-99 Bologna 19 1 1999-00 Bologna 14 1 Esquerdinha Albuquerque Glasner da Silva Born in Alxania Go 28.2.1980 Forward 1998 Joinville Santa Catarina 1998-99 Lecce (II) - - Evair Paulino Aparecido Evair Born in Ouro Fino or Crisolia 21.2.1965 Forward 1985 Guarani Campinas 21 13 1986 Guarani Campinas 32 24 1987 Guarani Campinas 1988 Guarani Campinas 22 18 1988-89 Atalanta Bergamo 25 10 1989-90 Atalanta Bergamo 19 5 1990-91 Atalanta Bergamo 32 10 1992 Palmeiras São Paulo 1993 Palmeiras São Paulo 1994 Palmeiras São Paulo 1995 Yokohama Flügels (Japan) 1996 Yokohama Flügels (Japan) Portuguesa São Paulo 1997 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro 1998 Palmeiras São Paulo 1999 Portuguesa São Paulo 2000 São Paulo Fábio Júnior Fábio Júnior Pereira Born in São Pedro do Avaí or Manhuaçu 22.11.1977 Forward 1994-96 Democrata MG (amateurs) 1997 Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte 5 - 1998 Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte 32 18 jan ’99 Roma 7 3 1999-00 Roma 9 1 2000 Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte Falção Paulo Roberto Falção Born in Xanxere 16.10.1953 As player Midfield 1966-80 Internacional Porto Alegre 1980-81 Roma 25 3 1981-82 Roma 24 6 1982-83 Roma 27 7 1983-84 Roma 27 5 1984-85 Roma 4 1 1985 São Paulo As coach aug.‘90-sep.’91 Brazil National Team feb.-nov. ’94 Japan National Team Faustinho Fausto Pinto da Silva Born in São Paulo 30.8.1937 Midfield Sporting Lisboa (Portugal) Sedan-Torcy (France) 1962-63 Palermo 8 1 1963-64 Palermo (II) - - 1964-65 Palermo (II) 6 1 Fernandez José Eduardo Bitar Fernandez Born 24.11.1967 Defender 1988-89 Pro Cisterna (V) Fernando José Ferdinando Puglia Born in São José do Rio Prado 23.1.1937 Centerforward Sporting Lisboa (Portugal) 1961-62 Palermo 33 10 1962-63 Palermo 29 3 1963-64 Bari 11 2 1964-65 Bari (II) 24 2 Gaucho Toffoli Luis Carlos Toffoli Born in Porto Alegre 7.3.1964 Forward (Japan) Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1993-94 Lecce 5 - Gama Luciano Gama Born in Rio Claro 25.5.1973 Forward 1992 Guarani Campinas 1993 Aracatuba 1994 Olimpique Sancanta (III) 1995 Botafogo Rio de Janeiro 1996 Paulista Giuedai (II) nov ’96 América Rio de Janeiro (II) 1997 Marilia (III) 1998-99 Teramo (IV) 23 4 Geovani Geovani Silva Born in Vitoria 6.4.1964 Midfield Desportiva Ferroviaria 1982-89 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro 1989-90 Bologna 27 2 1990-91 Karlsruhe (Germany) Germano José Germano De Sales Born in Conselheiro Peña 25.3.1942 Forward Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1962-63 Milan 2 2 nov ’62 Genoa 12 2 Gerson (Caçapa) Gérson Candido de Paula Born in São Paulo 1.6.1967 Midfield 1986 Palmeiras São Paulo 27 2 1987 Palmeiras São Paulo 15 1 1988 Palmeiras São Paulo 20 - 1989 Palmeiras São Paulo - - 1989-90 Bari 33 1 1990-91 Bari 30 - 1991-92 Fenerbahçe Istanbul (Turkey) 26 9 1992-93 Fenerbahçe Istanbul (Turkey) 22 11 1993-94 Lecce 31 3 1994-95 Bari 34 2 1995-96 Bari 25 - 1999 Atlético Paranaense Gilberto Gilberto Melo da Silva Born in Rio de Janeiro 25.4.1976 Defender 1996 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 14 - 1997 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 15 - 1998 Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte 28 2 jan ’99 Inter 2 - 1999 Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte 2000 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro Gonçalves Ramiro Gonçalves Born in 1958 Forward 1982-83 Sorso (V) Jair Jair da Costa Born in São Paulo 9.7.1940 Forward Portuguesa São Paulo 1962-63 Inter 27 10 1963-64 Inter 30 12 1964-65 Inter 19 10 1965-66 Inter 27 4 1966-67 Inter 15 3 1967-68 Roma 23 2 1968-69 Inter 22 3 1969-70 Inter 18 4 1970-71 Inter 23 6 1971-72 Inter 17 1 Santos João Paulo Sergio Luis Donizetti Born in Campinas 7.9.1964 Forward 1983-89 Guarani Campinas 1989-90 Bari 33 6 1990-91 Bari 29 12 1991-92 Bari 3 - 1992-93 Bari (II) 11 2 1993-94 Bari (II) 31 4 1994 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro 1995 Goias 1996 Corinthians São Paulo 1999 União São João Araras 2000 União São João Araras Jorginho Jorge Enrique Amaral de Castro Born in São Paulo 20.2.1980 Midfield 1997 Palmeiras São Paulo 1 - 1998 Palmeiras São Paulo - - 1998-99 PSV Eindhoven (Holland) 2 - feb ’99 Udinese - - 1999-00 Udinese 3 - Juarez Juarez de Souza Teixeira Born in São Paulo 25.9.1973 Defender 1992 Portuguesa São Paulo 1993 Portuguesa São Paulo 1993-94 Yverdon (Switzerland) 18 - 1994-95 Servette Genève (Switzerland) 25 1 1995-96 Servette Genève (Switzerland) 19 - 1996-97 Servette Genève (Switzerland) 21 - 1997-98 Servette Genève (Switzerland) 33 2 1998-99 Servette Genève (Switzerland) 34 3 1999-00 Servette Genève (Switzerland) 9 - aug ’99 Lecce 33 - Juary Jorge dos Santos Filho Born in Rio de Janeiro 16.6.1959 Forward 1976-79 Santos 1980 Universidád Aut. de Guadalajara (Mex) 1980-81 Avellino 12 5 1981-82 Avellino 22 8 1982-83 Inter 21 2 1983-84 Ascoli 27 5 1984-85 Cremonese 19 2 1985-86 Porto (Portugal) 1986-87 Porto (Portugal) 1987-88 Porto (Portugal) 2 - 1988-89 Boavista Oporto (Portugal) 1989 Santos Julinho Julio Botelho Born in São Paulo 5.8.1929 Forward Portuguesa São Paulo 1955-56 Fiorentina 31 6 1956-57 Fiorentina 30 9 1957-58 Fiorentina 28 7 Julio César Julio César da Silva Born in Baurú 8.3.1963 Defender 1979-86 Guarani 1986-87 Brest (France) 32 1 1987-88 Montpellier (France) 37 5 1988-89 Montpellier (France) 26 1 1989-90 Montpellier (France) 30 4 1990-91 Juventus 29 1 1991-92 Juventus 33 1 1992-93 Juventus 16 1 1993-94 Juventus 11 - 1994-95 Borussia Dortmund (Germany) 25 1 1995-96 Borussia Dortmund (Germany) 23 2 1996-97 Borussia Dortmund (Germany) 10 3 1997-98 Borussia Dortmund (Germany) 17 1 1998-99 Borussia Dortmund (Germany) 5 - 1999 Botafogo Rio de Janeiro 1999-00 Werder Bremen (Germany) Júnior Leovegildo Lins da Gama Born in João Pessoa 29.6.1954 Defender-Midfield Juventus (Brazil) 1972-84 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1984-85 Torino 26 7 1985-86 Torino 30 4 1986-87 Torino 30 1 1987-88 Pescara 28 3 1988-89 Pescara 34 3 1989 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1990 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1990-91 Torino (only Mitropa Cup matches) Lazaroni Sebastião Lazaroni Barroso Born in Muriae 25.10.1950 As player São Cristovão Rio de Janeiro As coach 1984-86 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro Guarani Campinas 1986-88 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro Al Ahly (Saudi Arabia) 1988 Saudi Arabia National Team 1989-90 Brazil National Team 1990-91 Fiorentina 1991-92 Fiorentina (replaced) 1992-93 Bari (II) Deportivo Leon (Mexico) Al Hilal (Saudi Arabia) 1996-97 Fenerbahçe Istanbul (Turkey) Leandro Leandro André Martins Born in Porto Alegre 8.10.1971 Forward 1990-91 Internacional Porto Alegre 1991-93 Gremio Porto Alegre 1993-94 Tirsense Santo Tirso (Portugal) 1994-95 Académica Coimbra (Portugal) (II) 1995-96 Académica Coimbra (Portugal) (II) 1996-97 União Coimbra (Portugal) (III) 1997-98 Avellino (III) 5 - Leonardo Leonardo Nascimento de Araújo Born in Niterói 5.9.1969 Midfield 1987 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 18 - 1988 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 18 - 1989 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 16 - 1990 São Paulo 18 - 1991 São Paulo 22 1 1991-92 Valencia (Spain) 37 3 1992-93 Valencia (Spain) 34 3 1993 São Paulo 13 - 1994 Kashima Antlers (Japan) 9 7 1995 Kashima Antlers (Japan) 28 17 1996 Kashima Antlers (Japan) 12 6 1996-97 Paris Saint Germain (France) 32 7 1997-98 Paris Saint Germain (France) 2 - sep ’97 Milan 27 3 1998-99 Milan 27 12 1999-00 Milan 19 4 Lima Francisco Govinho Lima Born in Manaus 17.4.1971 Midfield 1990-94 Feroviario (II) 1995 União São João Araras 6 - 1996-97 Gaziantepspor (Turkey) 30 1 1997-98 Gaziantepspor (Turkey) 28 2 1998-99 Zürich (Switzerland) 30 6 1999-00 Zürich (Switzerland) 2 1 jul ’00 Lecce 32 1 Luis Silvio Luis Silvio Danuello Born in Julio Mesquita 28.1.1960 Forward Marilia 1980 Palmeiras São Paulo mar ‘80 Ponte Preta Campinas 1980-81 Pistoiese 6 - 1989 Maringá Luvanor Luvanor Donizete Borges Born in Pirajuba 15.2.1961 Midfield 1977-83 Goiás 1983-84 Catania 30 - 1984-85 Catania (II) 30 2 1985-86 Catania (II) 23 1 1989 Sporting Barranquilla (Columbia) 1990 Goiás 1991 Goiás Marcão Marcos Antonio Aparecido Cipriano Born in Andirá 7.4.1973 Forward 1991 Matsubara FC (amateurs) 15 8 1992 Wanderers Montevideo (Uruguay) - - 1993 Wanderers Montevideo (Uruguay) 12 9 1994 Toluca (Mexico) - - jul ’94 Matsubara FC (III) 6 4 nov ’94 Torino 4 - Marcio Santos Marcio Roberto dos Santos Born in São Paulo 15.9.1969 Defender 1988 Novorizontino 4 - 1989 Novorizontino 20 1 1990 Novorizontino 29 2 Internacional Porto Alegre 5 - 1991 Botafogo Rio de Janeiro - - 1992-93 Bordeaux (France) 36 2 1993-94 Bordeaux (France) 20 2 1994-95 Fiorentina 32 2 1995-96 Ajax Amsterdam (Holland) 7 - 1996-97 Ajax Amsterdam (Holland) 14 1 1997 Atlético Mineiro Belo Horizonte 1998 São Paulo 1999 São Paulo 2000 Santos Marco Aurélio Marco Aurélio Cunha dos Santos Born in Rio de Janeiro 18.2.1967 Defender 1988 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro 6 - 1989 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro 17 - 1990 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro 16 - 1990-91 União Madeira (Portugal) 36 1 1991-92 União Madeira (Portugal) 28 1 1992-93 União Madeira (Portugal) (II) 1993-94 União Madeira (Portugal) 30 1 1994-95 Sporting Lisboa (Portugal) 29 2 1995-96 Sporting Lisboa (Portugal) 31 1 1996-97 Sporting Lisboa (Portugal) 31 - 1997-98 Sporting Lisboa (Portugal) 28 - 1998-99 Sporting Lisboa (Portugal) 14 - jan ’99 Vicenza 14 - 1999-00 Vicenza (II) Marcos Assunção Marcos dos Santos Assunção Born in Caieiras 25.7.1976 Midfield 1996 Santos 19 2 1997 Santos 14 1 1998 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 21 5 1999 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro - - 1999-00 Roma 20 1 Matuzalem Francelino Matuzalem da Silva Born in Natal 10.6.1980 Midfield 1997 Vitória de Bahia 1 - 1998 Vitória de Bahia 13 - 1999 Vitória de Bahia - - mar ’99 Bellinzona (Switzerland) (III) - - 1999-00 Napoli (II) Mazinho Iomar do Nascimento Born in Santa Rita 8.4.1966 Defender-Midfield 1983 Santa Cruz 1984 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro 1985 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro 6 1 1986 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro 59 5 1987 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro 63 2 1988 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro 58 6 1989 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro 39 1 1990 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro - - 1990-91 Lecce 34 2 1991-92 Fiorentina 21 - 1992 Palmeiras São Paulo 1993 Palmeiras São Paulo 1994 Palmeiras São Paulo 1994-95 Valencia (Spain) 31 - 1995-96 Valencia (Spain) 40 - 1996-97 Celta Vigo (Spain) 40 3 1997-98 Celta Vigo (Spain) 37 1 1998-99 Celta Vigo (Spain) 31 4 1999-00 Celta Vigo (Spain) Milton Luiz Milton de Souza Filho Born in Rio de Janeiro 11.11.1961 Midfield 1983-84 Serrano 1985-87 Nacional Manaus 1987 Apucarana jun ‘87 Coritiba 1988 Coritiba 1988-89 Como 34 4 1989-90 Como (II) 26 3 1990-91 Chiasso (Switzerland) 13 5 1991-92 Zürich (Switzerland) 22 3 1992-93 Zürich (Switzerland) 21 2 1993-94 Sion (Switzerland) 19 - 1994-95 Sion (Switzerland) 12 1 1995-96 Sankt Gallen (Switzerland) 32 3 1996-97 Sion (Switzerland) 30 1 1997-98 Sion (Switzerland) 29 3 Miranda Armando Miranda Born in São Paulo 12.12.1939 Forward Corinthians São Paulo 1962-63 Juventus 17 12 1963-64 Catania 10 1 Müller Luiz Antonio Correa da Costa Born in Campo Grande 31.1.1966 Forward 1984 São Paulo 1985 São Paulo 1986 São Paulo 1987 São Paulo 30 11 1987 São Paulo 1988 São Paulo 1988-89 Torino 31 11 1989-90 Torino (II) 27 11 1990-91 Torino 7 2 1992 São Paulo 1993 São Paulo 1994 São Paulo 1995 Kashima Antlers (Japan) jul ’95 Palmeiras São Paulo 1996 Palmeiras São Paulo 1996-97 Perugia 6 - 1997 Santos 1999 Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte Murolo Américo Murolo Born in São Paulo 28.4.1932 Midfield Linense 1955-56 Lane Rossi Vicenza 25 10 Napolitano José Luis Napolitano Born 18.4.1969 Forward 1992-93 Vadese 9 2 Nelsinho Luis Nelson Born in São Paulo 18.8.1939 Midfield Palmeiras São Paulo 1961-62 Mantova 4 - Nenê Claudio Olinto de Carvalho Born in Santos 1.2.1942 As player Forward-Midfield Santos 1963-64 Juventus 28 11 1964-65 Cagliari 26 5 1965-66 Cagliari 28 1 1966-67 Cagliari 32 4 1967-68 Cagliari 27 5 1968-69 Cagliari 30 1 1969-70 Cagliari 28 3 1970-71 Cagliari 30 1 1971-72 Cagliari 27 1 1972-73 Cagliari 28 1 1973-74 Cagliari 22 - 1974-75 Cagliari 20 1 1975-76 Cagliari 13 - As coach Juventus (youths) Orlando Orlando Pereira Born in Rio de Janeiro 22.1.1949 Died in Rio de Janeiro 5.9.1999 Defender 1971-72 Santos oct ’73 Curitiba 1974-76 América Tio de Janieiro 1977-81 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro 1981-82 Udinese 29 - Paco Soares Francisco Ediván Soares de Souza Born in São Luis 14.12.1979 Forward 1997 Motagua (Honduras) 14 6 1997-98 Sampdoria 8 1 1998-99 Sampdoria - - aug ’98 Empoli - - nov ’98 Fidelis Andria (II) 6 - 1999-00 Carrarese (III) Paulo Pereira Paulo Antonio do Prado Pereira Born in Campinas 27.8.1965* Defender 1985-87 São Bento (amateurs) 1987-88 Monterrey (Mexico) 1988-89 Porto (Portugal) 18 1 1989-90 Porto (Portugal) 17 1 1990-91 Porto (Portugal) 28 7 1991-92 Porto (Portugal) 23 4 1992-93 Vitória Guimarães (Portugal) 19 2 1993-94 Porto (Portugal) 11 2 1994-95 Benfica Lisboa (Portugal) 13 2 1995-96 Benfica Lisboa (Portugal) 7 - 1996-97 Benfica Lisboa (Portugal) - - sep ’96 Genoa (II) 33 1 1997-98 Genoa (II) 13 1 1998-99 Reggina (II) 8 - * = Twin brother of Silas Paulo Rogério Paulo Rogério Paranagua Gunyies Bprn 25.8.1975 Goalkeeper 1996-97 Rovigo (V) 12 - Paulo Sérgio Paulo Sérgio Silvestre do Nascimento Born in São Paulo 2.6.1969 Forward 1989 Corinthians São Paulo - - 1990 Novorizontino (II) aug ’90 Corinthians São Paulo 10 2 1991 Corinthians São Paulo 17 2 1992 Corinthians São Paulo 18 2 1993-94 Bayer Leverkusen (Germany) 34 17 1994-95 Bayer Leverkusen (Germany) 28 9 1995-96 Bayer Leverkusen (Germany) 26 4 1996-67 Bayer Leverkusen (Germany) 33 17 1997-98 Roma 34 12 1998-99 Roma 30 12 1999-00 Bayern München (Germany) 28 13 Pedrinho Pedro Luis Vicençote Born in Santo André 22.10.1957 Defender-Midfield 1975-81 Palmeiras São Paulo 1982-83 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro 1983-84 Catania 27 3 1984-85 Catania (II) 35 7 1985-86 Catania (II) 26 - Pelado Fernando Roberto Marquez da Silva Born in São Luis 14.10.1981 Forward 1997-98 Atlético Juventus (amateurs) 1998-99 Treviso (II) - - 1999-00 Treviso (II) Pinga André Luciano da Silva Born in Fortaleza 27.4.1981 Forward 1999 Atlético Juventus (amateurs) 1999-00 Torino 7 2 Pita Neivaldo Mozetti Born in São Paulo 28.1.1965 Midfield 1983-86 Santo André 1986-87 Vittorio Veneto (V) 21 4 1987-88 Trapani (IV) 20 5 1988-89 Vittorio Veneto (V) 21 6 1989-90 Avezzano (V) 20 3 1990-91 Avezzano (V) 23 5 1994-95 Paganica (V) 28 7 1995-96 Luco dei Marsi (V) 18 3 Reinaldo Reinaldo Rosa dos Santos Born in Belo Horizonte 1.7.1976 Forward 1993 Atlético Mineiro Belo Horizonte 9 1 1994 Atlético Mineiro Belo Horizonte 26 12 1994-95 Anderlecht Bruxelles (Belgium) - - 1995-96 Anderlecht Bruxelles (Belgium) 2 - 1996 Palmeiras São Paulo - - 1996-97 Verona 1 - 1996 Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte Botafogo Rio de Janeiro Atlético Mineiro Belo Horizonte Bragantino Portuguesa São Paulo jul ‘99 Ponte Preta Renato (Gaucho) Renato Portaluppi Born in Guaporé 9.9.1962 Midfield-Forward Esportivo Bento Gonçalves 1980-86 Gremio Porto Alegre 1986-88 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1988-89 Roma 23 - 1989 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1990 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1991 Botafogo Rio de Janeiro 1991 Nissan (Japan) 10 1992 Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte 1995 Fluminense Rio de Janeiro 1996 Fluminense Rio de Janeiro 1997 Fluminense Rio de Janeiro Reynaldo Reynaldo Santos de Fonseca Born 16.3.1966 Midfield 1988-89 Policassino (V) 1989-90 Policassino (V) 30 2 1990-91 Policassino (V) 28 3 1991-92 Policassino (V) 32 2 Roberto Carlos Roberto Carlos da Silva Born in Garça 10.4.1973 Defender 1990-92 União São João Araras (II) 1993 Palmeiras São Paulo 20 1 1994 Palmeiras São Paulo 24 2 1995 Palmeiras São Paulo - - 1995-96 Inter 30 6 1996-97 Real Madrid (Spain) 37 4 1997-98 Real Madrid (Spain) 35 4 1998-99 Real Madrid (Spain) 35 5 1999-00 Real Madrid (Spain) Rodrigo Rodrigo Vieira Born in 1975 Forward 1997-98 (Poland) 1998-99 Fortuna Düsseldorf (Germany) (II) 1999-00 Trento (V) Romeu Romeu Mendes Rodrigues Born 6.5.1974 Midfield 1999 Corinthians São Paulo 13 - 1999-00 Ravenna (II) Ronaldo Ronaldo Luis Nazário de Lima Born in Rio de Janeiro 22.9.1976 Forward 1992 Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte 1993 Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte 14 12 1994-95 PSV Eindhoven (Holland) 32 30 1995-96 PSV Eindhoven (Holland) 13 12 1996-97 Barcelona (Spain) 37 34 1997-98 Inter 32 25 1998-99 Inter 19 14 1999-00 Inter 7 3 Sani Dino Sani Born in São Paulo 23.5.1932 Midfield São Paulo Palmeiras São Paulo Boca Juniors Buenos Aires (Argentina) 1961-62 Milan 20 5 1962-63 Milan 23 6 1963-64 Milan 19 3 Santos Alfred de Jesus Santos Born in Bahia 2.1.1980 Forward 1996 São Paulo - - 1997 União Barbarense (amateurs) 7 9 1997-98 Salernitana (II) - - 1998-99 Salernitana - - 1999-00 Salernitana (II) Serginho Sérgio Cláudio dos Santos Defender-midfield 1992-93 Itaperuna (amateurs) 1994 Vitória de Bahia - - jun ’94 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1 - 1995 Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte 13 1 1996 São Paulo 19 2 1997 São Paulo 19 - 1998 São Paulo 20 4 1999 São Paulo - - 1999-00 Milan 24 2 Siciliano Bruno Siciliano Born in Rio de Janeiro 19.1.1938 Centerforward Botafogo Rio de Janeiro 1960-61 Juventus - - nov ’60 Lane Rossi Vicenza 21 1 1961-62 Venezia 23 8 1962-63 Juventus 12 4 1963-64 Bari 22 1 1964-65 Bari (II) 23 4 Silas Paulo Silas do Prado Pereira Born in Campinas 27.8.1965* Midfield 1985 São Paulo 29 3 1986 São Paulo 13 4 1987 São Paulo 1988 São Paulo 1988-89 Sporting Lisboa (Portugal) 35 8 1989-90 Sporting Lisboa (Portugal) 12 3 1990 Central Español Montevideo (Uruguay) 2 3 oct ’90 Cesena 26 3 1991-92 Sampdoria 31 3 Boca Juniors Buenos Aires (Arg) 1994 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro feb ’95 Kashiwa Reysol (Japan) apr ‘95 San Lorenzo de Almagro (Argentina) São Paulo 1998 Kyoto Purple Sanga (Japan) 30 5 1999 Kyoto Purple Sanga (Japan) 2000 Atlético Paranaense * = twin brother of Paulo Pereira Silva Forward 1988-89 Viareggio (V) Socrates Socrates Brasileiro Sampaio de Souza Vieira de Oliveira Born in Belem 19.2.1954 As player Midfield 1974-76 Botafogo Ribeirão Preto 1977-84 Corinthians São Paulo 1984-85 Fiorentina 25 6 1985 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1989 Santos As coach mar ‘96 LDU Quito (Ecuador) Sorio Wilson Sorio Born in Guaruyá 10.2.1939 Centerforward Jabaquará 1957-58 Spal Ferrara 9 1 1958-59 Spal Ferrara 21 5 Sormani Angelo Benedicto Miguel Sormani Born in Jaú 3.7.1939 As player Forward Santos 1961-62 Mantova 31 16 1962-63 Mantova 33 13 1963-64 Roma 25 6 1964-65 Sampdoria 30 2 1965-66 Milan 32 21 1966-67 Milan 18 4 1967-68 Milan 29 11 1968-69 Milan 29 4 1969-70 Milan 29 5 1970-71 Napoli 25 5 1971-72 Napoli 28 2 1972-73 Fiorentina 9 - 1973-74 Lane Rossi Vicenza 24 5 1974-75 Lane Rossi Vicenza 22 4 1975-76 Lane Rossi Vicenza (II) 11 3 As coach 1975-76 Lane Rossi Vicenza (II) (sub.) 1976-79 Napoli (youths) 1981-82 no club 1982-85 Napoli (youths) 1985-86 Roma (assistant coach) 1986-87 Roma (assistant coach) 1987-88 Roma (assistant coach) 1988-89 Roma (assistant coach) Tacio Caetano Cruz Queiroz Born in Valença 12.4.1980 Midfield 1997 Vitoria Bahia 1998 Vitoria Bahia 1998-99 Venezia - - 2000 Vitoria Bahia Taffarel Claudio André Mergen Taffarel Born in Santa Rosa 8.5.1966 Goalkeeper 1984-90 Internacional Porto Alegre 1990-91 Parma 34 - 1991-92 Parma 34 - 1992-93 Parma 6 - 1993-94 Reggiana Reggio Emilia 31 - 1994 1995 Atlético Mineiro Belo Horizonte 1996 Atlético Mineiro Belo Horizonte 1997 Atlético Mineiro Belo Horizonte 1998 Atlético Mineiro Belo Horizonte 1998-99 Galatasaray Istanbul 32 - 1999-00 Galatasaray Istanbul Tita Milton Queiroz da Paixão Born in Rio de Janeiro 1.4.1958 Midfield 1977-83 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro apr ’83 Gremio Porto Alegre 1984-85 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro jun ’85 Internacional Porto Alegre 1986-87 Internacional Porto Alegre 1987-88 Bayer Leverkusen (West Germany) 21 10 1988-89 Pescara 25 9 1989-90 Pescara (II) 2 - 1996 León (Mexico) Tonio Antonio Ribeiro de Campos Born 27.11.1968 Forward 1989-90 Sandonà (V) 30 5 1990-91 Conegliano (V) 32 5 1991-92 Conegliano (V) 29 3 1992-93 Cittadella (V) 16 3 Tozzi Humberto Tozzi Barbosa Born in São Cristovão 4.2.1934 Midfield Palmeiras São Paulo 1956-57 Lazio 19 9 1957-58 Lazio 25 7 1958-59 Lazio 33 14 1959-60 Lazio 15 2 Tuta Tuta Moacir Bastos Born in São Paulo 20.6.1974 Forward 1994 Aracatuba (II) 1995 XX Novembro (II) 1996 Aracatuba (II) aug ’96 Juventude São Paulo 2 - 1997 Portuguesa São Paulo 3 - 1998 Atlético Paranaense 36 19 oct ‘98 Venezia 18 3 1999 Vitoria Bahia 2000 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro Vágner Rogério Nuñes Vágner Born in Bauru 19.3.1973 Midfield Paulista São Paulo 1993 União São João Araras 13 - 1994 União São João Araras 20 3 1995 Santos 16 4 1996 Santos 17 1 1997 Santos - - 1997-98 Roma 11 - 1998 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro jul ’99 São Paulo Vinicio Luis Vinicius de Menezes Born in Belo Horizonte 28.2.1932 Height: 1,80 m Weight: 78 kg As player Centerforward Botafogo Rio de Janeiro 1955-56 Napoli A 26 16 1956-57 Napoli A 34 18 1957-58 Napoli A 34 21 1958-59 Napoli A 28 7 1959-60 Napoli A 30 7 1960-61 Bologna A 30 11 1961-62 Bologna A 17 6 1962-63 Vicenza A 26 7 1963-64 Vicenza A 29 17 1964-65 Vicenza A 27 12 1965-66 Vicenza A 34 25 1966-67 Inter A 8 1 1967-68 Vicenza A 25 7 Total in Serie A 348 155 First match in serie A: 18-09-1955: Napoli-Torino 2-2 First goal in serie A: 18-09-1955: Napoli-Torino 2-2 As coach 1968-69 Internapoli (III) 1969-70 Brindisi (III) 1970-71 Ternana Terni (II) 1971-72 Brindisi (III) 1972-73 Brindisi (II) 1973-74 Napoli 1974-75 Napoli 1975-76 Napoli 1976-77 Lazio 1977-78 Lazio (replaced) 1978-79 Napoli 1979-80 Napoli 1980-81 Avellino 1981-82 Avellino (replaced) 1982-83 Pisa 1983-84 Pisa (sub./replaced) 1984-85 Udinese 1985-86 Udinese (replaced) 1986-87 Avellino 1987-88 Avellino (replaced) 1988-91 no club 1991-92 Juve Stabia Castellammare (IV) (sub.) Wanderley Born in 1965 Midfield 1989-90 Rovereto (V) Warley Warley Silva dos Santos Born in Brasilia 13.2.1978 Forward 1998 Atlético Paranaense 17 7 1999 São Paulo - - 1999-00 Udinese 15 3 Zago (Antonio Carlos) Antonio Carlos Zago Born in Presidente Prudente 18.5.1969 Defender 1990 São Paulo 21 1 1991 São Paulo 21 1 1992 São Paulo 22 2 1992-93 Albacete (Spain) 12 1 1993 Palmeiras São Paulo 18 1 1994 Palmeiras São Paulo 21 2 1995 Palmeiras São Paulo 20 1 1996 Kashiwa Reysol (Japan) 24 - 1997 Corinthians São Paulo 12 2 jan '98 Roma 12 - 1998-99 Roma 28 - 1999-00 Roma 27 2 Zé Elias José Elias Moedim Junior Born in São Paulo 25.9.1976 Defender 1993 Corinthians São Paulo 19 2 1994 Corinthians São Paulo 27 - 1995 Corinthians São Paulo 13 - 1996 Corinthians São Paulo 1 - 1996-67 Bayer Leverkusen (Germany) 23 - 1997-98 Inter 20 - 1998-99 Inter 13 - 1999-00 Bologna 19 - Zé Maria José Marcelo Ferreira Born in Oeiras 25.7.1973 Defender 1993 Sergipe (II) 1994 Ponte Preta Campinas (II) 1995 Portuguesa São Paulo 17 2 1996 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro - - 1996-97 Parma 25 1 1997-98 Parma 20 - 1998-99 Perugia 11 - 1999 Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro 2000 Palmeiras São Paulo Zico Arthur Antunes Coimbra Born in Quintino Bocaiúva (Rio de Janeiro) 3.3.1953 Midfield 1972 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1973 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1974 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1975 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1976 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1977 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1978 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1979 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1980 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 21 1981 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1982 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 21 1983 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro (tot. 635/476) 1983-84 Udinese 24 19 1984-85 Udinese 16 3 1985 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1986 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1987 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1988 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1989 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro 1990 Flamengo Rio de Janeiro (tot. 95/32) 1993 Kashima Antlers (Japan) 1994 Kashima Antlers (Japan) List of Brazilian Players who won a Scudetto NB: between square brackets number of played matches 1955/56 - Julinho Botelho [31] (Fiorentina) 1958/59 - José Altafini [31] (Milan) 1961/62 - José Altafini [33] (Milan) 1962/63 - Jair da Costa [27] (Internazionale) 1964/65 - Jair da Costa [19] (Internazionale) 1965/66 - Jair da Costa [27] (Internazionale) 1966/67 - Chinesinho [31] (Juventus) 1967/68 - Sormani [29] (Milan) 1968/69 - Amarildo [25] (Fiorentina) 1970/71 - Jair da Costa [23] (Internazionale) 1972/73 - José Altafini [23] (Juventus) 1974/75 - José Altafini [20] (Juventus) 1982/83 - Falcão [27] (Roma) 1989/90 - Alemão [27] (Napoli) Careca [22] (Napoli) 1990/91 - Toninho Cerezo [12] (Sampdoria) 1998/99 - Leonardo [27] (Milan) 2000/01 - Aldair [15] (Roma) Antonio Carlos [28] (Roma) Cafu [31] (Roma) Emerson [13] (Roma) Marcos Assunção [12] (Roma) About this document With thanks to Roberto Di Maggio (dimrob@libero.it), Marcos Antonio Henriques Pinheiro and Rafael Aguiar de Campos (rafaelguiar@aol.com) Prepared and maintained by Davide Rota for the Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation Author: Davide Rota (davide_rota@hotmail.com) Last updated: 5 Nov 2005
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Edino Nazareth Filho: Brazilian footballer (1955-)
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Edino Nazareth Filho: Brazilian footballer (1955-); Athlete, Football player, Association football player, Journalist, Sports official, Association football manager; From: Brazil
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Edinho obtained 45 caps with the Brazilian national team between March 1977 and June 1986. He took part at three "FIFA World Cup" final tournament. He played 3 matches in the 1978 FIFA World Cup, in Argentina. He appears only one time during the 1982 FIFA World Cup, subbing in for Oscar after 75 minutes against New Zealand. He played all Brazil's five matches during the 1986 FIFA World Cup in which he was captain, scoring one goal. Edinho was also in the team which finished fourth in football at the 1976 Summer Olympics and won a gold medal in football at the 1975 Pan American Games.
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https://reliablesourceng.com/world-athletics-ratifies-amusans-100m-hurdles-record-at-oregon/
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World Athletics ratifies Amusan’s 100m hurdles record at Oregon
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2022-09-20T14:01:11+00:00
Nigeria
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Reliable Source NG
https://reliablesourceng.com/world-athletics-ratifies-amusans-100m-hurdles-record-at-oregon/
The World Athletics has ratified the women’s world 100m hurdles record set by Nigeria’s Tobi Amusan at the July 2022 World Championships in Oregon, United States. A statement by the international athletic governing body on Tuesday added that the record times of two other athletes — Mondo Duplantis and Sydney McLaughlin – have also been ratified. The statement read, “The world records set by Tobi Amusan, Mondo Duplantis, and Sydney McLaughlin at the World Athletics Championships, Oregon22, have been ratified. READ: My breaking world record not a fluke – Amusan “Amusan’s 12.12 in the women’s 100m hurdles semi-finals, Duplantis’s 6.21m in the men’s pole vault final and McLaughlin’s 50.68 in the women’s 400m hurdles final are all now officially in the record books, as is the world U20 mark of 9.94 set by Letsile Tebogo in the men’s 100m heats.” The 25-year-old Amusan took the world by storm when she ran a time of 12.12secs, shaving almost a tenth of a second off the previous world record held by American Keni Harrison (12.20secs), in the semi-finals of the World Championships, before going on to win gold in the final at the Hayward Field stadium. In appreciation of the feat at Oregon and the recent Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, UK, Nigeria’s president, Muhammadu Buhari, awarded her the national honour, Officer of the Order of the Niger (OON).
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https://thesun.my/sport/brazilian-football-legend-pele-dies-at-82-KG10430381
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Brazilian football legend Pele dies at 82
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SAO PAULO: Pele, the legendary Brazilian football player who rose from barefoot poverty to become one of the greatest and best-known athletes in moder...
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SAO PAULO: Pele, the legendary Brazilian football player who rose from barefoot poverty to become one of the greatest and best-known athletes in modern history, died on Thursday at the age of 82. Sao Paulo’s Albert Einstein Hospital, where Pele was undergoing treatment, said he died at 3.27pm “due to multiple organ failures resulting from the progression of colon cancer associated with his previous medical condition.” The death of the only man to win the World Cup three times as a player was confirmed on his Instagram account. “Inspiration and love marked the journey of King Pele, who peacefully passed away today,” it read, adding he had “enchanted the world with his genius in sport, stopped a war, carried out social works all over the world, and spread what he most believed to be the cure for all our problems: love.” Tributes poured in from across the worlds of sport, politics, and popular culture for a figure who epitomised Brazil’s dominance of the beautiful game. The government of President Jair Bolsonaro, who leaves office on Sunday, declared three days of mourning, and said in a statement that Pele was “a great citizen and patriot, raising the name of Brazil wherever he went.” Bolsonaro’s successor, President-elect Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, wrote on Twitter that “few Brazilians carried the name of our country as far as he did.” French president Emmanuel Macron said Pele’s legacy would live forever. “The game. The king. Eternity,” Macron tweeted. Pele had been undergoing chemotherapy since he had a tumour removed from his colon in September 2021. He also had difficulty walking unaided since an unsuccessful hip operation in 2012. In February 2020, on the eve of the Covid-19 pandemic, his son Edinho said Pele’s ailing physical state had left him depressed. On Monday, a 24-hour wake will be held for Pele in the centre of the field at the stadium of Santos, his hometown club where he started playing as a teenager and quickly rose to fame. The following day, a parade carrying his coffin will travel through the streets of Santos, passing the neighbourhood where his 100-year-old mother lives, and ending at the Ecumenical Memorial Necropolis cemetery, where he will be buried in a private ceremony. Pele, whose given name was Edson Arantes do Nascimento, joined Santos in 1956 and turned the small coastal club into one of the most famous names in football. In addition to a host of regional and national titles, Pele won two Copa Libertadores, the South American equivalent of the Champions League, and two Intercontinental Cups, the annual tournament held between the best teams in Europe and South America. He took home three World Cup winner’s medals, the first time as a 17-year-old in Sweden in 1958, the second in Chile four years later – even though he missed most of the tournament through injury – and the third in Mexico in 1970, when he led what is considered to be one of the greatest sides ever to play the game. He retired from Santos in 1974, but a year later made a surprise comeback by signing a lucrative deal to join the New York Cosmos in the then nascent North American Soccer League. In a glorious 21-year career, he scored between 1,281 and 1,283 goals – depending on how matches are counted. Pele, though, transcended football like no player before or since, and he became one of the first global icons of the 20th century. With his winning smile and an aw-shucks humility that charmed legions of fans, he was better known than many Hollywood stars, popes, or presidents – many if not most of whom he met during a six-decade-long career as player and corporate pitchman. “I am sad, but I am also proud to be Brazilian, to be from Pele’s country, a guy who was a great athlete,” said Ciro Campos, a 49-year-old biologist in Rio de Janeiro. “And also, off the field, he was a cool person, not an arrogant athlete.” Pele credited his one-of-a-kind mix of talent, creative genius, and technical skill to a youth spent playing pick-up games in small-town Brazil, often using grapefruit or wadded-up rags because his family could not afford a real ball. Pele was named “Athlete of the Century” by the International Olympic Committee, co-“Football Player of the Century” by world soccer body Fifa, and a “national treasure” by Brazil’s government. His celebrity was often overwhelming. Grown adults broke down crying in his presence with regularity. As a player, souvenir-seeking fans often rushed the field following games and tore off his shorts, socks, and even underwear. His house in Brazil was less than a mile from a beach, but he didn’t go there for some two decades because of fear of crowds. Yet, even in unguarded moments among friends, he rarely complained. He believed that his talent was a divine gift, and he spoke movingly about how football allowed him to travel the world, bring cheer to cancer patients and survivors of wars and famine, and provide for a family that, growing up, often did not know the source of their next meal. “God gave me this ability for one reason: To make people happy,” he said during a 2013 interview with Reuters. “No matter what I did, I tried not to forget that.” Brazil’s CBF soccer federation said: “Pele was much more than the greatest sportsman of all time. The King of Football was the ultimate exponent of a victorious Brazil.” Kylian Mbappé, the French star many view as the current best soccer player in the world, also offered his condolences. “The king of football has left us but his legacy will never be forgotten,” he wrote on Twitter. “RIP, KING.” - Reuters
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Brazilian football legend Pele dies at 82 after battle with cancer
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2022-12-30T09:47:08+00:00
Brazilian football legend Pele dies at 82 after battle with cancer   SAO PAULO - Pele, the legendary Brazilian soccer player who rose from barefoot poverty to become one of the greatest and best-known athletes in modern history, died on Thursday at the age of 82.   Sao Paulo’s Albert Einstein hospital, where Pele was u
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SINGGATE Digital Lock
https://full-smart-singapore.myshopify.com/blogs/smart-blog/brazilian-football-legend-pele-dies-at-82-after-battle-with-cancer
SAO PAULO - Pele, the legendary Brazilian soccer player who rose from barefoot poverty to become one of the greatest and best-known athletes in modern history, died on Thursday at the age of 82. Sao Paulo’s Albert Einstein hospital, where Pele was undergoing treatment, said he died at 3.27pm “due to multiple organ failures resulting from the progression of colon cancer associated with his previous medical condition”. The death of the only man to win the World Cup three times as a player was confirmed on his Instagram account. “Inspiration and love marked the journey of King Pele, who peacefully passed away today,” it read, adding he had “enchanted the world with his genius in sport, stopped a war, carried out social works all over the world and spread what he most believed to be the cure for all our problems: love.” Tributes poured in from across the worlds of sport, politics and popular culture for a figure who epitomised Brazil’s dominance of the beautiful game. The government of President Jair Bolsonaro, who leaves office on Sunday, declared three days of mourning, and said in a statement that Pele was “a great citizen and patriot, raising the name of Brazil wherever he went”. Bolsonaro’s successor, President-elect Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, wrote on Twitter that “few Brazilians carried the name of our country as far as he did”. French President Emmanuel Macron said Pele’s legacy would live forever. “The game. The king. Eternity,” Macron tweeted. Pele had been undergoing chemotherapy since he had a tumour removed from his colon in September 2021. He also had difficulty walking unaided since an unsuccessful hip operation in 2012. In February 2020, on the eve of the coronavirus pandemic, his son Edinho said Pele’s ailing physical state had left him depressed. On Monday, a 24-hour wake will be held for Pele in the centre of the field at the stadium of Santos, his hometown club where he started playing as a teenager and quickly rose to fame. The next day, a parade carrying his coffin will pass through the streets of Santos, passing the neighbourhood where his 100-year-old mother lives, and ending at the Ecumenical Memorial Necropolis cemetery, where he will be buried in a private ceremony. Pele, whose given name was Edson Arantes do Nascimento, joined Santos in 1956 and turned the small coastal club into one of the most famous names in football. In addition to a host of regional and national titles, Pele won two Copa Libertadores, the South American equivalent of the Champions League, and two Intercontinental Cups, the annual tournament held between the best teams in Europe and South America. He took home three World Cup winner’s medals, the first time as a 17-year-old in Sweden in 1958, the second in Chile four years later - even though he missed most of the tournament through injury - and the third in Mexico in 1970, when he led what is considered to be one of the greatest sides ever to play the game. He retired from Santos in 1974 but a year later made a surprise comeback by signing a lucrative deal to join the New York Cosmos in the then nascent North American Soccer League.
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Defender (Association Football)
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World Cup - Free ebook download as PDF File (.pdf), Text File (.txt) or read book online for free.
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https://www.ieyenews.com/pele-dies-at-82/
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Pele dies at 82
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2023-01-02T15:30:16+00:00
Soccer star Pele, Brazilian legend of the beautiful game, dies at 82 December 30 2022 By Andrew Downie and Gabriel Araujo From Reuters SAO PAULO, Dec 29 (Reuters) – Pele, the legendary Brazilian soccer player who rose from barefoot poverty to become one...
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IEyeNews
https://www.ieyenews.com/pele-dies-at-82/
Soccer star Pele, Brazilian legend of the beautiful game, dies at 82 December 30 2022 By Andrew Downie and Gabriel Araujo From Reuters SAO PAULO, Dec 29 (Reuters) – Pele, the legendary Brazilian soccer player who rose from barefoot poverty to become one of the greatest and best-known athletes in modern history, died on Thursday at the age of 82. Sao Paulo’s Albert Einstein hospital, where Pele was undergoing treatment, said he died at 3:27 p.m. “due to multiple organ failures resulting from the progression of colon cancer associated with his previous medical condition.” “Inspiration and love marked the journey of King Pele, who peacefully passed away today,” it read, adding he had “enchanted the world with his genius in sport, stopped a war, carried out social works all over the world and spread what he most believed to be the cure for all our problems: love.” Latest Updates Brazilian city of Santos bids farewell to ‘king of soccer’ Pele Nadal not too worried by shaky start to season before Australian Open NBA roundup: Nikola Jokic, Nuggets end Celtics’ winning streak NHL roundup: Hurricanes top Devils in shootout, extend historic run Nadal falls to De Minaur at United Cup for second straight loss Tributes poured in from across the worlds of sport, politics and popular culture for a figure who epitomized Brazil’s dominance of the beautiful game. The government of President Jair Bolsonaro, who leaves office on Sunday, declared three days of mourning, and said in a statement that Pele was “a great citizen and patriot, raising the name of Brazil wherever he went.” Bolsonaro’s successor, President-elect Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, wrote on Twitter that “few Brazilians carried the name of our country as far as he did.” French President Emmanuel Macron said Pele’s legacy would live forever. “The game. The king. Eternity,” Macron tweeted. Pele had been undergoing chemotherapy since he had a tumor removed from his colon in September 2021. He also had difficulty walking unaided since an unsuccessful hip operation in 2012. In February 2020, on the eve of the coronavirus pandemic, his son Edinho said Pele’s ailing physical state had left him depressed. On Monday, a 24-hour wake will be held for Pele in the center of the field at the stadium of Santos, his hometown club where he started playing as a teenager and quickly rose to fame. The next day, a procession carrying his coffin will pass through the streets of Santos, passing the neighborhood where his 100-year-old mother lives, and ending at the Ecumenical Memorial Necropolis cemetery, where he will be buried in a private ceremony. ‘WHAT IS POSSIBLE’ U.S. President Joe Biden said on his Twitter that Pele’s rise from humble beginnings to soccer legend was a story of “what is possible.” Pele, whose given name was Edson Arantes do Nascimento, joined Santos in 1956 and turned the small coastal club into one of the most famous names in football. In addition to a host of regional and national titles, Pele won two Copa Libertadores, the South American equivalent of the Champions League, and two Intercontinental Cups, the annual tournament held between the best teams in Europe and South America. He took home three World Cup winner’s medals, the first time as a 17-year-old in Sweden in 1958, the second in Chile four years later – even though he missed most of the tournament through injury – and the third in Mexico in 1970, when he led what is considered to be one of the greatest sides ever to play the game. He retired from Santos in 1974 but a year later made a surprise comeback by signing a lucrative deal to join the New York Cosmos in the then nascent North American Soccer League. In a glorious 21-year career he scored between 1,281 and 1,283 goals, depending on how matches are counted. Pele, though, transcended soccer, like no player before or since, and he became one of the first global icons of the 20th century. With his winning smile and an aw-shucks humility that charmed legions of fans, he was better known than many Hollywood stars, popes or presidents – many if not most of whom he met during a six-decade-long career as player and corporate pitchman. “I am sad, but I am also proud to be Brazilian, to be from Pele’s country, a guy who was a great athlete,” said Ciro Campos, a 49-year-old biologist in Rio de Janeiro. “And also off the field, he was a cool person, not an arrogant athlete.” Pele credited his one-of-a-kind mix of talent, creative genius and technical skill to a youth spent playing pick-up games in small-town Brazil, often using grapefruit or wadded-up rags because his family could not afford a real ball. Pele was named “Athlete of the Century” by the International Olympic Committee, co-“Football Player of the Century” by world soccer body FIFA, and a “national treasure” by Brazil’s government. His celebrity was often overwhelming. Grown adults broke down crying in his presence with regularity. When he was a player, souvenir-seeking fans rushed the field following games and tore off his shorts, socks and even underwear. His house in Brazil was less than a mile from a beach, but he didn’t go there for some two decades because of fear of crowds. Yet even in unguarded moments among friends, he rarely complained. He believed that his talent was a divine gift, and he spoke movingly about how soccer allowed him to travel the world, bring cheer to cancer patients and survivors of wars and famine, and provide for a family that, growing up, often did not know the source of their next meal. “God gave me this ability for one reason: To make people happy,” he said during a 2013 interview with Reuters. “No matter what I did, I tried not to forget that.” Brazil’s CBF soccer federation said “Pele was much more than the greatest sportsman of all time… The King of Soccer was the ultimate exponent of a victorious Brazil.” Kylian Mbappé, the French star many view as the current best soccer player in the world, also offered his condolences. “The king of football has left us but his legacy will never be forgotten,” he wrote on Twitter. “RIP KING.” Reporting by Andrew Downie and Gabriel Araujo; Additional reporting by Peter Frontini, Carolina Pulice and Sergio Queiroz; Editing by Gabriel Stargardter, Daniel Wallis and Rosalba O’Brien Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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https://dunyanews.tv/en/Sports/723997-Pele/cricket.html
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Pele's gilded, turf-lined tomb opens to public in Brazil
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[ "Pele's gilded", "turf-lined tomb opens to public in Brazil" ]
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2023-05-16T00:00:00
Brazil opened Pele's gilded, football-turfed tomb to the public on Monday.
en
https://dunyanews.tv/new…e-touch-icon.png
Dunya News
https://dunyanews.tv/en/Sports/723997-Pele\'s-gilded,-turf-lined-tomb-opens-to-public-in-Brazil
SANTOS (Brazil) (AFP) – It is a final resting place fit for "The King": six months after the death of the man widely considered the greatest footballer of all time, Brazil opened Pele's gilded, football-turfed tomb to the public Monday. Pele, who died on December 29 at age 82 after a battle with cancer, was laid to rest at the Ecumenical Memorial Cemetery in Santos, Brazil. It is a high-rise, 14-story mausoleum that holds the Guinness world record for the tallest cemetery on Earth. Fans were greeted by two life-size golden statues of the player nicknamed "O Rei" -- The King -- whose remains rest inside a large golden vault displayed in the middle of a 200-square-meter (more than 2,000-square-foot) room carpeted in artificial turf. "It surpassed my expectations. It's a really beautiful place," said Ronaldo Rodrigues, 44, a businessman who was first in line to visit the tomb, along with his wife. "I hope lots of tourists will come visit and get to know a little about Pele's story, what he represented for Santos, Brazil and the entire world." Born Edson Arantes do Nascimento, Pele is the only player in history to win three World Cups (1958, 1962 and 1970). He scored a world record 1,281 goals during his more than two-decade career with Santos (1956-74), the New York Cosmos (1975-77) and the Brazilian national team. In tears, Pele's son Edinho told reporters who flocked to the southeastern port city that the family was still struggling to cope with their loss. "But we're also very proud and happy at all the affection and reverence that's kept pouring in," he said. For now, entries to the tomb are limited to 60 people a day, via a sign-up form on the cemetery's website. Topped with a cross, Pele's golden vault has black etchings on its sides depicting his 1,000th goal and his famous raised-fist goal celebration. The room is wallpapered with images of fans in a football stadium. The resort-like cemetery also features an auto museum that now includes the Mercedes Benz S-280 the company gave Pele in 1974 to commemorate his 1,000th goal. "It's a place that's rich in detail, all lovingly assembled in tribute, as the 'King' deserves," cemetery manager Paulo Campos told AFP.
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https://breaknlinks.com/news/61981
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Football legend Pele dies aged 82
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Media for all across the globe
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Breaknlinks
https://breaknlinks.com/news/61981
Pele, the iconic Brazilian soccer player who rose from poverty to become one of the modern era's finest and most famous athletes, passed away on Thursday at 82. The Albert Einstein hospital in Sao Paulo, where Pele was receiving treatment, reported that he passed away at 3:27 p.m. "due to multiple organ failures resulting from the progression of colon cancer associated with his previous medical condition." The Instagram account of the only guy to win the World Cup three times as a player acknowledged his passing. "Inspiration and love marked the journey of King Pele, who passed away peacefully today," the obituary read, adding that he had "enchanted the world with his genius in sport, stopped a war, carried out social works all over the world and spread what he most believed to be the cure for all our problems: love." Sport, politics, and popular culture all paid their respects to a guy who exemplified Brazil's domination in the beautiful game. The government of President Jair Bolsonaro, who leaves office on Sunday, has announced three days of mourning and released a statement describing Pele as "a great citizen and patriot, raising the name of Brazil wherever he went." President-elect Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Bolsonaro's successor, stated on Twitter that "few Brazilians carried the name of our country as far as he did." President Emmanuel Macron of France stated that Pele's legacy would last forever. "The game. The king. Eternity" tweeted Macron. Pele had chemotherapy since September 2021, when a tumor was removed from his colon. In addition, he has had trouble walking unassisted since a failed hip procedure in 2012. In February 2020, on the brink of the coronavirus pandemic, Pele's son Edinho said that his father's failing health had left him depressed. On Monday, a 24-hour wake will be conducted for Pele in the stadium of his hometown club, Santos, where he began playing as a teenager and swiftly climbed to prominence. The following day, a procession carrying his casket will travel through the streets of Santos, passing by the neighborhood where his mother, who is 100 years old, resides and concluding at the Ecumenical Memorial Necropolis cemetery, where he will be buried in a private ceremony. Pele, whose name was Edson Arantes do Nascimento, joined Santos in 1956 and made it one of the most renowned football clubs in the world. In addition to numerous regional and national championships, Pele won two Copa Libertadores, the South American version of the Champions League, and two Intercontinental Cups, the yearly competition between the best clubs from Europe and South America. He won three World Cups, the first as a 17-year-old in Sweden in 1958, the second in Chile four years later despite missing most of the tournament due to injury, and the third in Mexico in 1970 when he captained what is often regarded as the best team in the history of the sport. A year after his retirement from Santos in 1974, he made a surprising comeback by accepting a lucrative contract with the New York Cosmos of the then-emerging North American Soccer League. Depending on how matches were tallied, he scored between 1,281 and 1,283 goals over his 21-year career. Pele transcended soccer, though, like no other player before or after, and he became one of the first global idols of the twentieth century. He was more recognized than many Hollywood stars, popes, and presidents — many, if not the majority of whom he met during his six-decade career as a player and corporate pitchman. Ciro Campos, a 49-year-old biologist in Rio de Janeiro, said, "I am sad, but I am also proud to be Brazilian, to be from Pele's country, a guy who was a great athlete. And also off the field, he was a cool person, not an arrogant athlete." Pele attributed his unique blend of talent, creative ingenuity, and technical proficiency to his youth spent playing pick-up games in small-town Brazil, often with grapefruits or rags for a ball because his family could not buy one. Pele was designated "Athlete of the Century" by the International Olympic Committee, co- "Football Player of the Century" by Fifa, and a "national treasure" by the government of Brazil. His fame was frequently overwhelming. Adults of all ages often burst into tears in his presence. As a player, souvenir-hungry fans often rushed the field after games and ripped off his shorts, socks, and undergarments. His home in Brazil was less than a mile from a beach, but he avoided it for around twenty years out of fear of crowds. However, he seldom complained, even at unguarded moments with friends. He believed that his talent was a heavenly gift, and he spoke eloquently about how soccer enabled him to travel the world, offer joy to cancer patients and survivors of wars and starvation, and support a family that, while growing up, was frequently unable to afford food. "God gave me this talent for one purpose: to make people happy," he told Reuters in a 2013 interview. Whatever I did, I endeavored not to forget that. The CBF soccer federation of Brazil stated, "Pele was much more than the greatest athlete of all time... The King of Soccer was the supreme representative of a winning Brazil." Kylian Mbappe, considered by many to be the best soccer player in the world at present, also expressed his condolences. He stated on Twitter, "The king of football has passed away, but his legacy will never be forgotten." "RIP KING."
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https://www.news18.com/football/brazil-peles-gilded-turf-lined-tomb-opens-to-public-7827301.html
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Brazil: Pele's Gilded, Turf
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2023-05-16T04:34:40+05:30
Pele, who died on December 29 at age 82 after a battle with cancer, was laid to rest at the Ecumenical Memorial Cemetery in Santos, Brazil
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News18
https://www.news18.com/football/brazil-peles-gilded-turf-lined-tomb-opens-to-public-7827301.html
It is a final resting place fit for “The King”: six months after the death of the man widely considered the greatest footballer of all time, Brazil opened Pele’s gilded, football-turfed tomb to the public Monday. Pele, who died on December 29 at age 82 after a battle with cancer, was laid to rest at the Ecumenical Memorial Cemetery in Santos, Brazil. It is a high-rise, 14-story mausoleum that holds the Guinness world record for the tallest cemetery on Earth. Fans were greeted by two life-size golden statues of the player nicknamed “O Rei” — The King — whose remains rest inside a large golden vault displayed in the middle of a 200-square-meter (more than 2,000-square-foot) room carpeted in artificial turf. “It surpassed my expectations. It’s a really beautiful place,” said Ronaldo Rodrigues, 44, a businessman who was first in line to visit the tomb, along with his wife. “I hope lots of tourists will come visit and get to know a little about Pele’s story, what he represented for Santos, Brazil and the entire world.” Born Edson Arantes do Nascimento, Pele is the only player in history to win three World Cups (1958, 1962 and 1970). He scored a world record 1,281 goals during his more than two-decade career with Santos (1956-74), the New York Cosmos (1975-77) and the Brazilian national team. In tears, Pele’s son Edinho told reporters who flocked to the southeastern port city that the family was still struggling to cope with their loss. “But we’re also very proud and happy at all the affection and reverence that’s kept pouring in,” he said. For now, entries to the tomb are limited to 60 people a day, via a sign-up form on the cemetery’s website. Topped with a cross, Pele’s golden vault has black etchings on its sides depicting his 1,000th goal and his famous raised-fist goal celebration. The room is wallpapered with images of fans in a football stadium. The resort-like cemetery also features an auto museum that now includes the Mercedes Benz S-280 the company gave Pele in 1974 to commemorate his 1,000th goal. “It’s a place that’s rich in detail, all lovingly assembled in tribute, as the ‘King’ deserves,” cemetery manager Paulo Campos told AFP. The mausoleum sits less than a kilometer (0.6 mile) from the Vila Belmiro, the stadium where Pele played most of his storied career.
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https://www.tiktok.com/%40letrasemusicastop/video/7325418821563763974
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Make Your Day
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https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Edimo_Ferreira_Campos
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Category:Edimo Ferreira Campos
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https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Edimo_Ferreira_Campos
Media in category "Edimo Ferreira Campos" The following 3 files are in this category, out of 3 total.
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http://xtralegend.blogspot.com/2013/05/Brazil.html
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International Legendary Museum
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“The Selecao” Brazil creates the value of the wonderful beautiful side to the game and have been producing many World legends. However,...
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http://xtralegend.blogspot.com/2013/05/Brazil.html
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https://www.wikiwand.com/en/Campos_(surname)
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Campos (surname)
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Campos is a surname of Spanish and Portuguese origin, meaning "Fields" in both languages. Notable people with the surname include:
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Wikiwand
https://www.wikiwand.com/en/Campos_(surname)
Campos is a surname of Spanish and Portuguese origin, meaning "Fields" in both languages. Notable people with the surname include:
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dbpedia
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https://www.transfermarkt.us/edinho/profil/spieler/27363
en
Edinho - Player profile
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[ "Edinho", "Karriereende", "", "Brazil" ]
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Edinho ➤ former footballer from Brazil ➤ Defensive Midfield ➤ last club: Vila Nova Futebol Clube (GO) ➤ * Jan 15, 1983 in Niterói, Brazil
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https://blackbraziltoday.com/all-hail-the-king-pele-the-greatest-soccer-player-of-all-time-turns-80/
en
All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80
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[ "Marques Travae" ]
2020-10-25T01:04:02+00:00
All Hail the King of Soccer recently celebrated eight decades, but talking about Pelé offers a glipse of being a black man in Brazilian society.
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https://i0.wp.com/blackb…it=32%2C32&ssl=1
Black Brazil Today
https://blackbraziltoday.com/all-hail-the-king-pele-the-greatest-soccer-player-of-all-time-turns-80/
Note from BBT: I can’t say with any certainty when I first heard the name Pelé, but I do know it was some time in the late 70s. As a child, I was an avid sports fan and prided myself on being a walking sports encyclopedia. I could remember birthdates, points per game averages, batting averages and rushing yards of players in the three most popular American sports as well as any sports journalist. To keep up with stats, teams and players, I always asked my parents to buy me sports books and I remember having at least two subscriptions to Sports Illustrated magazine. I had many favorite sports heroes, but my favorite player was the legendary Julius Erving, better known as Dr. J, the high-flying forward of the Philadelphia 76ers. The first book I remember reading in my life was about Dr.J, and like any black kid growing up in the ‘hood, I wanted to be like The Doctor. I played all three of the big three most popular team sports in the United States, basketball, football and baseball, and when I wasn’t playing, I was glued in front of the television watching the games, both professional and college. (All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80) I also watched boxing matches and was aware of other sports such as soccer, hockey, volleyball, bowling, etc. I reguarly went bowling or watched my father’s weekly bowling events, but sports such as soccer and volleyball I would only play when I was required to participate during my school’s gym classes. I only knew one black family that advidly watched hockey and soccer just didn’t interest me. Even not being into soccer, I still knew who Pelé was. He was the first Brazilian I ever knew of. At such a young age, I hadn’t come to understand how black people ended up in so many countries in the Americas but you didn’t have to know where they were from to recognize that non-American black people looked like people in the family and my neighborhood. (All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80) As soccer wasn’t a sport that caught my attention, I didn’t know anything about Pelé when he began to play for the North American Soccer League with the New York Cosmos, but I couldn’t help but note all of the hoopla there was in the media about his arrival in the US. Pelé would appear on the cover of an issue of Sports Illustrated at that time wearing the green and white of the Cosmos. From the reports I read about him, he was supposed to be like Dr. J of soccer. As I had only seen photos of him and had never actually seen him play, I couldn’t develop an opinion on this. There were at least five things that Dr. J and Pelé had in common and, if I were to really think about it, I would probably find many more. One was playing for teams located in New York. Dr.J had constructed his image as one the most exciting basketball players in history playing for the New York Nets of the old American Basketball Association, the ABA, the rival league of the NBA, the National Basketball Association. Erving’s last year with the Nets was also the ABA’s last year, the league folding in 1976 due to financial issues. Erving was in his prime at the age of 27 when he would join the 76ers for the 1976-77 season. (All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80) On the other hand, Pelé, at age 34, had joined the Cosmos in the twilight of his career. I didn’t know it, but the man whose real name was Edson Arantes do Nascimento had already won three World Cup titles, an incredible feat for a single player. The second thing they shared was, similar to Erving joining the NBA in Philly, Pelé arrived in New York with high expectations from fans and the league. Thinking back, another thing the two had in common, at least for me, was the fact that I had missed the best years of both. Although both athletes were still great, by the time Erving had joined the NBA and Pelé had joined the NASL, I had no way of knowing their prior careers. In Doc’s case, ABA games didn’t gain television exposure and Pelé played his career up to that point in Brazil, plus soccer wasn’t very popular in the US. (All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80) Erving had carried the declining ABA for many years and, as the ABA hadn’t received much media attention, people really hadn’t seen vintage Erving and, with his arrival, it was expected that he would not only bring a championship to Philly, but also revitalize a league whose popularity had declined in the years before he joined the 76ers. Similarly, it was hoped that Pelé could do the same for an NASL that simply couldn’t compete with the big three American sports. This hope that Pelé could make soccer more popular in the US was matched by his salary. Joining the league in 1975, Pelé signed a deal that would pay him nearly $1.5 million per year, a staggering amount of money at the time. For the sake of comparison, consider the fact that Erving didn’t reach the seven-figure mark until sometime in the early to mid-1980s. It’s absolutely mind-boggling to realize that a current athlete like LeBron James earns Pelé’s 1975 salary, which was extremely lucrative for the time, in less than four NBA games! (All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80) Another similarity The Doctor and The King shared was joining star-studded teams. Erving would join a 76ers team that already had higher-scoring all-stars such as fellow ABA collegue, power forward George McGinnis, guard Doug Collins and a host of other players players who had the potential to be all-stars. Pelé’s Cosmos also featured the Italian Giorgio Chinaglia and the West German Franz Beckenbauer. (All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80) After playing a few seasons for the Cosmos, Pelé officially ended his career in 1977. It would only be when I “discovered” Brazil at the close of the 20th century that I began to understand the magnitude of Pelé’s career. He was nicknamed “O Rei”, “The King” of soccer, and at one point or another, EVERY major soccer star, Brazilian or not, would be compared to the great in the same way that a debate rages today over the possibility of anyone unseating Michael Jordan as the “GOAT” (greatest of all-time) in basketball. Coincidentally, Pelé called it quits in 1977, a few weeks before reaching the age of 37, while Erving, 10 years younger, would retire 10 years later, also at the age of 37. As it was the question of race and the history of black Brazilians that attracted me to Brazil in the first place, it would only be a matter of time before the race question in regards to Pelé would come up during my research. What I discovered was intriguing. While black Brazilians hailed him the one of the greatest, if not THE greatest of all-time, like Jordan, Pelé left much to be desired in terms of the race issue. In my two decades of researching things of Brazil, I conclude that Pelé must also be THE most criticized figure in terms of racial politics. He has been criticized for his silence as well as the manner in which he has downplayed the issue for decades. Many have defined Pelé’s comments on race as truly embarrassing. In the 1960s and early 1970s, Nascimento constructed his image as a god on the field of futebol, but at a time when athletes such as Muhammad Ali, Jim Brown, Bill Russell, Kareem Abdul Jabbar, John Carlos and Tommy Smith were taking firm stances on race, society and sports, Pelé was missing in action. (All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80) I remember sometime in the early 2000s having a conversation with a guy named Romeo that I used to work with in a retail store in Michigan. He was also black, but he clearly knew more about soccer than I did. As I had just begun my annual trips to Brazil at the time, we would frequently discuss things about the country. Speaking of Pelé, he remembered once seeing an interview with the soccer great in which a journalist asked him something about being black. (All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80) According to Romeo, Pelé stopped the journalist, put up his index finger and said, “I am Brazilian!” I can’t confirm this statement, but considering Pelé’s non-positioning on the race factor for so many years, I could imagine him saying something like this. At that time, Brazil, was in the middle of a Military Dictatorship and not only had the country been divulging the myth that the country was a racial democracy, at one point, it could actually be considered illegal to speak out against racism. According to the wording of Law 5250/67 of 1967, speaking out on things related to race and class was a national security issue and considered a threat to the politcal and social order. For years, I looked at Pelé as a disgrace as a black man for his silence on the clear existence of racial discrimination that had held black Brazilians in their “place” well after 350 years of slavery. A black man, arguably the most famous Brazilian in the world, had enormous influence on society and he could have used this fame and later fortune to become a voice that black Brazilians desparately needed. In the 1970s, 80s and beyond, it was very common for black Brazilians to deny even being black and believing that racism didn’t exist in their country. There’s no way to know with any certainty how Pelé speaking out on these issues could have affected society, but I now have to see the icon as a simply a product of his time. I consider Pelé’s era, where he came from and where his position as a rich and famous black man placed him. It is a well-known fact that in Pelé’s time, black Brazilians simply didn’t speak on the race issue. Deep down, they knew it existed, but they were taught to deny it or ignore it. Unlike in the US, race wasn’t an issue that black Brazilian families would discuss at their dinner tables, and having been born in that era, in 1940, it would be unrealistic to expect that Pelé would do so. This is yet another difference between the United States and Brazil that puts into question which society was/is better for black people. In the US, the militancy of black Americans had reached a fever pitch in the late 1960s and early 1970s with the rise of numerous exponents of civil rights and black power. There were organizations dedicated to racial equality, student groups, magazines, music featuring lyrics of protest against racism, films that approached the issue and numerous other areas of society in which people boldly spoke out. It was a time of black revolution. In Brazil, it was a different story. The most prominent Afro-Brazilian activist of the time, Abdias do Nascimento, went into exile because of it. It was much easier for him to denounce racism in the United States than it was in his own country. To understand the lengths the Brazilian dictatorship would go to protect its image, it even censored Nascimento when he attempted to expose Brazilian racism during the 1977 Second World Black and African Festival of Arts and Culture (FESTAC) in Nigeria. In Brazil of the 1930s, black political parties were effectively prohibited during the first dictatorship and even by the 1970s, even with black people being excluded from so many areas of society, cultural groups such as Ilê Aiyê were advised not to adopt the name “Black Power”, and countless Afro-Brazilian activists were arrested and interrogated on suspicions that would create a similar black revolution in Brazil. I’m not saying I excuse Pelé’s silence on this issue, but I do wonder how many people would have had the courage to do such a thing at the time. At that time in Brazil, anyone of Pelé stature’s would surely have had to blaze this trail alone. When Ali took a political stance at the height of his career, a number of black athletes stepped forward in support of his cause. I can’t say that at that time, Pelé would have received such support from other Afro-Brazilian athletes. Today, I think this would happen, but Afro-Brazilians have made enormous strides in terms of the race issue in the past few decades that simply wasn’t possible in Pelés time. From various videos and photos, we know that Pelé knew Ali and has to know of the things “The Champ” said in terms of the race issue. I have to wonder what Pelé thought of this in terms of his own politics. But Pelé isn’t a black American and he isn’t Ali. Here was a black man who rose to a position that was nearly impossible for any black Brazilian. He was globally known, rich, was the pitchman for numerous products and was seen meeting various dignitaries around the world. Perhaps these are some of the very reasons that Pelé would not speak out. Like Michael Jordan, Pelé had the choice of having the world laid out at his doorstep or perhaps losing it all do a controversial political stance. If I were a betting man, I would wager that someone pulled Pelé to the side and had a talk with him about what he could say or do publicly. (All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80) Besides presumed pressure from Brazilian authorities authorities at the time, I also wonder what types of conversations Pelé had with the likes of American President Richard Nixon and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. CIA notes document a possible relationship between The King of Futebol and Kissinger and I find it hard to believe that their conversations were only about soccer, even as Kissinger was apparently a key figure in convincing Pelé to take his talents to the US. People don’t like to admit this, but fame and fortune come at a high price, a price that often compromises some of our most admirable public figures. Was Pelé bought and paid for or was he simply not the man to lead a black Brazilian revolution? I think it’s a little of both. Would he be different if he had been born in the 1970s, 80s or 90s? Possibly, but he could have easily been like current star Neymar, another star with origins on the Santos soccer team who has been criticized for his lack of racial politics. As Pelé celebrates his 80th birthday, yesterday, October 23rd, one has to wonder how the man really thinks beneath the public facade. In recent years, due to a hip problem, The King has been seen getting around in a wheelchair and is rarely seen making public appearances. Pelé’s fame and fortune hasn’t shielded him from public scrutiny. Not only has he earned criticism for his lack of posture on racial issues, but the legend’s public image has also taken a beating do to his failure to acknowledge a woman that everyone knew was his daughter as well as accusations that he wasn’t financially supporting his grandchildren. Interestingly, in terms of an illegitimate child, this is another thing he has in common with Erving, although with a different ending. For years it wasn’t publicly known that the NBA superstar had fathered a child through an extra-marital affair. But when this daughter, Alexandra Stevenson, became a famous tennis player, the cat was out of the bag. Fortunately, Erving finally did the right thing and began to form a bound with the daughter he didn’t know for decades. I can’t say the same for Pelé. Everyone wonders why. In the end, as O Rei reaches his eighth decade, my view on the legend is a bit complex. He did great things in the soccer field that I would only see decades after he retired. These accolades would lead to his being named the World Player of the Century by FIFA and Athlete of the Century by the International Olympic Committee and for the BBC, he was second only to Muhammad Ali. Incredible, unbelievable accomplishments for a poor black man from Minas Gerais. But there are other things about The King that I would like to know and possibly never will. But this is also true about my own father. And similar to my father, in terms of Pelé, after many years, I’m cool with that. All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80 Why do we celebrate so little the greatest player in the history of futebol? Talking about Pelé is also looking at the trajectory of a black man in Brazilian society By Kamille Viola He appears on all the lists of the best athletes of the 20th century. For many, he is the greatest of all time. He scored 1,281 goals in 21 years, was São Paulo’s top scorer for ten consecutive years and has more won more than 60 titles, among them, three-time World Cup champion for the Brazilian Seleção, the National Team. It is said that his talent with the ball was able to even stop a war. This Friday, October 23, Edson Arantes do Nascimento, Pelé, turns 80 years old. Why are the tributes not at the height of the grandeur of his career? For journalist Angélica Basthi, author of the book Pelé: uma estrela negra em campos verdes (Pelé: a black star on green fields), some factors contributed to the fact that a negative imaginary about him is so present in Brazilian society today. One of them was the rejection of Sandra, the result of a relationship she had in 1963. She fought in court to be recognized as his daughter, but she never managed to co-exist with her father, having died in 2006, at 42, of breast cancer. “Nobody could understand why Pelé took so long to recognize this daughter. And he also had another daughter outside of marriage, Flávia, whom he recognized. What was his great difficulty? Did you think the girl wanted to take him? But then, with so much evidence that she was his daughter, why did he refuse? This was very controversial and much discussed at the time. It was a mark on his trajectory,” she observes. Another very controversial issue was the player’s refusal to talk about racial issues for much of his life. Angélica observes that, in recent years, he has been reviewing this posture, although “in his own way”: in 2014, when commenting on the racism suffered by the goalkeeper Aranha, during a game for Santos (the team that Pelé also played for), he said that if had he stopped every game in which someone called him “macaco” (monkey) or “crioulo” (nigger), all the games he played in would have to be stopped – admitting, for the first time, that he suffered racial discrimination. In June, he joined the demonstrations for the assassination of George Floyd, Blackout Tuesday, by posting a black square on Instagram. “This is also new in Pelé’s repertoire”, points out the journalist. “That image, in which he invested, of Pelé from the 70s, who never wanted to be linked to the racial issue, still remains”. Professor at the Instituto Brasiliense de Direito Público (IDP) and doctoral student in Law at the University of Brasília (UnB), Marcos Queiroz believes that the little attention to date also has to do with an identity crisis that Brazil is experiencing. “This country has to rebuild itself. Even in relation to what is the nation’s greatest passion, futebol (football/soccer). This erasure in relation to Pelé’s 80 years is part of a Brazil that is looking to find itself, as samba great Candeia says. There is an economic and political crisis, but also, as [historian Luiz Antonio] Simas says, an epistemic crisis,” he reflects. “And, thinking about Pelé’s depression [in February, Edinho, the player’s son, said that Pelé was in recluse and “with some depression” due to his mobility problems], maybe he is depressed because Brazil is also depressed. The world that was built around Pelé and in which he lived does not exist anymore. And it will hardly come back to exist.” The racism of Brazilian society also causes Pelé to be judged relentlessly for all his mistakes. “His figure is interesting to think about the racial issue because he brings together several factors, including the image in which he himself invested as a perfect man. The perfect white man is completely different from the perfect black man. The black man is demanded to be impeccable,” analyzes the journalist Angélica Basthi. “He embraced this idea of the perfect man. Only that he is a black man. So society, when looking at Pelé, looks at this black man. Where’s that perfection? People turn a blind eye to other players, but not to him. The judgment is relentless. And it is relentless with this racial content, yes: the perfect black man that Pelé should be and play: he cannot make mistakes, he must be this man who does not exist.” Sports journalist Martha Esteves believes that the Brazilian’s little memory and Pelé’s seclusion, in addition to the issue with his daughter, contribute to the weak celebration around the player’s eight decades. “I think that the disease was a complicated fact for him. He’s very reclusive. And whoever is not seen, is not remembered, unfortunately. This must be contributing to him receiving few honors, which is unfortunate, right? Because he is and will always be the best in the world. Nobody will ever surpass him. Lionel Messi thinks that,” he says. “You are talking about a world idol, who was welcomed by the Queen of England, who stopped the war, who, if he were active today, in the world of social media, of exhibitionism, would be much more famous than the Beatles, for example. Or anyone who is alive today.” She agrees that racism has also crossed the star’s entire career, influencing judgments about his mistakes. “When black people in futebol reach a level of wealth, of fame, they have a little acceptance, but up to page two. Because if you mess up, if you misbehave, then the beating comes. It comes with force,”he says. The sports journalist believes that even the case of Robinho, who had his contract with Santos suspended after pressure from society over the player’s conviction for rape, could have a different outcome if he were white. “Cristiano Ronaldo was also accused of rape. In order not to go to trial, he called the girl and gave her a lot of money. He’s been playing. It didn’t have the international, worldwide scream that it should have had. Because Cristiano Ronaldo is infinitely more famous, more powerful, richer and more of an ace than Robinho. But, even there in Portugal, there in Europe, it was not that way,”he compares. Angélica sees similarities between the criticisms based on racist stereotypes that Pelé received in his youth and those that Neymar receives today. “And it has to do with the idea of that perfect black man as well as that childish black man, which is the way to infantilize black men to always put them in a place of inferiority. The black man, especially in futebol, is associated with childhood emotions, unpreparedness, lack of maturity and lack of responsibility. It is always childish emotion versus reason, which is within the civilized white man. Even the African continent itself suffers from this stereotype of the childish black man,” she explains. The Paris Saint-Germain player, by the way, was also the target of criticism throughout his career for not taking a position on racial issues – until recently, when he denounced having been called a monkey by Olympique defender Álvaro González, and getting ejected from a game. “People make demands of him, people made demands of Pelé, and, above all, he becomes this reference target. But many times we end up focusing these discussions on a player who has his controversies, instead of having a structural discussion, of how futebol itself and the atmosphere around the sport impel these players to be embarrassed, they often didn’t speak of this, being afraid to take a position,”argues Marcos. “There is no support in the Brazilian media for this. There is not enough discussion about what racism means in the country, the history of futebol in relation to racism, how it was even an instrument of perpetuation of racial inequality in Brazil.” He observes that, at the same time that Pelé was one of the symbols of the country that lived under the myth of racial democracy – the idea that blacks, indigenous people and whites lived integrated and in harmony -, it is necessary to understand the importance of the ace when opening paths for black people. “When he arrived at Vasco, they said that there were several black people just like him, so there was no need. He arrived at Santos and was called Gasolina (gasoline), Crioulo (nigger), that kind of thing. He, as an individual, was surviving, trying to find a place in that context in futebol that came from two recent World Cup traumas,” he says. “At the time, it was said that blacks were incapable, unstable, without discipline. So just playing soccer, getting that space, even if he has an individual trajectory in which he normally does not speak openly about it, has already opened many doors, streamlined many questions in relation to the place that blacks can occupy. Because maybe for us it is natural for the black man to play ball, but in the 1950s it was not.” Marcos recalls that he was the pioneer of a line of players in which young blacks can see themselves. “He has this importance, not only for the Brazilian, but for the world. When he emerges as a futebol player, it is the moment, for example, of the struggle for independence of African countries, it is the moment of an immense discussion about racism in the United States, the aftermath of the struggle for civil rights, it’s the moment sports is desegregating in the United States. He represented a lot, as Moacyr Luz says, this power to be where you want,”he explains. “To travel, to be able to be in various places that were often considered inaccessible to the black population: Pelé did it. And I think that we lose a lot of dimension when we focus only on what was negative or controversial in his life.” (All Hail the King: Pelé, The Greatest soccer player of all-time, turns 80) For Angélica Basthi, the projection that racial discussions have gained in the mainstream media in recent months may be the chance to reflect on the treatment given to Pelé in recent years by society and the press. “This is a very peculiar year, not only because of the pandemic, but because of everything that George Floyd’s death represented, in the United States and worldwide, and so many deaths here in Brazil. At this moment when we started to see some mobilization of the media for these racial issues, the challenge remains, in these 80 years, of the Brazilian press to make a self-reflection,”she says. “We must give Pelé his place in the history of futebol. We must also give him the place he has in the history of the black Brazilian. He is a black man who took unimaginable flights, who made several mistakes, who was one of the symbols of racial democracy, he is a black man who suffered racism, who silenced racism. We have a lot to learn about racism and the trajectory of black men in Brazilian society through Pelé.”
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https://issuu.com/itaucultural/docs/publicacao_digital_ocupacao_paulo_freire_en_af
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Ocupação Paulo Freire [english]
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2021-09-16T00:00:00+00:00
Beyond this publication, which also features the reverberations of the educator in other countries, the Ocupação Paulo Freire, produced entirely du...
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Issuu
https://issuu.com/itaucultural/docs/publicacao_digital_ocupacao_paulo_freire_en_af
Resources Dive into our extensive resources on the topic that interests you. It's like a masterclass to be explored at your own pace. Beyond this publication, which also features the reverberations of the educator in other countries, the Ocupação Paulo Freire, produced entirely during the Covid-19 pandemic, presents a series of contents online. Visit itaucultural.org.br/ocupacao. DOI: https://doi.org/10.53343/9786588878224
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https://www.batimes.com.ar/news/sports/peles-gilded-turf-lined-tomb-opens-to-public-in-brazil.phtml
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Pelé's gilded, turf-lined tomb opens to public in Brazil
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[ "James Grainger", "Buenos Aires Times", "Rodrigo Almonacid" ]
2023-05-16T12:27:15-03:00
Six months after the death of the man widely considered the greatest footballer of all time, Brazil has opened Pelé's gilded, football-turfed tomb to the public.
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Buenos Aires Times
https://www.batimes.com.ar/news/sports/peles-gilded-turf-lined-tomb-opens-to-public-in-brazil.phtml
It is a final resting place fit for "The King": six months after the death of the man widely considered the greatest footballer of all time, Brazil opened Pelé's gilded, football-turfed tomb to the public Monday. Pelé, who died on December 29 at age 82 after a battle with cancer, was laid to rest at the Ecumenical Memorial Cemetery in Santos, Brazil. It is a high-rise, 14-story mausoleum that holds the Guinness world record for the tallest cemetery on Earth. Fans were greeted by two life-size golden statues of the player nicknamed "O Rei" – The King – whose remains rest inside a large golden vault displayed in the middle of a 200-square-metre (more than 2,000-square-foot) room carpeted in artificial turf. "It surpassed my expectations. It's a really beautiful place," said Ronaldo Rodrigues, 44, a businessman who was first in line to visit the tomb, along with his wife. "I hope lots of tourists will come visit and get to know a little about Pele's story, what he represented for Santos, Brazil and the entire world." Born Edson Arantes do Nascimento, Pelé is the only player in history to win three World Cups (1958, 1962 and 1970). He scored a world record 1,281 goals during his more than two-decade career with Santos (1956-74), the New York Cosmos (1975-77) and the Brazilian national team. In tears, Pelé's son Edinho told reporters who flocked to the southeastern port city that the family was still struggling to cope with their loss. "But we're also very proud and happy at all the affection and reverence that's kept pouring in," he said. For now, entries to the tomb are limited to 60 people a day, via a sign-up form on the cemetery's website. Topped with a cross, Pelé's golden vault has black etchings on its sides depicting his 1,000th goal and his famous raised-fist goal celebration. The room is wallpapered with images of fans in a football stadium. The resort-like cemetery also features an auto museum that now includes the Mercedes Benz S-280 the company gave Pelé in 1974 to commemorate his 1,000th goal. "It's a place that's rich in detail, all lovingly assembled in tribute, as the 'King' deserves," cemetery manager Paulo Campos told AFP. The mausoleum sits less than a kilometre (0.6 mile) from the Vila Belmiro, the stadium where Pelé played most of his storied career. – TIMES/AFP related news by Rodrigo Almonacid, AFP
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Edinho Campos
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Listen to Edinho Campos on Spotify. Artist · 0 monthly listeners.
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Spotify
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https://archive.org/stream/cashbox23unse_14/cashbox23unse_14_djvu.txt
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Full text of "Cash Box"
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https://archive.org/details/cashbox23unse_14
See other formats DECEMBER 30, 1961 For tlie thirleciilli coii^eriitivr year Perry (ajino lielps Cash Box wish a Merry (Christinas anil a Hajuiy New ^ ear to all its readers throughout the worhi. Above, the K(CA \ ietor rerordinp star, in his typiealiv relaxeil manner, paints a jolly picture of the Christmas season during a rehearsal for his annual Kraft Theatre ^ uletide show. Perry’s latest single is “^oiTre Following .Me." TOPS IK SnOLES THROmillOUT THE WOKU WHO'S SORRY NOW I'M SORRY I MAOE YOU CRY CAROLINA MOON STUPIO CUPIO PALLIN' MY HAPPINESS IF I OIDN'T CARE LIPSTICK ON YOUR COLLAR FRANKIE YOU'RE GONNA MISS ME PLENTY GOOO LOVIN' AMONG MY SOUVENIRS MAMA TEOOY JEALOUS OF YOU EVERYBOOY'S SOMEBOOY'S FOOL MY HEART HAS A MIND OF ITS OWN MANY TEARS AGO WHERE THE BOYS AREgHT NO ONE BREAKING IN A BRAND NEW BROKEN HEART SOMEONE ELSE'S BOY TOGETHER TOO MANY RULES DREAMBOAT HOLLYWOOD WHEN THE BOY IN YOUR ARMS (Is The Boy In Your Heart) BABY'S FIRST CHRISTMAS Current fill Single WHEN THE BOY IN YOUR A (Is Tire Boy In Your Heart) and BABY'S FIRST CHRISTM K-13051 ..i '■ 1 I iin j m {No. J in OoitnUifn} (No. T In itofltfn) (No. t Sn Spanish) (No. I in Japano*a} (No. I In ridfllslij DIE ERSHTEH 13 RELEASES 14 HITS oCinda Scott Santo ^olinn^ Site Seimonti ^anie ^rant She .>^n^eii Ranted l^a^ . “I'VE TOLD EVERY LIHLE STAR” “DON'T BET MONEY HONEY” “STARLIGHT STARBRIGHT” “IT'S ALL BECAUSE” “I DON'T KNOW WHY” . “TWISTIN' BELLS” “HOP SCOTCH” “TELL ME WHY” “DON'T GET AROUND MUCH ANYMORE” “I NEED SOMEONE” , “TRIANGLE” “ROMEO” “IF YOU GOTTA MAKE A FOOL OF SOMEBODY” Album releases: STARLIGHT STARBRIGHT, Linda Scott/ENCORE, Santo & Johnny/HAWAII, Santo & Johnny Chart albums: STARLIGHT STARBRIGHT, Linda Scott/ENCORE, Santo & Johnny/HAWAII, Santo & Johnny Best Wishes! CAPRICE RECORD CORP. RECORD.4. Ltd 150 WMf 55ih Sirctt N«W York 19, N. Y. SABINA RECORD CORP. fJeiiQJii i^an ciuie i^ernie cjCt awrence Cash Box — December 30, 1961 by New Musical Express "THE GOLDEN LION AWARD” Radio Luxembourg L-'.: FEMALE VOCALIST in The Cash Box Year End Survey 7961 ^^ereonol Mofloi GEORGE 161 W. 54 St.t N»w i'ork, N. Y. THE STARPOWER LABEL I I I 1 I I I ’ I ( i i I I I I I i I I I .1 1 1 i I I i I I I j I I I I I I I I I < I I I I I I I . 1 ‘3 i Cash Box (Publication Office) 1721 Broadway New York 19, N. Y. (Phone: JUdson 6-2640) CABLE ADDRESS: CASHBOX, N. Y. JOB OBLECK, President and Publisher NORSIAN OBLECK, VP and Managing Director GEOBGE ALBEBT, VP and Treasurer EDITORIAL — Music MABTY OSTBOW. Editor-in-Chief IBA HOWABD, Editor IBV LICHTMAN, Associate Editor TED WILLIAMS, Statistical Editor MIKE MABTUCCI, Statistical Assistant POPSIE, Staff Photographer ADVEBTISING BOB AUSTIN, National Director, Music JEBBY SHIFEIN, N.Y.C. office. Music LEE BBOOKS, Manager Chicago JACK DEVANEY, Manager Los Angeles MABTY TOOHEY, National — Coin Machine NEVILLE MAETEN, London, Eng. PAUL ACKET, The Hague, Holland MAL SONDOCK, Munich, Germany BON TUDOE, Heathmont, Victoria, Aust. VITTOBIO de MICHELI, Milano. Italy SVEN G. WINQUIST, Stockholm, Sweden EOGEB SELLAM, Paris, France ENEIQUE OETIZ, Mexico 7, D.F. DENIS PANTIS, Quebec, Canada MIQUEL SMIENOFF, Buenos Aires, Argentina BICAEDO & BENATO MACEDO, Sao Paulo, Brazil HIKAEU SUGIUEA, Tokyo, Japan BBUNO DUTKOWSKI, Art Director MANAGERS MABTY TOOHEY, Coin Machine Dept. T. TOETOSA, Circulation NEVILLE MARTEN, European Director CHICAGO LEE BROOKS 29 E. Madison St., Chicago 2, 111. (All Phones: Financial 6-7272) HOLLYWOOD JACK DEVANEY Erv Malec 6272 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood 28, Cal. (Phone. Hollywood 5-2129) f ENGLAND i NEVILLE MARTEN I Dorris Land 9a New Bond St. , London, Wl, Eng. 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Published weekly. Second- 'l class postage paid at Bristol, Conn, j Copyright © 1961 by The Cash Box Publishing I Co., Inc. All rights reserved. Copyright under Universal Copsnright Convention. !l <1 Gdsh Box TOP 100 BEST SELLING TUNES ON RECORDS COMPILED BY CASH BOX FROM LEADING RETAIL OUTLETS— -DECEMBER 30, 1961 Position 12/23 12/16 1— THE LION SLEEPS TONIGHT ★TOKENS-RCA-7954 1 1 ERNIE WILKINS-Riverside-4508 THE TWIST -ACHUBBY CHECKER-Parkway-811 5 7 ERNIE FREEMAN-lmperiol-5793 HANK BALLARD & MIDNIGHTERS-KInQ-5171 BILLY WADE-Operators-2003 3— WALK ON BY ★LEROY VAN DYKE-Mercury-71834 3 5 4— RUN TO HIM ★BOBBY VEE-Liberty-55388 4 6 5^ PLEASE MR. POSTMAN ★MARVELLETTES-Tamla-54046 2 3 6— CANT HELP FALLING IN LOVE ★ELVIS PRESLEY-RCA-7968 7 21 KEELY SMITH-Dot-16298 FOUR ESQUIRES-Terraee-7502 7— THE PEPPERMINT TWIST ★JOEY DEE & STARLITERS-Roulette-4401 8 10 8— . MOON RIVER ★HENRY MANClNI-RCA-7916 9 8 ★JERRY BUTLER-Vee-Jay-405 FULLER BROTHERS-Challenge-9119 CALVIN JACKSON-Reprise-20022 CARMEN CAVALLARO-Decco-31304 RICHARD HAYMAN-Mercury-71869 . HOLLYRIDGE STRINGS 8i CHORUS-Capitol-4631 MANTOVANI-London-2021 JANE MORGAN-Kapp-431 EDDIE HARRIS-VeeJay-420 AKI ALEONG-Reprise-20,042 9_HAPPY BIRTHDAY, SWEET SIXTEEN ★NEIL SEDAKA-RCA-7957 11 14 A- WHEN THE BOY IN YOUR ARMS ★CONNIE FRANCIS-MGM-13051 14 20 11— GOODBYE CRUEL WORLD JIMMY DARREN-Colpix-609 6 2 A-l KNOW ★BARBARA GEORGE-A.F.O.-302 23 34 13_WHEN I FALL IN LOVE ★LETTERMEN-Capitol-4658 15 22 MILES DAVIS-Prestige-195 TONY LAWRENCE-Jude-131 14—1 DON'T KNOW WHY ★LINDA SCOTT-Canodian-Ameriean-129 13 11 15— UNCHAIN MY HEART ★RAY CHARLES-ABC-10266 18 32 16— 'TIL ★ANGELS-Caprice-107 16 16 17— REVENGE ★BROOK BENTON-Mercury-71903 21 30 18— LET THERE BE DRUMS ★SANDY NELSON-lmperial-5775 10 9 19— THERE'S NO OTHER (LIKE MY BABY) ★CRYSTALS-Philles-lOO 20 23 20— BIG BAD JOHN ★JIMMY DEAN-Columbia-42175 12 4 21— GYPSY WOMAN ★ilMPRESSIONS-ABC-10241 17 19 22— TONIGHT ★FERRANTE & TEICHER-United Artists-372 19 12 * EDDIE FISHER-7 Arts-719 *JAY & THE AMERICANS-United Artlsts-353 RALPH MARTERIE-United Artists-352 FELICIA SANDERS-Decca-31335 JESSIE POWELL-Tru-Sound-407 AKI ALEONG-Reprise- 20,042 A-SMALL sad SAM ★PHIL McLEAN-Versatile-107 42 65 BOB KAYLI-Tamla-54051 24— RUNAROUND SUE ★DION-Laurie-3110 22 13 P^IF YOU GOTTA MAKE A FOOL ^ OF SOMEBODY ★JAMES RAY-Cgpriee-IIO 35 40 VAUGHN MONROE-Det-16308 26— TOWN WITHOUT PITY ★GENE PITNEY-Musicor-1009 31 37 27— JUST OUT OF REACH ★SOLOMON BURKE-Atlantic-2114 26 26 28— CRAZY ★PATSY CLINE-Decca-31317 25 17 29— ROCK-A-HULA BABY ★ELVIS PRESLEY-RCA-7968 28 36 P^BABY IT'S YOU ★SHIRELLES-Scepter-1227 48 71 31— WELL 1 TOLD YOU ★CHANTELS-Carlton-564 34 28 i^THE WANDERER ★DION-Laurle-3115 50 79 Position 12/23 12/16 33- -LET'S TWIST AGAIN ★CHUBBY CHECKER-Parl(way-824 A LITTLE BITTY TEAR ★BURL IVES-Decca-31330 JOEY BROOKS-Columbia-42251 CROSBY BROS.-Dot-16300 WANDA JACKSON-Capitol-4681 37 44 70 88 FOOL #1 ★BRENDA LEE-Decca-31309 35 36— JOHNNY WILL ★PAT BOON E-Dot-1 6284 MIMI ROMAN-Warner Bros.-5245 37_FUNNY how time SLIPS AWAY ★JIMMY ELLEDGE-RCA-7946 44 56 BILLY WALKER-Columbia-42050 24 15 38 42 40- 41- 42- NORMAN ★SUE THOMPSON-Hickory-1159 COTTONFIELDS ★HIGHWAYMEN-United Artists-370 -POOR FOOL ★ IKE & TINA TURNER-Sue-753 -YOU'RE THE REASON ★BOBBY EDWARDS-Crest-1075 JOE SOUTH-Fairlane-21006 HANK LOCKLIN-RCA-7921 53 77 57 70 45 53 30 25 -YOUR MA SAID YOU CRIED IN YOUR SLEEP LAST NIGHT ★ KENNY DINO-Musicor-1013 39 43— THE MAJESTIC ★DION-Laurie-3115 44— MARIA 41 46 59 51 61 55 67 52 63 61 87 ★ROGER WILLIAMS-Kapp-437 * CLEBANOFF-Mercury-71905 * JOHNNY MATHIS-Columbia-41684 PETER NERO-RCA-7956 SALEMS-Epic-9480 PEPE LA STARZA-Everest-19423 DAVID WHITFIELD-London-9506 -JAMBALAYA ★FATS DOMINO-lmperial-5796 46— LITTLE ALTAR BOY ★VIC DANA-Dolton-48 -JINGLE BELL ROCK ★CHUBBY CHECKERS, BOBBY RYDELL- Cameo-205 * BOBBY HELMS-Decca-30513 CHET ATKINS-RCA-7971 48— 1 UNDERSTAND JUST HOW YOU FEEL ★G-CLEFS-Terrace-7500 RICK PAGE-Dot-16261 49— BRISTOL STOMP ★DOVELLS-Parkway-827 50— DREAMY EYES ★JOHNNY TILLOTSON-Cadence-1409 51— TURN AROUND, LOOK AT ME ★GLEN CAMPBELL-Crest-1087 TOMMY BUTLER-Roulette-4399 -TURN ON YOUR LOVE LIGHT ★BOBBY BLAND-Duke-344 -FLYING CIRCLE ★FRANK SLAY-Swan-4085 -TWIST-HER ★BILL BLACK'S COMBO-Hi-2042 55— SEPTEMBER IN THE RAIN ★DINAH WASHINGTON-Mercury-71876 56— SOOTHE ME ★SIMS TWINS-Sar-117 57— IN THE MIDDI^ OF A HEARTACHE ★WANDA JACKSON-Cafclol-4635 32 29 -LETTER FULL OF TEARS ★GLADYS KNIGHT 8, PIPS-Fury-1054 71 89 -LANGUAGE OF LOVE ★JOHN D. LOUDERMILK-RCA-7938 33 31 -BABY'S FIRST CHRISTMAS ★CONNIE FRANCIS-MGM-130S1 85 100 -IRRESISTIBLE YOU ★BOBBY DARIN-Atco-6214 76 — -DEAR LADY TWIST ★GARY U.S. BONDS-Legrand-1015 72 94 63— THE FLY ★CHUBBY CHECKER-Parkway-830 40 33 RAY GARNETT-Operators-2002 64— IT WILL STAND ★SHOWMEN-Minit-632 58 58 65— HEARTACHES ★MARCELS-Colpix-612 41 35 66— HEY! LITTLE GIRL ★DEL SHANNON-Bigtop-3091 47 54 29 18 36 27 54 57 49 52 66 80 63 75 64 74 27 24 56 64 59- 67- 69- 71- 72- 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84- 85- 86- Position 12/23 12/16 -I NEED SOMEONE ★ BELMONTS-Sabina-502 -SHE'S EVERYTHING ★RAL DONNER-Gone-5121 -GYPSY ROVER ★HIGHWAYMEN-United Artists-370 MULTIPLICATION ★BOBBY DARIN-Atco-6214 -UP A LAZY RIVER ★SI ZENTNER-Liberty-55374 TONI HARPER-RCA-7976 -FOOT STOMPIN' (Port 1) ★FLARES-Felsted-8624 DO-RE-MI ★LEE DORSEY-Fury-1056 LITTLE DRUMMER BOY ★HARRY SIMEONE CHORALE-20th-Fox-121 ROCKIN' AROUND THE CHRISTMAS TREE ★BRENDA LEE-Decca-30776 POCKETFUL OF MIRACLES ★FRANK SINATRA-Reprise-20,040 -TOWER OF STRENGTH ★GENE McDANIELS-Liberty-55371 -A WONDER LIKE YOU ★RICK NELSON-lniperial-5770 -TUFF ACE CANNON-Hi-2040 -GO ON HOME ★PATTI PAGE-Mercury-71906 -IT'S TOO SOON TO KNOW ★ ETTA JAMES-Argo-5402 -SEARCH IN' ★JACK EUBANKS-Monoument-451 —I COULD HAVE LOVED YOU SO WELL 69 72 78 90 60 49 80 — 43 38 59 46 93 — 100 — 100 — 92 — 62 39 65 43 82 86 86 100 74 60 83 83 ★RAY PETERSON-Dunes-2009 89 100 -THE COMANCHEROS ★CLAUDE KING-Columbio-42196 94 76 HOLLYRIDGE STRINGS-Capitol-4664 -WHITE CHRISTMAS ★ BING CROSBY-Decca-23778 DRIFTERS-Atlontlc-1048 -ROCK-A-BYE YOUR BABY WITH A DIXIE MELODY ★ARETHA FRANKLIN-Columbia-42157 77 51 JUDY GARLAND-Capitol-4624 87— YOU'RE RUNNING OUT OF KISSES ★CHUCK FOOTE-Soncraft-401 88 91 88— LET'S GO TRIPPIN' ★DICK DALE-DeItone-5017 84 85 MILT ROGERS-Dot-16279 -JUST GOT TO KNOW ★JIMMY McCRACKLIN-Art-Tone-825 — — -LOST SOMEONE ★JAMES BROWN-King-5573 — — -RUDOLPH THE RED-NOSED REINDEER ★DAVID SEVILLE & CHIPMUNKS-Liberty-55289 — — MELODEERS-Studio-9908 -POP GOES THE WEASEL ★ANTHONY NEWLEY-London-9501 87 55 89- 90- 91- 92- 93- 94- 95- 96- 97- 98- 99- 100- 100- 100- -THE CHIPMUNK SONG ★DAVID SEVILLE & CHIPMUNKS-Liberty-55250 ■PUSHIN' YOUR LUCK ★SLEEPY KING-Joy-257 97 84 ■THAT'S MY PA ★SHEB WOOLEY-MGM-13046 — — I'M BLUE ★IKETTES-Atco-6212 — — LONESOME NUMBER ONE ★DON GIBSON-RCA-7959 91 99 FEVER ★PETE BENNETT-Sunset-1002 — — BUT ON THE OTHER HAND, BABY ★RAY CHARLES-ABC-10266 100 — -WALKIN' WITH MY ANGEL ★BOBBY VEE-Liberty-55388 98 — -IT'S ALL BECAUSE ★LINDA SCOTT-Canadian-American-129 90 92 -I TOLD THE BROOK ★MARTY ROBBINS-Columbla-42246 — — • WASP UPWAM MOVI ^ BEST SELUNO lECOIDS • OTHK VOSIONS STRONGLY REPORTED PUIUSHEI UOT— INTaMATIONAL SECTION Cash Box — December 30, 1961 7 8 Cash Box — December 30, 1961 Cash Box — December 30, 1961 9 First Time In The History Of The Record Industry . . . 4 SINGLES AND 4 ALBUMS CURRENTLY ON THE CHARTS FOUR GREAT CHUBBY CHECKER ALBUMS . TWIST WITH CHUBBY CHECKER (Parkway-7001) FOR TWISTERS ONLY (Parkway-7002) CAMEO/PARKWAY 1405 Locust Street, Phila., Pa. 10 Cash Box — December 30, 1961 Cosi TOP lOO CHART HITS OF 1961 A TABULATION OF THE RECORDS WHICH ACHIEVED GREATEST SUCCESS ON THE WEEKLY CASH BOX TOP 100 BEST SELLER LIST. THE RECORDS LISTED BELOW ARE IN ORDER OF STRENGTH BASED ON A WEIGHTED POINT SYSTEM WHICH GIVES CREDIT FOR LONGEVITY ON THE TOP WO AS WELL AS HEIGHT ATTAINED ON THE CHART. ONLY SONGS WHICH WERE TOP 40 OR BETTER WERE INCLUDED AND SURVEY COVERS TWELVE MONTH PERIOD ENDING NOVEMBER 1961. 1. EXODUS — Ferrante & Teicher (United Artists) Pub: Chappell — ASCAP — Gold 2. CALCUTTA — Lawrence Welk — (Dot) Pub: Pincus-Symphony House — BMI — Gaze 3. WILL YOU LOVE ME TOMORROW— Shirelles (Scepter) Pub: Aldon— BMI— King, GoflFin 4. TOSSIN’ & TURNIN' — Bobby Lewis — (Beltone) Pub: Steven — BMI — Adams, Rene 5. WONDERLAND BY NIGHT — Bert Kaempfert — (Decca) Pub: Roosevelt — BMI — Newman, Klaus, Gunter 6. ARE YOU LONESOME TONIGHT — Elvis Presley (RCA) Pub: Bourne, Cromwell — ASCAP — Turk, Handman 7. TRAVELIN’ MAN — Ricky Nelson (Imperial) Pub: Four Star — BMI — Fuller 8. MICHAEL — Highwaymen (United Artists) Pub: Unart — BMI — Fisher 9. RUNAWAY — Del Shannon (Bigtop) Pub: Vicki, McLaughlin — BMI — Shannon, Crook 10. LAST DATE — Floyd Cramer — (RCA) Pub: Cigma — BMI — Cramer 11. BLUE MOON — Marcels (Colpix) Pub: Robbins — ASCAP — Rodgers, Hart 12. BOLL-WEEVIL SONG — Brook Benton (Mercury) Pub: Play — BMI — Benton, Otis 13. NORTH TO ALASKA — Johnny Horton — (Columbia) Pub: Robbins — ASCAP — Phillips 14. PONY TIME — Chubby Checker — (Parkway) Pub: Alan K. — BMI — Covay, Berry 15. 100 LBS. OF CLAY — Gene McDaniels (Liberty) Pub: Gil — BMI — Pick Elgin, Dixon, Rogers 16. MOTHER-IN-LOW — Ernie K-Doe (Minit) Pub: Minit Music — BMI — Toussaint 17. RAINDROPS — Dee Clark (Veejay) Pub: Conrad — BMI — Clark 18. HE WILL BREAK YOUR HEART-^ — Jerry Butler — (Vee Jay) Pub: Pamco — BMI — Butler, Mayfield, Carter 19. QUARTER TO THREE — U.S. Bonds — (Legrand) Pub: Pepe — BMI — Barge, Guida, Anderson, Royster 20. A THOUSAND STARS — Kathy Young (Indigo) Pub: Dare — BMI — Pearson 21. RUNNING SCARED — Roy Orbison (Monument) Pub: AcuflF-Rose — BMI — Orbison, Melson 22. WOODEN HEART — Joe Dowell — (Smash) Pub: Gladys — ASCAP — Kempfert, Toomey, Wiseman 23. TAKE GOOD CARE OF MY BABY— Bobby Vee (Liberty) Pub: Aldon— BMI— King, Goffin 24. WHEELS — Billy Vaughn (Dot) Pub: Dundee — BMI — Torres, Stephens 25. SHOP AROUND — Miracles (Tamla) Pub: Jobette — BMI — Gordy, Robinson 26. LAST NIGHT — Mar-Keys (Satellite) Pub: East Publications — BMI — Mar-keys 27. DADDY’S HOME — Shep & Limelites (Hull) Pub: Keel — BMI — Sheppard, Bassett, Baskerville 28. CRYIN’ — Roy Orbison (Monument) Pub: Acuff-Rose — BMI — Orbison, Melson 29. WHERE THE BOYS ARE — C. Francis (MGMI Pub: Aldon — BMI — Green Field — Sedaka 30. APACHE — Jorgen Ingmann (Atco) Pub: Regent — BMI — Lordan 31. DON’T WORRY — Marty Robbins (Columbia) Pub: Marty’s — BMI 32. SURRENDER — Elvis Presley — (RCA) Pub. E. Presley — BMI — Pomus, Shuman 33. I’VE TOLD EVERY LITTLE STAR — Linda Scott — (Canadian American) Pub: T. B. Harms — ASCAP — Hammerstein, Kern 34. MOUNTAIN’S HIGH— Dick & Deedee (Liberty) Pub: Odin— ASCAP— St. John 35. HATS OFF TO LARRY — Del Shannon — (Big Top) Pub: Vicki, McLaughlin — BMI — Shannon 36. MOODY RIVER — Pat Boone — (Dot) Pub: Keva — BMI — Bruce 37. STAY — Maurice Williams — (Herald) Pub: Windsong — BMI — Williams 38. CALENDAR GIRL — Neil Sedaka — (RCA) Pub: Aldon — BMI — Sedaka, Greenfield 39. BUT I DO — Clarence Henry — (Argo) Pub: Arc — BMI — Guidry, Gayten 40. DEDICATED TO THE ONE I LOVE — Shirelles (Scepter) Pub: Armo— BMI— Pauling, Bass 41. POETRY IN MOTION — Johnny Tillotson — (Cadence) Pub: Meridian — BMI — Kaufman, Anthony 42. YELLOW BIRD — Lawrence Welk — (Dot) Pub: Frank — ASCAP — Keith, Bergman, Luboff 43. STAND BY ME — Ben E. King (Atco) Pub: Progessive Trio — BMI — King, Glick 44. NEW ORLEANS — U.S. Bonds (Legrand) Pub: Pepe — BMI — Guida, Royster 45. YOU’RE SIXTEEN — Johnny Burnette — (Liberty) Pub: Blue Brass — BMI — Sherman, Sherman 46. ANGEL BABY — Rosie & The Originals (Decca) Pub: Figure — BMI — Ponci 47. SAILOR — Lolita (Kapp) Pub: Biem — Scharfen Berger — Busch 48. DUM-DUM — Brenda Lee (Decca) Pub: Metric — BMI — Sheeley, Deshannon 49. I LIKE IT LIKE THAT — Chris Kenner — (Instant) Pub: Tune-Kel — BMI — Kenner, Toussaint 50. RUBBER BALL — Bobby Vee — (Liberty) Pub: Arch — ASCAP — Orlowski, Schroeder 51. THERE’S A MOON OUT TONIGHT — Capris (Old Town) Pub: Rob — Ann — BMI — Striano, Lucciano, Gentile 52. LITTLE SISTER — Elvis Presley — (RCA) Pub: E. Presley — BMI — Pomus, Shuman 53. HELLO MARY LOU — Ricky Nelson — (Imperial) Pub: January — BMI — Pitney 54. HURT — Timi Yuro (Liberty) Pub: Miller — ASCAP — Crane, Jacobs 55. HOW MANY TEARS — Connie Francis (MGM) Pub: Roosevelt — BMI — Scott 56. PRETTY LITTLE ANGEL EYES— Curtis Lee— (Dunes) Pub: S-P-R— BMI— Lee, Boyce 57. MAMA SAID — Shirelles — (Scepter) Pub: Ludix — BMI — Dickson, Denson 58. SCHOOL’S OUT — Gary (U.S.) Bonds — (Legrand) Pub: Pepe — BMI — Anderson, Barge 59. LET’S GO, LET’S GO, LET’S GO — Hank Ballard & Midnighters (King) Pub: Lois — BMI — Ballard 60. THINK TWICE — Brook Benton — (Mercury) Pub: Play — BMI — Shapiro, Williams, Otis (:^61 through #100 continued on next page) Cash Box — December 30, 1961 11 TOP lOO CHART HITS OF 1961 61. GEORGIA ON MY MIND — Ray Charles — (ABC Paramount) Pub: Peer Int’l — Carmichael, Gorrell 62. LET’S TWIST AGAIN— Chubby Checker (Parkway) Pub: Kalmann— ASCAP— Mann, Appell 63. ON THE REBOUND — Floyd Cramer (RCA Victor) Pub: Cigma — BMI — Cramer 64. CORRINA, CORRINA — Ray Peterson — (Dunes) Pub: Mills — ^ASCAP — Parish, Chapman, Williams 65. BREAKIN’ IN A BRAND NEW BROKEN HEART— Connie Francis— (MGM) Pub: Aldon— BMI— Greenfield, Keller 66. MY TRUE STORY — Jive Five (Beltone) Pub: Stenen — BMI — Waltzer 67. TOGETHER — Connie Francis (MGM) Pub: De Sylva, Brown & Henderson — ASCAP — Writers same as publisher 68. HELLO WALLS — Faron Young — (Capitol) Pub: Pamper — BMI — Nelson 69. BABY SITTIN’ BOOGIE — Buzz Clifford — (Columbia) Pub: Reis — BMI — Parker 70. EMOTIONS — Brenda Lee — (Decca) Pub: Cedarwood — BMI — Tillis, Kearney 1' 71 . YOU TALK TOO MUCH— Joe Jones (Ric) Pub: Ron— BMI— Jones, Hall 72. SAVE THE LAST DANCE FOR ME — Drifters — (Atlantic) Pub: Rumalero — Progressive — BMI — Pomus, Shuman 73. LONELY TEENAGER — Dion — (Laurie) Pub: Lola — BMI — Pippa, Dipaola, Faraci 74. YOU CAN DEPEND ON ME — Brenda Lee — (Decca) Pub: Peer Int’l — BMI — Carpenter, Dunlap, Hines 75. EBONY EYES — Everly Bros — (Warner Bros) Pub: Acuff-Rose — BMI — Loudermilk 76. DON’T BET MONEY HONEY — Linda Scott — (Canadian American) Pub: Figure — BMI — Scott ^ 77. WINGS OF A DOVE — Ferlin Husky — (Capitol) Pub: Bee Gee — BMI — Ferguson 78. WHO PUT THE BOMP — Barry Mann (ABC Paramount) Pub: Aldon — BMI — Mann, Guffin 79. MEXICO — Bob Moore — (Monument) Pub: Acuff Rose — BMI — Bryant 80. YOU CAN HAVE HER— Roy Hamilton (Epic) Pub: Big Billy— BMI— Cock 81. PORTRAIT OF LOVE — Steve Lawrence (United Artists) Pub: Piccadilly — BMI — Ornadel 82. I FEEL SO BAD — Elvis Presley — (RCA Victor) Pub: Berkshire — BMI — Willis 83. GEE WHIZ (LOOK AT HIS EYES) — Carla Thomas — (Atlantic) — East, Bais — BMI — Thomas >r 84. TAKE GOOD CARE OF HER — Adam Wade — (Coed) Pub: Paxton — ASCAP — Lorenzo, Whiting, Egan, Alden 85. DOES YOUR CHEWING GUM LOSE ITS FLAVOR— Lonnie Donegan— (Dot) Pub; Mills & Double A— ASCAP— Rose, Bloom, Breuer 86. SWAY — Bobby Rydell — (Cameo) Pub: Peer Int’l — BMI — Gimble, Ruiz 87. HIT THE ROAD JACK — Ray Charles (ABC) Pub: Tangerine — BMI — Mcyfield 88. PLEASE LOVE ME FOREVER — Cathy Jean (Valmor) Pub: Tricky — BMI — Malone, Blanchard 89. ALONE AT LAST — Jackie Wilson — (Bruswick) Pub: Pal — BMI — Hilliard 90. SPANISH HARLEM — Ben E. King — (Atco) Pub: Progressive — Trio — BMI — Leiber, Stoller ^ 91. I’M GONNA KNOCK ON YOUR DOOR— Eddie Hodges— (Cadence) Pub: Sigma— ASCAP— Schroeder, Wayne 92. THOSE OLDIES BUT GOODIES — Caesar & Romans (Del-Fi) Pub: Maraville — BMI — Politi, Euringa 93. GOOD TIME BABY — Bobby Rydell — (Cameo) Pub: Lowe — ASCAP — Mann, Lowe, Appell 94. YOU MUST HAVE BEEN A BEAUTIFUL BABY— Bobby Darin (Atco) Pub: Remick— ASCAP— Warren, Mercer 95. YOU DON’T KNOW WHAT YOU’VE GOT — Ral Donner — (Gone) Pub: Sequence — ASCAP — Hampton, Burton 96. I FALL TO PIECES — Patsy Cline (Decca) Pub: Pamper — BMI — Cochran, Howard 97. LITTLE DEVIL — Neil Sedaka — (RCA) Pub: Aldon — BMI — Sedaka, Greenfield 98. ONE MINT JULEP — Ray Charles — (Impulse) Pub: Progressive — BMI — Toombs 99. RUNAROUND SUE — Dion — (Laurie) Pub: Just, Mubon — BMI — Mareska, DiMucci 100. EVERY BEAT OF MY HEART— Gladys Knight (Fury) Pub: Lois— BMI— Otis BIIBV LEWIS WHO HAD THE YEAR'S BIGGEST RECORD! TOSSIN' AKD TURNIH' HIS NEW SMASH RELEASE: THE TWIST DANCE FROM BROADWAY'S NEWEST MUSICAL, "A FAMILY AFFAIR" MAMIE IN THE AFTERNOON Beltone 1016 A' >- I >1 12 Cash Box — December 30, 1961 The SOUND for '62 on DECCA CORAL BRUNSWICK THERE'LL BE NO NEXT TIME cAv THE GREATEST HDRT BRUNSWICK 55221 JACKIE WILSON so DEEP cAv BREAK IT TO ME GENTLY DECCA 31348 BRENDA LEE ' aiiert II Be Ito Next Time ® Biim RECORDS 1 lb Greatest Hurt ^21 Jackie Wilson"! INEWHIT! ! in/ ieaui^// of/eene mme SEll-IIIUK SO DEER and BREAK IT TO ME OERTL.Y 3134a BRENDA L.EE i!7(/// o/iewe SEIL-ABILITV /n4^£ Cash Box — December 30, 1961 13 The SOUNDfor’62 r ( on DECCA CORAL BRUNSWICK ECHO IN THE NIGHT c/w AFRIKAANBEAT DECCA 31350 BERT KAEMPFERT WHILE WE DANCED AT THE MARDI GRAS c/w YES INDEED CORAL 65549 PETE FRRNTAI N Co! 4 Cash Box — December 30, 1961 The SOUND for '62 on DECCA CORAL BRUNSWICK YOU ARE MY LIFE c/w ALLA MY LOVE DEGGA 31347 WEBB PIEBGE AU RE VOIR c/w UNLOVED UNWANTED DECCA 31349 KITTY WEILS Cash Box — December 30, 1961 A TABULATION OF ARTISTS WHO ACHIEVED GREATEST SUCCESS IN THE FIELD OF SINGLE RECORDS ACCORDING TO THE WEEKLY CASH BOX TOP 100 BEST SELL- ER LIST. NAMES LISTED BELOW ARE IN ORDER OF STRENGTH IN THEIR VARIOUS CATEGORIES BASED ON A WEIGHTED POINT SYSTEM WHICH GIVES CREDIT FOR LONGEVITY ON TOP 100 AS WELL AS HEIGHT ATTAINED ON CHART. ONLY TITLES WHICH WERE TOP 40 OR BETTER WERE USED FOR AN ARTIST'S TOTAL. THE SUM TOTAL OF ALL OF AN ARTIST'S HITS RESULTED IN THE POSITIONING OF A NAME. SURVEY COVERS 12 MOS. ENDING NOV. 1961. W/ i W/ V/ ^ V < •- ' BEST MALE VOCALISTS (SINGLES) 1. ELVIS PRESLEY 2. CHUBBY CHECKER 3. BROOK BENTON 4. ROY ORBISON 5. RICKY NELSON 6. BOBBY VEE 7. RAY CHARLES 8. PAUL ANKA 9. JERRY BUTLER 10. JACKIE WILSON 11. NEIL SEDAKA 12. BOBBY RYDELL 13. CLARENCE HENRY 14. ADAM WADE 15. DION 16. SAM COOKE 17. DEE CLARK 18. JOHNNY BURNETTE 19. JOHNNY TILLOTSON 20. MARTY ROBBINS 21. PAT BOONE 22. BOBBY DARIN 23. FATS DOMINO 24. JOHNNY HORTON 25. RAY PETERSON 26. FARON YOUNG 27. FERLIN HUSKY 28. ROY HAMILTON 29. STEVE LAWRENCE 30. LONNIE DONEGAN 31. JERRY WALLACE 32. JIMMY DEAN 33. FRANK SINATRA 34. ANDY WILLIAMS 35. BRIAN HYLAND 36. JOSE JIMINEZ 37. DON GIBSON 38. FRANKIE AVALON 39. CONWAY TWITTY 40. JIM REEVES BEST NEWCOMERS — MALE VOCALISTS (SINGLES) 1. GARY U.S. BONDS 2. DEL SHANNON 3. BEN E. KING 4. BOBBY LEWIS 5. GENE McDaniels 6. ERNIE K-DOE 7. JOE DOWELL 8. CHRIS KENNER 9. TONY ORLANDO 10. CURTIS LEE 11. RAL DONNER 12. BUZZ CLIFFORD 13. BARRY MANN 14. EDDIE HODGES 15. LEE DORSEY 16. JOE BARRY 17. TORY SHONDELL 18. BOB LUMAN 19. GENE PITNEY 20. CHUCK JACKSON 21. SLIM HARPO 22. BOBBY EDWARDS 23. JIMMY CHARLES 24. FRANK GARI 25. JOHNNY MAESTRO BEST FEMALE VOCALISTS (SINGLES) 1. CONNIE FRANCIS 2. BRENDA LEE 3. PATSY CLINE 4. DAMITA JO 5. ETTA JAMES 6. DINAH WASHINGTON 7. ETTA JONES 8. WANDA JACKSON 9. PATTI PAGE 10. LAVERN BAKER BEST NEWCOMERS — FEMALE VOCALISTS (SINGLES) 1. LINDA SCOTT 2. KATHY YOUNG 3. MAXINE BROWN 4. ROSIE 5. LOLITA 6. TIMI YURO 7. CARLA THOMAS 8. CATHY JEAN 9. GLADYS KNIGHT 10. HAYLEY MILLS 11. SUE THOMPSON 12. ANN-MARGRET BEST INSTRUMENTALISTS & COMBOS (SINGLES) 1. FLOYD CRAMER 2. FERRANTE & TEICHER 3. BILL BLACK’S COMBO 4. ARTHUR LYMAN 5. RAY CHARLES 6. VENTURES 7. DUANE EDDY 8. AL CAIOLA 9. DAVE BRUBECK 10. JERRY MURAD’S HARMONICATS 11. SANTO & JOHNNY BEST NEWCOMERS — INSTRUMENTALISTS (SINGLES) 1. MAR-KEYS 2. JORGEN INGMANN 3. STRING-A-LONGS 4. KOKOMO 5. DUALS 6. JAMES BOOKER 7. B. BUMBLE & STINGERS 8. PAUL REVERE & RAIDERS BEST VOCAL GROUPS (SINGLES) 1. SHIRELLES 2. DRIFTERS 3. EVERLY BROS. 4. HANK BALLARD & MIDNIGHTERS 5. PLATTERS 6. CHORDETTES 7. McGUIRE SISTERS 8. OLYMPICS 9. CHANTELS 10. FOUR PREPS 11. JAN & DEAN 12. CLEFTONES 13. PLAYMATES 14. BELMONTS 15. COASTERS 16. G-CLEFS BEST NEWCOMERS — VOCAL GROUPS (SINGLES) 1. HIGHWAYMEN 2. MARCELS 3. MIRACLES 4. SHEP & LIMELIGHTS 5. DICK & DEEDEE 6. CAPRIS 7. JIVE FIVE 8. CAESAR & ROMANS 9. DOVELLS 10. CHIMES 11. ECHOES 12. LETTERMEN 13. REGENTS 14. TOKENS 15. PARIS SISTERS 16. VELVETS 17. IKE & TINA TURNER 18. DREAMLOVERS 19. MARATHONS 20. CASTELLS 21. MARVELETTES 22. ROOMATES 23. PIPS 24. EDSELS 25. ROCHELLE & CANDLES FOREIGN RECORDS TO HIT TOP 100 IN 1961 ANNA — Jorgen Ingmann (Atco) APACHE — Jorgen Ingmann (Atco) A SCOTTISH SOLDIER — Andy Stewart (Warwick) CERVEZA — Bert Kaempfert (Decca) COWBOY JIMMIE JOE— Lolita (Kapp) DOES YOUR CHEWING GUM LOSE ITS FLAVOR— Lonnie Donegan (Dot) MY KIND OF GIRL — Matt Monro (Warwick) NOW AND FOREVER— Bert Kaempfert (Decca) SAILOR— Lolita (Kapp) SUCU SUCU— Ping Ping (Kapp) TENDERLY — Bert Kaempfert (Decca) TUNES OF GLORY — Cambridge Strings (Top Rank) FOREIGN TUNES RECORDED BY AMERICAN ARTISTS WHICH HIT TOP 100 IN 1961 AFRICAN WALTZ — Cannonball Adderly/Johnny Dankworth (River- I side)/(London) BERLIN MELODY— Billy Vaughn (Dot) CALCUTTA — Lawrence Welk (Dot) PORTRAIT OF MY LOVE — Steve Lawrence (United Artists) NEVER ON SUNDAY — Don Costa/Chordettes (United Artists)/(Ca- dence) VOLARE— Bobby Rydell (Cameo) BEST ORCHESTRAS (SINGLES) 1. LAWRENCE WELK 2. BERT KAEMPFERT 3. BILLY VAUGHN 4. BOB MOORE 16 Cash Box — December 30, 1961 i^OLLOW YOUg "SEE CflH GO^ - jr LAURIE ^16 V ANOTHER SWASH FROM LAURIE PERSONAL MANAGER SAL B 0 N A F E D E LAURIE RECORDS ■ NEW YORK CITY FOR A HAPPY HOLIDAY SEASON ciii al Cash Box — December 30, 1961 17 TOP / VLBUMS & ALBUIV 1 ARTISTS Of 1S61 MONAURAL STEREO CAMELOT I r (TIE) EXODUS J 3. GREAT MOTION PICTURE THEMES 4. G. I. BLUES 5. SOUND OF MUSIC 6. NEVER ON SUNDAY 7. CALCUTTA 8. KNOCKERS UP 9. BUTTON DOWN MIND STRIKES BACK 10. ENCORE OF GOLDEN HITS 11. BUTTON DOWN MIND 12. NICE & EASY 13. MAKE WAY 14. T.V. SING ALONG WITH MITCH 15. ALL THE WAY 16. SOMETHING FOR EVERYBODY 17. EXODUS 18. STRING ALONG 19. SINATRA’S SWINGIN’ SESSION 20. GOIN’ PLACES 21. GENIUS + SOUL = JAZZ 22. JOHNNY’S MOODS 23. WONDERLAND BY NIGHT 24. BRENDA LEE 25. HAPPY TIMES SING-A-LONG 26. RING-A-DING-DING 27. LAST DATE 28. JUDY AT CARNEGIE HALL 29. TONIGHT IN PERSON 30. CARNIVAL 31. YELLOW BIRD 32. STARS FOR A SUMMER NIGHT 33. PORTRAIT OF JOHNNY 34. MEMORIES ARE MADE OF THIS 35. RICK IS 21 36. SINATRA SWINGS 37. SOLID & RAUNCHY 38. BELAFONTE RETURNS TO CARNEGIE HALL 39. THIS IS BRENDA 40. GENIUS HITS THE ROAD 41. EXODUS TO JAZZ 42. BOBBY DARIN STORY 43. QUARTER TO THREE 44. 60 YEARS OF MUSIC — VOL. II 45. COME SWING WITH ME 46. DARIN AT THE COPA 47. THE ASTRONAUT 48. UNSINKABLE MOLLY BROWN 49. PAUL ANKA’S BIG 15 50. I’LL BUY YOU A STAR 51. JUMP UP CALYPSO ORIGINAL B’WAY CAST — COLUMBIA FILM TRACK — RCA VICTOR VARIOUS ARTISTS — UNITED ARTISTS ELVIS PRESLEY — RCA VICTOR ORIGINAL B’WAY CAST — COLUMBIA FILM TRACK — UNITED ARTISTS LAWRENCE WELK — DOT RUSTY WARREN— JUBILEE BOB NEWHART — WARNER BROS. PLATTERS — MERCURY BOB NEWHART — WARNER BROS FRANK SINATRA — CAPITOL KINGSTON TRIO CAPITOL MITCH MILLER — COLUMBIA FRANK SINATRA — CAPITOL ELVIS PRESLEY — RCA VICTOR MANTOVANI — LONDON KINGSTON TRIO — CAPITOL FRANK SINATRA — CAPITOL KINGSTON TRIO — CAPITOL RAY CHARLES — IMPULSE JOHNNY MATHIS — COLUMBIA BERT KAEMPFERT — DECCA BRENDA LEE — DECCA MITCH MILLER — COLUMBIA FRANK SINATRA — REPRISE LAWRENCE WELK — DOT JUDY GARLAND — CAPITOL LIMELIGHTERS — RCA VICTOR ORIGINAL B’WAY CAST — MGM LAWRENCE WELK — DOT VARIOUS ARTISTS — COLUMBIA JOHNNY MATHIS — COLUMBIA RAY CONNIFF — COLUMBIA RICK NELSON — IMPERIAL FRANK SINATRA — REPRISE BILL BLACK — HI HARRY BELAFONTE — RCA VICTOR BRENDA LEE — DECCA RAY CHARLES — ABC PARAMOUNT EDDIE HARRIS — VEE JAY BOBBY DARIN — ATCO U.S. BONDS — LEGRAND VARIOUS ARTISTS — RCA VICTOR FRANK SINATRA — CAPITOL BOBBY DARIN — ATCO BILL DANA (JOSE JIMINEZ) — KAPP ORIG. B’WAY CAST — CAPITOL PAUL ANKA — ABC PARAMOUNT JOHNNY MATHIS — COLUMBIA HARRY BELAFONTE — RCA VICTOR 1. SOUND OF MUSIC 2. EXODUS 3. GREAT MOTION PICTURE THEMES 4. CAMELOT 5. CALCUTTA 6. NEVER ON SUNDAY 7. PERSUASIVE PERCUSSION 8. G. I. BLUES 9. SOUTH PACIFIC 10. EXODUS 11. NICE & EASY 12. MAKE WAY 13. ALL THE WAY 14. STRING ALONG 15. SINATRAS SWINGIN’ SESSION 16. T.V. SING-A-LONG WITH MITCH 17. WONDERLAND BY NIGHT 18. JOHNNY’S MOODS 19. HAPPY TIMES SING-A-LONG WITH MITCH 20. MEMORIES ARE MAKE OF THIS 21. LAST DATE 22. GOIN’ PLACES 23. PROVOCATIVE PERCUSSION 24. GENIUS + SOUL = JAZZ 25. SAY IT WITH MUSIC 26. BEN-HUR 27. STARS FOR A SUMMER NIGHT 28. JUDY AT CARNEGIE HALL 29. BELAFONTE RETURNS TO CARNEGIE 30. EXODUS TO JAZZ 31. RING-A-DING-DING 32. BONGOS 33. CARNIVAL 34. YELLOW BIRD 35. YELLOW BIRD 36. PERSUASIVE PERCUSSION VOL. II 37. UNSINKABLE MOLLY BROWN 38. PORTRAIT OF JOHNNY 39. ORANGE BLOSSOM SPECIAL — WHEELS 40. WILD IS LOVE 41. SOMETHING FOR EVERYBODY 42. SINATRA SWINGS 43. LOOK FOR A STAR 44. YOUNG AT HEART 45. TONIGHT IN PERSON 46. COME SWING WITH ME 47. MR. LUCKY GOES LATIN 48. JUMP UP CALYPSO 49. ITALIA MIA 50. WILDCAT ORIGINAL B’WAY CAST — COLUMBIA FILM SOUND TRACK — RCA VICTOR VARIOUS ARTISTS — UNITED ARTISTS ORIGINAL CAST — COLUMBIA LAWRENCE WELK — DOT SOUND TRACK — UNITED ARTISTS TERRY SNYDER — COMMAND ELVIS PRESLEY — RCA VICTOR SOUND TRACK — RCA VICTOR MANTOVANI — LONDON FRANK SINATRA — CAPITOL KINGSTON TRIO — CAPITOL FRANK SINATRA — CAPITOL KINGSTON TRIO CAPITOL FRANK SINATRA — CAPITOL MITCH MILLER — COLUMBIA BERT KAEMPFERT— DECCA JOHNNY MATHIS COLUMBIA MITCH MILLER — COLUMBIA RAY CONNIFF — COLUMBIA LAWRENCE WELK — DOT KINGSTON TRIO — CAPITOL ENOCH LIGHT — COMMAND RAY CHARLES COLUMBIA RAY CONNIFF — COLUMBIA MOVIE SOUNDTRACK — MGM VARIOUS ARTISTS — COLUMBIA JUDY GARLAND — CAPITOL HARRY BELAFONTE — RCA VICTOR EDDIE HARRIS — VEE JAY FRANK SINATRA — CAPITOL LOS ADMIRADORIN — COMMAND ORIGINAL CAST — MGM LAWRENCE WELK — DOT ARTHUR LYMAN — HI-FI TERRY SNYDER — COMMAND ORIGINAL CAST — CAPITOL JOHNNY MATHIS — COLUMBIA BILLY VAUGHN — DOT NAT “KING” COLE — CAPITOL ELVIS PRESLEY — RCA VICTOR FRANK SINATRA — REPRISE BILLY VAUGHN — DOT RAY CONNIFF — COLUMBIA LIMELITERS RCA VICTOR FRANK SINATRA — CAPITOL HENRY MANCINI — RCA VICTOR HARRY BELAFONTE — RCA VICTOR MANTOVANI — LONDON ORIGINAL CAST — RCA VICTOR y 7 -t BEST MALE VOCALISTS (LP’S) 1. FRANK SINATRA 2. ELVIS PRESLEY 3. JOHNNY MATHIS 4. RAY CHARLES 5. BOBBY DARIN 6. HARRY BELAFONTE 7. PAUL ANKA 8. RICKY NELSON 9. U. S. BONDS 10. CHUBBY CHECKER 11. NAT KING COLE 12. PAT BOONE 13. JOHNNY HORTON 14. BROOK BENTON 15. MARTY ROBBINS BEST VOCAL GROUPS (LP’S) 1. KINGSTON TRIO 2. PLATTERS 3. LIMELIGHTERS 4. FOUR PREPS 5. EVERLY BROS. BEST ORCHESTRAS (LP’S) 1. LAWRENCE WELK 2. MANTOVANI 3. RAY CONNIFF 4. BERT KAEMPFERT 5. BILL BLACK 6. ARTHUR LYMAN 7. BILLY VAUGHN 8. HENRY MANCINI ORCHS (STEREO ONLY) 1. TERRY SNYDER (Command) 2. ENOCH LIGHT (Command) BEST CHORUSES (LP’S) 1. MITCH MILLER 2. RAY CONNIFF BEST FEMALE VOCALISTS (LP’S) 1. BRENDA LEE 2. JUDY GARLAND 3. CONNIE FRANCIS 4. ELLA FITZGERALD BEST JAZZ COMBOS (LP’S) 1. EDDIE HARRIS 2. DAVE BRUBECK 3. PETE FOUNTAIN 4. AL HIRT BEST FILM TRACKS (LP’S) 1. EXODUS— Ernest Gold (RCA Victor) 2. GREAT MOTION PICTURE THEMES — Various Artists (United Artists 3. G. I. BLUES— ELVIS PRESLEY (RCA-Victor) 4. NEVER ON SUNDAY (United Artists) BEST INSTRUMENTALISTS & COMBOS (LP’S) 1. BILL BLACK 2. EDDIE HARRIS 3. VENTURES 4. EARL GRANT 5. DAVE BRUBECK 6. PETE FOUNTAIN 7. SANTO & JOHNNY 8. AL HIRT BEST COMEDY ARTISTS (LP’S) 1. BOB NEWHART 2. RUSTY WARREN 3. DAVE GARDNER 4. BILL DANA 5. JONATHAN WINTERS 6. SHELLEY BERMAN 7. JUSTIN WILSON 8. MOMS MABLEY 9. STAN FREBERG TOP B’WAY CAST LP’S 1. CAMELOT (Columbia) 2. SOUND OF MUSIC (Columbia) 3. CARNIVAL (MGM) 4. UNSINKABLE MOLLY BROWN (Capitol) YEAR’S LEADING ALBUMS IN STEREO NOT IN TOP 50 MONAURAL LP LISTING 1. PERSUASIVE PERCUSSION— Terry Snyder (Command) 2. SOUTH PACIFIC— Film Track— (RCA) 3. PROVOCATIVE PERCUSSION— Enoch Light (Command) 4. SAY IT WITH MUSIC— Ray Conniff (Columbia) 5. BEN HUR— Film Track (MGM) 6. BONGOS — Los Admirados (Command) 7. PERSUASIVE PERCUSSION VOL. II — -Terry Snyder (Command) 8. ORANGE BLOSSOM SPECIAL/ WHEELS— Billy Vaughn (Dot) 9. WILD IS LOVE— Nat Cole (Capitol) 10. SOMETHING FOR EVERYBODY — Elvis Presley (RCA) 11. LOOK FOR A STAR— Billy Vaughan (Dot) 12. YOUNG AT HEART— Ray Conniff (Columbia) 13. MR. LUCKY GOES LATIN— Henry Mancini (RCA) 14. ITALIA MIA — Mantovani (London) 15. WILDCAT— Original Cast (RCA) THE ABOVE DATA IS THE RESULT OF A TABULATION OF THE WEEKLY CASH BOX MONAURAL & STEREO BEST SELLING ALBUM CHART. NAMES LISTED ABOVE ARE IN ORDER OF STRENGTH IN THEIR VARIOUS CATEGORIES BASED ON A WEIGHTED POINT SYSTEM WHICH GIVES CREDIT FOR LONGEVITY ON CHARTS AS WELL AS HEIGHT AT- TAINED ON CHART. ONLY TITLES WHICH WERE TOP 30 OR BETTER WERE USED FOR TOTALS. SURVEY COVERS 12 MOS. ENDING NOV. 1961. y T 4 18 Cash Box — December 30, 1961 C ^DIVIDENDS PAID TO DATE • NEW ORLEANS • QUARTER TO THREE • SCHOOL IS mi • SCHOOL IS IN EXCLUSIVELY ON 817 CHURCH STREET • NORFOLK, VIRGINIA DISTRIBUTED NATIONALLY BY RUST RECORDS INC, NEW YORK CITY 817 CHURCH ST. NORFOLK, VA. MERRY CHRISTMAS & HAPPY NEW YEAR O Cash Box — December 30, 1961 T9 Best Wishes for A Happy Prosperous and Twistin’ New Year BILL BLACK COMBO and THANKS for the award #1 INSTRUMENTAL COMBO (Albums) (in the year-end Cash Box Poll) current HIT single “TWIST- HER” Hi 2042 current HIT album Let’s TWIST HER Hi-HL 12006 SHL 32006 (stereo) personal management PETER PAUL 1270— 6th Are. N.Y. Bookings CONTINENTAL BOOKING 1270— 6th Ave. N.Y. Cosh Box m JUKE BOX OPS' RECORD GUIDE ACTIVE with OPS (Selections NOT on Cosh Box Top 100 reported going strongly with opt.) BELLS AT MY WEDDING LOVELAND Paul Anka (ABC Paramount 10279) WHITE CHRISTMAS Drifters (Atlantic 1048) MIDNIGHT SPECIAL Jimmy Smith (Blue Note 1819) THE EXODUS SONG Chordettes (Cadence 1412) BIRMINGHAM Santo & Johnny (Canadian-American 131) STEP RIGHT UP Not "King" Cole (Capitol 4672) WHERE HAVE ALL THE FLOWERS GONE Kingston Trio (Capitol 4671) PARDON/ANOTHER TIME, ANOTHER PLACE Al Martino (Capitol 4643) DEAR IVAN Jimmy Dean (Columbia 42259) PLAY THE THING Marlowe Morris Quint. (Columbia 42218) MITCH MILLER CHRISTMAS PACK (5 Singles) (Columbia MM-3) MITCH MILLER PACK (5 singles) (Columbia MM 1&2) ORGAN PACK (5 singles) Ken Griffin (Columbia KG 1 8. 2) JAZZ PACK (5 singles) Various Artists (Columbia HIP 1 & 2) MARIA Johnny Mathis (Columbia 41684) STEP RIGHT UP Teresa Brewer (Coral 62299) DEAR GESU BAMBINO Christian Marandi (Decca 31343) SILENT NIGHT Bing Crosby (Decca 23777) WHITE CHRISTMAS Bing Crosby (Decca 23778) EVERYBODY'S TWISTING DOWN IN MEXICO Billy Vaughn (Dot 76295) ROSES OF PICARDY/HALLELUJAH, I LOVE HER SO Buddy Greco (Cpic 9472) I'M GLAD THERE IS YOU (5 singles) Gloria Lynne (Iverest 5 74) I WILL FOLLOW YOU/YOU DON'T HAVE TO BE A TOWER OF STRENGTH Gloria Lynne (Everest 19428) IF I HAD YOU/WHEN DAY IS DONE Seymour & His Trumpet (Heartbeat H-2) OPERATORS' SPECIAL (5 Singles) Seymour & His Magic Trumpet (Heartbeat) I BELIEVE Timi Yuro & Johnnie Ray (Liberty 55400) TEARS FROM AN ANGEL Troy Shondell (Liberty 55398) YOU'LL NEVER KNOW Platters (Mercury 71904) MARIA Clebanoff (Mercury 71905) LOST PENNY/SHADRACK Brook Benton (Mercury 71912) I REMEMBER TOMMY (5 Singles) Frank Sinatra Pack (Reprise PP-1) BASIE TWIST Count Basie (Roulette 4403) DUKE'S PLACE Duke Ellington (Roulette 4390) GOD BLESS THE CHILD Eddie Harris (Vee Jay 407) CLAP HANDS, HERE COMES CHARLIE Ella Fitzgerald (Verve 10241) IMAGINATION Quotations (Verve 10245) NEW ADDITIONS to TOP 100 85— WHITE CHRISTMAS Bing Crosby (Decca 23778) 89— JUST GOT TO KNOW Jimmy McCracklin (Art-Tone 825) 90— LOST SOMEONE James Brown (King 5573) 91 — RUDOLPH THE RED-NOSED REINDEER David Seville & Chipmunks (Liberty 55289) 95 — THAT'S MY PA Sheb Wooley (MGM 13046) 96 — I'M BLUE Ikettes (Atco 6212) 98— FEVER Pete Bennett (Sunset 1002) 100—1 TOLD THE BROOK Marty Robbins (Columbia 42246) Hof as a Twist-oU 5 IRVING FIELDS ORCH I New Everest Album ^ “TWIST-ING” j THE HULA HUU TWIST | I LATIN QUARTER TWIST ^ ^ SOCIETY TWIST \ \ INTERNATIONAL TWIST \ \ IRISH TWIST I Mills Music, 1619 B’way, N. Y. 19 { The World's First STEREO-SCORED Orchestra 20 Cash Box — December 30, 1961 Cash Box — December 30, 1961 21 RECORDS OF THE PAST 15 YEARS* ‘The Top lO Records of 1947 thru 1961 As Compiled by CASH BOX in its Annuel Year-End Poll 1947 : I 1. Peg O’ My Heart — The Harmonicats 2. Near You — Francis Craig 3. Heartaches — Ted Weems 4. Anniversary Song — A1 Jolson 5. That’s My Desire — Frankie Laine 6. Mamselle — Art Lund 7. Linda — Charlie Spivak 8. I Wonder Who’s Kissing Her Now — Perry Como 9. Anniversary Song — Guy Lombardo 10. That’s My Desire — Sammy Kaye 1948 1952 1 1. Cry — Johnnie Ray 2. Blue Tango — Leroy Anderson 3. Anytime — Eddie Fisher 4. Delicado — Percy Faith 5. Kiss Of Fire — Georgia Gibbs 6. Wheel Of Fortune — Kay Starr 7. Tell Me Why — Four Aces 8. Pm Yours — Don Cornel 9. Here In My Heart — A1 Martino 10. Auf Wiedersehn Sweetheart — Vera Lynn 1953 1957 1. Tammy — Debbie Reynolds 2. Love Letters In The Sand — Pat Boone 3. Bye Bye Love — Everly Brothers 4. It’s Not For Me To Say — Johnny Mathis 5. Young Love — Sonny James — Tab Hunter 6. All Shook Up — Elvis Presley 7. So Rare — Jimmy Dorsey 8. Little Darlin’ — Diamonds 9. Round And Round — Perry Como 10. Diana — Paul Anka 1958 1. My Happiness — Jon & Sondra Steele 2. Manana — Peggy Lee 3. Ballerina — Vaughn Monroe 4. Four Leaf Clover — Art Mooney 5. You Can’t Be True, Dear — Ken Griffin — Jerry Wayne 6. Nature Boy — King Cole 7. Little White Lies — Dick Haymes 8. It’s Magic — Doris Day 9. You Call Everybody Darling — A1 Trace 10. Mickey — Ted Weems 1. Song From Moulin Rouge — Percy Faith I 2. Till I Waltz Again With You— [ Tie Teresa Brewer | 3. April In Portugal — Les Baxter 4. Vaya Con Dios — Les Paul & Mary Ford 5. I’m Walking Behind You — Eddie Fisher 6. I Believe — Frankie Laine 7. You, You, You — Ames Bros. 8. Doggie In The Window — Patti Page 9. Why Don’t You Believe Me — Joni James 10. Pretend — Nat “King” Cole 1. Nel Blue Dipinto Di Blu — Domenico Modugno 2. It’s All In The Game — Tommy Edwards 3. Patricia — Perez Prado 4. All I Have To Do Is Dream— Everly Brothers 5. Bird Dog/Devoted To You— Everly Brothers 6. Little Star — Elegants 7. Witch Doctor — David Seville 8. Twilight Time — Platters 9. Tequila — Champs 10. At The Hop— Danny & The Juniors 1949 Silii 1. Forever And Ever — Russ Morgan Orch. 2. Riders In The Sky — Vaughn Monroe 3. Again — Gordon Jenkins Orch. 4. Forever And Ever — Perry Como 5. Cruising Down The River — Blue Barron Orch. 6. Cruising Down The River — Russ Morgan Orch. 7. Again — Vic Damone 8. So Tired — Russ Morgan Orch. 9. Lavender Blue — Dinah Shore 10. Buttons And Bows — Dinah Shore 1954 *•< .. 1 1. Little Things Mean A Lot — Kitty Kallen 2. Hey There — Rosemary Clooney 3. Wanted — Perry Como 4. Young At Heart — Frank Sinatra 5. Sh-Boom — Crewcuts 6. Three Coins In The Fountain — Four Aces 7. Little Shoemaker — Gaylords 8. Oh, My Papa — Eddie Fisher 9. Secret Love — Doris Day 10. Happy Wanderer — Frank Weir 1959 I ^ 1. Mack The Knife — Bobby Darin '2. Battle Of New Orleans— Johnny Horton 3. There Goes My Baby— Drifters 4. Venus — Frankie Avalon 5. Lonely Boy — Paul Anka 6. Personality — Lloyd Price 7. Three Bells — Browns 8. Put Your Head On My Shoulder — Paul Anka 9. Sleepwalk — Santo & Johnny 10. Come Softly To Me— Fleetwoods 1950 1. Goodnight Irene — Gordon Jenkins & The Weavers 2. It Isn’t Fair — Sammy Kaye 3. Third Man Theme — Anton Karas 4. Mule Train — Frankie Laine 5. Mona Lisa — King Cole 6. Music, Music, Music — Teresa Brewer 7. I Wanna Be Loved — Andrew Sisters 8- I’d’ve Baked A Cake — Eileen Barton 9. I Can Dream Can’t I — Andrew Sisters 10. That Lucky Old Sun — Frankie Laine 1951 1. Tennessee Waltz — Patti Page 2. How High The Moon— Les Paul & Mary Ford 3. Too Young — Nat “King” Cole 4. Be My Love — Mario Lanza 5. Because Of You — Tony Bennett 6. On Top Of Old Smoky — Weavers & Terry Gilkyson 7. If — Perry Como 8. Sin — Four Aces 9. Come On-A My House — Rosemary Clooney 10. Mockin’ Bird Hill— Les Paul & Mary Ford 1955 I 1. Rock Around The Clock — Bill Haley & Comets 2. Davy Crockett — Bill Hayes 3. Cherry Pink And Apple Blossom White — Perez Prado 4. Melody Of Love — Billy Vaughn 5. Yellow Rose Of Texas — Mitch Miller 6. Ain’t That A Shame — Pat Boone 7. Sincerely — McGuire Sisters 8. Unchained Melody — A1 Hibbler 9. Crazy Otto — Johnny Maddox 10. Mr. Sandman — Chordettes 1956 1. Don’t Be Cruel — Elvis Presley 2. The Great Pretender — Platters 3. My Prayer — Platters 4. The Wayward Wind — Gogi Grant 5. Whatever Will Be, Will Be — Doris Day 6. Heartbreak Hotel — Elvis Presley 7. Lisbon Antigua — Nelson Riddle 8. Canadian Sunset — Hugo Winterhalter 9. Moonglow & Picnic — Morris Stoloff 10. Honky Tonk — Bill Doggett 1960 I ; 1. Theme From A Summer Place — Percy Faith 2. It’s Now Or Never— Elvis Presley 3. Save The Last Dance For me — Drifters 4. The Twist — Chubby Checker '5. Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka Dot Bikini — Brian Hyland 6. I’m Sorry — Brenda Lee 7. Stuck On You — Elvis Presley 8. He’ll Have To Go— Jim Reeves 9. Cathy’s Clown— Everly Brothers 10. Running Bear— Johnny Preston 1961 1. Exodus — Ferrante & Teicher 2. Calcutta — Lawrence Welk 3. Will You Love Me Tomorrow — Shirelles 4. Tossin’ And Turnin' — Bobby Lewis 5. Wonderland By Night — Bert Kaempfert 6. Are You Lonesome Tonight — Elvis Presle> 7. Travelin’ Man — Ricky Nelson 8. Michael — Highwaymen 9. Runaway — Del Shannon 10. Last Date — Floyd Cramer 22 Cash Box — December 30, 1961 *? ' i ■ *■* *■’^■*"^*2^^ « ♦ 3 y^y^-fen.^ it^tjii »*« V ijt-<^e # ^ *-v ^ :^<*1P’Jf3M».«4»« I ^ii<'«4««4 c > (i<«’r4<- Lj44*<jf* tii l>>i»<M|»4f><jf ► M - V « m Si #" ■* /♦>» Current Smash Single: “HAPPY BIRTHDAY SWEET SIXTEEN ’ RCA Vicfor 7957 Exclusively: mca Personal Management BENJAMIN L. SUHER Cash Box — December 30, 1961 23 Cash Box RECORD REVIEWS B+ very good B good C+ fair C only those records best suited for commercial use are reviewed by Cash Box AARON NEVILLE (Minit 639) Pick of the Week “A LITTLE BITTY TEAR” (2:16) [Pamper-Cochran] “I DON’T WANTA GO” (2:14) [Ridgeway-Glasser] WANDA JACKSON (Capitol 4681) Thrush should make more big pop-country chart news with “A Little Bitty Tear,” which is a femme version of the current click by Burl Ives (Decca). Her stint is backed by an infectious middle-beat string-included ork-chanting arrangement. A strong follow-up to the performer’s chart effort, “In The Middle Of A Heartache.” (B-f ) “HOW MANY TIMES” (2:40) [Minit BMI — Neville] An ap- pealing medium-beat Latin-blues bal- lad sound from the songster and his musical accompaniment. Track that could develop into something. (B) “I’M WAITIN’ AT THE STA- TION” (2:21) [Minit BMI — Neville] Catchy easy-beat rock-a-cha affectionate. “MARIA” (2:30) [G. Schirmer ASCAP — Bernstein, Sondheim] “I BELIEVE” (2:15) [Cromwell BMI — Drake, Graham, Shirl, Stillman] DAVID WHITFIELD (London 9506) “Maria.” the beautiful ballad from “West Side Story,” is currently rid- ing high on the charts with Roger Williams Kapp version leading the instrumental way. Look for London songster David Whitfield to cop vocal honors with his wonderfully rich, big-voiced performance. The lovely inspirational is treated to a superb job on the excellent companion por- tion. Stellar choral ork showcases. “SHAKE SHAKE SHERRY” (2:15) [Trinity BMI— Barry] “IF YOUR PILLOW COULD TALK” (2:26) [Robert Mellin BMI — Russell] THE EDSELS (Capitol 4675) The “Rama Lama Ding Dong” boys can come through with a smash Top 100 disking in the wildly portrayed “Shake Shake Sherry,” which was also cut a short while-back on Epic. Backed by an all-out ork attack, the boys offer an uninhibited belt, including “Rama Lama” chants. “Pil- low” has interesting upbeat Latinish remarks from the string-filled ork. “WHAT’S THE REASON” (2:04) [Bourne ASCAP — Tomlin, Hatch, Poe, Grier] “WALK AWAY SLOWLY” (2:34) [Pamper BMI— Sharp, Brown] BOBBY EDWARDS (Capitol 4674) Edwards, who still has a big pop-country hit with his Crest disking of “You’re The Reason,” is now on the Capitol label, and is in a strong position to make-the-grade again with “What’s The Reason,” the oldie done in bouncy manner of the first “Reason” session. The artist offers a wistful light-beat country waltzer on the under cut. Pick of the Week Newcomers In an effort to call DJ. attention to Pick records by “Newcomers’' (artists never before on the Top 100) the editorial staff of Cash Box will list such records under this special heading. “SOMEBODY’S SMILING (WHILE I’M CRYING)” (2:16) [Acuff-Rose BMI — Day, Holbert, Loveday] “JUST TO BE LOVED” (2:09) [Combine BMI— Walker] CURTIS & DEL (Monument 455) Curtis & Del could be up among the front runners in the weeks to come with their Monument bow, “Somebody’s Smiling (While I’m Crying).” Side features a most attractive medium-beat ballad blend (with a catchy background thump) by the songsters, who have an Everly Bros.-like approach. Splendid programming item that should really please the teeners. The feelingful pose, on the other hand, sports a soft-spoken sur- vey by the boys. “NO WORD FROM BETTY” “WE GONNA” (2:20) (2:20) [Tobi-Ann [Tobi-Ann BMI— BMI — Burton, Simmons] Burton, Simmons] JIMMY PARKER (Diamond 104) Newcomer Jimmy Parker is a good bet to score with either end, or both, of his debut on the N.Y.-based Diamond label. One half, “No Word From Betty,” is a heartfelt rock-a-cha-cha about a gal who didn’t show for the wedding. The infectious pairing, “We Gonna,” sports a happy fla- voring of two while-back hits, “My Babe” and “Little Bitty Pretty One.” Potent ork-chorus support on both ends. “WALKING CANE” (2:40) [Russ Will ASCAP — Tesone, Romano, Catrombone] “AMEN” (2:10) [Kaycee BMI — Segure, Hardy, Schoen] BILLY DUKE (20th-Fox 296) Duke can head into the new year with his first big one on the 20th-Fox label. It’s the oldie, “Walking Cane,” that’s treated to a bright new rhythm-swing performance. Side builds along the way a la Bobby Darin’s “Mack The Knife.” Sock support from Jimmy Wisner’s crew. The spir- itual, on the flip, is taken for an inviting handclapping ride. TONI ARDEN (Mercury 71885) (B+) “YOU FOOL” (2:45) [Rags BMI — Elias, Reid] Longtime thrush is backed by an interesting teen-directed ork-chorus rhythm. She adapts herself well to the rockin’- style idiom. Can get action. (B) “SIGNS OF THE TIMES” (3:09) [Vogue BMI — Kauf- man, Anthony] Funky sound, includ- ing an harmonica, supports the per- former’s fine wistful chirping. TOMMY BOYCE (RCA Victor 7975) (B-h) “YOU LOOK SO LONELY” (1:50) [Calboy BMI — Boyce] Boyce, a writer of teen ditties, bows as a songster on Victor with a pro rock-a-cha lovey-dovey. Ray Ellis di- rects the solid teen-beat setting. Can make noise. (B-f) “ALONG CAME LINDA” (2:10) [Calboy BMI — Boyce] A love-found affair with a bright, catchy way. Can also be very big. JACK COLLIER ORCH.-CHORUS/ JOHN VAN HORN ORCH. (Moonglow 207) (B-f) “HAPPY JOSE” (Ching- Ching)” (2:20) [Landsdowne ASCAP — Malin, Gonzales] The hot instrumental is presented with a pro sunny rock beat by the Collier ork- chorus. A worthy entry in the race for Top 100 honors for the tune. Label is based in Hollywood. (B) “OCTOPUS TANGO” (2:23) [Ray Maxwell BMI — Max- well] The John Van Horn ork is heard in a lush tango arrangement. Attrac- tive programming. CLAY COLE (Imperial 5804) (B-f) “TWIST AROUND THE CLOCK” (2:17) [Columbia ASCAP — Kaye, Springer, Cole] The deejay heads a happy Twist date on the main-title from the Twist pic. Pic exposure can get this end around. (B) “DON’T TWIST (With Any- one Else But Me)” (2:27) [Post ASCAP — Kaye, Springer, Cole] Another Twist number included in the flick. LULU REED (Federal 12440) (B) “WHAT MAKES YOU SO COLD” (2:02) [Sonlo BMI — Reed, Thompson] Blues thrush and combo make infectious music mostly for the R&B market, which should take to the sound. (B) “AIN’T NO COTTON PICK- IN’ CHICKEN (Gonna Break This Chicken Heart of Mine)” (2:20) [Sonlo BMI — Thompson, Williams] More upbeat blueser with a good- natured way. mediocre THE IMPRESSIONS (Swirl 107) (B-f) “DON’T LEAVE ME” (1:46) [Wemar BMI — Brooks] Effec- tive blues rhythmic from the lead and his chanting companions. Combo has a good bounce touch. Grow-on-you ef- fort from the New York-based wax- ery. (B) “I NEED YOUR LOVE” (1:50) [Wemar BMI— Brooks] Somewhat of a low-down blues approach here. THE CRAZY KATS (Deauville 1005) (B+) “MAKIN’ WHOOPEE” (2:20) [BVC ASCAP— Kahn, Don- aldson ]The oldie goes Twist-beat in this combo go, which features a growl- ing sax. Good-sounding session for the Twist crowd. Label headquarters in Miami Beach, Fla. (C-f) “THE CANDY STIK TWIST” (2:28) [Carnival BMI — Lin- ale] Guitars pound here. BERNA-DEAN (Imperial 5792) (B) “LITTLE WILLIE” (2:45) [Travis BMI — Bartholomew, King] Infectiously displayed blues novelty about Little Willie and his 6' gal friend flirt. The fine lark talent is supported by a choice combo-male chorus set-up. (B) “I WALK IN MY SLEEP” (2:32) [Commodore BMI — Bartholomew, King] Nice intimate moody. TEDDY RANDAZZO (ABC-Paramount 10287) (B-f) “MOTHER GOOSE TWIST” (2:35) [South Mountain BMI — Randazzo, Barberis, Weinstein] Vet teen songster tops a wild Twist date that’s included the Twist flick, “Hey, Let’s Twist,” which includes the per- former. Good Twist punch. (B) “IT’S A PITY TO SAY GOODNIGHT” (2:30) [Leeds ASCAP — Reid] The fine oldie is also done in the flick, and Randazzo does a pleasing stint against a lush, moody full ork backdrop. CATHY MOORE (Majesty 302) (B) “DREAM LOVER” (2:29) [Adaris — Progressive-Fern BMI — Darin] The old Bobby Darin click is revived with a busy teen sound. A s-wingin’ organ is part of the setting for the lark. Diskery is based in Hollywood. (C-f) “I’LL WAIT” (2:35) [Trinity BMI — Klein, Ebb] Slow-beat plaintive. DONNIE ELBERT (Jalynne 110) (B-f) “WHAT YOU’RE DOING TO ME” (2:22) [Jot BMI— El- bert] This catchy blueser features songster Elbert, who has a distinctive, falsetto-type voice. Muted trumpet is part of the backdrop proceedings. (B) “LUCILLE (I’ve Done You No Wrong)” [Jot BMI— El- bert] Deliberately-paced, sometimes wailing blues cut. 24 Cash Box — December 30, 1961 Marcas Reg. Printed In U. S. A Once in a great while, a new performer come along who is spe- cial. He will be endowed with talent, presence, youth and a rare, elusive factor that can only be called "star quality." To- day, such a performer is proudly spotlighted by Columbia Records. His name is Kenny Karen. His first record, produced by Nevins-Kirshner, is Oh.SusieForgiveMe," coupled with "The Light in Your Window" (4-42264). It is a great record. Cash Box — December 30, 1961 25 Gdsh Box RECORD REVIEWS B+ very good B good C+ fair C mediocre only those records best suited for commercial use are reviewed by Cash Box AKI ALEONG (Reprise 20,042) (B+) “TONIGHT” (Twist) (1:53) [G. Schirmer ASCAP— Bern- stein, Sondheim] The current hit tune is done to a polished Twist beat by Aleong’ and his Licorice Twisters. Aleong recently made a Top 100 ap- pearance with “Trade Winds”; there can be a similar reaction here. (B-h) “MOON RIVER” (Twist) (2:25) [Famous ASCAP — Mancini, Mercer] Same go for an- other top click. EDDIE LAAVRENCE (Coral 62298) (B+) “THE PHILOSOPHER TWIST” (2:27) [Warwick ASCAP — Lawrence] Lawi'ence’s pop- ular Philosopher character has some hilarious comments to make on the Twist, as viewed at the famed Twist haven. The Peppermint Lounge. Deck can be a comedy sleeper. (B) “THE D. J. PHILOSOPHER RETURNS” (2:53) [Warwick ASCAP — Lawrence] Funny stuff about the trials and tribulations of the modern-day deejay. BOBBY BARE (Fraternity 890) (B+) “BROOKLYN BRIDGE” (2:20) [Harry Bare BMI — Bare, Guynes] This rib-tickling, oft- told tale of the sale of the famous landmark is told in the delightful, talk-sing manner of the years-back success, “All American Boy.” Side has that big hit outlook. Stick with it. (B) “ZIG-ZAG TWIST” (1:52) [Sherman, DeVorzon BMI — Bare] On this end Bare gives out with a fetching finger-snapping, string- backed set of instructions to the dance. LITTLE NAT (Pik 242) (B-h) “DO THIS DO THAT” (2:28) [Lonnie BMI — Verroca] Little Nat, former lead with the Shells of “Baby Oh Baby” fame, can nail down chart honors with this Pik debut. It’s a captivating, chorus-backed rock-a- rhythm cha cha session that has loads of money-making potential. (B) “TALLY WALLY” (2:15) [Lonnie BMI — Bouknight] Colorful rock-a-jumper on this end. KENNY BALL (Kapp 442) (B-h) “MIDNIGHT IN MOSCOW” (2:58) [Melody Trails BMI — Arr. Ball] Ball and His Jazzmen, a leading exponent of the Trad (or Dixielandish) style now very popular in England, is hitting big in England with this infectious reading of the fine Russian tune, which has been released here in many vocal-instrumental ver- sions. This could be the outing that catches on. (B) “AMERICAN PATROL” [Traditional-Meacham] More sunny Trad, doings. LITTLE RICHARD (Mercury 71911) (B-f) “RIDE ON KING JESUS” (2:53) [Woodman BMI — Penniman, Jones] The label has again culled a single from the performer’s Gospel LP, “It’s Real,” which was the source of his recent chart-maker, “He’s Not Just A Soldier.” The dy- namic Richard delivery is heard against a bright Quincy Jones-di- rected ork-chorus. Can also succeed. (B) “DO YOU CARE” (2:48) [Peer Int’l BMI — Dell] A sensitive side from the album. JOE PUMA & THE AUDIOBON ALL-STARS (Columbia 42254) (B+) “NOAH’S ARK (Redwinged Blackbird)” (2:45) [Juma BMI — Puma, Hall, Sher] Here’s an original-sounding gospel-type .jazz- rock stint from the Puma that could take-off. It’s from an LP tag'ged “Like Tweet” and should be eyed closely. (B) “PANIC IN THE BIRD- CAGE” (2:20) [Davimar BMI — Macero] This selection from the LP is clever jazz swinging. KEITH COLLEY (Era 3067) (B-|-) “(And Her Name Is) SCAR- LET” (2:15) [Pattern ASCAP — Howard] Cheerful march-beat rock- a-string affair on a tuneful folkish ditty. Colley’s pro teen vocal is sup- ported by a full-blown ork-chorus ef- fort, including- a whistling stint by the chorus. Might step out. (B-h) “PUT EM DOWN” (2:18) [Bamboo & Burdett BMI — Colley] An interesting gospel-flavored stint about losing-the-blues. Also worth attention. DONNIE CHARLES (Smash 1725) (B-f-) “JUMPSVILLE, U.S.A.” (2:20) [Fame BMI — Thomp- son] Here’s an effective Twister from the songster and his busy-beat, sax- led combo-shout chorus backing. Deck’s right in the current upbeat teen groove and could go places. (B) “STAY WITH ME” (2:00) [MRC & Fame BMI— Thomp- son] Intriguing rock-a-cha sound supports the performer’s cozy multi- tracked ballad reading. DEL RICHARDSON (Stellar 1729) (B-p) “LOVER MINE” (2:20) [Mar- lene ASCAP — Buchanan, Gottfried] The deck, acquired for dis- tribution by Mercury’s Smash affiliate, could develop into a click session. Richardson understandingly offers a heartfelt affectionate against a very interesting combo-chorus stand that recalls the backing on Ben E. King’s awhile-back click, “Stand By Me.” Should be eyed closely. (B) “DON’T CRY LINDA’’ [Arch & Willow ASCAP— Buchanan, Gottfried] A folkish qual- ity to this good-sounding romantic bouncer. TEXAS-RAY (Kaydee 3001) (B-p) “MARY ANN” (2:17) [Pro- gressive BMI — Charles] A Ray Charles number is done with a busy blues-beat sound from the song- ster and combo. Mostly R&B-market doings. Diskery works-out of N.Y. (B) “WHAT’S COME OVER YOU?” (3:30) [Savoy BMI— Brown] Some unusual wailing from the performer. JULES BLATTNER (Norman 512) (B) “ST. JAMES INFIRMARY” (2:10) [BMI — Primrose] The familiar PD gets a partytime blues- rock attack, including Cab Calloway- like chant bits. Teeners will be in- terested in the sound. (C-P) “DO YOU LOVE ME” (2:15) [Missouri BMI — Blattner] Easy-beat wistful essay. VAUGHN MONROE (Dot 16308) (B) “IF YOU GOTTA MAKE A FOOL OF SOMEBODY” (2:13) [Good Songs BMI— Clark] The longtime songster-maestro offers a teen-beat version of the blues hit by James Ray on the Caprice label. (B) “MR. MOTTO” (1:36) [Arvee BMI — Johnson, Delvy] The Monroe ork solos in a catchy upbeat blueser. Side is also a cover. JOHNNY (Guitar) WATSON (King 5579) (B-p) “BROKE AND LONELY” (2:50) [0-Cal BMI — Otis, Watson] Strong R&B-directed pose by the blues songster, who is backed by a potent band-styled sound. Could also get pop action. (B) “CUTTIN’ IN” (3:03) [Valjo BMI — Watson] Strings are in- cluded in this touching blueser. COSMO (Tilt 787) (B-p) “YOU CAN’T GET KISSED (When You Twist)” (2:04) [Tree BMI — Spence] The Twist-mar- ket novelty is presented with lots of teen verve by the songster and his rompin’, sax-led combo support. Lon- don handles this very reliable Twist affair. (B) “PM A LITTLE MIXED UP” (2:44) [Sunflower & Garnet ASCAP — James, Johnson] Funky up- beat vocal by the talent. FRANK VERNA (Jubilee 5414) (B) “FACIME LA TWIST” (2:11) [Benell BMI — Como, Verna, Baker] “O Sole Mio” becomes a cheer- ful Italian-styled Twist novelty. Ver- na’s likeable vocal is supported by a busy combo-choi’us chore. (B) “TWISTIN’ BABY” (2:20) [Southern ASCAP ■ — • Baker, Verna] Made-in-U.S.A. Twistin’ here. THE WOBBLERS (King 5585) (B) “THE WOBBLE” (2:08) [0- Cal — Briarcliff BMI — Stryker, Hall, Otis] A “bubbly” gimmick is in- cluded in this infectious teen-beat out- ing b.v the combo. Sax and keyboard are rockin’ highlights. Deserves teen programming. (B) “BLOW OUT” (2:15) [0- Cal — Foi’e-site BMI — Stryker, Hall, Otis] Similar good-sounding stuff from the crew. ROBIN WILSON (Monument 452) (B-p) “THE BLACK EYED GYPSY” (2:13) [Acuff-Rose BMI — Bryant] Happy country-flav- ored stint by the songster and combo- chorus on an engaging number. A con- tagious cut that can move. (B) “I WANTA HANG MY HAT IN HEAVEN” (2:02) [Target BMI — Wilson] Snappy item mostly for the country trade. CHARLES LYNTON/KEITH DAVIS (Broadway 101) (C) “PM DISILLUSIONED” [ASCAP— Pinkard] Old-fash- ioned tenor crooning here. (C) “SWEET SUBURBAN SUE” [ASCAP — Pinkard] Keith heads another years-back sound. THE JAGS (London 9507) (B-p) “CRY WOLF” (2:12) [Hollis BMI — Vandyke] Musicians put across an exciting Latin-styled rock sound. A refreshing ork outing that can have a Top 100 career. (B) “THE HUNCH” (2:12) [Hol- lis BMI — Vandyke] Cute and original-sounding rock-a-cha stint. BILL REEDER (Hi 2041) (B-p) “SECRET LOVE” (2:13) [Remick ASCAP — Fain, Web- ster] Country songster does an upbeat reading of the oldie against a bouncy rock beat from the combo. Off-beat reading of the opus that could get solid exposure. (B) “JUDY” (2:20) [Progressive BMI — Redell] Another bouncy sound backs the performer’s portrayal of the lovey-dovey ditty. THE GAY JAYS (Josie 8931 (B-p) “CHICKEN BACK”— Part 1 (2:25) [Straight Ahead BMI — Dickens, Grace, Rice, Gamble] R&B songsters perform the dance- novelty with a pro blend, while the Dales Dickens ork supplies a highly Twist-able sound. (B-p) “CHICKEN BACK”— Part 2 (2:20) [Straight Ahead BMI — Dickens, Grace, Rice, Gamble] The solid-sounding session is continued. JIMMY SOUL (S.P.Q.R. 3300) (B-p) “TWISTIN’ MATILDA” (2:33) [Pepe BMI—] Old calypso favorite is done as a Twist in an original-sounding R&B-fiavored manner. Soul’s survey is backed by solid remarks by the combo-fenune chorus. London distributes the outing. Could score. (B) “I CAN’T HOLD OUT ANY LONGER” (2:34) [Progres- sive BMI — Baker, (jalhoun, Wexler] Bluesy plaintive from the performer. BRYAN JOHNSON (London 9509) (B) “LOVE THEME FROM ‘EL CID’” (2:25) [Robbins AS- CAP— Webster, Rozsa] Big-voiced English singer offers a vocal version of the main-theme from the just-re- leased epic flick. A lush ork-chorus arrangement backs-up. (B) “TENNESSEE WALTZ” (2:25) [Acuff-Rose BMI— Stewart, King] Soft-spoken reading of the oldie. 26 Cash Box — December 30, 1961 best wishes for a happy holiday season! Direction RCA\iCTOR GENERAL ARTISTS CORPORATION NEW YORK • CHICAGO BEVERLY HILLS • CINCINNATI • DALLAS • LONDON Cash Box — December 30, 1961 27 Cdsh Box LESLIE UGGAMS (Columbia 42255) (B+) “GET HAPPY” (2:53) [Rem- ick ASCAP — Koehler, Arlen] Talented thrush, featured on the Mitch Miller sing-along TV’er, is backed by the Miller’s male chorus in this solid jukebox-sounding survey of the sturdy. Side is from an LP, “Les- lie Uggams on TV.” (B) “BIRTH OF THE BLUES” (3:33) [Harms ASCAP— De- Sylva, Brown, Henderson] Relaxed reading of another evergreen. Also from the LP. JOHNNY COOPER (Ermine 37) (B) “I FOUND LOVE WITH YOU” (2:07) [Venetia BMI— Erman] Coy-voiced songster pleas- ingly recites the nice lovey-dovey against a sax-led teen-beat ork-chorus ork stand. Label hails from Chicago. (C-f) “RIVALRY” (2:32) [Venetia BMI — Cooper, Blair] Brighter teen-market approach. THE NOBLES (Stacy 926) (B+) “SERENADE” (2:12) [Harms ASCAP — Romberg] The gem from “Student Prince” goes-in for a soft-beat teen reading, with the lead mostly turning-in teen-market off-the- tune phrasing. Lots of teeners will dig the approach. (B) “YOU AIN’T RIGHT” (1:41) [Lucky Eight BMI — Jones] Rich Latinish, Twist-able touch to this rhythmic upbeat entry. Firm is from Chicago. WAILING BETHEA (Hawkeye 0430) (B) “ANNIE PENGUIN” (1:55) [Claiborne BMI — Bethea, Clairborne] The novelty ditty gets a Coasters-like attack from Bethea and The Captans. Good laff stuff. (B) “ROCKIN’ IN THE JUNGLE” (2:11) [Claiborne BMI — Bethea] More humorous, blues- styled attack. MARGARITA “CHA-CHA” SIERRA (Warner Bros. 5248) (B) “CHA CHA TWIST” (2:20) [American BMI — Fayne, Bowen, Paladino] The performer, fea- tured as Cha-Cha O’Brien in the TV’er, “Surfside 6,” heads a lively Latin angle to the Twist. (B) “PRETTY BABY” (1:53) [Remick ASCAP — Kahn, Jack- son, VanAlstyne] Cute easy-beat turn for the oldie. ROSS TALBOT (Bobbie 222) (B) “(Calypso Twist) SHORT SKIRTS & POLLY PANTS” (2:26) [BMI— Talbot] Calypso per- former reads his own calypso novelty against a calypso combo chore that, true to its title, can be easily Twisted to. Diskery is based in Philly. (C) “TEN MILLION STARS” (2:24) [BMI— Talbot, Joel] Artist goes strictly teen-beat in this softie display. RECORD REVIEWS B+ very good B good C+ fair C mediocre only those records best suited for commercial use are reviewed by Cash Box THE PASTEL SIX (Downey 101) (B) “WIMO STOMP” (2:13) [Downey BMI — Wenzel] “Wi- moweh,” the source of The Tokens’ smash, “The Lion Sleeps Tonight,” is displayed in exciting, funky har- monica-led fashion by the instrumen- talists. Worthy teen work. Original Sound handles the diskery. (B) “TWITCHIN” (1:57) [Dow- ney BMI — Toten] Good, steady-beat pounder for the Twist crowd. PAUL DE NOIA (Kenco 5020) (B) “DEAR ABBY” (2:36) [Kenco Enterprises ASCAP — Durante, Durant] Songster and combo-chorus offer a wistful teen-beat reading of tune that ties-in with the popular let- ter-to-the-lovelorn columnist. (C-f) “MAUREEN” (1:40) [Kenco Enterprises ASCAP — Durante, Durant] Name-song affectionate for the kids. THE TRAVELERS (Don Ray 5965) (B) “TRAVELER” (1:54) [Don Bennett BMI — Self] Good- sounding combo rockin’, headed by sound-wise guitarist Alvie Self. Chor- us offers jungle-like chants. Label is based in Phoenix. (B) “SEVEN MINUTES TILL FOUR” (2:04) [Don Bennett BMI — Self, Wilcox] Latinish way to another colorful affair headed by Self. THE FORTUNES (Queen 24010) (B) “UGLY DUCKLING” (1:48) [Scepter BMI — Crawford, Starr, Smith] Pleasant easy rock-a- cha date about a gal who blossoms out into one of the town’s top lookers. Label is the King Records’ affiliate. (B) “NOTHING MATTERS ANY- MORE” (2:44) [Lois BMI — Ashcroft, Spoke] Nicely rendered teen-beat tale of a disenchanted love affair. FRIEDEL WENDE (Cadence 1413) (B-h) “LIEBCHEN” (2:35) [E. H. Morris ASCAP— Wende] At- tractive import instrumental display, with lead saxes offering a Billy Vaughn-type sound. Trombone is also featured along with a chanting chorus. Solid programming entry. (B) “ALL MY PRETTY ONES” (2:35) [E. H. Morris ASCAP -—Neumann, Stanke] Chorus has a bigger chant role in a faster-moving affair. MARK MURPHY (Riverside 4511) (B) “ANGEL EYES” (2:58) [Bradshaw BMI — Brent, Den- nis] The fine jazz songster gives a distinctive account of the great Matt Dennis standby. There’s a haunting cornbo backdrop. Should be included in jazz jukebox programming. (B) “STOPPIN’ THE CLOCK” (2:10) [Charles Street BMI— Landesman, Krai] Lighter, swingin’ blues-flavored entry. Both sides stem from an LP, “Rah-Mark Murphy.” CALVIN CARTER (VeeJay 419) (B-h) “THE ROACH” (2:39) [Las- tar-Bloor & H.H. BMI— Wil- lis, Venetoulis] The current dance noise-maker, via Gene & Wendell on Ray Star, is presented with solid rockin’ band verve. Swingin’ keyboard and organ are included. Strong cover outing. (B) “WHAT’D I SAY” (2:31) [Progressive BMI — Charles] The Ray Charles standard is infec- tiously portrayed (string comments are included). FATHER RALPH (Jo-Dan 1002) (B) “ZIM BOOM BA” (2:32) [Lighthouse BMI — Attanasio] Father Ralph (Attanasio), known as the “Hoodlum Priest,” heads an at- tractive outing on a lovely Mexican folk-song. He’s supported by an ef- fective ork-chorus sound. Father Ralph opens the deck with an English narrative. Off-beat affair. (B) “MAMA” (2:26) [Southern ASCAP] — The Italian fav- orite is warmly sung by Father Ralph. THE DEL-PHIS (Check-Mate 1005) (B-f-) “I’LL LET YOU KNOW” (2:50) [Kapa — Brohun BMI — Jean, Hunter] Lass song team, sport- ing a solid lead voice, offer an infec- tious blueser about a gal who’s dish- ing out a wait-and-see attitude to the guy who wants to come back. Can get R&B-pop recognition. (B) “IT TAKES TWO” (3:15) [Kapa — Brohun BMI — Jean, Hunter] Expressive blues moody from the same upfront lark. BLAZER BOY (Imperial 5801) (B) “NEW ORLEANS TWIST” (1:59) [Travis BMI — King, Bartholomew, Quezergue] Deft Twist- ing, vocally and instrumentally, as the songster notes that the dance has won favor with all age groups. Gal chorus assists the performer. (B) “THAT’S WHERE IT’S AT” (2:24) [Travis BMI— King, Quezergue, Stevenson] Blueser and infectious medium-beat attitude. TOMMY MARIS (World-Wide 8506) (B) “STRANGE AS IT SEEMS” (2:16) [Doral BMI — Burnette] This soft, Latin beat romantic weeper has an ear-appealing quality that should attract a heap of airplay. Pleasant, choral backed vocal stint by Maris. (B) “GONNA BE LOVED BY YOU” (2:07) [Doral BMI— Burnette] Complete change-of-pace on this colorful rock ’n roller. Sock musical assist. Dorsey Burnette penned ’em both. BEN DiTOSTI (World Pacific 1410) (B-t-) “LET’S GET TOGETHER” (2:27) [Wonderland BMI— Sherman, Sherman] The big rock ’n roll hit by Haley Mills is surprisingly done to an infectious jazz-oriented, gospel-type beat by the pianist and his rhythm accompaniment. Interest- ing project that can come-up with strong airplay. (B) “THEME FROM CARNI- VAL” (2:35) [Robbins ASCAP — Merrill] Cool jazz approach to the pretty waltzer from the hit musical. Track is from an LP on the score. CARMEN McRAE (Columbia 42245) (B) “I CRIED FOR YOU” (2:52) [Miller ASCAP — Freed, Arn- heim, Lyman] Stylist does a bright, fast-paced reading of the oldie against a classy jazz romp from the combo. Swingin’ stuff that will be played by the hip jocks. (B) “MISS BROWN TO YOU” (2:28) [Famous ASCAP — Robin, Whiting, Rainger] Easier swingin’ on another oldtimer. THE MARC-ANTONIANS (Dot 16294) (B) “CLEOPATRA’S THEME” (2:24) [Campbell-Connelly ASCAP — Manners] Musicians supply an interesting rock-inclined hoochy- coochy sound to capture the ditty’s exotic title. Off-beat issue. (B) “MOSHI, MOSHI, ANONE” (2:12) [Campbell - Connelly ASCAP — Manners, Watson] This is a rockin’ Japanese-lyric version of “Lon- don Bridge Is Falling Down” that met with big success in Japan about 10 years ago. Dot purchased both ends from the So Deska label of Long Island. RAY CORBIN (Trend ’61 104) (B) “THE WHOLE NIGHT LONG” (1:59) [Talent Town BMI — Corbin, Corbin] Country-fla- vored songster heads a colorful dis- play of a dramatic plaintive. Guitars make the top commercial sounds in the setting. (B) “JUST FOR TONIGHT” (2:38) [Talent Town BMI — Corbin, Corbin] Strings are included in this country waltz wistful. JOE MARINO (Electro-Vox 2173) (C) “SOME DAY I’LL FIND YOU” (2:12) [Thelma Hester Jones BMI — Jones] Bobby Bell takes the vocal spotlite as he cries over a romantic sentimental. Joe Marino & his group lend a soft swing musical backdrop. (C) “TRYING SO HARD TO FORGET YOU” (2:38) [Thel- ma Hester Jones BMI — Jones] Here the artists warmly etch a slow paced lover’s lament. Label’s based in Ful- lerton, Calif. POLKA LI’L WALLY (Jay Jay 254) “Li’l Wally Polka Twist”/“Twistin’ And Turning Polka” PAUL WEINGARDT (Cuca 1057) “Sweet Marguerite”/“Sweet Potato Polka” JAZZ DAVE BAILEY TRIO (Jazz Line 4501) “Just Friends”/“Should Support” DADDY GOODLOWE (Vee Jay 421) “Jamil — parts I & 11” RELIGIOUS DIXIE HUMMINGBIRDS (Peacock 1844) “Have A Talk With Jesus”/‘Tn The Morning” WANDERING TRAVELERS (Pea- cock 1843) “Jeusus Is The Heavyweight Champ”/ “I Would Like To Have Been With Him” 28 Cash Box — December 30, 1961 7 THANKS DJ'S, DEALERS AND OPS For The Azvard of NO. 1 NEW VOCAL GROUP (In The CASH BOX Year-End Poll) .’’V, .♦s »■' ' * f- r- f; m 1 ■c ‘v -T^ - ‘ j tt'’ .’7, 4,'^''y *;* Tt •**« ♦“ JR *^r i * ♦ -*• ^ I '• »\ '•’*** *. «Oesa ««. ■A^- HIGHWAYMEN Exclusively: INI TED ARTISTS E C O R O S Personal Management: KEN GREENGRASS Public Relations: MARVIN DRAGER 161 ash Box — December 30, 1961 29 Cash Box LOOKING AHEAD 5 6 10 A compilation, in order of strength, breaking into The Cash Box Top of up and 100. List coming records showing signs of is compiled from retail outlets. DEAR IVAN limmy Deart (Columbia 42259) 11 A KISS FOR CHRISTMAS (0 Tonnenbaum) Joe Dowell (Smash 1728) ROOM FULL OF TEARS Drifters (Atlantic 2127) HAPPY JOSE Jack Ross (Dot 16302) Daye Appell (Cameo 207) 12 13 WALKIN' BACK TO HAPPINESS Helen Shapiro (Capitol 4662) GREETINGS (This Is Uncle Sam) Valadiers (Miracle 6) BELLS AT MY WEDDING/ LOVELAND Paul Anka (ABC Paramount 10279) 14 YOU DON'T HAVE TO BE A TOWER OF STRENGTH Gloria Lynne (Everest 19428) IMAGINATION Quotations (Verve 10245) 15 JINGLE BELL TWIST U.S.A. Johnny Mendell (Jamie 1708) CAN'T TAKE THE HEARTACHES Mary Ann Fisher (Seg-Way 1007) 16 LOSING YOUR LOVE/ WHAT 1 FEEL IN MY HEART Jim Reeves (RCA Victor 7950) MY BOOMERANG WON'T COME BACK Charles Drake (United Artists 398) 17 LOST PENNY SHADRACK Brook Benfon (Mercury 71912) THE DOOR IS OPEN Tommy Hunt (Scepter 1226) 18 TWISTIN' ALL NIGHT LONG Danny & Juniors (Swan 4092) UNSQUARE DANCE Dave Brubeck (Columbia 42228) 19 HOLLER HEY Jimmy Jones (Cub 9102) FREE ME Johnny Preston (Mercury 23017) 20 1 HEAR YOU KNOCKIN' Fats Domino (Imperial 5796) 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 TEARS FROM AN ANGEL/ ISLAND IN THE SKY Troy Shondell (Liberty 55398) 36 PLEASE COME HOME FOR CHRISTMAS Charles Brown (King 5405) MOTORCYCLE 37 SWEETWATER Tico & Triumpets (Amy 835) Stereos (Cub 9103) SANTA & THE TOUCHABLES 38 SOMETHING YOU GOT Dickie Goodman (Rori 701) Chris Kenner (Instant 3237) DREAMIN' ABOUT YOU 39 SHIMMY SHIMMY WALK Annette (Vista 388) Megatons (Dodge 808) DEAR GESU BAMBINO 40 YOU DON'T HAVE TO BE Christian Morandi (Decca 31343) A BABY TO CRY Joe Barry (Smash 1727) FLYING BLUE ANGELS George, Johnny & Pilots (Coed 555) 41 ONE DEGREE NORTH Mar-Keys (Stax 115) THE THINGS 1 WANT 42 PLAY THE THING TO HEAR Marlowe Morris Quintet Shirelles (Scepter 1227) (Columbia 42218) OLD ENOUGH TO KNOW BETTER Crickets (Liberty 55392J 43 PORTRAIT OF A FOOL Conway Twitty (MGM 13050 DUKE OF EARL Gene Chandler (Vee Jay 416 44 A SUNDAY KIND OF LOVE Jan & Dean (Liberty 55397) 45 BABY DON'T LEAVE ME Joe Henderson (Todd 1066) LET ME IN Sensations (Argo 5405) 46 JAMIE Eddie Holland (Motown 1021) SMOKEY PLACES Corsairs (Tuff 1808) 47 SITTIN' AND DRINKIN' Christine Kittrell (Vee Jay 399) NEIN NEIN FRAULEIN Cathy Carr (Smash 1726) 48 BOMBAY Mike Clifford (Columbia 42226) EVERYBODY'S CRYIN' Jimmy Beaumont (May 112) 49 WHAT'S SO GOOD ABOUT GOODBYE IN THE SAME OLD WAY Tommy Ridgely (Ric 984) Miracles (Tamla 54053) EVERYBODY'S TWISTIN' 50 TWISTIN' BELLS CHRISTMAS DAY DOWN IN MEXICO Santo & Johnny Linda Scott Billy Vaughn (Dot 16295) (Canadian American 132) .E ! I i I Erma Franklin IT'S OVER and HELLO AGAIN Ce3f>ic5 5-9488 rhE eventuaIs chARliE chAN (OiifeA) 30 Cash Box — December 30, 1961 )MPILED BY CASH BOX FROM LEADI NG RETAIL OUTLETS^DEC 30, 1 961 MONAURAL 1 •BLUE HAWAII BMt PresSef (RCA Victor LPM 2426; LSP 2426) 2 • BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY'S Henry Mancinl (RCA Victor LPM 2S62; LSP 2362) 3 •HOLIDAY SING ALONG WITH MITCH (Columbia CL 1701; CS 1501) 4 •! REMEMBER TOMMY frank Sinatra (Reprise R-1003; R9-I003I Pos. Lost WMk 1 5 •JUDY AT CARNEGIE HALL 5 Judy Garland (Capitol BO 1569; 5WBO 1969) 6 THE TWIST 13 Chubby Chockor (Parkway P 7001) 7 YOUR TWIST PARTY 15 Chubby Checker (Parkway 7007) 8 •CAMELOT 8 Orig. B'way Cast (Columbia KOL-S620; KOS-3021) 9 •WEST SIDE STORY 11 film Soundtrack (Columbia OL 5670; OS 2070) 10 •TIME OUT 9 Dare Brubeck (Columbia CL 1397; CS S192) 11 •PORTRAIT OF JOHNNY 6 Johnny Mathis (Columbia CL 1644; CS 8444) 12 •never on SUNDAY 10 Connie fronds (MGM f 3965; Sf 3965; 13 •CLOSE-UP 7 Kingston Trio (Capitol T 1642; ST 1642) 14 •BEHIND THE BUTTON- DOWN MIND 12 Bob Newhart (Warner Bros. W 1417; WS 1417) 15 •WEST SIDE STORY 14 Original B'way Cast (Columbia OL 5230; OS 2001) 16 CHUBBY CHECKER & BOBBY RYDELL 23 (Cameo C 1013) 17 •DOIN' THE TWIST AT THE PEPPERMINT LOUNGE 19 Joey Dee & Starlites (Roulette R 25166; SR 25166) 18 RUNAROUND SUE 17 Dion (Laurie 2009) 19 •WEST SIDE STORY 21 ferrante & Telcher (United Artists UAL 3166; UAS 6166) 20 •YOUR REQUEST SING ALONG WITH MITCH 18 Mitch Miller & The Com (Columbia CL 1671; CS $471) 21 •KING OF KINGS Soundtrack (MGM 1E2; S 112) 20 22 •THE SOUND OF MUSIC 22 Original Cast (Columbia KOL 5450; KOS-2020) 23 •GREAT MOTION PICTURE THEMES 16 Various Artists (United Artists UAL 3122; UAS 61220) 24 •CHRISTMAS SING ALONG WITH MITCH 29 (Columbia CL 1205; CS 8027) 25 •THE SLIGHTLY FABULOUS LIMELITERS 25 (RCA Victor IPM 2392; ISP 2393) Pos. Last Pos. Lost Week Week 26 • MILK & HONEY B'way Cast (RCA Victor LX 1065; tSO 1065) 28 1 STEREO 35/mm Enoch Light 4 Orcb. (Command RS 826 SD) 1 27 • NEVER ON SUNDAY 24 2 BLUE HAWAII 2 Movie Soundtrack Ehrls Presley (United Artists UAL 4070; UAS $070) (RCA Victor LSP 2426) 28 RUSTY WARREN BOUNCES 3 BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY'S 3 BACK 31 Henry Maadnl (RCA Victor LSP 2302) (Jubilee JGM 2039) 4 HOLIDAY SING ALONG 29 KNOCKERS UP 27 WITH MITCH 7 Rusty Warren (Jubilee 2029) Mitch Miller (Columbia CS 8501) 30 • THE ASTRONAUT 26 5 JUDY AT CARNEGIE HALL 4 Bill Dana Judy Garland (Capital SWBO 1549) (Kapp KL 1238; KS 3238) 6 CAMELOT 6 31 • JUMP UP CALYPSO Harry Belalotrte (RCA Victor LPM 2388; LSP 2388) 30 Orta. B'way Cast (Columbia KOS-3021) 7 WEST SIDE STORY 8 32 • PERSONAL APPEARANCE 34 Sound Track Shelly Berman (Vorye V6-15027; Y-1$027) (Columbia OS-2070) 33 LET'S TWIST AGAIIN 36 8 1 REMEMBER TOMMY 5 Chubby Checker (Parkway 7004) frank Sinatra (Reprise R9-1003) 34 • MEXICO 33 9 THE SOUND OF MUSIC 10 Bob Moore Original Cast (Columbia KOS-2020) (Monument M 4005; SM 14005) 10 TIME OUT 9 35 LET THERE BE DRUMS Sandy Nelson (Imperial 9159) 38 Dave Brubeck (Columbia CS 8192) 36 • EBB TIDE Earl Grant (Decca DL 4165; DL 74165) 32 11 KING OF KINGS Soundtrack (MGM SI E-2) 13 37 • JOAN BAEZ VOL II (Vanguard VRS 9094; VSD 297) 40 12 WEST SIDE STORY Ortglaal B'way Cast (Columbia OS 2001) 11 38 • FOUR PREPS ON CAMPUS 35 13 GREAT MOTION PICTURE (Capitol T 1566; ST 1566) THEMES Various Artists 12 39 • BIG BAD JOHN Jimmy Dean (Columbia CL 1735; CS 8535) 43 14 (United Artists UAS 61220) WEST SIDE STORY ferrante 4 Telcher (United Artists UAS 6166) 14 40 • MERRY CHRISTMAS 46 Bing Crosby (Decca DL 8128; DL 78128) 41 • TIME FURTHER OUT Dave Brubeck 41 15 CLOSE-UP Kingston Trio (Capital ST 1642) 16 (Columbia CL 1690; CS 8490) 16 YOUR REQUEST SING 42 DO THE TWIST WITH ALONG WITH MITCH 15 RAY CHARLES (Atlantic 8054) 48 Mitch Miller & The Gattg (Columbia CS 8471) 43 • YELLOW BIRD 37 17 PORTRAIT OF JOHNNY 17 Lawrence Welk (Dot DLP 3389; 253*9; Johnny Mathis (Columbia CS 8444) 44 • SONGS OF PRAISE Mantovani (London LL 3251; PS 245) 45 18 MILK 8> HONEY B'way Cast (RCA Victor LSO 1865) 20 45 • MERRY CHRISTMAS 19 JUMP UP CALYPSO 18 Johnny Mathis Harry Belafeote (RCA Victor LSP 2388) (Columbia CL 1195; CS 8021) 20 MELODY & PERCUSSION FOR 46 • HOW TO SUCCEED IN TWO PIANOS 21 BUSINESS WITHOUT REALLY Ronnie Aldrich (Loadoa SP 40807) TRYING B'way Cost (RCA Victor LOC 1066; LSO 1066) 49 21 EBB TIDE Earl Grant (Decca DL 74165) 23 47 • MESSIAH Mormon Tabernacle Choir — 22 THE SLIGHTLY FABULOUS (Columbia M2L 264; M2S 607) LIMELITERS (RCA Victor LSP 2393) 24 48 • ELLA IN HOLLYWOOD Ella fttxgerald (Verve V 4052; V 64052) 42 23 PASS IN REVIEW Boh Sbarpha 0. (UmOem SP 40001) 25 49 FOR TWISTERS ONLY 47 24 NEVER ON SUNDAY 19 Chubby Checker (Parkway 7002) Connie f rands (MGM Si S96S) 50 • SILENT NIGHT 25 BEST OF THE DUKES OF 30 Lawrence Welk DIXIELAND (Dot DLP 3397; 25397; (Aadle fidelity A/SD $9S6) 26 YELLOW BIRD Lawrence Welk (Dot 25389) Pos. Lost Week 22 27 VICTORY AT SEA Vol III 27 Robert Russeit Besiaatt (RCA Victor IX 2523) 28 NEVER ON SUNDAY Sound Track (United Artists UAS 5070) 29 YELLOW BIRD Arthur Lyman (HifI 1004) 26 28 30 SOMEBODY LOVES ME 29 Ray Conniff Singers (Columbia CS 85442) 31 new piano in town 32 Peter Nero (RCA Victor LSP 23$3) 32 BIG BAND PERCUSSION 31 Ted Heath (London SP 44002) 33 CHRISTMAS SING ALONG WITH MITCH 41 (Columbia CS 8027) 34 MEXICO 33 Bob Moore (Memuateat SM 1409$) 35 time FURTHER OUT 37 Dove Brubeck (Columbia CS 8490) 36 merry CHRISTMAS 40 Johnny Mathis (Columbia CS 8021) 37 PERCUSSION AROUND THE WORLD 34 Infl Pop AH Stars (Loadoa SP 44010) 38 BERLIN MELODY Billy Vaughn (Dot 25396) 35 39 EXOTIC PERCUSSION 39 Stanley Black (London SP 4«)04) 40 PERSUASIVE PERCUSSION 36 Terry Snyder (Command RS 800 SD) 41 GOLDEN PIANO HITS ferrante & Teicher (United Artists WWS 8505) 42 SILENT NIGHT Lawrence Welk (Dot 25397; 42 43 43 SEPTEMBER IN THE RAIN 44 Dinah Washington (Mercury SR 60638) 44 SINATRA SWINGS 38 (formerty SWING JUjOHG Wmt Ml) frank Sinatra (Reprhe R9 1002) 45 MOON RIVER Lawrence Welk (Dot 25412) 46 46 BROTHERS FOUR SONG BOOK 47 (Columbia CS 8497) 47 HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS WITHOUT REALLY TRYING 48 B'way Cast (RCA Victor LSO 1066) 48 BIG BAD JOHN — Jimmy Dean (Columbia CS 8535) 49 MESSIAH — Mormon Tabernacle Choir (Columbia M25 607) 50 WEST SIDE STORY Stan Kenton (CapHW ST 1600) 45 • Alto oronoMo hi Storoo A* Alto avoHoblo hi EF I I CosiiJIflm ALOUM mmmm. POPULAI t PICKS 0 F THE WEEK TWIST wrm BOBBY DARIN & e n-,' 'i;t fmmmf ddahI Comedy Night atjhe, Apollo "StfOMS^saABLBY BBORm mm “TWIST WITH BOBBY DARIN”— Atco 33 138 Cashing in on the twist craze, Atco has come up with an album of some big Darin hits delivered with an effective dancing b^eat. Young songster’s performance is professional and mature as he reads “Early In The Morning,” “Queen Of The Hop,” and “You Must Have Been A Beautiful Baby.” Set includes two new Darin single hits in “Multiplication” and “Irresistible You.” Disk looms as a sure-fire chart item. “$1,000,000 WORTH OF TWANG, VOL. 11”— Duane Eddy — Jamie JLP 70 3021 Coming back with plenty of zip, Duane Eddy shows that he still has the same success ingred- ients that helped his first “Twang” session score in the coin department. Eddy reads a group of his previous hits including “Pepe,” “Gidet Goes Ha- waiian,” and “Theme From Dixie,” with his dis- tinctive. original style. LP seems a sales natural. “WOODY WOODBURY’S SALOONATICS”— Steroddities MW 4 Laughman Woodbury offers more of his usual gags and stories in this disk recorded live in Fort Lauderdale’s Bahama Hotel. Comic’s risque humor has had a large audience in the past and this new edition should prove equally successfuL A plus factor here are the sounds of Woodbury’s admiring audience. LP looms as a top-drawer seller. “THE ANDREWS SISTERS GREATEST HITS” —Dot DLP 3406 The Andrews Sisters offer a package of sturdies that were the biggest hits of their career. These are the tunes that one automatically associates with them. Their clear, bell-like voices are top form as they read “Beer Barrel Polka,” “Hold Tight,” and “Bei Mir Dist Du Schon.” Billy Vaughn has added modern instrumental back- grounds to the old, familiar vocal arrangements. Set should attract the trio’s fans in droves. “THE COLORFUL PERCUSSIONS OF AR- THUR LYMAN”— Hifirecords L 1005 Arthur Lyman shows his stuff in this potent fol- low-up disk to “Yellow Bird,” his recent hit LP. Lyman and his boys kick off with a dramatic ver- sion of “Exodus” and move quickly into other favorites such as “Blue Hawaii” and “Never On Sunday.” An interesting band contains the group’s jazz version of “Moanin’.” Disk should score on the charts. “COMEDY NIGHT AT THE APOLLO”— “Moms” Mabley and George Kirby — Vanguard VRS 9093 The Mabley humor is beautifully showcased in this album recorded live at New York’s Apollo Theatre. Moms display superior material and a first-rate delivery. George Kirby is also on hand as are the Keynotes, a group of singers who premiered the Theatre the night this disk was cut. Kirby’s bits are filled with yocks and a per- fect match to the Mabley wit. Unfortunately, much of the humor here is visual and lost on the record. However, the infectious spirit of this Vanguard offering makes it a sure noise-maker. “TRIBUTE TO 6”— Ray Allen— Blast BLP 6804 Ray Allen and the Upbeats have come up with a musical tribute to six late r&r stars in this at- tractive package from Blast. The boys shine as they render superb interpretations of Ritchie Valen’s “La Bamba” and “Donna.” Their form is tops as they read Johnny Horton’s “Battle Of New Orleans” and “North To Alaska.” Other artists given musical eulogies are Buddy Holl^ Jesse Belvin, Big Bopper and Eddie Conhran. LP has plenty of built-in sales appeal and should score in the coin department. 1 < M’THE MKwr illil SAM BUTB«* ANO THE WITHS6SES T8E TWBT • TSST TWiSTif 081B m waEsm twist* war twist TTIE ‘Lirs TWIST km MftlBE>*LS8S1,8IST.y(i Wi-WE ffl mi nusis * gi8w woiM . mi bt m LEO FUCKS rntmm sciif S88 Mfmmmmmmm MCSTTtX A. “BALLET WITH A BEAT” — Hal Mooney — Mer- cury PPS 6017 The swinging sounds of Hal Mooney skillfully at- tack a group of classical, semi-classical and popu- lar ballet themes. Mooney and his ork put an exciting, electric flavor into the standard pieces that they read. Orkster turns in excellent rendi- tions of “An American In Paris,” “March Of The Toys” and “Sleeping Beauty Waltz.” LP’s original arrangements make it first-rate listening fare. “DOIN’ THE TWIST WITH LOUIS PRIMA”— Dot DLP 25410 Jumping feet first on the twist bandwagon Louis Prima teams up with Sam Butera and the Wit- nesses for a swinging disk geared for dancing pleasure. The Prima sound is as distinctive as ever as he reads “The Twist,” “Marie,” and “Side By Side.” The Horace Ott arrangements seem perfectly suited for the rockin’ Prima voice. LP should score with both teens and their parents. ■KWAMINA” — Original Cast Capitol W 1645 Cut by Capitol after the show failed, African- based “Kwamina” had many Richard Adler num- bers well-worth an original-cast LP. The most noteworthy are the lovely, folkish “Nothing More To L(mk Forward To,” the “The Sun Is Begin- ning To Crow,” the comic “One Wife” and the strictly Schubert Row ballad, “What’s Wrong topped by Sally Ann Howes (Adlers wife), Terry Carter and Brock Peters. “BEI MIR BISTU SCHOEN”— Original Cast— Decca 79115 The sound of Second Avenue refuses to give in to the hard-boiled economics of today’s theatre. One 01 the biggest Yiddish musical successes of re- cent years is “Bei Mir Bistu Schoen,” whose original-caster will delight many a Yiddish mu- sical fan whose heart is still in the right senti- men^l and nostalgic place. Sholom Secunda, the vet, deft hand at Yiddish musical scores, has writ- ten a number of varied, tuneful numbers (mostly sung in Yiddish) — and included, of course, is oecunda s title favorite. Leo Fuchs, Jacob Jacobs, who also wrote the lyrics, Miriam Kressyn and Leon Liebgold head the reliable cast. DANCING THE BIG TWIST” — Ray Bryant and His Combo — Columbia CL 1746 Ray Bryant has come up with an unusual LP that combines both good jazz and music for twist- ing. The 88’er plays with dexterity as does his ac- complished crew. The boys turn in rousing ver- “Twist City,” “Big Susie,” and “Twist On. There s enough here to attract both twist- ers and jazz buffs. “SING SING SING-ALONG”— A1 Alberts Jubi- lee JGM 2040 Jubilee dishes up an extremely funny collection of evergreen melodies with new satirical l3ndcs. The whole thing is a take-off on sing-along disks. A1 Alberts and the Lifers Chorus read prison- oriented lyrics with style and charm. Half the fun, is the absurdity of the words set to tune of standard melodies. Many laughs to be had here. “STRING BAND STRUM-ALONG”— Tony Mot- tola — Command RS 828 SD Tony Mottola, on the electric guitar, heads up a hand-picked group of string musicians in this excellent collection of evergreens from Command The arrangements here are fresh, exciting, and vibrant. The band starts things off with a rousing version of “Happy Days,” and launches into equally swinging renditions of “Carolina In The Morning” and “Twelfth Street Rag.” Disk pro- vides first-rate listening pleasure. ... To All of You . . . From All of Us . . . For A F ^ry Successful Year LAWRENCE And The Champagne Music Makers Current Albums: “MOON RIVER" Dot DLP 3472 “NORMA ZIMMER SINGS TRUE LOVE” / Dot DLP 25404 Cash Box — December 30, 1961 33 ALBUM REVIEWS mmn enTOTait alls “HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH JOE WILLIAMS” — Roulette R52071 Joe Williams is in his usual top form as he reads a group of Ernie Wilkins-arranged sturdies in this Birdland series LP from Roulette. The re- laxed, easy Williams style perfectly captures the mood of “Old Folks,” “A Blues Serenade,” and “Moonlight In Vermont.” Harry “Sweets” Edison and his ork provide a well-molded musical back- ground for the songster’s vocal talents. Disk should attract attention with Williams’ fans. “MARTYN GREEN SIGNS THE GILBERT & SULLIVAN SONG BOOK”— MGM E 3980 The magnificent impish quality of Martyn Green brings a touch of genius to this fine collection of melodies from the light operas of Gilbert & Sul- livan. Perhaps no other singer in the world today is more closely associated with G & S than Green. His steadfast devotion to his craft has earned him an endless string of laurels and this disk must rank as still another honor for the talented Britisher. The Green reading of “I Am The Very Modern Of Modern Major General” is the high- point of the album and must be classed as super- lative lung work. Jane Bronhill and Andrew Gold assist in other selections. Disk should attract mobs of Green and Gilbert & Sullivan fans. “15 COUNTRY GREATS BY 8 GREAT ART- ISTS”—Hickory LP M 105 Hickory has, in this album, a first-rate group of favorite tunes that should appeal to all appreci- ators of country music. The cast is all-star includ- ing Margie Bowes, Roy Acuff, and Rusty & Doug. The tunes are sturdies with proven records of pub- lic acceptance. LP should draw attention in coun- try circles. “THE SOUND OF FOLK MUSIC”— Various Art- ists— SRV 125 Vanguard has produced a splendid album that will delight all folk tune fans. Disk offers a taste of the top folk stars including Odetta, the Weav- ers, Leon Bibb, Joan Baez and Ronnie Gilbert. The songs come from a worldwide catalog of folk favorites with “Michael Row The Boat,” “East Virginia,” and “Down On Me,” standing out as highlights. LP could become hot item with folk music followers. “JUSTIN TUBB”— Starday SLP 160 Justin Tubb comes through on this Starday offer- ing with a fine collection of his past hits. The Grand Ole Opry chanter displays an original style and professional delivery as he reads “I’d Know You Anywhere,” and “One For You — One For Me.” Songster has more than enough coun- try authority and sincerity to attract a slew of his fans to the LP. “THE GOLDEN COUNTRY HITS”— Warner Mack— Kapp KL 1255 For his first Kapp album Warner Mack offers a fine collection of country winners tastefully ar- ranged and read. The sincere Mack voice has plenty of hillbilly authority as he delivers “A Sat- isfied Mind,” “Don’t Worry,” and “Room Full Of Roses.” LP should catch on with all of Mack’s admirers and win him a new flock of devotees. “PLAY AND SING ALONG TOO!”— Clyde Sech- ler — Ad Lib A224 Ad Lib has a clever idea in this kiddie album that is being released with three tinfoil hand wind instruments for the children to play along as well as sing. Clyde Sechler leads a children’s chorus through the paces of some popular folk songs in- cluding “Who Put The Farmer In The Dell” and “I’ve Been Working On The Railroad.” Set seems a perfect way to introduce kids to music. JAZZ PICK OF THE WEE K “SE'TTIN’ THE PACE”— John Coltrane— Pres- tige 7213 Cut during his exclusive days with Prestige, this disk provides a superb portrait of the swinging brand of jazz associated with John Coltrane. The selections here are extremely varied including “I See Your Face Before Me,” “Little Melonae,” and “Rise And Shine.” Kudos also go to Red Garland, who turns in a first rate job on the piano. Disk has strong sales potential. a “BASH” — Dave Bailey Sextet — Jazz Line JAZ 33-01 Starting off with an impressive version of Sonny Rollins’ “Grand Street” Dave Bailey and his boys give proof positive of their stature as noteworthy jazz artists. The group turns in admirable jobs on “Like Someone In Love” and “Just Friends.” This Rudy Stevenson arranged disk could make some noise with Bailey devotees. “LET ME TELL YOU ’BOUT IT”— Leo Parker- Blue Note 4087 For his first Blue Note disk Leo Parker’s bari- tone sax is teamed up with a fine group of musi- cians with John Burks on trumpet. Bill Swidell on tenor sax, Yusef Salim on piano, Stan Conover on bass, and Purnell Rice on drums. All the tunes here are originals and delivered with professional artistry and control. Notable selections are “Glad Lad,” a catchy uptempo number with Parker tak- ing the opening solo, and “Vi,” a swinging, free- flowing thing with the group turning in a top- notch performance. LP rates as excellent jazz listening. “WHITE GARDENIA” — Johnny Griffin — River- side RLP 387 Johnny Griffin offers his personal tribute to Billj Holiday in this album of tunes that the late thrush made famous. There is one Griffin original in “White Gardenia,” a Holiday-like tune that could well have been one of the lark’s songs. An accomplished group of jazz musicians accompany the Griffin tenor sax in readings of “Gloomy Sun- day,” “No More,” and “Don’t Explain.” Top-flight arrangements by Melba Liston and Norman Sim- mons give the set a polished free-flowung touch. CLASSICAL PICK OF THE WEEK CHOPIN: Sonata in B-Flat Minor, Op. 35; Sonata in B-Minor, Op. 58 — Artur Rubinstein, pianist — RCA Victor LD 2554 The nimble fingers of Artur Rubinstein treat Chopin as an old friend in this brilliant disk from Victor. Pianist has put exactly the right amount of expression into the ‘Funeral March’ to appeal to even the most discriminating audiences. The Rubinstein approach to the “Sonata In B-Minor” comes from a firm understanding of the music coupled wdth superb artistry and skill. Set should make some noise with classical collectors. TCHAIKOVSKY: The Nutcracker, Op. 71 Utah Symphony Orchestra conducted by 3Iaurice Ab- ravnel — V'anguard SRV 123 4 SD Maurice Abravanel and the Utah Symphony Or- chestra have turned in an adroit, beautifully-read performance of the complete “Nutcracker Ballet” in this two-record set from Vanguard. Conductor has captured the bright, lyrical spirit of the im- portant interwoven rhythms of this most difficult piece. All the color and festiveness that the music demands is reproduced. The Chorus of Utah adds an extra charming touch. Disk ranks as a superb rendition of “The Nutcracker.” “KEYBOARD GIANTS OF THE PAST"— Vari- ous Artists — RCA Victor LM 2585 Reaching as far back as 1923, Victor has produced a varied collection of some outstanding piano pieces. Although this album only gives a taste of the various artists, and at times the fidelity is only passable, it ranks as a truly remarkable etching. Here the genius of Paderewski, Pach- mann and Lhevine are preserved for music lovers to appreciate and marvel at. The technical faults are completely overlooked in this memorable LP. ! t ; 1 34 RECORDS is proud to congratulate LAWRENCE THE NATION S NUMBER T and THE NATION S NUMBER T ORCHESTRA (IP S) (from the CASH BOX Year-End Survey) Casli Box — December 30, 1961 35 BIOS OF 1961'S LEADING ARTISTS r-, Bill Anderson — Decca Born in Columbia, S.C. and bred In Decatur, Ga. Bill Anderson completed his B.A. in Journal- ism, from the School of Journalism of the Uni- versity of Georgia. His first success in the music business was early in his high school career, when, as leader of his own high school band, he won the Avondale High School Talent Show, the band of course playing a song that Bill had writ- ten. He has a considerable amount of radio credits, on such stations as WBGE in Atlanta, WEAS in Decatur, and WQXI television in Atlanta. He has played many one night stands and dances throughout the country, and has been met every- where with tremendous enthusiasm. He has, in addition, been a DJ on various southern stations, and worked os sports writer for the DeKalb New Era, in Decatur and the Atlanta Constitution. His success as a songwriter was cemented when four different recording artists all had notable success with a Bill Anderson original, "Xity Lights," and when, in 1958 the same song re- ceived the BMI award for the best song in the C&W field for 1958. As a recording artist, he has been enjoying hit after hit, starting with his first Decca release, "That' What It’s Like To Be Lonesome." Others include "Ninety Nine,** "Walk Out Backwards," and "Po’ Folks." His hobbies include song-writing, baseball, foot- ball and collecting records. Paul Anka — ABC-Paramount In 1960, when Paul Anka turned 18 and was of legal age to appear in nightclubs, an exciting and most important new phase of his young but sensational career was launched. Debuting his act at Las Vegas' Sahara to tumultuous acclaim, he moved on to New York’s Copa and came away with a record-breaking engagement. Dates In a Miami Beach hotel and other famed niteries are now permanent stops in his constant travels. Born on July 30, 1941 in Ottawa, Paul's big break came when he approached Don Costa, then A&R head for ABC-Paramount Records, with four songs he had written. Among them was "Diana," which Costa and other AmPar execs felt Anka should record for them himself. It became a mil- lion-seller and launched the career of the young- ster. He has composed almost all of his hit sin- gles, is o solid LP seller and has an international acceptance with his recordings second to none. Ernest Ashworth — Decca Ernest Ashworth, made his first personal pro- fessional appearance in 1948 on Radio Station WLAC in Nashville, and has been going strong ever since. Born in Huntsville, Alabama, Ernest is one of five children. He decided on a musical career early in life, and taught himself to play the guitar at fifteen. He has appeared on practically all the major radio and TV stations in the South, and has made many appearances on the "Grand Ole Opry" and Ernest Tubb’s "Midnight Jamboree." Besides sing- ing, Ernest is a prolific song writter, and his songs have been recorded by such top country artists os Carl Smith, Jimmy Dickens and Wilma Lee Cooper. The artist lives happily with his wife Elizabeth and three children in Huntsville, where he also works for Redstone Arsenal, in missile develop- ment work. He hopes someday to devote all his time to music and to become a regular member of the "Opry.** In his spare time he enjoys hunting and fishing especially, and is constantly writing new songs. His Decca chart credits include "You Can’t Pick A Rose In December," "Forever Gone" and "Be Mine Again.** Hank Ballard & Midnighters — King The Midnighters, featuring Hank Ballard in the lead slot, rank as one of the most consistent, long- running hit-makers on the wax scene today. The fellas, who began as favorites in the rhythm & blues dept., have become equally as important in the pop category. Their fantastic string of King dual-mart chart winners includes "Work With Me Annie,** "Finger Poppin* Time," "Sexy Ways," "Annie Hod A Baby," "Let’s Go Again," "Let’s Go, Let’s Go, Let’s Co," "Hoochie Coochle Coo," "Teardrops On Your Letter" and the coupler which was the very first version of today's dance sensation, "The Twist." In addition, the fellas have turned out a host of money-making LP’s. Ballard, who makes Detroit his home town, is a baseball enthusiast and is quite prolific as a songwriter and arranger. Personal manager for the group is Ben Bart while the booking office is Universal Attractions. Harry Belafonte — RCA Victor Horry Belofonte has become one of the world’s best known artists as well as one of the world’s most dynomic and magnetic entertainers. He has that something extra that makes him a favorite of the masses. Born in N.Y.C., Harry moved to Jamaica, B.W.I., while a young boy. Then he returned to N.Y. to attend George Washington High School. After his discharge from the Navy he became a member of the American Negro The- atre Workshop and later joined the Dramatic Workshop where he developed his acting talents. Monte Kay heard Belafonte sing at a Workshop meeting and asked him if he would do the same “just for laughs" at the Royal Roost, a club which Kay owned. Belafonte did and Kay signed him to a contract which ran 20 weeks. From this engagement, Harry went on to become a fairly successful pop singer. But not satisfied with crooning he quit the field and opened a restau- rant in N.Y.’s Greenwich Village. During informal songfests at his eatery, Harry discovered a love for folk songs, sought out his friend Millard Thomas (now his accompanist) and together they built a repertoire of folk songs and ballads. He signed a Victor contract and has since had one success after another. In films he starred in "Bright Road," "Carmen Jones" and "Island In The Sun." In 1955 he took Broadway by storm with "Three For Tonight." His albums are con- tinually programmed by jockeys around the world. He has set attendance records everywhere and his TV appearances attract the highest ratings. There are few recording artists who rank with Bela- fonte. Brook Benton — Mercury To songster Brook Benton belongs the invalu- able asset of versatility. He can express himself with equal authority on material ranging from rhythmic teen-market numbers to ligit ballads, and, recently proven, to folk-like items (e.g. "Boll Weevil"). Benton’s career, two years as o hitmaker began in Camden, South Carolina, in a church choir di- rected by his father, and today he declares: ". . . of all the songs I’ve written and recorded, I’ve derived the most satisfaction from my album of spirituals, ‘If You Believe’.’’ At 17, he came to New York to seek his fortune as a songwriter, not a singer. Though success wasn’t sudden in story-book fashion, he eventually clicked through his association with publisher- writer Dave Dreyer, now Benton’s manager. To- gether, they wrote "Looking Back,"
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https://gameofthepeople.com/floodlit-dreams-1000-best-football-teams-ever/
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1001 Floodlit Dreams
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A Aberdeen 1983-84:  Jim Leighton, Stewart McKimmie, Alex McLeish, Willie Miller, Doug Rougvie, Neil Simpson, Gordon Strachan, Doug Bell, Neale Cooper, Ian Angus, Peter Weir, Billy Stark, Mark McGhee, John Hewitt, Eric Black. Achievements: Scottish League Champions 1979-80, 1983-84 and 1984-95; Scottish Cup Winners 1982, 1983, 1984 and 1986. European Cup-Winners Cup Winners 1982-83; Scottish…
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GAME OF THE PEOPLE
https://gameofthepeople.com/floodlit-dreams-1000-best-football-teams-ever/
A Aberdeen 1983-84: Jim Leighton, Stewart McKimmie, Alex McLeish, Willie Miller, Doug Rougvie, Neil Simpson, Gordon Strachan, Doug Bell, Neale Cooper, Ian Angus, Peter Weir, Billy Stark, Mark McGhee, John Hewitt, Eric Black. Achievements: Scottish League Champions 1979-80, 1983-84 and 1984-95; Scottish Cup Winners 1982, 1983, 1984 and 1986. European Cup-Winners Cup Winners 1982-83; Scottish League Cup Winners 1986. Five year league record: 2, 3, 1, 1, 4 Manager: Alex Ferguson Key men: Alex McLeish, dependable central defender. Willie Miller, described as the “best penalty box defender in the world”, by Ferguson. Gordon Strachan, perceptive midfielder once tipped to be Britain’s first £2m player. Perception: Exciting “new firm” outfit that broke the mould in Scotland and helped end the Glasgow duopoly. Alex Ferguson’s prototype for Manchester United. Académica de Coimbra 1966-67: João Maló, Rui Rodrigues, Vieira Nunes, Celestino Bárbara, António Mareues, Vitor Campos, Toni, Artur Jorge, Augusto Rocha, Serafim Peréira, Ernesto Sousa. Manager/coach: Mario Wilson Achievement: Primeira Liga runners-up 1966-67, Taca de Portugal runners-up 1966-67. Key men: Augusto Rocha, Macau-born forward who won seven caps for Portugal. Artur Jorge, robust striker who went on to play for Benfica. Toni, played for Académica between 1965 and 1968 before joining Benfica where he played over 300 games and was capped 32 times by Portugal. Portuguese footballer of the year in 1972. Perception: Very close to major success, deprived by Benfica and Setúbal. Accra Hearts of Oak 1999-2000: Sammy Adjei, Dan Quaye, Jacob Nettey, Edward Agyeman-Duah, Stephen Tetteh, Joe Ansah, Charles Allotey, Emmaneel Adjogu, Adjah tetteh, Edmond Copson, Ishmael Addo, Emmanuel Osei Kuffour, Charles Taylor, Osmanu Amadu, Yaw Amankwah Mireku. Manager: Cecil Jones Attuquayefio Achievement: 1997-98 – Ghanaian League champions; 1999 – Ghanaian League champions and FA Cup winners; 2000 – CAF Champions League winners, Ghanaian League champions and FA Cup winners; 2001 – Ghanaian League champions; 2002 – Ghanaian League champions. Key men: Daniel Quaye, a tough defender, capped by Ghana. Sammy Adjei, durable goalkeeper who won 37 caps and had three spells with Hearts of Oak. Ishmael Addo, prolific scorer nicknamed the “baby-faced assassin”. Perception: Considered to be the finest batch of players to come out of Ghanaian football. Well-drilled and focused. AC Milan 1906-1907: Attilio Trere, Herbert Kilpin, Andrea Meschia, Alfred Bosshard, Oscar Giger, Hans Heuberger, Guido Pedroni, Giuseppe Rizzi, Guerriero Colombo, Ernst Widmer, Sandro Trere, Guido Moda, Guido Piazza, Hans Walter Imhoff, Johann Mädler Manager: Herbert Kilpin/ Daniele Angeloni Achievement: Serie A champions 1906, 1907 Key men: Herbert Kilpin, exiled Englishman and versatile player. Founded AC Milan. Giuseppe Rizzi, midfielder capped by Italy. Perception: Early champions of Italian football, driven by an Englishman. AC Milan 1950 to 1955: Lorenzo Buffon, Arturo Silvestri, Andrea Bonomi, Carlo Annovazzi, Omero Tognon, Renzo Burini, Gunnar Gren, Gunnar Nordahl, Nils Liedholm, Mario Renosto, Francesco Zagatti, Eduardo Ricagni, Amleto Frignani, Albano Vicaritto. Coaches: Lajos Czeizler, Mario Sperone, Hector Puricelli, Bela Guttmann, Arrigo Morselli. Achievements: Serie A winners 1950-51, 1954-55; Latin Cup winners 1951 Key men: Lorenzo Buffon – Considered to be one of the great goalkeepers of his generation. An acrobatic, athletic and reliable keeper who won 15 caps for Italy. Later played for Inter, Genoa and Fiorentina. Omero Tognon – Central midfielder who was renowned for his physical power as well as his sportsmanship. Capped 14 times by Italy. Gunnar Nordahl – Swedish forward signed from Norrkoping in 1948. A prolific goalscorer, he netted 221 goals in 268 for Milan and 43 goals in 33 appearances for Sweden. Powerful and physically strong, he was nicknamed Il Bisonte (the Bison). Nils Liedholm – Signed from Norrkoping in 1949, this Swedish midfielder was an intelligent and elegant playmaker who specialised in accurate crosses. Played 394 games for Milan, finishing with the club in 1961. Gunnar Gren – Another Swede, signed from IFK Goteborg in 1949, who spent four seasons with Milan. Capable of playing in midfield or as a striker. A skilful player who was known for his tactical savvy. Perception: An attack-minded team built around the trio of Swedes, known as Gre-No-Li (Gren, Nordahl, Liedholm). AC Milan 1961-1963: Giorgio Ghezzi, Mario David, Mario Trebbi, Victor Benitez, Sandro Salvadore, Giovanni Trapattoni, Cesare Maldini, Luigi Radice, Dino Sani, Jose Altafini, Gianni Rivera, Bruno Mora, Paulo Barison, Gino Pivatelli Manager: Nereo Rocco Achievement: Serie A champions 1961-62, European Cup winners 1962-63 Key men: Jose Altafini – Brazil-born striker who scored prolifically in Italy – quick, skilful and powerful; Gianni Rivera, graceful midfielder and “golden boy” of Italian football; Cesare Maldini, elegant long-serving defender. Perception: Arch exponents of catenaccio, but capable of stunning, fast, counter-attacking football. AC Milan 1967-69: Fabio Cudicini, Angelo Anquilletti, Karl-Heinz Schnellinger, Roberto Rosato, Nevio Scala, Saul Malatrasi, Giovanni Trapattoni, Giovanni Lodetti, Kurt Hamrin, Angelo Sormani, Gianni Rivera, Pierino Prati. Manager: Nereo Rocco Achievement: Serie A champions 1967-68; European Cup-Winners’ Cup winners 1967-68; European Cup winners 1968-69 Key men: Gianni Rivera, graceful midfielder and “golden boy” of Italian football; Pierino Prati, sharp shooting forward, good in the air. Hat-trick in European Cup final 1969; Karl-Heinz Schnellinger, German full-back known as the Volkswagen for his relentless energy. Perception: Continued the Milan expertise in Catenaccio, but with a little more attacking flair. AC Milan 1987 to 1990: Giovanni Galli, Mauro Tassotti, Paolo Maldini, Angelo Colombo, Alessandro Costacurta, France Baresi, Roberto Donadoni, Frank Rijkaard, Marco van Basten, Ruud Gullit, Carlo Ancelotti, Alberico Evani, Antonio Virdis. Coach: Arrigo Saachi Achievements: Serie A winners 1987-88; European Cup winners 1988-89, 1989-90. Five year league record in Serie A (1986-87 to 1990-91) 5 – 1 – 3 – 2 – 2 Key men: Paolo Maldini – One of the greatest defenders in the Euroopean game, Maldini could play left back or centre half. A versatile player who was also tough and a difficult opponent for any forward. Won 126 caps for Italy and played over 900 games for Milan. Franco Baresi – Played 700 times for Milan and won 81 caps for Italy. An accomplished and formidable defender who perfected the art of the sweeper. Captain of the team, he was an inspirational leader. Frank Rijkaard – Quick and strong, Rijkaard was able to play in central midfield or at the heart of the defence. He won 73 caps for the Netherlands and was in the Dutch side that won the European Championship in 1988. Marco van Basten – Although injury plagued in his career, Van Basten won three Ballon d’Or awards (1988, 1989 and 1992) and was rated as the most complete striker of his generation. He won 58 caps for the Netherlands and scored 283 goals in 379 games in his career. Ruud Gullit– With his dreadlocked hair, Gullit was an instantly-recognised figure when he burst on the scene, winning the Ballon d’Or in 1987 after joining Milan from PSV Eindhoven. A strong midfielder whose passing was matched by his ball-winning capabilities. First coined the phrase “sexy football” in the mid-1990s when he joined Chelsea. Perception: Arguably the best team in Europe in the early-to-mid 1990s. Full of talent and flowing football. AC Milan 1993-94: Sebastiano Rossi, Mauro Tassotti, Christian Panucci, Paolo Maldini, Franco Baresi, Marcel Desailly, Demetrio Albertini, Filippo Galli, Zvonimir Boban, Roberto Donadoni, Dejan Savićević, Alessandro Costacurta, Daniele Massaro, Marco Simone, Jean-Pierre Papin, Stefano Eranio. Coach: Fabio Capello Achievements: Serie A winners 1991-92, 1992-93, 1993-94, 1995-96 Champions League winners 1993-94 runners-up 1992-93, 1994-95 Five year league record (1991-92 to 1995-96): 1 -1 -1 -4 -1 Key men: Marcel Desailly – Versatile, Ghana-born player signed from Marseille midway through the season. A powerful central defender or midfielder who was known as “the rock” due to his strength and powerful tackling. Won the World Cup with France in 1998 and was capped 116 times. Dejan Savićević – One of the key men in Red Star Belgrade’s 1991 European Cup triumph. Born in Montenegro, he won 56 caps for Yugoslavia and featured in the 1990 World Cup. A classic playmaker, he was skilful and very technical but was sometimes accused of lacking effort. His performance in the 1994 Champions League final was outstanding.Daniele Massaro – Although 33 years old in 1993-94, Massaro was top scorer for Milan in a memorable year and scored twice in the Champions League final. He was signed from Fiorentina in 1986 and went on to win 15 caps for Italy. Demetrio Albertini – Played 79 times for Italy and was rated one of the best midfielders of his generation. A tireless player who had good technique and strength, he made over 400 appearances for Milan in 14 seasons. Perception: An excellent team with strength in depth. Tore a very good Barcelona side apart in the Champions League final. Ajax Amsterdam 1970-73: Heinz Stuy; Wim Suurbier, Barry Hulshoff, Horst Blankenburg, Ruud Krol; Johan Neeskens, Arie Haan, Gerrie Muhren, Sjaak Swart; Johan Cruyff, Piet Keizer; Johnny Rep, Dick van Dijk Achievements: 1970-71 European Cup winners, KNVB Cup winners; 1971-72 Eredivisie champions, KNVB Cup winners, European Cup winners; 1972-73 Eredivisie champions, European Cup winners. Five year league record (1968-69 to 1972-73): 2 – 1 – 2 – 1 – 1 Manager: Rinus Michels/ Stefan Kovacs Key men: Johan Cruyff, arguably the number one player in the world in the early 1970s. Played for Ajax between 1964 and 1973, before moving to Barcelona in 1973. His domination of European football enabled him to win three Ballon d’Or titles in 1971, 1973 and 1974. He was capped 48 times by the Netherlands, scoring 33 goals. As a coach, Cruyff was very successful, winning five league titles and the 1992 European Cup with Barcelona. Ruud Krol, an Ajax youth product, Krol played in all 14 of the Netherlands’ World Cup games across the 1974 and 1978 competitions and was captain in 1978. He won 83 caps for the Netherlands, starting in November 1969 against England. Johan Neeskens, the perfect foil for Cruyff. A tough player who was energetic and very technical, becoming one of the first box-to-box midfielders in the modern game. After Ajax, he moved to Barcelona to link-up again with Rinus Michels and Cruyff. He won 49 caps for the Netherlands between 1970 and 1981, scoring 17 goals. Perception: The arch exponents of “total football”. Arguably the greatest European team after Real Madrid of the 1950s. A team of their time, the epitome of “cool”. Ajax Amsterdam 1994-95: Edwin van der Sar, Michael Reiziger, Danny Blind, Frank de Boer, Frank Rijkaard, Clarence Seedorf, Edgar Davids, Jari Lirmanen, Finidi George, Ronald de Boer, Marc Overmars, Winston Bogarde, Nwankwo Kanu, Patrick Kluivert. Achievement: 1994-95 – Eredivisie champions, UEFA Champions League winners. 1995-96 Intercontinental Cup winners, Eredivisie champions, UEFA Champions League runners-up. Five year league record: 1, 1, 1, 4 , 1 Key men: Edgar Davids, a fiercely competitive midfielder. Patrick Kluivert, prodigious forward who netted 21 goals in 37 games in 1994-95. Frank de Boer, central defender/sweeper who was capped more than 100 times for Holland. Manager: Louis van Gaal Perception: Unbeaten in the league in 1994-95 and victorious against a strong Milan in the UCL final, Ajax revived memories of their glorious 1970s period with a young and vibrant team. Al-Ahly SC 2004-2009: Essam El Hadary, Amir Abdul Hamid, Islam El Shater, Tarek Said, Emad El-Nahhas, Wael Gomaa, Shady Mohamed, Emad Moteab, Hossam Ashour, Mohamed SHawky, Mohamed Aboutrika, Flavio da Silva Amado, Hassan Mostafa, Ahmad Sedik. Manager: Manuel Jose Achievement: 2005: CAF Champions League winners, Egypt Premier League winners. 2006: CAF Champions League winners, Egypt Premier League winners, Egypt Cup winners. 2007: Egypt Premier League winners, Egypt Cup winners. 2008: CAF Champions League winners, Egypt Premier League winners. 2009: Egypt Premier League winners. Key men: Essam El Hadary, one of the best goalkeepers in African football history. Emad Moteab, a prolific striker. Mohamed Aboutrika, rated one of Egypt’s best ever forwards. Perception: One of the best teams to come out of African continent. Reliant on fast-moving front men. Anderlecht 1975-78: Jan Ruiter, Michel Lomme, Hugo Broos, Gilbert Van Binst, Jean Thissen, Jean Dockx, Johnny Dusbaba, Ludo Coeck, Francois Van der Elst, Peter Ressel, Arie Haan, Robbie Rensenbrink, Franky Vercauteren, Benny Nielsen Key men: Francois Van der Elst, right winger who played 44 times for Belgium. Rob Rensenbrink, an introverted member of the famous Dutch national team of 1974. Achievements: 1976 European Cup-Winners Cup winners; 1977 ECWC runners-up; 1978 ECWC winners. Belgian Cup winners 1975, 1976. Manager: Hans Croon/ Raymond Goethels Perception: Total football’s Belgian cousin – a team based on fast attacking play. Arbroath 1885: Jim Milne Sr, Bill Collie, Tom Salmond, Hen Rennie, Jim Milne Jr, Dyken Bruce, John Petrie, Johnny Tackett, Jim Marshall, David Crawford, Daniel Neil. Achievements: 36-0 victory in the Scottish Cup on September 12 1885 – a world record. Key men: John “Jocky” Petrie, an 18 year-old right winger who scored 13 times in the game and tormented the Bon Accord defence. Jim Milne Junior, a powerful header of the ball. Perception: Record-breaking team that will forever be listed in the history books. Argentinos Juniors 1984-85: Enrique Vidalle, Carmelo Villalba, Jose Luis Pavoni, Jorge Pellegrini, Adrian Domenech, Miguel Lemme, Caros Mayor, Emilio Commisso, Jorge Olguin, Sergio Batista, Renato Corsi, Mario Videla, Juan Jose Lopez, Claudio Borghi, Armando Dely Valdes, Carlos Ereros. Key men: Claudio Borghi, attacking midfielder once considered to be the next big thing; Sergio Batista, midfielder who played in the 1986 World Cup final for Argentina; Adrian Domenech, defender who had a long career with the club. Achievements: 1984 Primera (Metropolitano) winners; 1985 Copa Libertadores winners; 1985 Primera (Nacional) winners; 1985 Copa Interamericana winners. Manager: Jose Yudica Perception: Young, attacking team from Buenos Aires whose stay at the top was relatively short-lived. Arsenal 1929-1931: Dan Lewis, Charlie Preddy, Tom Parker, Alf Baker, Eddie Hapgood, Bob John, Bill Seddon, Herbie Roberts, Joe Hulme, Alex James, Jack Lambert, David Jack, Cliff Bastin, Charlie Jones, David Halliday Manager: Herbert Chapman Achievements: 1929-30 FA Cup winners; 1930-31 Football League champions. 1931-32: Football League runners-up, FA Cup runners-up. Five year league record: 9, 14, 1, 2, 1 Key men: Herbie Roberts, the first “stopper” centre half; Alex James, gifted inside forward; David Jack, £11,500 inside forward, one of the stars of the era. Perception: The first London team to win the league, this was Herbert Chapman’s first great Arsenal line-up. Set a record for points won in 1930-31 and scored 127 goals in 42 games. With big sums paid to secure big names, this was also very much a title that was “bought”. Arsenal 1932-1935: Frank Moss, George Male, Eddie Hapgood, Bob John, Jack Crayston, Frank Hill, Wilf Copping, Herbie Roberts, Joe Hulme, Jack Lambert, Ted Drake, Tim Coleman, David Jack, Alex James, Ray Bowden, Jimmy Dunne, Ralph Birkett, Charlie Jones, Cliff Bastin, Pat Beasley. Manager: Herbert Chapman, Joe Shaw (caretaker), George Allison. Achievement: Football League champions 1932-33, 1933-34, 1934-35. Five-year league record: 1- 2 – 1 -1 – 1 Key men: Eddie Hapgood, an elegant and cool defender, signed from Kettering in 1927, spending 17 years with Arsenal. Won 30 England caps; Ted Drake, powerful and brave centre forward signed from Southampton. Good in the air and possessing a powerful shot, he won five caps for England; Cliff Bastin, goalscoring winger who joined from Exeter in 1929. Known as “boy Bastin” due to his youthful appearance. 21 England caps. Perception: A well-drilled, functional set of players schooled in the ways of legendary manager Herbert Chapman. Sometimes accused of over-caution, but their quality was never in doubt. Arsenal 1950-1953: George Swindin, Jack Kelsey, Laurie Scott, Walley Barnes, Alex Forbes, Leslie Compton, Joe Mercer, Freddie Cox, Jimmy Logie, Peter Goring, Reg Lewis, Dennis Compton, Lionel Smith, Ray Daniel, Cliff Holton, Doug Lishman, Don Roper, Joe Wade, Arthur Milton, Arthur Shaw. Manager: Tom Whittaker Achievement: Football League champions 1952-53, runners-up 1951-52; FA Cup runners-up 1951-52. Five year league record: 5 – 2- 1 – 12 – 9 Key men: Joe Mercer, wing half who was a popular figure in the game, joined from Everton after the second world war at the veteran stage of his career; England international, five caps; Walley Barnes, Welsh full back (22 caps), joined from Southampton in 1943. A versatile player; Alex Forbes, Scottish international wing half who won 14 caps for his country. Went on to become a successful coach. Perception: An ageing team possessing a strong defence. Frequently called “lucky Arsenal” by the media. Arsenal 1997-98: David Seaman, Lee Dixon, Nigel Winterburn, Patrick Vieira, Steve Bould, Tony Adams, Ian Wright, Nicolas Anelka, Dennis Bergkamp, Marc Overmar, Ray Parlou, Emmanuel Petit, Giles Grimandi, David Platt. Manager: Arsène Wenger. Achievement: Premier League champions 1997-98; FA Cup winners 1997-98. Five-year league record: 5 – 3 – 1 – 2 – 2 Key men: Marc Overmars, two-footed winer with pace and tremendous acceleration. Dutch international signed from Ajax, he spent three years with the club before joining Barcelona; Patrick Vieira, Senegalese born midfielder full of power and aggression, joined from AC Milan. 107 caps for France; Dennis Bergkamp, highly-skilled Dutch legend who joined Arsenal from Inter Milan in 1995. Top scorer in the double-winning season of 1998. 79 caps for the Netherlands. Perception: Emerging power built on Wenger’s innovative methods, some of which changed English football for ever. Wonderful to watch. Arsenal 2001-2005: Jens Lehmann, David Seaman, Ashley Cole, Lauren, Sol Campbell, Martin Keown, Kolo Toure, Oleg Luzhny, Patrick Vieria, Robert Pires, Fredrik Ljungberg, Ray Parlour, Edu, Gilberto Silva, Dennis Bergkamp, Thierry Henry, Sylvain Wiltord, Nwankwo Kanu Manager: Arsene Wenger Achievements: 2001-02 Premier League winners, FA Cup winners; 2002-03 FA Cup winners; 2003-04 Premier League champions; 2004-05 FA Cup winners. Five year league record: 1,2, 1, 2, 4 Key men: Patrick Vieria, Senegalese-born midfielder, power and precision. Dennis Bergkamp, sublime skills and spectacular goals. Thierry Henry, pace and intricate skill in abundance. Perception: Unbeaten in the Premier League 2003-04, the last great side produced by Arsenal and Wenger. Excellent footballing team. Arsenal 1970-71: Bob Wilson, Pat Rice, Bob McNab, Peter Storey, Frank McClintock, Peter Simpson, George Armstrong, George Graham, John Radford, Ray Kennedy, Charlie George, Eddie Kelly. Achievements: Football League Champions, FA Cup winners. Pre: FL Cup runners-up 1968 and 1969, Inter Cities Fairs Cup winners 1970. Post: FA Cup finalists 1972. Five-year league record: 4, 12, 1, 5, 2 Key men: Frank McClintock, veteran skipper; George Graham, strolling midfielder; Ray Kennedy, powerful striker; and Charlie George, precocious local lad. Manager: Bertie Mee Perception: Dull, consistent and workmanlike. Effective. Argentina 1928-30: Juan Botasso, Angel Bossio, Francisco Varallo, Jose Della Torre, Juan Evaristo, Ludovico Bidoglio, Fernando Paternoster, Segundo Medici, Adolfo Zumelzu, Luis Monti, Juan Evaristo, Mario Evaristo, Alfredo Carricaberry, Domingo Tarasconi, Pedro Suarez, Manuel Ferreira, Feliciano Perducca, Raimundo Orsi, Guillerme Stabile, Carlos Peucelle. Manager: Francisco Olazar Achievement: Olympic Games silver medalists 1928, World Cup runners-up 1930, Copa America winners 1927, 1929 Key men: Raimundo Orsi – Quick-footed left winger, one of the greatest of his time. Adolfo Zumelzu, half back who knew how to score goals. Guillerme Stabile, free-scoring centre forward. Luis Monti, midfield player who was rugged and ruthless. Perception: Only Uruguay could claim to be the best on the planet at the time. Skilful, full of flair, perhaps lacking method and discipline. Argentina 1978: Ubaldo Filol; Jorge Olguin, Luis Galvan, Daniel Passarella, Alberto Tarantini; Americo Gallego, Osvaldo Ardiles, Daniel Bertoni, Oscar Alberto Ortiz; Leopoldo Luque, Mario Kempes. Rene Houseman, Norberto Alonso, Omar Larrosa. Achievement: World Cup 1974: Last eight; Copa America 1975: Round One; World Cup 1978: Winners – 3-1 v Holland; Copa America 1979: Round One Key men: Daniel Passarella, tough skipper; Osvaldo Ardiles, tricky and nimble in midfield; Mario Kempes, top scorer in World Cup 1978. Manager: Cesar Luis Menotti Perception: Assisted by home advantage in 1978. Exciting going forward. Argentina 1986: Neri Pumpido, Jose Luis Brown, Jose Cuciuffo, Oscar Ruggeri,Ricardo Giusti, Julio Olarticoechea, Sergio Batista, Hector Enrique, Diego Maradona, Jorge Burruchaga, Jorge Valdano, Marcelo Trobbiani, Ricardo Bochin, Carlos Daniel Tapia, Pedro Pasculli. Achievement: World Cup winners 1986. Key men: Diego Maradona, who recovered from a disappointing 1982 competition to lead his country to victory. Jorge Valdano, fast-moving forward who became an accomplished football administrator. Manager: Carlos Bilardo Perception: Heavily reliant on Maradona, then the best player in the world – he drove them through the 1986 World Cup with a series of virtuoso – and often controversial – performances. Aston Villa 1896-97: Jimmy Whitehouse; Howard Spencer, Jack Reynolds; Albert Evans, James Cowan, Jimmy Crabtree; Charlie Athersmith, Jack Devey, John Campbell, Fred Wheldon, John Cowan. Achievements: 1893-94 FL Champions; 1894-95 FA Cup Winners; 1895-96 FL Champions; 1896-97 FA Cup Winners and FL Champions. Five year league record: 3, 1, 1, 6, 1 Key men: Charlie Athersmith, England winger; Jimmy Cowan, Scottish half-back, renowned for his speed; Fred Wheldon, England inside left who joined the club in 1896 and topped scoring list with 21 goals. Manager: George Ramsay Perception: Victorian England’s most successful club. Influential, consistent and packed with impressive players. Aston Villa 1912-13: Sam Hardy, Tom Lyons, Tommy Weston, Tommy Barber, Jimmy Harrop, Jimmy Leach, Charlie Wallace, Clem Stephenson, Harry Hampton, Harold Halse, Joseph Bache, Albert Hall, William Morris, Sam Whittaker. Manager: George Ramsay Achievement: 1912-13 FA Cup winners, runners-up Football League. Five year league record: 2, 6, 2, 2, 14 Key men: Sam Hardy, England goalkeeper who was one of the best of his generation – known as “safe and stead Sam”. Clem Stephenson, cultured inside forward who later played for Herbert Chapman’s Huddersfield. Harry Hampton – England international forward who scored 30 goals in 1912-13. Perception: Went neck-and-neck with Sunderland for both major honours, Villa winning the FA Cup and Sunderland edging them out in the league title race. Aston Villa 1980-1982: Jimmy Rimmer, Kenny Swain, Gary Williams, Colin Gibson, Dennis Mortimer, Ken McNaught, Allan Evans, Gordon Cowans, Des Bremner, Tony Morley, Gary Shaw, Peter Withe. David Geddis, Brendan Ormsby, Nigel Spink, Andy Blair. Manager: Ron Saunders/Tony Barton Achievement: 1980-81 – Football League Champions; 1981-82 – European Cup winners. Five year league record: 8, 7, 1, 11, 6 Key men: Dennis Mortimer, swashbuckling midfielder. Gordon Cowans, talented youngster capped 10 times by England. Peter Withe, under-rated centre forward. Perception: Often overlooked, Villa not only overcome the more popular Ipswich but also surprised Europe by beating Bayern Munich a year later in the European Cup final. Athletic Bilbao 1933-36: Gregorio Blasco, Jose Ispizua, Luis Uribe, Issac Oceja, Luis Zabala, Martin Calvo, Angel Zubieta, Roberto, Jose Muguerza, Manuel Yurrebasco, Guillermo Gorostiza, Jose Iraragorri, Bata, Elices, Jose Careaga, Javier Moronati, Leonardo Cilaurren, Jose Castellanos, Juan Jose Urquizio Manager: Fred Pentland/ Patricio Caicedo Achievement: 1931-32: Copa del Rey winners; 1932-33: Copa del Rey winners; 1933-34: La Liga champions; 1935-36: La Liga champions. Five year league record: 2, 2, 1, 4, 1 Key men: Guillermo Gorostiza, prolific goalscorer who netted 106 goals in 146 games for Bilbao. Bata (Agustín Sauto Arana) a menacing striker who was known as El terror de San Mames. Gregorio Blasco, goalkeeper who won the prestigious Ricardo Zamora award three times. Perception: Exciting, fast-moving team full of talented forwards that dominated Spanish football for a few years. Atletico Madrid 2011-14: Thibaut Courtois, Juanfran, Filipe Luis, Diego Godin, Miranda, Arda Turan, Tiago, Koke, Gabi, Diego Costa, David Villa, Adrian, Raul Garcia, Toby Alderweireld, Sosa, Radamel Falcao Manager: Diego Simeone Achievements: 2011-12 Europa League winners, 2012-13 Copa del Rey winners, 2013-14 La Liga winners, UEFA Champions League runners-up. Five year league record: 5, 3, 1, 3, 3 Key men: Thibaut Courtois, young Belgian goalkeeper on loan from Chelsea; Raul Garcia, central midfielder with an eye for goal; Diego Costa, Brazilian-born forward who stepped into the role vacated by Falcao. Perception: Broke the Real-Barca duopoly with their high-octane style. Went so close to winning the Champions League against arch-rivals Real Madrid. Atletico Nacional 1989-1991: Rene Higuita, Hugo Almeida, Gillardo Gomez, Pablo Escobar, Geovanis Cassiani, Leonal Alvarez, Luis Herrera, Luis Carlos Perea, Jaime Arango, Alexis Garcia, Gustavo Restrepo, Niver Arboledo, John Trellez, Albeiro Usuriaga. Manager: Pacho Maturano Achievement: Copa Libertadores winners 1989; Colombian Primera A winners 1991 – runners-up 1988, 1990. Key men: Rene Higuita, flamboyant goalkeeper famed for his scorpion kick. Perception: Rated one of South America’s top 20 clubs, arguably Colombia’s finest. Australia 2015: Matt Ryan, Ivan Franjic; Trevor Sainsbury, Matthew Spiranovic, Jason Davidson, Mark Milligan, Mile Jedinak, Massimo Luongo, Robbie Krusa, Matthew Leckie, Tim Cahill, James Troisi, Matt McKay, Tomi Juric. Achievement: AFC Asian Cup winners 2015; World Cup finals qualification 2014 and 2018 Manager: Ange Postecoglou Key men: Massimo Luongo, named player of the 2015 Asian Cup with the most assists. Played for QPR. Italian descent; Tim Cahill, attacking midfielder who played for Millwall and Everton, among others. Perception: Much travelled band of players that benefitted from their experiences to become Asian champions. Austria 1932-34: Peter Platzer, Franz Cisar, Karl Sesta, Walter Nausch, Franz Wagner, Josef Smistik, Johann Urbanek, Anton Schall, Rudolf Viertl, Josef Bican, Matthias Sindelar, Matthias Kaburek, Franz Binder, Johann Horvath, Karl Zischek. Achievements: World Cup semi-finals 1934; Central European International Cup 1931-32. Manager: Hugo Meisl Key men: Matthias Sindelar – frail, skilful and influential forward. Johann Horvath, an extremely technical player and prolific scorer. Josef Bican, scorer of over 600 goals in his career. Walter Nausch, captain and versatile member of team. Perception: Das Wunderteam – the forefathers of “Total football” and arguably one of the best teams never to have won the World Cup. FK Austria Vienna 1933-1936: Johann Billich, Rudolf Zoehrer, Karl Andritz, Karl Sesta, Karl Graf, Walter Nausch, Karl Adamek, Matthias Najemnik, Johann Mock, Karl Gall, Josef Molzer, Franz Riegler, Josef Stroh, Matthias Sindelar, Camillo Jerusalem, Rudolf Viertl. Manager: Josef Blum, Robert Lang, Walter Nausch Achievement: Mitropa Cup winners 1933, 1936; Austrian Cup winners 1933, 1935, 1936 Key men: Matthias Sindelar, the legendary “man of paper”, skilful and influential forward. Full back Walter Nausch, captain of the “wunderteam” and supremely fit. Rudolf Viertl, winger who played for Austria in the 1934 World Cup. Perception: Aligned to the Austrian “wunderteam” and full of class. Better in cup competitions than in the league. B Barcelona 1958-1961: Antoni Ramallets, Foncho, Ramon Larraz, Celdrán, Carlos Medrano, Ferran Olivella, Jose Pinto, Rodri, Brugué, Gracia Rifé, Goicotea, Biosca, Sigfrid Gracia, Hermes González, Jesus Garay, Joan Segarra, Enric Gensana, Marti Vergés, Flotats, Ladislao Kubala, Evaristo, Eulogio Martínez, Luis Suárez, Zoltan Czibor, Sandor Kocsis, Luis Coll, Justo Tejada, Suco, Sampedro, Ramon Villaverde, Ribelles, Estremo Manager: Helenio Herrera / Enrique Orizaola Achievement: 1957-58 – Inter-Cities Fairs Cup winners; 1958-59 – Lia Liga champions, Copa del Rey winners; 1959-60 – La Liga champions, Inter-Cities Fairs Cup winners; 1960-61 – European Cup finalists. Key men: Luis Suarez, Spanish international striker who became world’s most expensive player in 1961. Ladislao Kubala, Hungarian-born forward who scored 131 goals in 186 games for Barca. Perception: Multi-national team fashioned by Herrera, reliant on the awesome striking power of Suarez and Kubala. Barcelona 1973-74: Salvador Sadurni, Jesus De La Cruz, Joaquim Rife, Antonio Torres, Juan Manuel Asensi, Juan Carlos, Marcial, Enrique Costas, Hugo Sotil, Carlos Rexach, Johan Cruyff, Gallego, Juanito, Manuel Tome Manager: Rinus Michels Achievements: 1973-74 La Liga champions. Five year league record: 3, 2, 1, 3, 2 Key men: Johan Cruyff, the legendary Dutch international, who drove Barca to their first title in 14 years; Carles Rexach, winger who formed a successful partnership with Cruyff; Juan Manuel Asensi, goalscoring midfielder. Perception: Inspired by Cruyff, then the best player in the world, Barca ended a long, lean spell to secure the title. Barcelona 2008-2011: Victor Valdes, Carles Puyol, Dani Alves, Yaya Toure, Javier Mascherano, Gerard Pique, Sylvinho, Sergio Busquets, Xavi, Andres Iniesta, Cesc Fabregas, Alexis Sanchez, Lionel Messi, David Villa, Thierry Henry, Samuel Eto’o, Pedro, Isaac Cuenca Manager: Pep Guardiola Achievement: La Liga champions 2008-09, 2009-10, 2010-11; Copa del Rey winners 2008-09; UEFA Champions League winners 2008-09, 2010-11; FIFA World Club Cup winners 2009, 2011. Key men: Lionel Messi, sublimely talented Argentinian international; Andreas Iniesta, often under-estimated midfielder; Xavi, precise and energetic midfielder. Perception: The epitome of tiki-take, total football and latin flair. One of the great teams of the modern era. Barnsley 1909-1912: Fred Mearns, Jack Cooper, Dickie Downs, Archie Taylor, Harry Ness, Bob Glendenning, Tommy Boyle, George Utley, Wilfred Bartrop, Philip Bratley, Harry Tufnell, George Lillycrop, Ernie Gadsby, George Travers, Tom Forman, Jimmy Moore. Manager: Arthur Fairclough Achievements: FA Cup winners 1911-12, runners-up 1909-10. Key men: Harry Tufnell, scored the winning goal in the 1912 FA Cup final. An inside foeward who was signed from Bury. Score 61 goals in 199 games for Barnsley. George Utley, a talented half back who won the Cup with Barnsley and Sheffield United (1915). Capped once by England in 1913. The only Barnsley player to play for England. Tommy Boyle, signed from local football, he was a hard-tackling half back who won a single cap for England. Later won the FA Cup and league with Burnley. Perception: Punched above their weight in the FA Cup, mid-table second division side in 1910, finishing sixth in 1912. Bayer Leverkusen 2001-02: Hans-Jörg Butt, Zoltán Sebescen, Boris Živković, Lúcio, Diege Placente, Carsten Ramelow, Bernd Schneider, Michael Ballack, Thomas Brdarić, Yidiray Bastürk, Oliver Neuville, Marko Babic, Ulf Kirsten, Dimitar Berbatov, Zé Roberto. Manager: Klaus Topmöller Achievement: 2001-02 – runners up in UEFA Champions League, DFB Pokal and Bundesliga. Key men: Ulf Kirsten, Stocky striker who played for East Germany and Germany. Scored 237 goals in 446 games for Leverkusen; Michael Ballack, outstanding and versatile midfielder, powerful and physically strong. East German born, his long career included spells with Bayern Munich and Chelsea; Carsten Ramelow, strong, tough tackling central defender. Could also play in midfield. Perception: A talented, strong team that bit off more than it could chew. Threw away a five-point advantage in the final weeks of the Bundesliga season. Losing all three major prizes gave birth to the jibes “treble horror” and “Neverkusen”. Bayer Leverkusen 2023-24: Lukas Hradecky, Piero Hincapíe, Jonathan Tah, Odilon Kossounou, Edmond Tapsoba, Jeremie Frimpong, Nathan Tella,Granit Xhaka, Jonas Hofmann, Robert Andrich, Exequiel Palacios, Florian Wirtz, Alejandro Grimaldo, Patrik Schick, Amine Adli, Adam Hložek, Victor Boniface. Manager: Xabi Alonso Achievements: Bundesliga champions 2023-24. DFB Pokal finalists 2023-24 (final to come), UEFA Europa League QF. Key men: Florian Wirtz, young midfielder who joined the club from Köln’s youth system and became a first team player in 2020. Capped 16 times by Germany, his goals from midfield and creativity were pivotal in Leverkusen’s first Bundesliga triumph. Granit Xhaka, experienced and tenacious midfielder signed from Arsenal for € 25 million. Swiss international, capped 126 times, he has also played for Basel and Borussia Mönchengladbach. Alejandro Grimaldo, Valencia-born defender who was signed on a free transfer from Benfica and proved to be one of the best signings of the season. Capped twice by Spain, he was most effective as a left-sided wing-back. Victor Boniface, robust centre forward who arrived from Union Saint-Gilloise in July 2023 for € 20 million. Commanding in the air, he also possessed excellent dribbling skills. Perception: Outstanding team spirit and determination. Swift counter-attacking side that ended Bayern Munich’s dominant run in German football. Bayern Munich 2000-01: Oliver Kahn, Thomas Linke, Willy Sagnol, Samuael Kuffour, Patrick Andersson, Bixente Lizarazu, Hassan Salihamidžić, Mehmet Scholl, Owen Hargreaves, Thorsten Fink, Michael Tarnet, Jens Jeremies, Stefen Effenberg, Ciriaco Sforze, Giovane Élber, Paulo Sergio, Carsetn Jancker, Alexander Zickler, Roque Santa Cruz Manager: Ottmar Hitzfeld Achievement: DFB Pokal winners 1999-00, Bundesliga champions 2000-01, UEFA Champions League winners 2000-01, Intercontinental Cup winners 20001. Five-year record: 1 – 1 – 1 – 3 – 1 Key men: Oliver Kahn, goalkeeper with excellent reflexes and agility, as well as a superb big game temperament; Steffen Effenberg, captain and central midfielder, named UEFA club player of the year in 2001; Giovane Élber, top scorer, Brazilian international prolific throughout career. Perception: Relatively uninspiring, multi-national Bayern were controversial league champions and ground out a Champions League win on penalties against Valencia. Bayern Munich 2012-13 Manuel Neuer, Dante, Jéròme Boateng, Philipp Lahm, David Alaba, Franck Ribèry, Javi Martinez, Arjen Robben, Xherdan Shaqiri, Thomas Müller, Luiz Gustavo, Bastian Schweinsteiger, Tony Kroos, Mario Mandžukić, Mario Gomez Manager:Juup Heynckes Achievement: DFB Pokal winners 2012-13, Bundesliga champions 2012-13, UEFA Champions League winners 2012-13. Five-year record: 3 – 2 – 1 – 1- 1 Key men: Manuel Neuer, one of the most successful sweeper-keepers with sharp reflexes and skilful footwork; Philipp Lahm, known as “magic dwarf” owing to his diminutive appearance. Defence or midfield, skipper of the team. 113 caps for Germany; Tony Kroos, the archetypal modern attacking midfielder. Superb passing ability and technique. Perception:Record-breaking team, (30 records broken in 2012-13), playing with pace, power and patience. Bayern Munich 1973-1976: Sepp Maier, Johnny Hansen, Bjorn Andersson, Paul Breitner, Udo Horsmann, Hans-Grog Schwarzenbeck, Franz Beckenbauer, Franz Roth, Conny Torstensson, Rainer Zobel, Gerd Mueller, Uli Hoeness, Jupp Kapellmann, Bernd Duernberger, Klaus Wuender, Sepp Weiss, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, Hugo Robl Manager: Udo Lattek/ Dettmar Cramer Achievement: 1971-72 – Bundesliga champions; 1972-73 – Bundesliga champions; 1973-74 – European Cup winners, Bundesliga champions; 1974-75 – European Cup winners; 1975-76 – European Cup winners. Key men: Sepp Maier, giant goalkeeper with huge hands. Franz Beckenbauer, Der Kaiser, the quintessential libero. Gerd Mueller, a goal machine for club and country. Perception: Machine-like at times, the epitome of German football in the 1970s. Manager: Austin Donnelly Achievements: Irish League champions 1926, 1927, 1928, 1929; Irish Cup winners 1926. Key men: Mickey Hammill, considered to be one of Ireland’s best from the 1920s. Won seven caps and played for Celtic, Manchester United and Manchester City. A skilful inside forward or half-back. Sammy Curran, known as “blind Sammy” because he only had eyes for goals. Scored 170 times for Belfast Celtic. Won four caps for Ireland. Billy Pollock, a solid defender who won a single cap for Ireland. Nicknamed “stonewall Billy” because of his formidable nature. Perception: Skilful team who presided over the mid-1920s in Ireland. Benfica 1960-1962: Alberto da Costa Pereria, Mario Joao, Germano de Figueiredo, Angelto Martins, Jose Neto, Fernando Cruz, Jose Augusto, Joaquim Santana, Jose Aguas, Mario Coluna, Domiciano Cavern, Eusebio, Antonio Simoes. Manager: Bela Guttmann Achievement: 1959-60 – Primeira Liga champions; 1960-61 – European Cup winners, Primeira Liga champions; 1961-62 – European Cup winners, Taca de Portugal winners; 1962-63 – Primeira Liga champions; 1963-64 – Primeira Liga champions, Taca de Portugal winners. Key men: Eusebio, Mozambique-born striker, one of the all-time greats. Mario Coluna, powerful midfielder. Jose Augusto, right winger. Perception: Fast and skilful side crafted by Guttmann. Broke the Real Madrid hegemony in 1961. Billericay Town 1979: Paul Norris, Paul Blackaller, Billy Bingham, Dave Groom, Steve Bone, John Pullin, Charlie Knott, Alan Russ, Mark Carrigan, Arthur Coughlan, Paul Scott, Phil Whettell, Terry Fearey, Doug Young, Jamie Reeves, Freddie Clayden Manager: John Newman/ Colin Searle Achievement: 1974-75 Essex Senior League champions; 1975-76 FA Vase winners, Essex Senior League champions; 1976-77 FA Vase winners; 1977-78 Athenian League champions; 1978-79 FA Vase winners, Athenian League champions. Key men: Freddie Clayden, prolific goalscorer who topped Billericay’s scoring list throughout the 1970s; Doug Young, in 1979, scored the first hat-trick at Wembley since Geoff Hurst’s 1966 treble; Arthur Coughlan, inspirational skipper. Perception: Non-league football’s success story of the mid-to-late 1970s, laying foundation of Billericay Town. Bishop Auckland 1954-1957: Harry Sharratt, David Marshall, Childs, Tommy Stewart, Bob Thursby, Bob Hardisty, Corbett Cresswell, Jimmy Nimmins, Jack Major, Warren Bradley, Derek Lewin, Ray Oliver, Seamus O’Connell, Benny Edwards, Billy Russell, Frank McKenna. Achievement: 1953-54 – FA Amateur Cup runners-up, Northern League champions; 1954-55 – FA Amateur Cup winners Northern League champions; 1955-56 – FA Amateur Cup winners, Northern League champions; 1956-57 – FA Amateur Cup winners. Key men: Bob Hardisty, England and Great Britain international and legendary half back figure in amateur football; Derek Lewin, forward capped by England and Great Britain. Went on to become a successful football administrator. Perception: The leading amateur club of their day, Bishop Auckland epitomised everything that was good about the game outside the Football League. A fine footballing side whose reputation extended beyond Britain. Blackburn Olympic 1883: Thomas Hacking, James Ward, Albert Warburton, Thomas Gibson, William Astley, Jack Hunter, Thomas Dewhurst, Arthur Matthews, George Wilson, Jimmy Costley, John Yates Coach: Jack Hunter Achievement: FA Cup winners 1882-83 Key men: John Yates, left winger who went on to play for England; Jack Hunter, half back capped by England, he coached the Olympic team. Perception: Backed by a local foundry owner, Sidney Yates, Olympic’s team of tradesmen and weavers broke the dominance of the “gentleman” teams of the south. Blackburn Rovers 1994-95: Tim Flowers, Henning Berg, Graeme Le Saux, Colin Hendry, Ian Pearce, Tony Gale, Tim Sherwood, Stuart Ripley, Jason Wilcox, Mark Atkins, Paul Warhurst, Chris Sutton, Alan Shearer, Robbie Slater Coach: Kenny Dalglish Key men: Alan Shearer, England centre forward signed from Southampton for £ 3.5m. Chris Sutton, striker who cost £5m when signed from Norwich. Colin Hendry, uncompromising central defender. Achievement: Premier League champions 1994-95. Five year league record: 4, 2, 1, 7, 13 Perception: Funded by lifelong fan and multi-millionaire, Jack Walker, Rovers were accused of “buying” the title, mostly by disgruntled Manchester United fans who had seen their team win the previous two Premier League championships. Success was relatively short-lived. Blackpool 1950-1953: George Farm, Eddie Shimwell, Tommy Garrett, Ewan Fenton, Eric Hayward, Harry Johnston, Hugh Kelly, Cyril Robinson, Stanley Matthews, Ernie Taylor, Stan Mortensen, Jackie Mudie, Bill Perry, Bill Slater. Achievements: FA Cup winners 1952-53, FA Cup finalists 1950-51. Five-year record (1950-51 to 1954-55): 3 – 9 – 7 – 6 – 19 Manager: Joe Smith Key men: Stan Mortensen – Scored a hat-trick in the 1953 FA Cup final. Born in the North-East of England but played for Blackpool between 1941 and 1955, playing 350 games and scoring 227 goals. A strong striker who won 25 caps for England, scoring 23 times. His last cap was the infamous 6-3 defeat by Hungary in November 1953. Stanley Matthews – Legendary figure who ranks among the finest players of all time. Began with Stoke in 1932 and joined Blackpool in 1947 at the age of 32. He finally won a FA Cup winners’ medal in 1953 after going close twice with Blackpool. His England career spanned 1934 to 1957, winning 54 caps. He returned to Stoke in 1961 and finally retired in 1965 aged 50. Harry Johnston – A one-club man who captained Blackpool in the 1953 FA Cup final. A versatile defender, he was capped 10 times by England. Perception: A team that was encouraged to play good football and became something of an attraction at away grounds. Blackpool’s golden age. Blackpool 1971: John Burridge, Dave Hatton, Bill Bentley, Alan Ainscow, Terry Alcock, Peter Suddaby, Micky Burns, Tony Green, John Craven, Johnny Johnston, Alan Suddick, Tommy Hutchison. Achievements: Anglo-Italian Cup winners 1971 Manager: Bob Stokoe Key men: Tommy Hutchison, midfielder or winger who won 17 caps for Scotland and was part of the 1974 World Cup squad. Went on to play for Coventry City and Manchester City. Tony Green, a talented midfielder whose career was ended by prematurely by injuries. A Scotland international, he moved to Newcastle United where he became a popular figure with fans. John Burridge, a huge character and a very competent goalkeeper. A fitness and health fanatic whose career involved more than 20 clubs. Perception: An average side who were relegated from the first division in 1970-71 but won a summer tournament involving six English and six Italian clubs. Beat Bologna 2-1 in the final. Boavista 2000-01: Ricardo, Rui Óscar, Pedro Emanuel, Litos, Erivan, Petit, Rui Bento, Erwin Sánchez, Martelinho, Duda, Whelliton, Pedro Santos, Jorge Silva, Elpídio Silva, Nuno Frechaut, Jorge Couto. Manager/coach: Jaime Pacheco Achievement: Primeira Liga champions 2000-01. Key men: Petit, French-born diminutive midfielder who was named Portuguese footballer of the year in 2001. Won 57 caps for Portugal. Erwin Sánchez, Bolivian attacking midfielder who was previously with Benfica. A popular player with the Boavista fans. Duda, Brazilian forward who had a varied career that took in spells in Japan, Brazil and Malta. A fast winger with an eye for goal. Perception: A team with a watertight defence, but also one that could score goals. Took their chance and won the title against the odds. Boca Juniors 1977-1978: Hugo Gatti, Carlos Rodriguez, Vincente Pernia, Francisco Sa, Roberto Mouzo, Alberto Tarantini, Carlos Veglio, Mario Zanabria, Enresto Mastrangelo, Daniel Pavon, Dario Felman, Jorge Ribalzi, Jose Tesare, Carlos Ortiz, Hector Bernabitti, Miguel Bordon, Jorge Benitez, Ruben Sune, Carlos Salinas, Hugo Perotti. Manager: Juan Carlos Lorenzo Achievement: 1976 – Primera Division champions (Metropolitano and Nacional); 1977 – Copa Libertadores winners; 1978 – Copa Libertadores winners. Key men: Ruben Sune, midfielder who played 300 games in two spells with Boca. Capped six times by Argentina. Hugo Gatti, unorthodox and outstanding. Saved penalty in Libertadores final in 1977. Roberto Mouzo, 400 plus games in defence for Boca. Alberto Tarantini, wild-haired defender who had an aborted spell in England. Perception: Underpinned by steely defence, experience and the speed of forwards like Mastrangelo and Felman. This Boca side was widely considered to be the best since the club’s first golden age of the 1960s. Bologna 1963-64: William Negri, Carlo Furlanis, Mirko Pavinato, Paride Tumburus, Francesco Janich, Romano Fogli, Marino Perani, Giancomo Bulgarelli, Harald Nielsen, Helmut Haller, Ezio Pascutti, Antonio Renna Manager: Fulvio Bernardini Achievement: 1963-64 – Serie A champions Five year record: 4, 4, 1, 6, 2 Key men: Harald Nielsen, free-scoring Danish forward; Helmut Haller, West Germany inside forward. Fast and tricky. William Negri, kept 18 clean sheets in 34 games in Serie A. Perception: Unfancied Bologna stunned Italian and European champions Inter by lifting the title. Bolton Wanderers 1923-1929: Dick Pym, Bob Haworth, Harry Greenhalgh, Fred Kean, Alex Finney, Harry Nuttall, Jimmy Seddon, Billy Jennings, Billy Butler, Jim McClelland, Harold Blackmore, George Gibson, David Jack, Jack Smith, Joe Smith, Ted Vizard, Willie Cook. Manager: Charles Foweraker Achievement: FA Cup winners 1923, 1926 and 1929. Five-year league record (starting in 1922-23): 13, 4, 3, 8, 4 Key men: Dick Pym, dependable and consistent goalkeeper. David Jack, one of the most sought-after forwards of his generation. Ted Vizard, Welsh left winger who gave Bolton 18 years. Perception: FA Cup specialists who were not quite consistent enough for league success. Bordeaux 1983-1987: Christian Delachet, Dominique Dropsy, Raymond Domenech,Leonard Specht, Jean-Ch. Thouvenel, Zoran Vujovic, Alain Roche, Gernot Rohr, Jean Tigana, Rene Girard, Dieter Mueller, Bernard Lacombe, Jose Toure, Philippe Vercruysse, Patrick Battiston, Alain Giresse, Antoine Martinez, Bernard Zenier, Thierry Tusseau, Michel Audrain, Fernando Chalana, Uwe Reinders, Marc Pascal, Zlatko Vujovic, Philippe Fargeon. Manager: Aimé Jacquet Achievement: 1983-84 – Ligue 1 champions; 1984-85 – Ligue 1 champions; 1985-86 – Coupe de France winners; 1986-87 – Ligue 1 champions, Coupe de France winners. Five-year league record: 1, 1, 3, 1, 2 Key men: Alain Giresse, intelligent playmaker in midfield. Bernard Lacombe, goal-hungry striker. Jean Tigana, outstanding box-to-box midfielder. Perception: A team built with significant amounts of money, luring a cluster of French internationals to the club. Borussia Dortmund 1964-1966: Hans Tilkowski, Gerhard Cyliax, Theodor Redde, Dieter Kurrat, Wolfgang Paul, Hermann Staschitz, Wilhelm Sturm, Alfred Schmidt, Reihard Wosab, Friedhelm Konietzka, Lothar Emmerich, Rudi Assauer, Reinhard Libuda, Siegfried Held. Manager: Hermann Eppenkhoff/ Willi Multhaup Achievement: 1963 German champions and Cup finalists; 1964-65 German Cup winners; 1965-66 European Cup-Winners Cup winners, Bundesliga runners-up. Five-year league record: 4, 3, 2, 3, 14 Key men: Hans Tilkowski, goalkeeper who played between 1963 and 1967, 39 caps for West Germany; Siegfried Held, exciting midfielder/forward signed from Kickers Offenbach. Scored in the ECWC final; Lothar Emmerich, free scoring winger who netted 115 goals in 183 Bundesliga games. Also scored in ECWC final. Perception: Arguably the best German side before Bayern’s 1970s team. Borussia Dortmund 1997: Stefan Klos, Matthias Sammer, Jürgen Kohler, Martin Kree, Julio Cesar, Stefan Reuter, Jörg Heinrich, Bodo Schmidt, Michael Zorc, Steffen Freund, Patrik Berger, Lars Ricken, Andreas Möller, Knut Reinhardt, Thomas Franck, Paul Lambert, Karl-Heinz Riedle, Ruben Sosa, Paulo Sousa, Stephane Chapuisat. Manager: Ottmar Hitzfeld Achievement: 1994-95 Bundesliga champions; 1995-96 Bundesliga champions; 1996-97 UEFA Champions League winners. Five-year league record: 1, 1, 3, 10, 8 Key men: Matthias Sammer, captain born in East Germany, capped by both DDR and unified Germany; Andreas Möller, attacking midfielder who won 85 caps for Germany; Stephane Chapuisat, Swiss striker named as his country’s best player of all time. Perception: Surprise UCL winners in 1997, beating Juventus. A powerful unit. Bradford City 1910-11: Mark Mellors, Robert Campbell, David Taylor, George Robinson, Willie Gildea, Jimmy McDonald, Peter Logan, Jimmy Speirs, Frank O’Rourke, Archie Devine, Frank Thompson, Bob Torrance. Manager: Peter O’Rourke Key men: Jimmy Speirs, Scottish forward sadly killed at Ypres 1917. Scored winning goal in 1911 cup final. Archie Devine, Scottish midfielder who also played for Arsenal. Achievement: FA Cup winners 1910-11. Five year league record: 18, 7, 5, 11, 13 Perception: Bradford’s best ever season was assisted by Newcastle, their FA Cup final opponents, being without key players. Brazil 1950: Moacir Barbosa, Augusto, Juvenal, Jose Carlos Bauer, Danilo, Bigode, Friaca, Zizinho, Ademir, Jair, Chico Manager: Flavio Costa Achievement: 1949 – Copa America winners; 1950 – World Cup runners-up. Key men: Ademir, golden boot winner in 1950 World Cup, fast and powerful. Zizinho, described by Pele as the “most complete player I ever saw.” Midfield or forward. Bauer, one of the finest midfielders of his time. Perception: Lost to Uruguay in 1950 final but everyone’s favourites to win the World Cup that year. Brazil 1958 to 1962: Gilmar, Djalma Santos, Orlando Peranha, Bellin, Nilton Santos, Zito, Didi, Garrincha, Mario Zagallo, Vava, Pele, Mauro Ramos, Zozimo, Amarildo. Manager: Vicente Feola/Aymore Moreira Achievement: 1958 – World Cup winners; 1962 – World Cup winners. Key men: Garrincha, the “little bird” at his best on the flank. Gilmar, rated Brazil’s best ever goalkeeper. Vava, striker rated one of the best of his time. Didi, midfielder who was a dead-ball specialist, possibly the first ever. Djalma Santos, one of the greatest full backs of all time. Pele, young talent who burst onto the scene in 1958. Perception: Packed with ball-playing skill and trickery, this was the first Brazil side to capture the imagination of the rest of the world. Brazil 1970: Felix, Carlos Alberto, Brito, Piazza, Everaldo, Clodoaldo, Gerson, Jairzinho, Tostao, Pele, Rivelino, Marco Antonio, Roberto, Paulo Cesar. Manager: Mario Zagallo Achievement: 1970 – World Cup winners. Key men: Carlos Alberto, skipper and overlapping full back. Pele, the great, charimastic talisman of the team. Gerson, chain-smoking midfield genius. Jairzinho, goalscoring front man, strong and agile – nicknamed “the hurricane”. Perception: Steeped in the tradition of Brazilian teams from the 1950s and 1960s, this team, with Pele at his peak, is arguably the all-time great international XI. Brazil 1982: Waldir Peres, Leandro, Oscar, Luizinho, Junior, Toninho Cerezo, Falcao, Socrates, Zico, Serginho, Eder, Edevaldo, Paulo Isidoro, Edinho. Manager: Tele Santana Achievement: 1982 – World Cup second stage; 1983 – Copa America runners-up. Key men: Socrates, technical playmaker with great vision and passing ability. Zico, heralded as a successor to Pele, he was a flair player who could score great goals. Falcao, a deep-lying playmaker with a powerful shot. Perception: The “people’s champions” in 1982 World Cup, beaten by Italy in the second stage. Flowing football, sublime free-kicks, but weaknesses in defence and up front. Breslau Elf (Germany 1937): Hans Jakob, Paul Janes, Reinhold Münzenberg, Andreas Kupfer, Ludwig Goldbrunner, Albin Kitzinger, Ernst Lehner, Rudolf Gellesch, Otto Stiffling, Fritz Szepan, Adolf Urban. Manager: Sepp Herberger Achievement: One defeat in 11 games. 8-1 victory against Denmark in May 1937 in Breslau. Key men: Otto Stiffling, a clever forward who scored four times in that game with Denmark. Fritz Szepan, Schalke forward who lacked pace but had the uncanny ability to make the ball do the work for him. Prolific in front of goal. Perception: A team that was never allowed to fulfill its potential. Bristol City 1908-09: Harry Clay, Archie Annan, Joe Cottle, Pat Hanlin, Bill Wedlock, Arthur Spear, Fred Staniforth, Bob Hardy, Sam Gilligan, Andy Burton, Frank Hilton. Manager: Harry Thickett Achievement: FA Cup finalists 1908-09 Key men: Billy Wedlock, centre half who played 26 times for England. A stout, short defender, who was known as “Fatty” and “India Rubber Man”. Played over 400 games for City, who named a stand after him. Joe Cottle, dependable left back who played over 200 games for Bristol City. A local lad, he won one England cap in 1909. Perception: A mid-table team that overperformed to reach the FA Cup final. Played nine games on the way to the final, needing a replay in four of five rounds. Key men: Ken Yenson was an England international defender, considered to be among the best in amateur football at the time. He also played for Notts County and Grays and enjoyed Amateur Cup success with Leyton in the 1950s. Charlie Fullerwas also an England international and also played for Dagenham, his home town club. Eric Fright, a half-back, started his career with Margate but captained Bromley in the 1949 Amateur Cup final. He was a member of the Great Britain Olympic squad in 1948. George Brown was a tough and daunting centre forward who played for the club from 1938 to 1961, scoring 570 goals in the process. In 1948-49, he netted 129 times. Perception: One of the top amateur teams of the early post-war period. Played football with a swagger. Club Brugge 1975-76 to 1977-78: Birger Jensen, Hugo Pieters, Fons Bastijns, Eddie Krieger, George Keekens, Jos Volders, Julien Cools, René Vandereycken, Danny De Cubber, Roger Van Gool, Raoul Lambert, Ulrik Le Fevre, Dirk Hinderyckx, Dirk Sanders, Gino Maes, Jan Simeon, Jan Sørensen, Lajos Kū. Manager: Ernst Happel (Austria) Achievements: Belgian league champions 1975-76, 1976-77, 1977-78; Belgian Cup winners 1976-77; UEFA Cup finalists 1975-76; European Cup finalists 1977-78. Five-year league record (1974-75 to 1978-79): 4 – 1 – 1 – 1 – 6 Key men: Raoul Lambert, one of Belgium’s greatest forwards and a Bruges clubman. Won 33 caps for Belgium and played in the 1970 World Cup. Strong and determined player who won five league titles with the club. Roger Van Gool, much travelled striker who became the first one million Deutsche mark signing in German football when he left Bruges for Köln. René Vandereycken, midfielder who won 50 caps for Belgium. Also played in Italy and Germany and went on to enjoy a successful managerial career. Perception: Functional, workmanlike team. Marvellously consistent and denied European success both times by Liverpool. Burnley 1920-21: Jerry Dawson, Cliff Jones, Len Smelt, Billy Watson, David Taylor, George Halley, Tommy Boyle, Alf Basnett, Eddie Mosscrop, Billy Nesbitt, Walter Weaver, Joe Anderson, Benny Cross, Bob Kelly. Manager: John Haworth Achievement: 1920-21: Football League Champions. Five year league record (starting in 1919-20): 2, 1, 3, 15, 17 Key men: Joe Anderson, Scottish centre forward who netted 25 goals in the league campaign. Tommy Boyle, underrated half back who captained Burnley to FA Cup glory in 1914. Bob Kelly, another free-scoring forward who went on the break the record transfer record when he moved to Sunderland in 1925. Perception: Fine footballing side that set a 30-game unbeaten record that stood until 2003-04. Burnley 1959-60: Adam Blacklaw, John Angus, Alex Elder, Jimmy Adamson, Tony Cummings, Brian Miller, Trevor Meredith, Jimmy McIlroy, Ray Pointer,Jimmy Robson, Brian Pilkington, John Connelly Manager: Harry Potts Achievement: 1959-60 – Football League champions. Five year league record: 6, 7, 1, 4, 2 Key men: Ray Pointer, prolific goalscorer who was capped by England three times. Jimmy McIlroy, superb passer of the ball in midfield. One of Burnley’s all-time greats. John Connelly, tricky winger who was capped 20 times by England. Played in the 1966 World Cup. Perception: Cultured footballing team that surprised a few people in the post-Munich years. Eclipsed only by Tottenham’s 1960-61 double side. C Cagliari 1969-70: Enrico Albertosi, Mario Martiradonna, Giulio Zignoli, Pierluigi Cera, Comunardo Niccolai, Giuseppe Tomasini, Angelo Domenghini, Nené, Sergio Gori, Ricciotti Greatti, Luigi Riva. Manager: Manlio Scopigno Achievement: Italian Serie A champions 1969-70. Runners-up 1968-69. Five year league record: 9, 2, 1, 7, 4 Key men: Luigi Riva, powerful, legendary striker for Cagliari and Italy. Scored 21 goals in 1969-70; Enrico Albertosi, consistent goalkeeper for club and country; Angelo Domenghini, fast and agile striker with great technical ability. Perception: A team that broke the northern stranglehold on Serie A and became a local legend on Sardinia. Cardiff City 1924-1927: Tom Farquharson, James Nelson, Tom Watson, Fred Keenor, Tommy Sloan, Billy Hardy, Ernie Curtis, Sam Irving, Hughie Ferguson, Len Davies, George McLachlan. Achievement: FA Cup winners 1926-27, Football League Runners-up 1923-24, FA Cup finalists 1924-25. Five year record: 2, 11, 16, 14, 6 Manager: Fred Stewart Key men: Fred Keenor, a hard-tackling character a fiercely loyal to Cardiff City. A Welsh international; Len Davies, free-scoring forward from Splott; Hughie Ferguson, scored the winning goal in the 1927 FA Cup final against Arsenal. Perception: The golden age of Cardiff City, taking the FA Cup out of England for the only time. Celtic 1904-1910: David Adams, Don McLeod, William Strang, James Weir, Hugh Watson, Joseph Dodds, Daniel Munro, William Orr, Jim Young, James Hay, Alec McNair, John Graham, James McMenemy, William Loney, Alex Bennett, Edward Garry, Jimmy Quinn, Peter Somers, David Hamilton, Peter Johnstone, William Kivlichen. Achievement: 1904-05 – Scottish League champions; 1905-06 Scottish League champions; 1906-07 – Scottish League champions and Scottish Cup winners; 1907-08 – Scottish League champions and Scottish Cup winners; 1908-09 – Scottish League champions; 1909-10 – Scottish League champions. Manager: Willie Maley Key men: Jimmy Quinn, free-scoring forward who switched from the wing to centre and scored 216 goals in 331 appearances for the club; Alex McNair, intelligent and composed right back who spent 21 years with Celtic; Jim Young, right half nicknamed “Sunny”; Jimmy McMenemy, nicknamed “Napoleon”, a long-serving forward who scored 144 goals in 456 games. Perception: The dominant force in Scotland at the time, thanks to the consistent backbone of the team. Celtic 1965-1970 Ronnie Simpson, John Fallon, Evan Williams; Jim Craig, Tommy Gemmell, David Hay, Jim Brogan, Billy McNeill, John Clark; Bobby Murdoch, Bertie Auld, Willie Wallace, Jimmy Johnstone, Joe McBride; Steve Chalmers, Bobby Lennox, John Hughes, George Connelly. Manager: Jock Stein Achievement: Scottish League Champions 1965-66, 1966-67, 1967-68, 1968-69, 1969-70; Scottish Cup Winners 1966-67, 1968-69; Scottish League Cup Winners 1965-66, 1966-67, 1967-68, 1968-69, 1969-70; European Cup Winners 1966-67. Five year record: 1, 1, 1, 1, 1. Key men:Billy McNeill, commanding centre half and captain; Tommy Gemmell, attacking full back, good eye for goal; Jimmy Johnstone, tricky winger, known as “jinky”; Bertie Auld, midfielder or wide man, a big character. Perception: Brilliant, attacking football, one of Britain’s best-ever teams. Chelsea 1970-1972 Peter Bonetti, Ron Harris, Eddie McCreadie, John Boyle, John Dempsey, David Webb, Marvin Hinton, John Hollins, Alan Hudson, Charlie Cooke, Steve Kember, Peter Houseman, Tommy Baldwin, Chris Garland, Peter Osgood, Ian Hutchinson, Keith Weller. Achievement: FA Cup winners 1970; European Cup-Winners’ Cup 1971; Football League Cup runners-up 1972. Five year record (68-72): 6 – 5 – 3 – 6 – 7 Manager: Dave Sexton Key men: Peter Osgood, supremely skilful forward and a club legend; Charlie Cooke, outstanding dribbler; John Hollins, hard-working and reliable midfielder with an eye for goal; Alan Hudson, teenage prodigy in midfield. Perception: Lacked the professionalism and drive to challenge for league honours, but a great cup side. Chelsea 1954-55 Charlie Thomson, Bill Robertson, Stan Willemse, Peter Sillett, Stan Wicks, Derek Saunders, Ron Greenwood, John Harris, Ken Armstrong, Seamus O’Connell, Johnny McNichol, Roy Bentley, Les Stubbs, Frank Blunstone, Jim Lewis, Eric Parsons. Achievements: Football League champions 1954-55. Manager: Ted Drake Key men: Roy Bentley, England centre forward who netted 21 goals in the title-winning campaign; Eric Parsons, flying winger who had an outstanding season, known as “Rabbit”; Ken Armstrong, dependable right half; Peter Sillett, young full back. Perception: A team for a season that failed to build on its success. Chelsea 2004-2006 Peter Cech, Paulo Ferreira, Wayne Bridge, Asier Del Horno, Glen Johnson, John Terry, Ricardo Carvalho, William Gallas, Claude Makelele, Frank Lampard, Tiago, Michael Essien, Arjen Robben, Damien Duff, Joe Cole, Shaun Wright-Phillips, Mateja Kezman, Didier Drogba, Eidar Gudjohnsen, Hernan Crespo. Achievements: Premier League Champions 2004-05, 2005-06; Football League Cup winners 2004-05. Five-record (2003-2008): 2 – 1 – 1 – 2 – 2 Manager: Jose Mourinho Key men: Frank Lampard, goalscoring midfielder signed from West Ham, very consistent, scored 211 goals for Chelsea in 648 appearances. Capped 106 times by England, scoring 29 goals. An inspirational player who later managed the club. John Terry, old-style English central defender, incredibly popular with the club’s fans. Commanding in the air, he also had remarkable speed and strong tackling skills. Played 717 games for Chelsea, scoring 67 goals. Capped 78 times by England. Arjen Robben, Dutch winger who was one of the most gifted players of his era. Signed from PSV Eindhoven for £ 12 million in 2004, he played 106 games before moving to Real Madrid. He later played for Bayern Munich. Capped 96 times by the Netherlands, he had pace, a fierce shot and excellent dribbling ability. Perception: Wonderfully consistent, ruthless and focused. Chelsea 2009-2012: Petr Cech, Branislav Ivanović, Ashley Cole, Michael Essien, Ricardo Carvalho, John Terry, David Luiz, José Bosingwa, Alex, Paulo Ferreira, Gary Cahill, Ryan Bertrand, Frank Lampard, Joe Cole, Mike John Obi, Michael Ballack, Deco, Juan Mata, Florent Malouda, Salomon Kalou, Nicolas Anelka, Didier Drogba, Fernando Torres. Manager: Carlo Ancelotti, André Villas-Boas, Roberto di Matteo Achievements: Premier League champions 2009-10; FA Cup winners 2009-10, 2011-12; UEFA Champions League winners 2011-12. Key men: Petr Cech, joined Chelsea in 2004 from Rennes for a £3.9 million fee and went on to play almost 500 games for the club. He won 124 caps for the Czech Republic. One of the greatest goalkeepers of the Premier League era, brave, agile and possessing excellent reflexes. Didier Drogba, Ivorian forward who scored Chelsea’s winning penalty in the 2012 Champions League final shoot-out. A powerful, fast centre forward who joined the club from Olympique Marseille in 2004. A legend in his own country, Drogba played 105 times for the Ivory Coast. Michael Essien, Ghanaian midfielder, nicknamed “the Bison”, who was powerful, competitive and capable of playing in defence and the middle of the park. Joined from Lyon in 2005 for £ 24 million. Perception: The second phase of the Abramovich era at Chelsea, a team that had power in abundance but lacked the surprise factor of the 2004 side. Chile 1962 Misael Escuti, Adan Goday, Raul Sanchez, Carlos Contreras, Eladio Rojas, Jamie Ramirez, Jorge Toro, Honorino Landa, Leonel Sanchez, Manuael Rodriguez, Armando Tobar, Carlos Campos, Sergio Navarro. Achievement: Third place, World Cup 1962 (as hosts) Manager: Fernando Riera Key men: Leonel Sanchez, joint top scorer in the 1962 World Cup. Fractious left-sided forward with an eye for goal; Jorge Toro, attacking midfielder and dangerous in front of goal; Jaime Ramirez, a winger with great technique, fast. Nicknamed “Superclase”. Perception: Tenacious side who made the most of their host status in 1962. Chile 2015-2016 Claudio Bravo, Gary Medel, Francisco Silva, Marcelo Diaz, Mauricio Isla, Charles Aranguiz, Arturo Vidal, Jean Beausejour, Jorge Valdivia, Eduardo Vargas, Alexis Sánchez, Matias Fernandez, Angelo Henriquez, Gonzalo Jara, José Pedro Fuenzalida, Edson Puch, Nicolas Castillo. Achievements: Copa America winners 2015 and 2016. Manager: Jorge Sampaoli (2015), Juan Antonio Pizzi (2016) Key men: Eduardo Vargas, quick and dynamic forward, capable of creativity and goals; Arturo Vidal, hard-working versatile midfielder; Alexis Sanchez, winger or forward, quick and busy. Perception: Despite some outstanding players, lacked breadth of quality, hence failed to qualify for 2018 World Cup. Clyde 1958 Tommy McCulloch, Albert Murray, Harry Haddock, Joe Walters, Willie Finlay, Mike Clinton, George Herd, Dan Currie, John Coyle, Archie Robertson, Tommy Ring. Manager: Johnny Haddow Achievement: Scottish Cup winners 1957-58. Key men:Harry Haddock, played 500-plus games at left back for Clyde and included in Scotland World Cup squad; Tommy Ring, outside left who scored winner in the 1955 cup final; John Coyle, a member of the 1958 Scotland squad for the World Cup. Scored frequently in second half of 1957-58 season. Perception: Hard-working team that also finished fourth in the Scottish League and semi-final of the Scottish League Cup. Colchester United 1970-72: Graham Smith, Brian Hall, Bobby Cram, John Gilchrist, John Kurila, Brian Lewis, Dave Simmons, Mick Mahon, Ray Crawford, Brian Gibbs, Micky Cook, Ken Jones. Achievement:FA Cup giant-killers 1970-71; Watney Cup winners 1971 Manager: Dick Graham Key men:Ray Crawford, veteran former England striker plucked from non-league at the age of 34. Scored over 30 goals in 1970-71, including two against Leeds. Perception:Pulled off one of the great FA Cup giant-killings in beating the mighty Leeds United. Beat West Brom in the short-lived Watney Cup in the next pre-season. Croatia 2018 Danijel Subašić, Šime Vrsaliko, Dejan Lovren, Domagoj Vida, Ivan Strinić, Marcelo Brizović, Ante Rebić, Luka Modrić, Ivan Perišić, Ivan Rakitić, Mario Mandžukić, Andrej Kramarić, Marko Pjaca, Vedran Ćorluka, Milan Badelj, Josip Pivarić. Manager: Zlatko Dalić Achievement: World Cup finalists 2018 Key men: Luka Modrić, hard-working and clever midfielder; Ivan Rakitić, a quick-passing midfielder with Barcelona, often under-rated; Ivan Perišić, covered more ground than any other player in the World Cup 2018. Perception: Performed against the odds, beating hosts, Russia, and Argentina on the way to the final. An intelligent side, making the most of their strengths. Crystal Palace 1980 John Burridge, Billy Gilbert, Peter Nicholas, Jim Cannon, Jerry Murphy, Kenny Sansom, Dave Swindlehurst, Vince Hilarie, Barry Silkman, Mike Elwiss, Tony Sealy, Ian Walsh, Steve Lovell, Nicky Chatterton. Manager: Terry Venables Achievement: Second Division champions 1978-79. Five year record: 3+,9+,1+, 13, 22. +Football League Division Two. Key men: Kenny Sansom, talented full back who went on to win 86 caps for England as an Arsenal player; Vince Hilaire, skilful midfielder. Perception: Built on Palace’s FA Youth Cup-winning team of 1977 and 1978, an example of how hype can lead people getting carried away with expectation. Dubbed “team of the 80s”, the side never fulfilled its potential. Czechoslavakia 1960-62: Viliam Schrojf, Jirí Tichy, Ján Popluhár, Svatopluk Pluskal, Ladislav Novák, Tomáš Pospichal, Titus Bubernik, František Šafránek, Andrej Kvašnák, Josef Masopust, Pavol Molnár, Josef Jelínek, Adolf Scherer, Vlatimil Bubnik, Milan Dolinsky, Josef Kadraba. Achievement:European Championship 1960 third place, World Cup runners-up 1962. Manager: Rudolf Vytlačil Key men:Ladislav Novak, captain and defender, reliable and strong. 75 caps; Josef Masopust, supremely skilful and European Footballer of the Year in 1962. Perception:Very talented, highly-skilled team. Czechoslavakia 1976: Ivo Viktor, Anton Ondruš, Ján Pivarnik, Koloman Gögh, Jozef Čapkovič, Karol Dobiaš, Jozef Móder, Antonin Panenka, Marian Masny, Zdenêk Nehoda, Ján Švehlík, Ladislav Jurkemik, František Vesely. Achievement: European Championship winners 1976 Manager: Václav Ježek Key men: Zdenêk Nehoda, striker/winger who netted a goal every three games. Played for Dukla and then went to play in Belgium, France and Germany later in his career; Marián Masny, skilful winger, rated among the world’s best, from Slovan Bratislava; Antonin Panenka, attacking midfielder, famous for his jinked penalty that won the Euros. Perception: Surprise winners of the Euros, but skilful in attack. Inconsistent. D Denmark 1984-1986 Troels Rasmussen, Ole Qvist, John Sivebaek, Morten Olsen, Søren Busk, Ivan Nielsen, Henrik Andersen, Frank Arnesen, Jens Bertelsen, Klaus Berggreen, Søren Lerby, Michael Laudrup, Preben Elkjaer, Jesper Olsen, Jan Mølby, John Eriksen, Allan Simonson Achievement: Euro 1984 Semi-final; World Cup round of 16 1986 Manager: Sepp Piontek Key men: Michael Laudrup, wonderfully skilful forward, tricky and clever; Frank Arnesen, polished midfielder; Morten Olsen, calm in defence. Perception: Free-flowing, skilful football team that should have achieved more. An 1980s version of Total Football. Defining moment, 6-1 against Uruguay in Mexico 1986. Deportivo La Coruna 1999-00 Jacques Songo’o, Emrique Romero, Noureddine Naybet, Gabriel Schuerrer, Victor Sanchez, Mauro Silva, Donato, Manuel Pablo, Djalminha, Flavio Conceicao, Slaviska Conceicao, Slaviska Jokanovik, Fran, Jaime, Fernando, Lionel Scaloni, Roy Makaay, Turu Flores, Pauleta. Achievement: La Liga champions 1999-00; Five year record: 12 – 6 – 1 – 2 – 2 Manager: Javier Irureta Key men: Roy Makaay, free-scoring Dutch striker, 22 goals in 99-00. 43 Dutch caps. Djalminha, eccentric Brazilian attacking midfielder. Mauro Silva, Brazilian holding midfielder. Perception: Expensively assembled multi-national team that challenged the big two in Spain. Played extravagant football at times. Derby County 1897-1899: Jack Fryer, Jimmy Methven, Jonathan Staley, Joe Leiper, John Cox, Robert Patterson, Archie Goodall, Jimmy Turner, Johnny May, John Goodall, Steve Bloomer, John Boag, Tommy Arkesden, Jimmy Stevenson, Billy MacDonald, Harry Allen, Hughie McQueen. Manager: Harry Newbould Achievements: FA Cup finalists 1897-98, 1898-99 Key men: Steve Bloomer – Legendary striker who scored 273 goals for Derby in 419 games. A quick-thinking player who specialised in low shots, he won 23 caps for England and scored 28 goals. He later enjoyed a lengthy coaching career. Archie Goodall – Belfast-born half back or forward who also played for Preston, Aston Villa and Wolves. Renowned for his shoulder charging, he played 10 games for Ireland. John Goodall – Brother of Archie, his birthplace, Westminster, meant he could play for England (14 caps). A speedy forward, he was a member of the Preston “Invincibles” and was also a highly respected cricketer. Perception: Cup-fighters with no small amount of skill. Derby County 1935-36: Jack Kirby, Ted Udall, Jack Webb, Jack Nicholas, Jack Barker, Ralph Hann, Sammy Crooks, Reg Stockill, Hughie Gallacher, Peter Ramage, Dally Duncan, George Collin, Eric Keen, Jimmy Hagan, Charlie Napier, Jack Howe. Manager: George Jobey Achievements: Football League runners-up 1935-36 Key men: Sammy Crooks – Outside right who spent almost 20 years with Derby County. A native of the North-East of England, he previously played for Durham City. Won 26 caps for England between 19300 and 1936. Dally Duncan – Scottish left winger who joined the club from Hull City for £ 2,000 and played 261 league games for the club, scoring 63 goals. Later played for Luton Town and also managed the Bedfordshire club. Perception: With Crooks, Duncan and Gallacher, they were formidable going forward. Derby County 1945-46: Vic Woodley, Jack Nicholas, Jack Howe, Jim Bullions, Leon Leuty, Chick Musson, Reg Harrison, Raich Carter, Jackie Stamps, Peter Doherty, Dally Duncan. Manager: Stuart McMillan Achievements: FA Cup winners 1945-46 Key men: Raich Carter – Talented inside forward who joined Derby from Sunderland. Considered to be one of most natural footballers of his time, Carter won 13 England caps. He scored 12 goals in the FA Cup in 1945-46. A demanding team-mate, he was often very vocal about the performances of others. Peter Doherty – Londonderry-born inside forward who also played for Blackpool and Manchester City, joining Derby in 1945. He was capped 16 times by Ireland. Perception: A team with some exceptional veterans, very skilful but inconsistent in the league. Derby County 1971-1975 Colin Boulton, Rob Webster, Peter Daniel, David Nish, Rod Thomas, John Robson, Terry Hennessey, Roy McFarland, Colin Todd, Bruce Rioch, Alan Durban, Archie Gemmill, John McGovern, Alan Hinton, Henry Newton, John O’Hare, Kevin Hector, Francis Lee, Roger Davies Achievement: Football League champions 1971-72 and 1974-75 Manager: Brian Clough (1972), Dave Mackay (1975) Key men: Roy McFarland, towering centre half and skipper; Colin Todd, cultured defender; Archie Gemmill, tenacious midfielder; Kevin Hector, legendary striker. Perception: Good footballing side schooled by Brian Clough. Played the game the right way. Dinamo Bucharest 1961-65 Ilie Datcu, Iulius Cezer Ut, Dumitru Ivan, Ion Nunweiler, Cornel Popa, Vasile Alexandru, Constantin Stefean, Vasile Anghel, Haralambie Eftimie, Constantin Fratila, Ion Pircalab, Ion Tircovnicu, Gheorghe Ene, Aurel Ungurolu, Iosif Varga, Emil Petru, Octavian Popescu, Radu Nunweiler. Achievement: Romanian champions 1961-62, 1962-63, 1963-64, 1964-65. Romanian cup winners 1963-64. Manager: Traian Ionescu, Constantin Teasca, Dumitru Nicolae, Angelo Niculescu Key men: Ion Nunweiler, one of five brothers, a tough defender who won 40 caps for Romania. Radu Nunweiler, central midfielder. Constantin Fratila, small free-scoring forward. Perception: Powerful and robust unit built on strong defence. First Romanian double winners. Dinamo Tbilisi 1978-1981 Otar Gabelia, Tamaz Kostava, Aleksandre Chivadze, Nodar Khizanishvili, Giori Tavadza, Vitaly Daraselia, Zaur Svanadze, Tengiz Sulakvelidze, Vladimir Gutsaev, David Kipiani, Ramaz Shegelia, Nugzar Kakilasjvili, Shota Khinchagashvili, David Mujiri, Munachar Machaidze, Vakhtang Koridze, Gocha Machaidze, Vakhtang Koridze Manager: Nodar Akhalkatsi Achievements: Soviet League champions 1978, Soviet Cup winners 1979, European Cup-Winners’ Cup winners 1980-81 Key men: Ramaz Shengelia, USSR international striker and USSR player of the year in 1978n and 1981. Skilful and prolific. David Kipiani, elegant midfielder with good dribbling and passing skills. Vitaly Daraselia, energetic midfielder who died tragically young in 1982. Perception: Georgian team capable of stunning football played at pace. Dundee 1961-64 Pat Liney, Robert Slater, Bobby Cox, Alex Hamilton, Bobby Seith, Ian Ure, Alex Stuart, George Ryden, Andy Penman, Gordon Smith, Hugh Robertson, Bobby Wishart, Ken Cameron, Doug Houston, Alan Gilzean, Alan Cousin. Achievement: Scottish League champions 1961-62; European Cup semi-finalists 1962-63, Scottish Cup finalists 1963-64 Manager: Bob Shankly Key men: Alan Gilzean, skilful and aggressive striker; Ian Ure, powerful defender; Alan Cousin, tricky forward known as the “king of the double shuffle”. Perception: Tenacious, skilful team considered to be the best produced in Scotland between 1945 and 1961. Bucked the old firm trend. Dundee United 1982-83: Hamish McAlpine, Derek Stark, Maurice Malpas, Richard Gough, Paul Hegarty,Dave Narey, Eamonn Bannon, Ralph Milne, Billy Kirkwood, Paul Sturrock, Davie Dodds, Iain Phillip, John Reilly, John Holt. Achievement: Scottish League champions 1982-83 Five year record: 3, 3, 1, 3, 3 Manager: Jim McLean Key men: Richard Gough, commanding central defender; Eamonn Bannon, skilful playmaker who had a brief spell in England; Davie Dodds, 22-goal target man. Perception: Unlikely but deserving champions who also made a mark in Europe in the 1980s. Dynamo Moscow 1945 Aleksey Khomich, Vsevolod Radikorsyky, Mikhail Semichastny, Boris Stankevich,Vsevolod Blinkov, Leonid Solovyov, Yevgenly Arkhangeslsky, Vasiliy Kartsev, Konstantin Beskov, Vsevolod Bobrov, Sergey Solovyov, Vasiliy Trofimov, Boris Oreshkin Achievement: Russian spring champions 1945, 1949 Unbeaten on tour of England in 1945. Manager: Mikhail Yakushin Key men: Aleksey “Tiger” Khomich, brave goalkeeper with superb reflexes; Konstantin Beskov, prolific striker who later managed USSR; Vsevolod Bobrov, striker who turned to Ice Hockey. Perception: Highly skilled and fit team that went on an ambassadorial tour of the UK in 1945, winning friends and showing the world a different brand of football. E East Germany 1974 Juergen Croy, Lothar Kurbjuweit, Bernd Bransch, Konrad Weise, Hans-Juergen Kreischem Siegmar Waetzlich, Reinhard Lauckm Juergen Sparwasser, Harald Irmscher, Gerd Kische, Martin Hoffmann, Joachim Fritsche, Joachim Streich, Erich Hamann, Juergen Pommerkenke, Peter Ducke, Eberhard Vogel. Manager: Georg Buschner Achievements: Olympic Games 1972 bronze medal, World Cup 1974 second stage Key men: Juergen Croy, goalkeeper with outstanding reflexes, named GDR player of the year 1972, 1976 and 1978. Joachim Streich, striker capped 98 times by the GDR, scoring 53 goals. Juergen Sparwasser, scorer of the goal that beat West Germany in 1974 World Cup. Perception: An outstanding eastern bloc team that came to fruition in the 1972-74 period. Functional, but also capable of highly technical football. England 1908 Horace Bailey, Bob Crompton, Walter Corbett, Jesse Pennington, Ben Warren, Billy Wedlock, Bob Hawkes, Jock Rutherford, Vivien J Woodward, George Hilsdon, Jimmy Windridge, Frank Bradshaw, Arthur Bridgett. Manager: England selection committee Key men: George Hildson, nicknamed “gatling gun” for his sharp-shooting, scored eight on the European tour in four games; Vivien J Woodward, a gentleman amateur, skilful and sporting; Billy Wedlock, stout centre half, known for his power. Nicknamed “fatty” or “the India rubber man”. Achievement: Home International champions, 1908; GB XI winners of Olympic gold medal 1908; Unbeaten on first Continental European tour, 1908, goal-difference of 28-2. Perception: Skilful team with devastating forwards. Ahead of the field in Europe. England 1947-48 Frank Swift, Laurie Scott, John Howe, Billy Wright, Neil Franklin, Henry Cockburn, Stanley Matthews, Stanley Mortensen, Tommy Lawton, Wilf Mannion, Tom Finney, George Hardwick, Stan Pearson, Raich Carter. Manager:Walter Winterbottom Key men:Frank Swift, giant keeper with a handspan of almost 12 inches. Tragically died in the 1958 Munich crash; Billy Wright, dependable and skilful defender, first England player to win 100 caps; Stanley Matthews, legendary figure in the English game, excellent close control and dribbling; Tom Finney, named by Bill Shankly (a team mate at Preston) as the greatest to have played the game. Achievement: 1947-48 Home International champions; beat Italy, reigning world champions, in Turin 4-0. Perception: An ageing collection of players whose careers were impacted by war, but some of the great post-war names from English football. England 1966 Gordon Banks, George Cohen, Ray Wilson, Nobby Stiles, Jack Charlton, Bobby Moore, Alan Ball, Roger Hunt, Bobby Charlton, Geoff Hurst, Martin Peters, Jimmy Greaves, Ian Callaghan, John Connelly, Terry Paine Manager: [Sir] Alf Ramsey Achievements: World Cup winners 1966 Key men: Bobby Charlton, winger turned midfielder, fierce shot. Ambassador of the game. Bobby Moore, cultured defender, immaculate timing. Geoff Hurst, tall inside forward who netted a hat-trick in the World Cup final. Gordon Banks, occasionally spectacular but mostly safe and reliable goalkeeper. Perception: Often underated world champions whose style didn’t endear them to the media at the time. Reputation had grown with time and a realisation that it was a unique occasion. Estudiantes de La Plata 1968-70 Alberto Jose Poletti, Oscar Malbernat, Ramon Aguirre Suarez, Raul Madero, Jose Hugo Medina, Carlos Bilardo, Carlos Pachame, Nestor Togneri, Felipe Ribaudo, Marcos Conigliaro, Juan Ramon Veron, Juan Echecopar, Christian Rudzki, Errea, Ruben Paganini, Jorge Solari. Manager: Oscar Zubeldia Achievements: Argentine champions 1967; Libertadores Cup winners 1968, 1969, 1970; Intercontinental Cup winners 1968. Key men: Juan Ramon Veron, known as “the witch”, a highly technical player who could line-up in midfield or up front. Prolific scorer. Carlos Bilardo, midfielder anchor, tenacious. Carlos Pachame, fearsome battler in midfield. Perception: Very skilful team, too often distracted by over robust tactics. Everton 1931-33: Ted Sagar, Billy Cook, Warney Cresswell, Ben Williams, Jock Thomson, Charlie Gee, Archie Clark, Cliff Britton, Ted Critchley, Albert Geldard, Tommy White, Jimmy Dunn, Dixie Dean, Tommy Johnson, Jimmy Stein. Achievement: Football League Champions 1931-32, FA Cup winners 1932-33. Manager: Tom McIntosh Key men: Dixie Dean, 45 goals in 1931-32, excellent in the air and a legend of the inter-war years; Tommy Johnson, 22 goals in 1931-32, powerful left foot; Cliff Britton, classy playmaker signed from Bristol Rovers. Perception: Free-scoring, powerful team. Everton 1962-63: Gordon West, Alex Parker, Mick Meagan, George Thomson, Jimmy Gabriel, Brian Labone, Brian Harris, Alex Scott, Dennis Stevens, Tony Kay, Alex Young, Roy Vernon, Billy Bingham, Johnny Morrissey Manager: Harry Catterick Key men: Alex Young, creative midfielder known as “the golden vision”; Roy Vernon, heavy smoking inside forward, prolific in front of goal; Jimmy Gabriel, powerful midfielder, adding grit to the defence. Achievement: Football League champions 1962-63. Five-year record: 5 – 4- 1 – 3- 4 Perception: Skilful team that combined flair with a certain hard edge. Everton 1969-70: Gordon West, Tommy Wright, Sandy Brown, Keith Newton, Howard Kendall, Brian Labone, John Hurst, Colin Harvey, Alan Ball, Alan Whittle, Joe Royle, Jimmy Husband, Johnny Morrissey. Achievement: Football League champions 1969-70, FA Cup finalists 1968. Five year record: 5, 3, 1, 14, 15 Manager: Harry Catterick Key men: Alan Ball, England World Cup winner, foraging midfielder; Joe Royle, young striker, superb in the air; Brian Labone, England centre half. Perception: Exciting team that finished nine points ahead of Leeds United to win the title. Failed to build on success. Everton 1890 to 1893: Jack Angus, Richard Williams, Andrew Hannah, Dan Doyle, Daniel Kirkwood, Johnny Holt, William Campbell, Alex Latta, Alec Brady, Fred Geary, Edgar Chadwick, Alf Milward, Charlie Parry, David Jardine, Tom Wylie, Bob Howarth, Alan Maxwell, Dickie Boyle, Alec Stewart, Hope Robertson. Manager: Dick Molyneux Achievements: Football League champions 1890-91, runners-up 1889-90; FA Cup finalists 1892-93. Key men: Fred Geary, centre forward who joined the club from Notts Rangers. A small and powerful player, he had pace and could accelerate past defenders. He won two England caps and moved to Liverpool in 1895. Edgar Chadwick, an expert dribbler, he formerly played for Blackburn Olympic and Blackburn Rovers. A compact inside forward, he won seven caps for England and made 300 appearances for Everton, scoring 110 goals. Johnny Holt, half back signed from Bootle. One of the best centre halves of the 1890s, he was a tough player with boundless energy. He could be temperamental and sly with his challenges, hence he was called “the Little Everton devil”. Won 10 caps for England. Dan Doyle, Scottish international left back who was capped eight times. He won league titles in England and Scotland (with Celtic), the first player to achieve this double. Perception: A team of great skill and energy. One of the best from the early years of the Football League. Everton 1983 to 1987: Neville Southall, John Bailey, Gary Stevens, Pat Van Den Hauwe, Paul Power, Derek Mountfield, Kevin Ratcliffe, Trevor Steven, Peter Reid, Kevin Sheedy, Alan Harper, Ian Snodin, Andy King, Alan Irvine, Kevin Richardson, Paul Bracewell, Adrian Heath, Andy Gray, Gary Lineker, Wayne Clarke, Kevin Langley, Graeme Sharp. Manager: Howard Kendall Achievements: Football League champions 1984-85, 1986-87. Runners-up 1985-86. FA Cup winners 1983-84, finalists 1984-85, 1985-86. FL Cup finalists 1983-84. European Cup-Winners’ Cup winners 1984-85. Key men: Neville Southall, goalkeeper signed from Bury. A great shot-stopper who played 751 games for Everton. Also capped 92 times by Wales. One of the best keepers of the 1980s. Peter Reid, stocky midfielder whose career was blighted by injuries. Joined Everton from Bolton for £ 60,000. Hard-worker who won 13 caps for England and was a key player in their 1986 World Cup side. Joined QPR in 1989 and also played for Manchester City and Southampton. Kevin Sheedy, a gifted left-foot player who excelled at free-kicks. Although born in Wales, he played 46 times for the Republic of Ireland. Joined Everton from Liverpool for £ 100,000. Left the club in 1992. Gary Lineker was signed from Leicester for £ 800,000 in the summer of 1985 and scored 40 goals in 57 appearances for his new club. He went on to win the golden boot at the 1986 World Cup as the tournament’s top scorer and was signed by Barcelona for £ 2.8 million. A speedy striker whose finishing was first class. Perception: A hard-working team of young players that surprised English football with their 1985 title win. Well managed and very unlucky not to have won more. F Fenerbahçe 1967-68: Yavuz Simsek, Hazim Cantez, Levent Engineri, Yilmaz Sen, Sukrü Birand, Numan Okumus, Özcan Köksoy, Selim Soydan, Fuat Saner, Ziya Sengüi, Ogün Altiparmak, Yasar Mumcuoglu, Nedim Dögan, Abdullah Çevrin, Erdinç Sandalci, Can Bartu. Achievements: Turkish League champions 1967-68, Turkish Cup winners 1967-68. Manager: Ignác Molnár Key men: Yilmaz Sen, strong central defender, 24 years old, capped 18 times by Turkey; Ogün Altiparmak, leading scorer, two spells with the club. 32 caps for Turkey. Perception: Defence-orientated team, conceding just 12 goals in the league. Ferencvaros 1928: Ignác Amsel, Géza Takács, János Hungler, Károly Furmann, Márton Bukovi, Elemér Berkessy, Imre Koszta, József Takács, József Turay, Ferenc Szedlacsik, Vilmos Kohut. Achievements: Hungarian champions 1925-26, 1926-27, 1927-28. Runners-up 1928-29, 1929-30; Magyar Kupa winners 1926-27, 1927-28; Mitropa Cup winners 1927-28. Manager: Istvan Toth Key men: Márton Bukovi, defender who went on to become an innovative coach who helped develop the 4-2-4 formation; József Takács, prolific goalscorer from Budapest who won 32 caps for Hungary. Perception: Fast, attacking team who scored 26 goals in six games to win the Mitropa Cup. Ferencváros 1964-68: István Géczi, Dezsö Novak, Sándor Mátrai, László Horvath, István Juhász, Pál Orosz, Janos Orosz, Janos Karaba, Zoltán Varga, Flórian Albert, Gyula Rákosi, Máte Fenyvesi, Miklós Páncsics, Sándor Havasi, Lajus Szöke, László Balint, Sándo Katona Achievements: 1964 Hungarian League champions, 1964-65 Inter-Cities Fairs’ Cup winners; 1965 Hungarian League runners-up, 1966 Hungarian League runners-up, 1965-66 Hungarian Cup finalists; 1967 Hungarian League champions; 1968 Hungarian League champions, 1967-68 Inter-Cities Fairs’ Cup finalists. Managers: József Mészáros, Oszkár Vilezsál, Sándor Tátri, Károle Lakat. Key men: Flórian Albert, elegant midfielder who was named European Footballer of the Year in 1967. Nicknamed “the emperor”; Zoltán Varga, much-travelled midfielder who won Olympic gold; Gyula Rákosi, midfielder who played in World Cups and Olympics. Perception: Tough, cultured team, difficult to beat in Hungary. Feyenoord 1970: Eddie Pieters Graafland, Piet Romeijn, Theo Laseroms, Rinus Israël, Theo van Duivenbode, Wim Jansen, Franz Hasil, Wim van Hanegem, Henk Wery, Ove Kindvall, Coen Moulijn, Guus Haak, Ruud Geels. Achievements: 1968-69 Eredivisie champions, KNVB Cup winners; 1969-70 European Cup winners; 1970-71 Eredivisie champions. Manager: Ernst Happel Key men: Rinus Israël, nicknamed “Iron Rinus” for his solid defending, captain of the team and Dutch international (47 caps); Wim van Hanegem, superb passer of the ball, strong tackler and very tactical in his play, one of the Netherlands’ greatest players; Ove Kindvall, Swedish striker who was the first non-Dutch leading scorer in the Eredivisie (1969, 1970, 1971). Scored winning goal in European Cup final 1970. Perception: Less celebrated exponents of a more pragmatic style of “Total Football” but an excellent team that confounded the odds by winning the European Cup against highly-fancied Celtic. Fiorentina 1955-1957: Giuliano Sarti, Ardico Magnini, Sergio Cervato, Guiseppe Chiappella, Francesco Rosetta, Armando Segato, Alberto Orzan, Julinho, Guido Gratton, Giuseppe Virgili, Miguel Montuori, Maurilio Prini Achievements: 1955-56, Serie A champions; 1956-57 Serie A runners-up, European Cup finalists; 1957-78 Serie A runners-up; 1958-59 Serie A runners-up; 1959-60 Serie A runners-up. Manager: Fulvio Bernardini Key men: Giuliano Sarti, excellent goalkeeper who went on to star in the Grand Inter team of the mid-1960s; Julinho, Brazilian who was one of the great right wingers in history; Miguel Montuori, Argentinian-born forward whose career was plagued by injuries. Perception: An exciting team with outstanding individuals in Julinho and Montuori. Lost just one game in 1955-56 and were unlucky to come up against all-conquering Real Madrid in the European Cup final 1957. First Vienna 1930-1933: Karl Horeschovsky, Karl Rainer, Josef Blum, Willi Schmaus, Leopold Hofmann, Leonhard Machu, Anton Brosenbauer, Josef Adelbrecht, Fritz Gschwéidl, Gustav Tögel, Franz Erdl. Achievements: Austrian Champions 1931 and 1933; Austrian Cup winners 1930; Mitropa Cup winners 1931. Manager: Ferdinand Frithum Key men:Josef Blum, uncompromising defender and captain, won 51 caps for Austria; Leopold Hofmann, spent 15 years with the club, a skilful half-back who played in the 1934 World Cup. Won 27 caps for Austria. Josef Aldebrecht, much-travelled forward. Perception: Early adopters of the Danubian style. Flamengo 1981: Raul, Nei Das, Marinho, Mozer, Júnior, Andrade, Leandro, Zico, Nunes, Tita, Adílio, Anselmo, Lico, Baroninho. Achievements: Campeanato Brasileiro Série A winners 1980, 1982, 1983; Libertadores Cup winners 1981; Campeanato Carioca (Rio state championship) 1981. World Club champions (Intercontinental Cup) 1981. Manager: Paulo César Capegiani Key men: Zico, the “white Pele” who won over 70 caps for Brazil. Attacking midfielder, two-footed and a free-kick specialist; Júnior, attacking left-sided full back who could play in midfield; Leandro, one of Brazil’s all-time great defenders, a right wing-back with good dribbling skills. Perception: Attacking team who enjoyed their best ever season in 1981. Packed with talent and typical Brazilian skill. Fortuna Düsseldorf 1933: Willi Pesch, Kurt Trautwein, Paul Janes, Paul Bornefeld, Jakob Bender, Paul Mehl, Georg Hochsegang, Theo Breuer, Felix Zwolanowski, Willi Wigold, Stanislaus Kobierski. Achievements: Western Germany Champions 1931; German Championship winners 1933. Manager: Heinz Körner Key men:Paul Janes, one of the best full backs of his era, alsoplayed sweeper. Techniclaly brilliant, he was one of the first players to perform the bicycle kick; Jakob Bender, midfielder who played in the 1934 World Cup for Germany; Georg Hochsegang, veteran forward, also an international; Stanislaus Kobierski, forward who scored Germany’s first ever goal in the World Cup. Perception: Underdogs who won the German championship against FC Schalke. France 1982-1986: Joël Bats, Patrick battiston, Yvon Le Roux, Maxime bossis, Marius Tresor, Gerard Janvion, Jean-François Domergue, Luis Fernández, Alain Giresse, Jean Tigana, Michel Platini, Bernard Lacombe, Bruno Bellone, Manuel Amoros, Christian Lopez, Dominique Rocheteau, Bernard Genghini, Didier Six, William Ayache, Yannick Stopyra. Achievements: World Cup semi-finalists 1982 and 1986; European Championship winners 1984. Manager: Michael Hidalgo, Henri Michel Key men: Michel Platini, one of the all-time greats. Skilful, elegant, strategic and an eye for goal, along with superb dead-ball ability; Alain Giresse, attacking or central midfielder who acted as a playmaker and possessed pace and stamina; Jean Tigana, box-to-box midfielder with great movement, pace, defensive ability and teamwork ethic. Perception: Wonderful midfield, marshalled by Platini. Flowing, dynamic football. France 1998-2000: Fabien Barthez, Lilian Thurum, Frank Leboeuf, Marcel Desailly, Bixente Lizaru, Didier Deschamps, Christian Karembeu, Emmanuel Petit, Zinedine Zidane, Youri Djorkaeff, Stephane Guivarc’h, Patrick Vieira, Christoph Dugarry, Laurent Blanc, Thierry Henry, Sylvain Wiltord, David Trezeguet, Robert Pires. Achievements:World Cup winners 1998, European Championship winners 2000. Managers: Aimé Jacquet, Roger Lemerre Key men: Zinedine Zidane, one of the finest players of his generation. Elegant playmaker and attacking midfielder with an eye for goal; Didier Deschamps, intelligent and hard-working defensive midfielder and captain; Marcel Desailly, powerful sweeper/central defender born in Ghana. Perception:Exciting, skilful side with superb individuals. France 2018: Hugo Lloris, Benjamin Pavard, Raphaël Varane, Samuel Umtiti, Lucas Hernandez, Paul Pogba, N’Golo Kanté, Kylian Mbappe, Antoine Griezmann, Blaise Matuidi, Olivier Giroud, Steven Nzonzi, Corentin Tolisso, Nabil Fakir. Achievements: 2016 European Championship finalists; 2018 World Cup winners. Manager: Didier Deschamps Key men: Paul Pogba, tall, powerful midfielder, skilful but often temperamental; N’Golo Kanté, busy, hard-working midfielder who provides link between defence and attack; Kylian Mbappe, young striker brimming with skill and goal power. Perception: The best side in an entertaining World Cup in Russia. Fulham 1974-75: Peter Mellor, John Cutbush, John Fraser, Alan Mullery, John Lacy, Bobby Moore, John Mitchell, Jimmy Conway, Viv Busby, Alan Slough, Les Barrett, Barry Lloyd. Manager: Alec Stock Achievements: FA Cup finalists 1974-75, Anglo-Scottish Cup finalists 1975-76. Key men: John Mitchell, 23 year-old forward plucked from non-league football (St. Albans) who scored the decisive semi-final goal against Birmingham. Played 170 league games for Fulham, scoring 57 goals. Later played for Millwall and returned to his first club. Bobby Moore, although 34 years old, former England skipper Moore played a key role in helping Fulham’s younger players. He joined in 1974 from West Ham and finally retired in 1977 having played 148 games for Fulham. John Lacy, tall central defender who was signed from non-league Kingstonian. He was sold to Spurs in 1978 for £ 195,000. Perception: Surprise FA Cup finalists, boosted by veterans like Alan Mullery and Bobby Moore. G Glentoran 1950-51: Cecil Moore, John Dunlop, Noel McCarthy, Patrick Mulholland, Tommy Hughes, Jimmy Ferran, Michael Cunningham, Sammy Ewing, Sammy Hughes, Thomas Williamson, Jimmy Feeney, Billy Neill, Billy Humphries, Jim Murdough. Manager: Frank Grice Achievements: Irish League champions 1950-51, 1952-53; Irish Cup winners 1950-51. Key men: Sammy Hughes, Ballymena-born centre forward who was a prolific scorer, netting 297 goals for Glentoran in 378 games. Topped the Irish League scoring list three times in his career. Cecil Moore, goalkeeper who was capped by Ireland the United States. Joined Glentoran after the second world war and played six years with the club. Perception: Hard-to-beat team moulded by Frank Grice. Górnik Zabrze 1964-1967: Hubert Kostka, Stefan Florenski, Jan Kowalski, Roman Lentner, Włodzimierz Lubanski, Jerzy Musiałek, Edward Olszowska, Stanisław Oslizło,Ernest Pohl, Waldemar Słomiany, Erwin Wilczek, Zygfryd Szołtysik, Jan Gomola, Rainer Kuchta, Norbert Gwosdek, Alfred Olek. Achievements: Polish League champions 1964-65, 1965-66, 1966-67; Polish Cup winners 1964-65. Manager: Ferenc Farsang, Władyslaw Giergiel, Geza Kalocsai. Key men: Włodzimierz Lubanski, fast and prolific in front of goal. Injury robbed him of a place in Poland’s 1974 World Cup team. Second highest scorer for Polish national team; Hubert Kostka, goalkeeper who placed for the national team for a decade; Zygfryd Szołtysik, diminutive midfielder nicknamed “Zyga”, won 46 caps for Poland. Perception: Fast-moving team, fearsome on their own patch. Grasshopper Zurich 1936-37: Willy Huber, Severino Minellu, Walter Weiler, Oscar Rauch, Sirio Vernati, Max Abegglen, Josef Artimovics, Alfred Bickel, Eugen Rupf, Fritz Wagner, Robert Weiler. Achievements: Swiss League champions 1936-37, Swiss Cup winners 1936-37, Swiss Cup winners 1937-38 Manager: Karl Rappan Key men: Willy Huber, strong goalkeeper who played in two World Cups for Switzerland, winning 16 caps; Severino Minelli, one of the first sweepers, a calm defender who won 80 caps in a long career with Grasshopper; Alfred Bickel, tough striker who played 71 times for Switzerland. Perception: Innovative team coached by Rappan, early adopters of catenaccio system “the bolt” and use of sweepers. Great Britain Olympic XI 1912: Ronald Brebner, Thomas Burn, Arthur Knight, Joseph Dines, Edward Hanney, Henry Littlewort, Doug McWhirter, Harold Stamper, Gordon Wright, Harold Walden, Vivien Woodward, Arthur Berry, Gordon Hoare, Ivan Sharpe. Achievements: Olympic Gold medal, 1912 in Stockholm. Managers: A.Birch Key men: Ivan Sharpe, fast winger who went on to become a leading football writer; R.G. Brebner, outstanding goalkeeper who sadly signed two years on from a head injury sustained in a football match; Harold Walden, goalscoring forward to was later a music hall star. Perception: Cultured team, full of the Corinthian spirit. Greece 2004: Antonios Nikopolidis, Giourkas Seitaridis, Michalis Kapsis, Traianos Dellas, Takis Fyssas, Kostas Katsouranis, Theodoros Zagorakis, Angelos Basinas, Angelos Charisteas, Stelios Giannakopoulos, Zisis Vryzas, Stylianos Venetidis, Dimitris Papadopoulos. Achie
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https://www.thedailystar.net/sports/football/news/peles-gilded-turf-lined-tomb-opens-public-brazil-3321356
en
Pele's gilded, turf-lined tomb opens to public in Brazil
https://images.thedailys…6t183516.034.png
https://images.thedailys…6t183516.034.png
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[ "Pele", "football", "Brazil", "Brazil world cup", "Santos", "The King", "" ]
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[ "Santos" ]
2023-05-16T06:23:23+06:00
It is a final resting place fit for "The King": six months after the death of the man widely considered the greatest footballer of all time, Brazil opened Pele's gilded, football-turfed tomb to the public Monday.
en
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The Daily Star
https://www.thedailystar.net/sports/football/news/peles-gilded-turf-lined-tomb-opens-public-brazil-3321356
It is a final resting place fit for "The King": six months after the death of the man widely considered the greatest footballer of all time, Brazil opened Pele's gilded, football-turfed tomb to the public Monday. Pele, who died on December 29 at age 82 after a battle with cancer, was laid to rest at the Ecumenical Memorial Cemetery in Santos, Brazil. It is a high-rise, 14-story mausoleum that holds the Guinness world record for the tallest cemetery on Earth. Fans were greeted by two life-size golden statues of the player nicknamed "O Rei" -- The King -- whose remains rest inside a large golden vault displayed in the middle of a 200-square-meter (more than 2,000-square-foot) room carpeted in artificial turf. "It surpassed my expectations. It's a really beautiful place," said Ronaldo Rodrigues, 44, a businessman who was first in line to visit the tomb, along with his wife. "I hope lots of tourists will come visit and get to know a little about Pele's story, what he represented for Santos, Brazil and the entire world." Born Edson Arantes do Nascimento, Pele is the only player in history to win three World Cups (1958, 1962 and 1970). He scored a world record 1,281 goals during his more than two-decade career with Santos (1956-74), the New York Cosmos (1975-77) and the Brazilian national team. In tears, Pele's son Edinho told reporters who flocked to the southeastern port city that the family was still struggling to cope with their loss. "But we're also very proud and happy at all the affection and reverence that's kept pouring in," he said. For now, entries to the tomb are limited to 60 people a day, via a sign-up form on the cemetery's website. Topped with a cross, Pele's golden vault has black etchings on its sides depicting his 1,000th goal and his famous raised-fist goal celebration. The room is wallpapered with images of fans in a football stadium. The resort-like cemetery also features an auto museum that now includes the Mercedes Benz S-280 the company gave Pele in 1974 to commemorate his 1,000th goal. "It's a place that's rich in detail, all lovingly assembled in tribute, as the 'King' deserves," cemetery manager Paulo Campos told AFP.
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http://xtralegend.blogspot.com/2013/05/Brazil.html
en
International Legendary Museum
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[ "Naratorn Wirunhchatapant" ]
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“The Selecao” Brazil creates the value of the wonderful beautiful side to the game and have been producing many World legends. However,...
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http://xtralegend.blogspot.com/2013/05/Brazil.html
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https://www.besoccer.com/player/edinho-17679
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Profile Edinho, : Info, news, matches and statistics
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Access all Edinho's information, news, matches and stats. Search our website and discover everything about your favourite player
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https://www.besoccer.com/player/edinho-17679
Puedes ver la versión Española de BeSoccer.com. You can see the English version of BeSoccer.com. Vous pouvez voir la version French de BeSoccer.com. Puoi vedere la versione Italian su BeSoccer.com. Você pode ver a versão Brasileira de BeSoccer.com.
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https://pitacodogringo.wordpress.com/category/championship-guides/
en
Pitaco do gringo's Brazilian football site
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Posts about Championship guides written by pitacodogringo
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Pitaco do gringo's Brazilian football site
https://pitacodogringo.wordpress.com/category/championship-guides/
Posts filed under ‘Championship guides’
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http://soccerfootballwhatever.blogspot.com/2017/03/
en
Soccer, football or whatever
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[ "football or whatever", "View my complete profile" ]
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I am Lincoln W Chan from Hong Kong also aka Excapegoat at bigsoccer. This blog is mainly about all-time teams.
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I am Lincoln W Chan from Hong Kong also aka Excapegoat at bigsoccer. This blog is mainly about all-time teams.
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https://www.imdb.com/name/nm1233639/bio/
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Dondinho Nascimento
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[ "Dondinho Nascimento", "Biography" ]
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[ "IMDb" ]
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Dondinho Nascimento. Actor: O Rei Pelé. Dondinho Nascimento was born on 2 October 1917 in Campos Gerais, Minas Gerais, Brazil. He was an actor, known for O Rei Pelé (1965) and Pelé Eterno (2004). He died on 16 November 1996 in Santos, São Paulo, Brazil.
en
https://m.media-amazon.c…B1582158068_.png
IMDb
https://www.imdb.com/name/nm1233639/bio/
Dondinho Nascimento was born on October 2, 1917 in Campos Gerais, Minas Gerais, Brazil. He was an actor, known for O Rei Pelé (1965) and Pelé Eterno (2004). He died on November 16, 1996 in Santos, São Paulo, Brazil.
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https://www.besoccer.com/player/edinho-3229148
en
Profile Edinho, : Info, news, matches and statistics
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Access all Edinho's information, news, matches and stats. Search our website and discover everything about your favourite player
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https://www.besoccer.com/player/edinho-3229148
Puedes ver la versión Española de BeSoccer.com. You can see the English version of BeSoccer.com. Vous pouvez voir la version French de BeSoccer.com. Puoi vedere la versione Italian su BeSoccer.com. Você pode ver a versão Brasileira de BeSoccer.com.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edinho
en
Wikipedia
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[ "Contributors to Wikimedia projects" ]
2006-04-28T09:44:43+00:00
en
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edinho
Edinho is a Portuguese name, in origin a diminutive form of a forename such as Edison or Edson, both widely used as given names in South America and particularly in Brazil. Edinho (footballer, born 1955), known as Edino Nazareth Filho, defender Edinho (footballer, born 1966), full name Édson José Vichetin, right back Edinho (footballer, born 1967), full name Edon Amaral Neto, forward Edinho (footballer, born 1970), full name Edson Cholbi Nascimento, goalkeeper, son of Pelé Edinho (footballer, born 1974), full name Edoson Silva Martins, midfielder Edinho (footballer, born 1979), full name Edison Carlos Felícissimo Polidório, left back Edinho (footballer, born May 1982), full name Éder Luciano, forward Edinho (footballer, born 1983), full name Edimo Ferreira Campos, midfielder Edinho (footballer, born 1994), full name Francisco Edson Moreira Da Silva, midfielder Edinho (footballer, born July 1982), full name Arnaldo Edi Lopes da Silva, forward Edinho Júnior (born 1994), full name Edon Júnior Viegas Amaral, forward
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https://www.bigsoccer.com/threads/the-bigsoccer-profiles-complementary-thread.310570/
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The BigSoccer Profiles Complementary Thread
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This thread is complementary to the Bigsoccer Profiles project. It covers the basic career stats of over 1,000 former players. I’ve tried to gather the...
en
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BigSoccer Forum
https://www.bigsoccer.com/threads/the-bigsoccer-profiles-complementary-thread.310570/
This thread is complementary to the Bigsoccer Profiles project. It covers the basic career stats of over 1,000 former players. I’ve tried to gather the following information for each player: -Name -Nickname -Year of Birth -Country -Position -Caps / Goals -International career span -Participation in World Cup finals -Major trophies won with his country -Major trophies won with his club -Personal awards (Golden Ball, Golden Shoe, Top Scorer crown) -League appearances and goals (first division only) -Clubs played for plus club career span For many players I’ve been able to gather all of this data, however there are also a couple for whom parts of this information I couldn’t trace back. Book sources used were: - The Guinness Record of World Football by Guy Oliver (1992) - The Complete Encyclopedia of Football by Keir Radnedge (1998) - Fussball Lexikon by Bernd Rohr and Günter Simon (1994) - Das Grosse Europäische Fussballbuch by Uwe Nuttelmann (1997 - Fussball WM-Almanach by R.Keifu (1995) - Fussball EM-Almanach by Matthias Kropp (1997) - Enzyklopaedie der Europäischen Fussballvereine by Hardy Grüne (1992) As well as two volumes of books by the “International Federation of Football History and Statistics” (IFFHS), that deal with the World’s 211 Top League Goal Scorers of the 20th Century and the World Football Players of the 20th Century (book titles translated from German). Internet sources used were: RSSSF IFFHS Voetbal Focus Football Heroes Planet World Cup World Cup History Samba Foot Weltfussball Fussballdaten Nobok Sports Wikipedia Unfortunately some of these sources offered conflicting information on various player data, hence I can’t claim that every single information listed in this thread is 100% accurate, sometimes a bit of guessing had to be done, particularly in finding the correct span of years someone played for a club (I found a lot of conflicting information in that department). Some additional notes: The “Golden Ball South America” is based on the annual rankings of the “El Mundo” newspaper from Caracas (Venezuela). Their rankings are used for the period 1971 to 1990. Since 1991, the rankings of the “El Pais” newspaper from Montevideo (Uruguay) are used. The “Best Keeper” information is based on the highest ranked keeper in the annual “Golden Ball” rankings of South America and Europe. World Cup participation is listed regardless if the player was used in the final stages or not. Let’s get it on … Abbadie, Julio Cesar *1930, Uruguay, outside right 26 Caps (14 goals): 1952-1957 World Cup finals 1954 Intercontinental Cup 1966 1950-1956 Penarol 1956-1960 FC Genoa 1960-1962 Lecco 1962-1969 Penarol Abbes, Claude *1927, France, goalkeeper 9 Caps: 1957-1958 World Cup finals 1954, 1958 1953-1958 AS St. Etienne Abegglen, André („Trello“) *1909, +1944, Switzerland, inside forward 52 Caps (30 goals): 1927-1943 World Cup finals 1934, 1938 1928-1930 Cantonal 1930-1935 Grasshoppers 1935-1938 FC Sochaux 1938-1941 Servette 1941-1944 FC La Chaux-de-Fonds Abegglen, Max („Xam“) *1902, +1970, Switzerland, half back 68 Caps (34 goals): 1922-1937 World Cup finals 1934, 1938 1920-1926 Cantonal / Lausanne 1926-1939 Grasshoppers Abramczik, Rüdiger (“Abi”) *1956, (West) Germany, right wing 19 Caps (2 goals): 1977-1979 World Cup finals 1978 316 Bundesliga appearances (77 goals) 1973-1980 Schalke 04 1980-1983 Borussia Dortmund 1983-1984 Nuremberg 1984-1985 Galatasaray 1985-1987 RW Oberhausen (II. Division) 1987-1988 Schalke 04 Acimovic, Yovan *1948, Yugoslavia (Serbia), midfielder 56 Caps (3 goals): 1968-1976 World Cup finals 1974 560 club games (114 goals) 1966-1976 OFK & Red Star 1976-1978 Saarbrücken Adamec, Jozef *1942, Slovak Republic/Czechoslovakia, inside & center forward 44 Caps (14 goals): 1960-1973 World Cup finals 1962, 1970 Top Scorer CSSR 1967, 1968, 1970, 1971 396 club games (170 goals) 1959-1961 Spartak Trnava 1961-1963 Dukla Praha 1963-1964 Spartak Trnava 1963-1965 Slovan Bratislava 1965-1976 Spartak Trnava Adams, Tony Alexander *1966, England, center back 66 Caps (5 goals): 1987-2000 World Cup finals 1998 European Cup II 1994 504 league appearances (32 goals) 1983-2002 Arsenal FC Ademir, Marques de Menezes *1922, +1996, Brazil, inside & center forward 39 Caps (32 goals): 1945-1953 World Cup finals 1950 (Top Scorer) Copa America 1949 Top Scorer Brazil (Rio) 1949, 1950 409 league appearances for Vasco (301 goals) 1939-1942 Pernambuco 1942-1946 Vasco da Gama 1946-1947 Fluminense 1947-1956 Vasco da Gama Aguas, José Pinto Carvalho dos Santos *1931, Angola/Portugal, center forward 30 Caps (11 goals): 1952-1963 288 league appearances (292 goals) European Champions Cup 1961, 1962 Top Scorer Champions Cup 1961 Top Scorer Portugal 1952, 1956, 1957, 1959, 1961 1950-1963 Benfica 1963-1964 Austria Vienna Albert, Florian *1941, Hungary, center forward 75 Caps (33 goals): 1959-1974 World Cup finals 1962 (Top Scorer), 1966 Fairs Cup 1965 Golden Ball Europe 1967 Top Scorer Fairs Cup 1967 Top Scorer Hungary 1960, 1961, 1965 350 club games (258 goals) 1958-1975 Ferencvaros Albertini, Demetrio *1971, Italy, midfielder 79 Caps (2 goals): 1991-2002 World Cup finals 1994, 1998 European Champions Cup 1989, 1990 Champions League 1994 391 league appearances (26 goals) 1988-1991 AC Milan 1990-1991 Padova (II. Division) 1991-2002 AC Milan 2002-2003 Atletico Madrid 2003-2004 Lazio 2004-2005 Atalanta Bergamo 2004-2005 FC Barcelona Albertosi, Enrico *1939, Italy, goalkeeper 34 Caps: 1961-1972 World Cup finals 1962, 1966, 1970 European Cup II 1961 European Champion 1968 532 Serie A appearances 1958-1968 Fiorentina 1968-1974 Cagliari 1974-1980 AC Milan Albrecht, José Rafael („el Tucu“) *1941, Argentina, sweeper and midfielder 39 Caps (3 goals): 1961-1969 World Cup finals 1966 506 league appearances (95 goals) Estudiantes San Lorenzo Aldair, Nascimentos dos Santos *1965, Brazil, center back 81 Caps (3 goals): 1981-2000 World Cup finals 1990, 1994 (Champion), 1998 Copa America 1989, 1997 329 Serie A appearances for Roma 1986-1988 Flamengo 1988-1989 Benfica 1989-1990 Flamengo 1990-2003 Roma 2003-2004 FC Genoa Aldridge, John *1958, Ireland, forward 69 Caps (19 goals): 1986-1997 World Cup finals 1990, 1994 147 league appearances (88 goals) 1979-1984 Newport County (IV./III. Division) 1983-1985 Oxford United (III./II. Division) 1985-1987 Oxford United 1986-1990 Liverpool FC 1989-1991 Real Sociedad San Sebastian 1991-1992 Tranmere Rovers (III. Division) 1992-1998 Tranmere Rovers (II. Division) Aleinikov, Sergey *1961, Soviet Union (Belorussia), midfielder 77 Caps (6 goals): 1984-1992 (for Soviet Union/CIS) 4 Caps (0 goals): 1992-1994 (for Belorussia) World Cup finals 1986, 1990 UEFA Cup 1990 212 League appearances for Minsk (30 goals) 1980-1989 Dinamo Minsk 1989-1990 Juventus 1990-1992 US Lecce 1992-1995 Gamba Osaka Alemao, Rogerio de Brito Ricardo *1961, Brazil, midfielder 36 Caps (6 goals): 1983-1990 World Cup finals 1986, 1990 Copa America 1989 UEFA Cup 1989 124 Serie A appearances (14 goals) 1980-1987 Botafogo 1987-1988 Atletico Madrid 1988-1992 SSC Napoli 1992-1993 Atalanta Bergamo Alexanco, José Ramon Ventosa *1956, Spain, center back 34 Caps (4 goals): 1978-1982 World Cup finals 1982 Champions League 1992 European Cup II 1982, 1989 365 league appearances (34 goals) 1974-1975 Athletic Bilbao (amateur) 1975-1976 Deportivo Alaves 1977-1980 Athletic Bilbao 1980-1993 FC Barcelona Alkorta, Rafael Martinez *1968, Spain, center back World Cup finals 1990, 1994, 1998 54 Caps (0 goals): 1990-1998 1987-1993 Athletic Bilbao 1993-1997 Real Madrid 1997-2002 Athletic Bilbao Allchurch, Ivor *1933, +1997, Wales, inside left 68 Caps (23 goals): 1950-1966 World Cup finals 1958 694 League appearances (251 goals) 1949-1958 Swansea Town 1958-1962 Newcastle United 1962-1965 Cardiff City 1965-1968 Swansea Town Allemandi, Luigi *1903, +1959, Italy, left full back 24 Caps: 1925-1936 World Cup finals 1934 (Champion) 1920-1928 Juventus 1928-1934 (Ambrosiana) Internazionale 1934-1941 AS Roma Allofs, Klaus *1956, (West) Germany, outside left and midfielder 56 Caps (17 goals): 1978-1988 World Cup finals 1986 European Champion 1980 European Cup II 1992 Top Scorer UEFA Cup 1986 Top Scorer Germany 1979, 1985 514 League appearances (211 goals) 1975-1981 Fortuna Düsseldorf 1981-1987 Cologne 1987-1990 Olympique Marseille 1990-1993 Werder Bremen Altafini, José Giuseppe („Mazola“) *1938, Brazil/Italy, center forward 8 Caps (4 goals): 1958 (for Brazil) 6 Caps (5 goals): 1961-1962 (for Italy) World Cup finals 1958 (Champion), 1962 European Champions Cup 1963 Top Scorer Champions Cup 1963 Top Scorer Italy 1962 459 League appearances (216 goals) 1955-1958 Palmeiras 1958-1965 AC Milan 1965-1972 SSC Napoli 1972-1976 Juventus 1976-1978 FC Chiasso (II. Division) Altobelli, Alessandro (“Spillo”) *1955, Italy, forward 61 Caps (25 goals): 1980-1988 World Cup finals 1982, 1986 Top Scorer European Cup II 1979 337 Serie A appearances (137 goals) 1974-1977 Brescia 1977-1988 Internazionale 1988-1989 Juventus 1989-1990 Brescia 1990-1992 Ascoli Alzamendi, Antonio Casas *1956, Uruguay, forward 31 Caps (6 goals): 1978-1990 World Cup finals 1986, 1990 Copa Libertadores 1986 Intercontinental Cup 1986 1974-1976 Policial de Durazno 1976-1978 Sud America 1978-1981 Indepediente 1981-1982 River Plate 1982-1983 Nacional Montevideo 1983-1984 Universidad Guadalajara 1984-1985 Penarol 1985-1988 River Plate 1988-1990 Logrones 1990-1991 Mandiyu de Corrientes 1990-1991 Rampla Juniors 1991-1992 Racing Durazno Amancio, Amaro Varelos *1939, Spain, inside forward and outside right 42 Caps (11 goals): 1962-1974 World Cup finals 1966 European Champion 1964 European Champions Cup 1966 Top Scorer Spain 1969, 1970 1957-1962 Deportivo La Coruna 1962-1978 Real Madrid Amaral, Joao Justino dos Santos *1954, Brazil, center back 40 Caps (0 goals): 1975-1980 World Cup finals 1978 1971-1978 Guarani 1978-1981 Corinthians 1981-1982 Santos FC 1982-1984 America de Mexico 1984-1986 Universidad de Guadalajara Amarildo, Amaro Tavares da Silveira *1939, Brazil, outside and inside forward 23 Caps (8 goals): 1962-1963 World Cup finals 1962 (Champion) Top Scorer Brazil (Rio) 1961 1956-1961 Flamengo 1961-1963 Botafogo 1963-1967 AC Milan 1967-1969 Fiorentina 1969-1973 AS Roma Amokachi, Daniel Owefin *1972, Nigeria, forward World Cup finals 1994, 1998 African Champions 1994 201 league appearances (64 goals) 1989-1990 Ranchers Bees 1990-1995 Club Bruges 1994-1996 Everton FC 1996-1999 Besiktas Amoros, Manuel *1962, France, left and right full back 83 Caps (2 goals): 1982-1992 World Cup finals 1982, 1986 European Champion 1984 Champions League 1993 1978-1989 AS Monaco 1989-1993 Olympique Marseille 1993-1995 Olympique Lyon 1995-1996 Olympique Marseille Amunike, Emanuel (“Emmy”) *1970, Nigeria, forward World Cup finals 1994 African Champions 1994 European Cup II 1997 1989-1990 Concord FC 1990-1991 Julius Berger 1991-1994 Zamalek (Egypt) 1994-1997 Sporting Lisboa 1996-2000 FC Barcelona 2000-2002 Albacete 2003-2004 Al-Wehdat Anastasi, Pietro *1948, Italy, center forward 25 Caps (8 goals): 1968-1975 World Cup finals 1974 European Champion 1968 Top Scorer Fairs Cup 1971 338 Serie A appearances (105 goals) 1967-1968 Varese 1968-1976 Juventus 1976-1978 Internazionale 1978-1981 Ascoli Ancelotti, Carlo *1959, Italy, midfielder 26 Caps (1 goal): 1981-1991 World Cup finals 1990 European Champions Cup 1989, 1990 Intercontinental Cup 1989 1979-1987 AS Roma 1987-1992 AC Milan Ancheta, Atilio Genaro *1948, Uruguay, center back 20 Caps (1 goal): 1969-1971 World Cup finals 1970 Copa Libertadores 1971 1966-1971 Nacional Montevideo 1971-1980 Gremio Porto Alegre Anderson, Viv *1956, England, right full back 30 Caps (2 goals): 1978-1988 World Cup finals 1982, 1986 European Champions Cup 1979, 1980 475 league appearances (31 goals) 1974-1977 Nottingham Forest (II. Division) 1977-1984 Nottingham Forest 1984-1987 Arsenal FC 1987-1991 Manchester United 1990-1991 Sheffield Wednesday (II. Division) 1991-1993 Sheffield Wednesday Andersson, Kenneth *1967, Sweden, center forward 83 Caps (31 goals): 1990-2000 World Cup finals 1994 1985-1988 IFK Eskilstuna (III./II. Division) 1988-1991 IFK Gothenburg 1991-1993 KV Mechelen 1992-1993 IFK Norrköping 1993-1994 OSC Lille 1994-1995 SM Caen 1995-1996 AS Bari 1996-1999 FC Bologna 1999-2000 Roma 1999-2000 FC Bologna 2000-2002 Fenerbahce Andersson, Patrik *1971, Sweden, center back 96 Caps (3 goals): 1991-2002 World Cup finals 1998 European Champions Cup 2001 326 league appearances (22 goals) 1989-1992 Malmö FF 1992-1994 Blackburn Rovers 1993-1999 Borussia Mönchengladbach 1999-2001 Bayern Munich 2001-2003 FC Barcelona Andrade I, José Leandro *1898 (1901?), +1957, Uruguay, half back 31 Caps (1 goal): 1922-1933 World Cup finals 1930 (Champion) Copa America 1923, 1924, 1926 Bellavista Nacional Penarol Andrade II, Victor Rodriguez *1928, Uruguay, half back World Cup finals 1950 (Champion), 1954 Copa America 1956 Monetevideo Wanderers Penarol Andreolo, Michele *1912, +1981, Uruguay/Italy, center back 26 Caps (1 goal): 1936-1942 World Cup finals 1938 (Champion) FC Bologna Angelillo, Antonio Valentin *1937, Argentina/Italy, inside forward 14 Caps (11 goals): 1956-1957 (for Argentina) 2 Caps (1 goal): 1960-1961 (for Italy) Copa America 1957 Fairs Cup 1961 Top Scorer Italy 1959 245 Serie A appearances (98 goals) 1957-1961 Internazionale 1960-1965 Roma 1965-1966 AC Milan 1966-1967 Lecco 1967-1968 AC Milan 1968-1969 FC Genoa (II. Division) Angloma, Jocelyn *1965, France (Guadeloupe), right full back 37 Caps (1 goal): 1990-1996 Champions League 1993 1985-1987 Stade Rennes 1987-1990 OSC Lille 1989-1991 Paris St. Germain 1990-1994 Olympique Marseille 1994-1996 Torino 1996-1997 Internazionale 1997-2002 FC Valencia Antenen, Charles (“Kiki”) *1929, Switzerland, outside and inside right 56 Caps (22 goals): 1948-1962 World Cup finals 1950, 1954, 1962 444 league appearances (233 goals) 1944-1965 FC La-Chaux-de-Fonds Antognoni, Giancarlo *1954, Italy, midfielder, inside forward 73 Caps (7 goals): 1974-1983 World Cup finals 1978, 1982 (Champion) 341 Serie A appearances (61 goals) 1972-1987 Fiorentina 1987-1989 Lausanne Sports Antoniadis, Antonis *1945, Greece, forward 31 Caps (10 goals): 1969-1975 Top Scorer Champions Cup 1971 Top Scorer Greece 1969, 1971, 1973, 1974 1967-1975 Panathinaikos Apolloni, Luigi *1967, Italy, center back 15 Caps (1 goal): 1994-1996 World Cup finals 1994 European Cup II 1993 UEFA Cup 1995, 1999 AC Parma Hellas Verona Araquistain, José *1937, Spain, goalkeeper 4 Caps: 1961-1962 World Cup finals 1962 European Champions Cup 1966 1961-1968 Real Madrid Archibald, Steve *1956, Scotland, forward 27 Caps (4 goals): 1980-1986 World Cup finals 1982, 1986 UEFA Cup 1984 131 league appearances for Spurs (58 goals) 1977-1980 Aberdeen FC 1980-1984 Tottenham Hotspurs 1984-1988 Barcelona FC Arconanda, Luis (“Lord”) *1954, Spain, goalkeeper 68 Caps: 1977-1985 World Cup finals 1978, 1982 Europe’s Best Keeper 1980 350 League appearances 1973-1989 Real San Sebastian Ardiles, Osvaldo Cesar (“Priton”, “Ossie”) *1952, Argentina, midfielder 52 Caps (8 goals): 1975-1982 World Cup finals 1978 (Champion), 1982 UEFA Cup 1984 143 league appearances in Argentina (16 goals) 1973-1974 Instituto 1973-1974 Belgrano 1975-1978 Huracan 1978-1982 Tottenham Hotspur 1982-1983 Paris St. Germain 1983-1988 Tottenham Hotspur 1988-1988 Blackburn Rovers 1988-1991 Swindon Town Armfield, James Christopher *1935, England, right full back 43 Caps (0 goals): 1959-1966 World Cup finals 1962 568 league appearances 1954-1971 Blackpool FC Arnesen, Frank *1956, Denmark, midfielder 52 Caps (14 goals): 1977-1987 World Cup finals 1986 European Champions Cup 1988 1974-1976 Fremad Amager Copenhagen 1976-1981 Ajax Amsterdam 1981-1983 CF Valencia 1983-1985 RSC Anderlecht 1985-1991 PSV Eindhoven Artime, Luis *1938, Argentina, center forward 25 Caps (24 goals): 1961-1967 World Cup finals 1966 Copa Libertadores 1971 Intercontinental Cup 1971 Top Scorer Copa Libertadores 1971 Top Scorer Argentina 1962, 1963, 1966, 1967 Top Scorer Uruguay 1969, 1970, 1971 302 league appearances (236 goals) 1958-1961 Atlanta 1962-1965 River Plate 1966-1968 Indepediente 1968-1969 Palmeiras 1969-1971 Nacional Montevideo 1971-1972 Fluminense 1973-1974 Nacional Montevideo Asensi, Juan Manuel Ripoll *1949, Spain, midfielder and inside forward 41 Caps (7 goals): 1969-1980 World Cup finals 1978 European Cup II 1979 1967-1980 FC Barcelona 1980-1982 Puebla 1982-1983 Oxatepec Asparoukhov, Georgi (“Gundi”) *1943, +1971, Bulgaria, center forward 50 Caps (19 goals): 1962-1970 World Cup finals 1962, 1966, 1970 Top Scorer European Cup II 1963 Top Scorer Bulgaria 1965, 1970 245 league appearances (150 goals) 1961-1964 Botev Plovdiv 1964-1971 Levski/Spartak Sofia Asprilla, Faustino Hernan *1969, Colombia, forward 57 Caps (20 goals): 1993-2001 World Cup finals 1994, 1998 European Cup II 1993 UEFA Cup 1995, 1999 1990-1992 Atletico Nacional 1992-1996 AC Parma 1995-1998 Newcastle United 1998-1999 AC Parma 1999-2000 Palmeiras 1999-2000 Fluminense 2000-2001 Palmeiras 2000-2002 Fluminense 2001-2004 Universidad de Chile 2003-2004 Estudiantes Augenthaler, Klaus (“Auge”) *1957, (West) Germany, center back, sweeper 27 Caps (0 goals): 1983-1990 World Cup finals 1986, 1990 (Champion) 404 Bundesliga appearances (52 goals) 1977-1991 Bayern Munich Augusto, José Pinto de Almeida *1937, Portugal, outside right 45 Caps (8 goals): 1958-1968 World Cup finals 1966 European Champions Cup 1961, 1962 1955-1959 Barreirense 1959-1969 Benfica Axbom, Sven *1926, Sweden, left full back 31 Caps (0 goals): 1955-1960 World Cup finals 1958 IFK Norrköping Ayache, William *1961, France (Algeria), right full back 20 Caps (0 goals): 1983-1988 World Cup finals 1986 347 league appearances (5 goals) 1979-1986 FC Nantes 1986-1987 Paris St. Germain 1987-1988 Olympique Marseille 1988-1989 FC Nantes 1989-1990 Girondins Bordeaux 1989-1990 SC Montpellier 1990-1991 OGC Nice 1990-1991 Olympique Marseille 1991-1992 Olympique Nimes 1992-1995 AS Cannes Babington, Carlos *1949, Argentina, midfielder 12 Caps (2 goals): 1974 World Cup finals 1974 Huracan SG Wattenscheid 09 (II. Division) (1974-1978) Baggio, Roberto *1967, Italy, forward and midfielder 56 Caps (27 goals): 1988-2004 World Cup finals 1990, 1994, 1998 Golden Ball Europe 1993 UEFA Cup 1993 Top Scorer European Cup II 1991 452 Serie A appearances (203 goals) 1982-1985 Lanerossi Vicenza (III. Division) 1985-1990 Fiorentina 1990-1995 Juventus 1995-1997 AC Milan 1997-1998 FC Bologna 1998-2000 Internazionale 2000-2004 Brescia Bagni, Salvatore *1956, Italy, midfielder 41 Caps (4 goals): 1981-1987 World Cup finals 1986 1977-1981 Perugia 1981-1984 Internazionale 1984-1988 Napoli 1988-1989 Avellino Bajevic, Dusan (“Dusko”) *1948, Yugoslavia (Bosnia), center forward 37 Caps (29 goals): 1970-1977 World Cup finals 1974 Top Scorer Yugoslavia 1970 Top Scorer Greece 1980 429 league appearances (231 goals) 1966-1977 Velez Mostar 1977-1981 AEK Athens 1981-1983 Velez Mostar Bakero, José Maria *1963, Spain, midfielder 30 Caps (7 goals): 1987-1994 World Cup finals 1990, 1994 Champions League 1992 1980-1988 Real Sociedad San Sebastian 1988-1995 FC Barcelona 1995-1997 Vera Cruz (Mexico) 1997-1999 Norwich City Bal, Andrei *1958, Soviet Union, midfielder 17 Caps (1 goal): 1981-1986 World Cup finals 1982, 1986 European Cup II 1986 Dynamo Kiev Maccabi Haifa Bnei Yahuda Balakov, Krassimir *1966, Bulgaria, midfielder 92 Caps (16 goals): 1988-2003 World Cup finals 1994 236 Bundesliga appearances (54 goals) 1986-1990 Etar Veliko Tarnovo 1990-1995 Sporting Lisboa 1995-2003 VfB Stuttgart Balbo, Abel Eduardo *1966, Argentina, forward 37 Caps (11 goals): 1989-1998 World Cup finals 1990, 1994, 1998 UEFA Cup 1999 314 league appearances (138 goals) 1987-1988 Newell’s Old Boys 1988-1989 River Plate 1989-1990 Udinese 1990-1992 Udinese (II. Division) 1992-1993 Udinese 1993-1998 Roma 1998-1999 AC Parma 1999-2000 Fiorentina 2000-2002 Roma Balint, Laszlo *1948, Hungary, center back 74 Caps (4 goals): 1972-1982 World Cup finals 1978, 1982 1967-1979 Ferencvaros 1979-1981 FC Bruges 1981-1985 FC Toulouse Ball, Alan James (“Firehead”) *1945, England, half back and midfielder 72 Caps (8 goals): 1965-1975 World Cup finals 1966 (Champion), 1970 743 league appearances (170 goals) 1962-1966 Blackpool FC 1966-1971 Everton FC 1971-1977 Arsenal FC 1976-1980 Southampton FC 1979-1980 Philadelphia Furies 1980-1981 Vancouver Whitecaps Ballaman, Robert *1926, Switzerland, 50 Caps (19 goals): 1948-1961 World Cup finals 1954 1944-1950 FC Bienne (II. Division) 1950-1951 Grashoppers (II. Division) 1951-1963 Grashoppers 1963-1964 FC Winterthur (II. Division) Baltacha, Sergei *1958, Soviet Union, sweeper 47 Caps (2 goals): 1980-1988 World Cup finals 1982 European Cup II 1986 1976-1988 Dynamo Kiev 1988-1993 Ipswich Town 1993-1996 St. Johnstone Baltazar, Oswaldo da Silva *1926, Brazil, center forward 19 Caps (16 goals): 1950-1956 World Cup finals 1950, 1954 1943-1944 Uniao Monte Alegre 1944-1946 Jabaraqua 1946-1956 Corinthians 1956-1957 Juventus SP 1957-1958 Jabaraqua 1958-1959 Uniao Paulista Banishevski, Anatoli *1946, Soviet Union, inside or center forward 40 Caps (19 goals): 1965-1972 World Cup finals 1966 212 league appearances (81 goals) 1963-1978 Nevchi Baku Banks, Gordon *1937, England, goalkeeper 73 Caps: 1963-1972 World Cup finals 1962, 1966 (Champion), 1970 Europe’s Best Keeper 1970, 1972 487 league appearances (England) 1959-1967 Leicester City 1966-1973 Stoke City 1977-1978 Fort Lauderdale Strikers Baratelli, Dominique *1947, France, goalkeeper 21 Caps: 1972-1982 World Cup finals 1978, 1982 1967-1971 AC Ajaccio 1971-1978 OGC Nice 1978-1985 Paris St. Germain Barbosa, Moacir *1921, +2000, Brazil, goalkeeper 20 Caps: 1945-1953 World Cup finals 1950 Copa America 1949 494 league appearances 1940-1941 ADCI 1942-1944 Ypiranga 1945-1955 Vasco da Gama 1956-1957 Bonsucesso 1958-1960 Santa Cruz 1961-1962 Campo Grande Baresi, Franco (“Franz”) *1960, Italy, libero 81 Caps (1 goal): 1982-1994 World Cup finals 1982 (Champion), 1990, 1994 European Champions Cup 1989, 1990, 1994 Intercontinental Cup 1989, 1990 532 Serie A appearances (16 goals) 1977-1997 AC Milan Baresi, Giuseppe *1958, Italy, midfielder 18 Caps (0 goals): 1979-1986 World Cup finals 1986 UEFA Cup 1991 559 Serie A appearances for Inter (13 goals) 1977-1992 Internazionale 1992-1994 FC Modena Barison, Paolo *1936, +1979, Italy, outside left 9 Caps (6 goals): 1959-1966 World Cup finals 1966 Venezia (II. Division) Genoa AC Milan Sampdoria Roma Napoli Barnes, John Charles *1963, England (Jamaica), midfielder and forward 79 Caps (11 goals): 1983-1995 World Cup finals 1986, 1990 550 league appearances (154 goals) 1981-1982 Watford FC (II. Division) 1982-1987 Watford FC 1987-1997 Liverpool FC 1997-1999 Newcastle United 1998-1999 Charlton Athletic Basler, Mario *1968, Germany, right wing midfielder 30 Caps (2 goals): 1994-1998 World Cup finals 1994 European Champion 1996 Top Scorer Germany 1995 262 Bundesliga appearances (62 goals) 1987-1989 Kaiserslautern 1989-1991 RW Essen (II. Division) 1991-1993 Hertha BSC (II. Division) 1993-1996 Werder Bremen 1996-2000 Bayern Munich 1999-2003 Kaiserslautern 2003-2004 Al-Rayyan Bastin, Clifford *1912, +1991, England, outside left 21 Caps (12 goals): 1931-1938 367 league appearances (157 goals) 1930-1947 Arsenal Bastrup, Lars *1955, Denmark, left wing 30 Caps (10 goals): 1975-1983 European Champions Cup 1983 77 Bundesliga appearances (20 goals) Kjellerup Silkeborg IF Aarhus GF (1973-1975) Kickers Offenbach (1975-1976) Kickers Offenbach (1976-1979) (II. Division) Aarhus GF (1979-1981) Hamburg SV (1981-1983) Skovbakken IK Ikast FS Basualdo, José Horacio *1963, Argentina, midfielder 31 Caps (0 goals): 1989-1995 World Cup finals 1990, 1994 South American Champion 1993 1989-1991 VfB Stuttgart 1991-1992 Racing Club 1992-1995 Velez Sarsfield 1996-1997 Boca Juniors 1997-1998 Deportivo Espanol 1998-2001 Boca Juniors 2000-2001 CD Extremadura 2001-2002 Velez Sarsfield Bathenay, Dominque *1954, France, midfielder and center back 20 Caps (4 goals): 1975-1982 World Cup 1978 1971-1978 AS St. Etienne 1978-1985 Paris St. Germain 1985-1987 FC Sète Batista, Sergio Daniel *1962, Argentina, midfielder 39 Caps (0 goals): 1985-1990 World Cup finals 1986 (Champion), 1990 Copa Libertadores 1985 Argentinos Juniors River Plate Batistuta, Gabriel *1969, Argentina, forward 78 Caps (56 goals): 1991-2002 World Cup finals 1994, 1998, 2002 Copa America 1991, 1993 Top Scorer Italy 1995 318 Serie A appearances (184 goals) 1988-1989 Newell’s Old Boys 1989-1990 River Plate 1990-1991 Boca Juniors 1991-2000 Fiorentina 2000-2003 AS Roma 2002-2003 Internazionale 2003-2005 Al Arabi Bats, Joel *1957, France, goalkeeper 50 Caps: 1983-1989 World Cup finals 1986 European Champion 1984 1974-1980 FC Sochaux 1980-1985 AJ Auxerre 1985-1992 Paris St. Germain Battistini, Sergio *1963, Italy, libero 4 Caps (1 goals): 1984 UEFA Cup 1991, 1994 346 Serie A appearances (32 goals) 1980-1981 AC Milan (II. Division) 1981-1982 AC Milan 1982-1983 AC Milan (II. Division) 1983-1985 AC Milan 1985-1990 Fiorentina 1990-1994 Internazionale 1994-1996 Brescia 1996-1997 AC Spezia 1906 (III. Division) Battiston, Patrick *1957, France, right full back 56 Caps (3 goals): 1977-1987 World Cup finals 1978, 1982, 1986 European Champion 1984 1974-1980 FC Metz 1980-1983 As St. Etienne 1983-1987 Girondins Bordeaux 1987-1989 AS Monaco 1989-1991 Girondins Bordeaux Batty, David *1968, England, midfielder 42 Caps (0 goals): 1991-2002 World Cup finals 1998 343 league appearances (7 goals) 1987-1990 Leeds United (II. Division) 1990-1994 Leeds United 1993-1996 Blackburn Rovers 1995-1999 Newcastle United 1998-2004 Leeds United Bauer, José Carlos *1925, Brazil, half back 27 Caps (0 goals): 1949-1955 World Cup finals 1950, 1954 South American Champion 1949 1945-1956 Sao Paulo FC 1956-1957 Botafogo Baxter, James Curran (“Jim”) *1939, +2001, Scotland, left half back 34 Caps (3 goals): 1961-1968 1957-1960 Raith Rovers 1960-1965 Glasgow Rangers 1965-1967 Sunderland FC 1967-1969 Nottingham Forest 1969-1970 Glasgow Rangers Beara, Vladimir (“Cat”) *1928, Yugoslavia (Croatia), goalkeeper 60 Caps: 1950-1959 World Cup finals 1950, 1954, 1958 1946-1955 Hajduk Split 1955-1960 Red Star 1960-1962 Alemannia Aachen Beardsley, Peter Andrew *1961, England, forward 59 Caps (9 goals): 1986-1996 World Cup finals 1986, 1990 592 league appearances (209 goals) 1979-1981 Carlisle United (III. Division) 1980-1981 Vancouver Whitecaps 1981-1982 Carlisle United (III. Division) 1981-1982 Vancouver Whitecaps 1982-1983 Manchester United 1982-1983 Vancouver Whitecaps 1983-1987 Newcastle United 1987-1991 Liverpool FC 1991-1993 Everton FC 1993-1997 Newcastle United 1997-1998 Bolton Wanderers 1997-1998 Manchester City Beer, Erich („Ete“) *1946, (West) Germany, midfielder 24 Caps (7 goals): 1974-1978 World Cup finals 1978 341 Bundesliga appearances (95 goals) 1965-1968 VfL Neustadt (II. Division) 1968-1969 Nuremberg 1969-1971 RW Essen 1971-1979 Hertha BSC 1979-1981 Ittihad Djidda 1981-1984 TSV 1860 Munich (II./III. Division) Bebeto, José Roberto *1964, Brazil, forward 75 Caps (39 goals): 1985-1998 World Cup finals 1990, 1994 (Champion), 1998 Copa America 1989 Top Scorer Brazil 1992 1983-1984 Vitoria Bahia 1983-1989 Flamengo 1989-1992 Vasco da Gama 1992-1995 Deportivo La Coruna 1995-1996 Flamengo 1996-1997 FC Sevilla 1996-1997 Cruzeiro 1997-1998 Vitoria Bahia 1998-1999 Botafogo 1999-2000 Toros Neza Mexico 2000-2001 Kashima Antlers 2001-2002 Vasco da Gama 2002-2003 Al-Ittihad Beckenbauer, Franz („Der Kaiser“) *1945, (West) Germany, midfielder and libero 103 Caps (14 goals): 1965-1977 World Cup finals 1966, 1970, 1974 (Champion) 556 league appearances (67 goals) European Champion 1972 European Champions Cup 1974, 1975, 1976 European Cup II 1967 Intercontinental Cup 1976 Golden Ball Europe 1972, 1976 1964-1977 Bayern Munich 1977-1980 New York Cosmos 1980-1982 Hamburg SV 1982-1983 New York Cosmos Beguiristain, Aitor Mujica *1964, Spain, forward 22 Caps (6 goals): 1988-1994 World Cup finals 1994 European Champions Cup 1992 1982-1988 Real Sociedad San Sebastian 1988-1995 FC Barcelona 1995-1997 Deportivo La Coruna 1997-2000 Urawa Red Diamonds Bein, Uwe *1960, (West) Germany, midfielder 17 Caps (3 goals): 1989-1993 World Cup finals 1990 (Champion) 300 Bundesliga appearances (91 goals) 1978-1983 Kickers Offenbach (II. Division) 1983-1984 Kickers Offenbach 1984-1987 Cologne 1987-1989 Hamburg SV 1989-1994 Eintracht Frankfurt 1994-1997 Urawa Red Diamonds 1997-1998 VfR Giessen (III. Division) Belanov, Igor *1960, Soviet Union (Ukraine), winger and midfielder 33 Caps (8 goals): 1985-1990 World Cup finals 1986 European Cup II 1986 Golden Ball Europe 1986 1979-1980 SKA Odessa 1981-1984 Chernomorets Odessa 1985-1989 Dynamo Kiev 1989-1991 Borussia Mönchengladbach 1991-1995 Eintracht Braunschweig Bell, Colin *1946, England, midfielder 48 Caps (9 goals): 1968-1975 World Cup finals 1970 European Cup II 1970 393 league appearances (117 goals) 1966-1979 Manchester City Bell, Joseph-Antoine *1954, Cameroon, goalkeeper World Cup finals 1982, 1990, 1994 ASEC Abidjan Girondins Bordeaux AS St. Etienne Bellini, Hideraldo *1930, Brazil, center half 51 Caps (0 goals): 1957-1966 World Cup finals 1958 (Champion), 1962 (Champion), 1966 1947-1948 Itapirense 1949-1951 Sao Joanense 1952-1961 Vasco da Game 1962-1967 Sao Paulo FC 1968-1969 Atletico Paranaense Bellone, Bruno *1962, France, forward 34 Caps (2 goals): 1981-1988 World Cup finals 1982, 1986 European Champion 1984 1980-1987 AS Monaco 1987-1988 AS Cannes 1988-1989 SC Montpellier 1989-1990 AS Cannes Bellugi, Mauro *1950, Italy, midfielder and full back 32 Caps (0 goals): 1972-1979 World Cup finals 1974, 1978 Internazionale (1969-1974) FC Bologna Napoli Belodedici, Miodrag *1964, Romania, libero 55 Caps (5 goals): 1984-2000 World Cup finals 1994 European Champions Cup 1986, 1991 Intercontinental Cup 1991 1983-1988 Steaua Bucarest 1988-1992 Red Star Belgrade 1992-1994 FC Valencia 1994-1995 Real Valladolid 1995-1998 FC Villarreal 1998-2000 Steaua Bucarest Bene, Ferenc *1944, Hungary, center forward 76 Caps (36 goals): 1962-1979 World Cup finals 1966 Top Scorer Fairs Cup 1969 Top Scorer Hungary 1963, 1969, 1972, 1973 418 league appearances (302 goals) 1961-1979 Dozsa Ujpest Budapest 1979-1980 SC Volan Budapest 1980-1982 Sepsi 75 Seinajoki 1982-1983 SC Volan Budapest Benetti, Romeo *1945, Italy, midfielder 55 Caps (2 goals): 1971-1980 World Cup finals 1974, 1978 European Cup II 1973 UEFA Cup 1977 1967-1968 Palermo 1968-1969 Juventus 1969-1970 Sampdoria 1970-1976 AC Milan 1976-1979 Juventus 1979-1981 AS Roma Benarrivo, Antonio *1968, Italy, full back 23 Caps (0 goals): 1993-1997 World Cup finals 1994 European Cup II 1993 UEFA Cup 1995, 1999 261 Serie A appearances (5 goals) 1986-1989 Brindisi (II. Division) 1989-1991 Padova (II. Division) 1991-2004 AC Parma Bento, Manuel Glarinho *1948, Portugal, goalkepper 63 Caps: 1976-1986 World Cup finals 1986 1967-1972 Barreirense 1972-1992 Benfica Berggreen, Klaus *1958, Denmark, midfielder 46 Caps (5 goals): 1979-1988 World Cup 1986 1981-1982 Lyngby BK 1982-1986 SC Pisa 1986-1987 Roma 1987-1988 Torino 1988-1992 Lyngby BK Bergmark, Orvar *1930, Sweden, full back 94 Caps (0 goals): 1951-1965 World Cup finals 1958 1947-1954 Örebrö 1955-1956 AIK Stockholm 1956-1961 Örebrö 1962-1964 AS Roma 1964-1965 Örebrö Bergomi, Giuseppe *1963, Italy, defender 81 Caps (6 goals): 1982-1998 World Cup finals 1982 (Champion), 1986, 1990, 1998 European Cup II 1998 UEFA Cup 1991, 1994 519 Serie A appearances (23 goals) 1980-1999 Internazionale Bertelsen, Jens Jørn *1952, Denmark, midfielder 69 Caps (2 goals): 1976-1987 World Cup finals 1986 Esbjerg FC Seraing FC Rouen FC Aarau Berthold, Thomas *1964, (West) Germany, right full back 62 Caps (1 goal): 1985-1994 World Cup finals 1986, 1990 (Champion), 1994 446 league appearances (26 goals) 1982-1987 Eintracht Frankfurt 1987-1989 Hellas Verona 1989-1991 AS Roma 1991-1993 Bayern Munich 1993-2000 VfB Stuttgart Berti, Nicola *1967, Italy, midfielder 39 Caps (3 goals): 1988-1995 World Cup finals 1990, 1994 UEFA Cup 1991, 1994, 1998 1982-1985 AC Parma 1985-1988 Fiorentina 1988-1998 Internazionale 1997-1999 Tottenham Hotspur 1998-1999 CD Alaves Bertolini, Luigi *1904, +1977, Italy, half back 26 Caps (3 goals): 1929-1935 World Cup finals 1934 (Champion) 137 Serie A appearances for Juve (5 goals) 1922-1930 Alessandria 1930-1937 Juventus Bertoni, Daniel Ricardo *1955, Argentina, right wing 31 Caps (12 goals): 1974-1982 World Cup finals 1978 (Champion), 1982 Copa Libertadores 1973, 1974, 1975 Intercontinental Cup 1973 406 league appearances (145 goals) 1972-1978 Indepediente 1978-1980 FC Sevilla 1980-1984 Fiorentina 1984-1986 SSC Napoli 1986-1987 Udinese Calcio Bertrand-Demanes, Jean-Paul *1952, France, goalkeeper 11 Caps: 1973-1978 World Cup finals 1978 530 league appearances 1969-1987 FC Nantes Bessonov, Vladimir *1958, Soviet Union, midfielder 85 Caps (5 goals): 1977-1990 World Cup finals 1982, 1986, 1990 European Cup II 1986 1975-1990 Dinamo Kiev Best, George *1946, +2005, Northern Ireland, right and left wing 37 Caps (9 goals): 1964-1977 Golden Ball Europe 1968 European Champions Cup 1968 Top Scorer England 1968 514 league appearances (192 goals) 1963-1974 Manchester United 1973-1974 Dunstable Town (regional) 1974-1975 Stockport County (IV. Division) 1975-1976 Cork Celtic 1976-1977 Los Angeles Aztecs 1976-1978 Fulham FC (II. Division) 1977-1978 Los Angeles Aztecs 1978-1979 Fort Lauderdale Strikers 1980-1981 San José Earthquakers 1980-1981 Hibernian Edinburgh (II. Division) 1982-1983 Motherwell FC (II. Division) 1982-1983 Arbroath Victoria (III. Division) 1982-1983 Bournemouth AFC (III. Division) 1983-1984 Nuneaton Borough (regional) 1983-1984 Tobermore FC (regional) Bettega, Roberto *1950, Italy, left wing 42 Caps (19 goals): 1975-1983 World Cup finals 1978, 1982 (Champion) UEFA Cup 1977 Top Scorer Italy 1980 326 Serie A appearances (129 goals) 1969-1970 Varese 1970-1983 Juventus 1983-1985 Toronto Blizzard Bianchi, Carlos *1949, Argentina, center forward 14 Caps (7 goals): 1970-1972 Top Scorer Argentina 1971, 1981 Top Scorer France 1974, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979 546 league appearances (385 goals) 1967-1973 Velez Sarsfield 1973-1977 Stade Reims 1977-1979 Paris St. Germain 1979-1980 Racing Strasbourg 1980-1982 Velez Sarsfield Bican, Josef (“Pepi”) *1913, +2001, Austria, inside forward 19 Caps (14 goals): 1933-1936 (for Austria) 14 Caps (12 goals): 1938-1949 (for Czechoslovakia) World Cup finals 1934 Top Scorer Austria 1934 Top Scorer Czechoslovakia 1938, 1946, 1947, 1950 341 league appearances (518 goals) 1931-1935 Rapid Vienna 1935-1937 Admira Vienna 1937-1948 Slavia Prague 1949-1952 Vitkovice 1952-1953 Spartak Hradek Kralove 1953-1955 Dinamo Praha Bickel, Alfred *1918, +1999, Switzerland, center forward 71 Caps (15 goals): 1936-1954 World Cup finals 1938, 1950 405 league appearances (202 goals) 1935-1956 Grasshoppers Bicovsky, Premysl *1950, Czechoslovakia, outside forward 44 Caps (11 goals): 1970-1983 World Cup finals 1982 434 league appearances (106 goals) 1967-1970 Union Teplice 1970-1972 Dukla Prague 1972-1976 Union Teplice 1976-1983 Bohemians Prague 1983-1987 SC Eisenstadt 1987-1989 VfB Mödling Bierhoff, Oliver *1968, Germany, center forward 70 Caps (37 goals): 1996-2002 World Cup finals 1998, 2002 European Champion 1996 Top Scorer Italy 1998 343 league appearances (142 goals) 1986-1988 Bayer Uerdingen 1988-1990 Hamburg SV 1989-1990 Borussia Mönchengladbach 1990-1991 Casino Salzburg 1991-1992 Ascoli Calcio 1992-1995 Ascoli Calcio (II. Division) 1995-1998 Udinese Calcio 1998-2001 AC Milan 2001-2002 AS Monaco 2002-2003 Chievo Verona Bigode, Joao Ferreira *1922, +2003, Brazil, half back 10 Caps (0 goals): 1949-1950 World Cup finals 1950 South American Champion 1949 1940-1941 Setembro FC 1941-1942 Atletico MG 1943-1949 Fluminense 1950-1951 Flamengo 1954-1955 Fluminense Binder, Franz („Bimbo“) *1911, +1989, Austria, center forward 28 Caps (26 goals): 1933-1947 World Cup finals 1934 Top Scorer Austria 1933, 1937, 1938 243 league appearances (268 goals) 1930-1950 Rapid Vienna Bingham, William (“Billy”) *1928, Norther Ireland, outside right 56 Caps (10 goals): 1951-1964 World Cup finals 1958 1946-1950 Glentoran Belfast 1950-1958 Sunderland FC 1958-1960 Luton Town 1960-1963 Everton FC 1963-1964 Port Vale Birtles, Gary *1956, England, forward 3 Caps (0 goals): 1980-1981 European Champions Cup 1979, 1980 263 league appearances (71 goals) 1976-1977 Nottingham Forest (II. Division) 1977-1981 Nottingham Forest 1980-1982 Manchester United 1982-1987 Nottingham Forest Blanc, Laurent *1965, France, center back 97 Caps (16 goals): 1989-2000 World Cup finals 1998 (Champion) European Champion 2000 500 league appearances (95 goals) 1983-1987 SC Montpellier (II. Division) 1987-1991 SC Montpellier 1991-1992 SSC Napoli 1992-1993 Nimes 1993-1995 AS St. Etienne 1995-1996 AJ Auxerre 1997-1997 FC Barcelona 1997-1999 Olympique Marseille 1999-2001 Internazionale 2001-2003 Manchester United Blanchflower, Robert Dennis (“Danny”) *1926, +1993, Northern Ireland, wing half 56 Caps (2 goals): 1950-1963 World Cup finals 1958 European Cup II 1963 337 league appearances for Spurs (15 goals) 1945-1948 Glentoran Belfast 1948-1949 Swindon 1948-1951 Barnsley FC 1951-1954 Aston Villa 1954-1964 Tottenham Hotspur Blankenburg, Horst *1947, (West) Germany, sweeper and midfielder European Champions Cup 1971, 1972, 1973 Intercontinental Cup 1972 1967-1968 Nuremberg 1968-1969 SC Vienna 1969-1970 TSV 1860 Munich 1970-1975 Ajax Amsterdam 1975-1977 Hamburg SV 1978-1980 Chicago Stings 1980-1981 Preussen Münster (II. Division) Blind, Danny *1961, Holland, center back 42 Caps (1 goal): 1986-1996 World Cup finals 1990, 1994 Champions League 1995 European Cup II 1987 UEFA Cup 1992 Intercontinental Cup 1995 537 league appearances (45 goals) 1979-1986 Sparta Rotterdam 1986-1999 Ajax Amsterdam Blokhin, Oleg (“Blokha” = “Flea”) *1952, Soviet Union (Ukraine), left wing 101 Caps (35 goals): 1972-1988 World Cup finals 1982, 1986 European Cup II 1975, 1986 Top Scorer Soviet Union 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1977 471 league appearances (217 goals) 1969-1988 Dynamo Kiev 1988-1989 Vorwärts Steyr 1989-1990 Aris Limassol Bloomer, Stephen (“Paleface”) *1874, +1938, England, inside right 23 Caps (28 goals): 1895-1907 Top Scorer England 1896, 1897, 1899, 1901, 1904 536 league appearances (317 goals) 1892-1906 Derby County 1906-1910 Middlesbrough 1910-1914 Derby County Boban, Zvonimir *1968, Yugoslavia/Croatia, midfielder 8 Caps (1 goal): 1988-1991 (for Yugoslavia) 51 Caps (12 goals): 1991-1999 (for Croatia) World Cup finals 1998 Champions League 1994 308 league appearances (63 goals) 1985-1991 Dinamo Zagreb 1991-1992 US Bari 1992-2001 AC Milan 2001-2002 Celta Vigo Bobek, Stjepan *1923, Yugoslavia (Croatia), inside left and center forward 63 Caps (37 goals): 1946-1956 World Cup finals 1950, 1954 466 league appearances (413 goals) 1942-1944 Licanin 1944-1945 Gradjanski Zagreb 1945-1958 Partizan Belgrade Bochini, Ricardo Enrique (“Bocha”) *1954, Argentina, midfielder 29 Caps (0 goals): 1974-1986 World Cup finals 1986 (Champion) Copa Libertadores 1973, 1974, 1975, 1984 Intercontinental Cup 1973, 1984 634 league appearances (97 goals) 1972-1991 Indepediente Bode, Marco *1969, Germany, forward, midfielder and left full back 40 Caps (9 goals): 1995-2002 World Cup finals 2002 European Champion 1996 European Cup II 1992 379 Bundesliga appearances (101 goals) 1989-2002 Werder Bremen Boghossian, Alain *1970, France, midfielder 26 Caps (2 goals): 1997-2002 World Cup finals 1998 (Champion), 2002 UEFA Cup 1999 1988-1992 Olympique Marseille 1992-1993 FC Istres 1993-1994 Olympique Marseille 1994-1997 Napoli 1997-1998 Sampdoria 1998-2002 AC Parma 2002-2003 Espanyol Barcelona Bogicevic, Vladislav (“Bogie”) *1950, Yugoslavia (Serbia), midfielder 23 Caps (2 goals): 1971-1977 World Cup finals 1974 1968-1977 Red Star Belgrade 1978-1984 New York Cosmos Boksic, Alen *1970, Croatia, forward 40 Caps (10 goals): 1993-2002 World Cup finals 1998, 2002 Champions League 1993 Intercontinental Cup 1993 1987-1991 Hajduk Split 1991-1992 Cannes 1991-1994 Olympique Marseille 1994-1996 Lazio 1996-1997 Juventus 1997-2000 Lazio 2000-2003 Middlesborough Boli, Basile *1967, France (Ivory Coast), center back 45 Caps (1 goal): 1986-1993 Champions League 1993 1985-1990 AJ Auxerre 1990-1994 Olympique Marseille 1994-1995 Glasgow Rangers 1995-1996 AS Monacoi 1995-1997 Urawa Red Diamonds Bölöni, Ladislau (“Loti”) *1953, Romania, midfielder 104 Caps (24 goals): 1975-1988 European Champions Cup 1986 over 450 league appearances (over 80 goals) 1970-1977 ASA Tigru Mures 1977-1988 Steaua Bucarest 1988-1990 Racing Jet Brussels 1990-1991 US Orleans (II. Division) Bonetti, Peter *1941, England, goalkeeper 7 Caps: 1966-1970 World Cup 1970 European Cup II 1971 503 league appearances 1959-1962 Chelsea FC 1962-1963 Chelsea FC (II. Division) 1963-1975 Chelsea FC 1975-1977 Chelsea FC (II. Division) 1977-1979 Chelsea FC Bonev, Christo *1947, Bulgaria, inside forward and midfielder 83 Caps (41 goals): 1967-1979 World Cup finals 1970, 1974 410 league appearances 1965-1980 Lok Plovdiv 1981-1982 AEK Athens 1982-1983 Lok Plovdiv Bonhof, Rainer *1952, (West) Germany, full back, center back and midfielder 53 Caps (9 goals): 1972-1981 World Cup finals 1974 (Champion), 1978 European Champion 1972 European Cup II 1980 UEFA Cup 1975 311 Bundesliga appearances (57 goals) 1970-1978 Borussia Mönchengladbach 1978-1980 FC Valencia 1980-1982 Cologne 1982-1983 Hertha BSC 1982-1983 Cologne Boniek, Zbigniew *1956, Poland, forward 80 Caps (24 goals): 1976-1986 World Cup finals 1978, 1982, 1986 European Champions Cup 1985 European Cup II 1984 1975-1982 Widzew Lodz 1982-1985 Juventus 1985-1987 AS Roma Boninsegna, Roberto *1943, Italy, center forward 22 Caps (9 goals): 1967-1974 World Cup finals 1970, 1974 UEFA Cup 1977 Top Scorer Italy 1971, 1972 366 Serie A appearances (163 goals) 1964-1965 Potenza (II. Division) 1965-1966 Varese 1966-1969 US Cagliari 1969-1976 Internazionale 1976-1979 Juventus Boniperti, Giampiero *1928, Italy, outside right 38 Caps (8 goals): 1947-1960 World Cup finals 1950, 1954 1945-1963 Juventus Bonner, Patrick Joseph (“Pat”) *1960, Ireland, goalkeeper 80 Caps: 1981-1996 World Cup finals 1990, 1994 483 league appearances for Celtic Leicester City Glasgow Celtic (1978-1995) Kilmarnock Borg, Hans (“Hasse”) *1953, Sweden, right full back 49 Caps (4 goals): 1976-1985 World Cup finals 1978 139 Bundesliga appearances (7 goals) Örebrö SK Eintracht Braunschweig (1977-1983) Borghi, Claudio Daniel *1964, Argentina, forward 6 Caps (1 goal): 1986 World Cup finals 1986 (Champion) Copa Libertadores 1985 Argentinos Juniors Flamengo River Plate Colo Colo Borovicka, Jaroslav *1931, Czechoslovakia, center and inside forward 21 Caps (2 goals): 1953-1961 World Cup finals 1958 266 league appearances (77 goals) 1950-1952 Spartak Prague 1952-1963 Dukla Prague 1963-1965 Vitkovice Boskamp, Janus (“Jan”) *1948, Holland, midfielder 2 Caps (0 goals): 1978 World Cup finals 1978 UEFA Cup 1974 433 league appearances (59 goals) 1966-1968 Feijenoord Rotterdam 1968-1970 Holland Sport 1970-1974 Feijenoord Rotterdam 1974-1982 RWD Molenbeek 1982-1984 SK Lierse Boskov, Vujadin *1931, Yugoslavia (Serbia), half back 57 Caps (0 goals): 1951-1958 World Cup finals 1954, 1958 1948-1960 Vojvodina Novi Sad 1960-1962 FC Genoa 1962-1964 Young Fellows Zürich Bosman, Johannes Jacobus (“John”) *1965, Holland, forward 30 Caps (17 goals): 1986-1997 European Champion 1988 European Cup II 1987 Top Scorer European Cup II 1987 520 league appearances (251 goals) 1983-1988 Ajax Amsterdam 1988-1990 KV Mechelen 1990-1991 PSV Eindhoven 1991-1996 RSC Anderlecht 1996-1999 FC Twente Enschede 1999-2002 AZ’67 Alkmaar Bossis, Maxim *1955, France, left full back and center back 76 Caps (1 goal): 1976-1986 World Cup finals 1978, 1982, 1986 European Champion 1984 1973-1985 FC Nantes 1985-1989 Racing Paris 1989-1991 FC Nantes Bosquier, Bernard *1942, France, center back 42 Caps 3( goals): 1964-1972 World Cup finals 1966 1960-1961 Olympique Alès 1961-1966 FC Sochaux 1966-1971 AS St. Etienne 1971-1973 Olympique Marseille 1973-1974 FC Martigues Bozsik, Jozsef (“Cucu”) *1925, +1978, Hungary, right half back 101 Caps (11 goals): 1947-1962 World Cup finals 1954, 1958 1943-1948 Kispest 1948-1963 Honved Budapest Brady, Liam (“Chippy”) *1956, Ireland, midfielder 72 Caps (9 goals): 1975-1990 324 league appearances in England (52 goals) 1973-1980 Arsenal 1980-1982 Juventus 1982-1984 Sampdoria 1984-1986 Internazionale 1986-1987 SC Ascoli 1986-1989 West Ham United 1989-1990 West Ham United (II. Division) Braine, Raymond *1907, +1978, Belgium, center forward 54 Caps (26 goals): 1925-1939 World Cup finals 1938 Top Scorer Belgium 1928 Top Scorer Czechoslovakia 1932, 1934 370 league appearances (322 goals) 1922-1930 Royal Beerschot 1930-1937 Sparta Prague 1937-1943 Royal Beerschot 1943-1944 RCS La Forestoise Branco, Claudio Ibrahim Vaz Leal *1964, Brazil, left full back 72 Caps (9 goals): 1985-1994 World Cup finals 1986, 1990, 1994 (Champion) Copa America 1989 1981-1982 Guarani 1982-1986 Fluminense 1986-1988 Brescia 1988-1990 FC Porto 1990-1993 Genoa 1993-1994 Gremio 1994-1995 Corinthians 1994-1995 Fluminsense 1995-1996 Flamengo 1995-1996 Internacional 1996-1997 Middlesborough 1996-1997 Mogi Mirim 1997-1998 Fluminense 1998-1999 New York Metro Stars Brandts, Ernie *1956, Holland, center back 28 Caps (5 goals): 1977-1985 World Cup finals 1978 UEFA Cup 1978 252 league appearances for PSV (23 goals) 1974-1977 De Graafschap 1977-1986 PSV Eindhoven 1986-???? Roda Kerkrade Bransch, Bernd *1944, (East) Germany, center back 64 Caps (3 goals): 1967-1976 World Cup finals 1974 317 league appearances (43 goals) 1961-1973 Chemie Halle 1973-1974 Carl Zeiss Jena 1974-1979 Chemie Halle Bratseth, Rune *1961, Norway, sweeper 60 Caps (2 goals): 1986-1994 World Cup finals 1994 European Cup II 1992 230 Bundesliga appearances (12 goals) 1984-1987 Rosenborg Trondheim 1986-1995 Werder Bremen Brazil, Alan *1959, Scotland, forward 13 Caps (1 goal): 1980-1983 World Cup finals 1982 UEFA Cup 1982, 1984 1977-1983 Ipswich Town 1982-1984 Tottenham Hotspur 1984-1986 Manchester United 1986-1987 Coventry City Brehme, Andreas *1960, (West) Germany, left full back 86 Caps (8 goals): 1984-1994 World Cup finals 1986, 1990 (Champion), 1994 UEFA Cup 1991 441 league appearances (62 games) 1980-1981 Saarbrücken 1981-1986 Kaiserslautern 1986-1988 Bayern Munich 1988-1992 Internazionale 1992-1993 Real Zaragoza 1993-1998 Kaiserslautern Breitner, Paul („Mao“) *1951, (West) Germany, left full back and midfielder 48 Caps (11 goals): 1971-1982 World Cup finals 1974 (Champion), 1982 European Champion 1972 European Champions Cup 1974 369 league appearances (103 goals) 1970-1974 Bayern Munich 1974-1977 Real Madrid 1977-1978 Eintracht Braunschweig 1978-1983 Bayern Munich Bremner, William John (“Billy”) *1942, Scotland, midfielder 54 Caps (3 goals): 1965-1976 World Cup finals 1974 Fairs Cup 1968, 1971 586 league appearances (90 goals) 1959-1960 Leeds United 1960-1964 Leeds United (II. Division) 1964-1977 Leeds United 1976-1978 Hull City (II. Division) Brennan, Seamus Anthony (“Shay”) *1937, +2000, Ireland, right full back 19 Caps (0 goals): 1965-1971 European Champions Cup 1968 355 league appearances for United (6 goals) 1958-1971 Manchester United Brenninger, Dieter („Mucki“) *1944, (West) Germany, outside left 1 Cap (0 goals): 1969 European Cup II 1967 271 Bundesliga appearances (74 goals) 1963-1965 Bayern Munich (II. Division) 1965-1971 Bayern Munich 1971-1972 Young Boys Berne 1972-1975 VfB Stuttgart 1975-1976 VfB Stuttgart (II. Division) Briegel, Hans-Peter (“Walz aus der Pfalz”) *1955, (West) Germany, left full back and midfielder 72 Caps (4 goals): 1979-1986 World Cup finals 1982, 1986 European Champion 1980 346 league appearances (68 goals) 1975-1984 Kaiserslautern 1984-1986 Hellas Verona 1986-1988 Sampdoria Brindisi, Miguel Angel („Miguelito“) *1950, Argentina, midfielder and right wing 46 Caps (17 goals): 1969-1974 World Cup finals 1974 Top Scorer Argentina 1972 536 league appearances (224 goals) 1967-1976 Huracan Buenos Aires 1976-1979 UD Las Palmas 1979-1980 Huracan Buenos Aires 1981-1983 Boca Juniors 1982-1983 Nacional Montevideo 1982-1983 Union Santa Fé Brito, Hercules de Ruas *1939, Brazil, center back 45 Caps (0 goals): 1964-1972 World Cup finals 1966, 1970 (Champion) 1955-1959 Vasco da Gama 1959-1960 Internacional RS 1960-1969 Vasco da Gama 1969-1970 Flamengo 1970-1971 Cruzeiro 1971-1974 Corinthians 1973-1974 Atletico PR 1974-1975 Le Castor FC (Canada) 1975-1976 Deportivo Galicia (Venezuela) 1975-1978 Democrata Governardor Valadares Broadbent, Peter *1933, England, inside right 7 Caps (2 goals): 1958-1960 World Cup finals 1958 452 league appearances (127 goals) 1950-1951 Brentford FC (II. Division) 1951-1965 Wolverhampton Wanderers Broadis, Ivor *1922, England, inside right 14 Caps (8 goals): 1951-1954 World Cup finals 1954 Tottenham Hotspur (amateurs) Millwall FC (amateurs) Carlisle United (1946-1949) Sunderland FC (1949-1952) Manchester City (1951-1953) Newcastle United (1953-1955) Carlisle United (1955-1959) Brolin, Thomas (“Baby Face”) *1969, Sweden, forward 47 Caps (26 goals): 1990-1995 World Cup finals 1990, 1994 European Cup II 1993 1987-1989 Sundsvall 1989-1990 Norrköping 1990-1995 AC Parma 1995-1996 Leeds United 1996-1997 FC Zürich 1996-1997 AC Parma 1997-1998 Crystal Palace Brooking, Trevor David *1948, England, midfielder 47 Caps (5 goals): 1974-1982 World Cup finals 1982 636 league appearances (102 goals) 1967-1984 West Ham United Broos, Hugo *1952, Belgium, center back 24 Caps (0 goals): 1974-1986 World Cup finals 1986 European Cup II 1976, 1978 UEFA Cup 1983 1970-1983 RSC Anderlecht 1983-1988 Club Bruges Brown, José Luis *1956, Argentina, sweeper 36 Caps (1 goal): 1983-1990 World Cup finals 1986 (Champion) Deportivo Espanyol Boca Juniors Racing Avellaneda Estudiantes Real Murcia Nacional Medellin Stade Brest Brülls, Albert *1937, +2004, (West) Germany, outside left/right 25 Caps (9 goals): 1959-1966 World Cup finals 1962, 1966 1955-1962 Borussia Mönchengladbach 1962-1965 FC Modena 1965-1968 Brescia Calcio Brylle, Kenneth Larsen *1959, Denmark, forward 16 Caps (2 goals): 1980-1988 UEFA Cup 1983 Top Scorer UEFA Cup 1988 Hvidovre IF Vejle BK RSC Anderlecht (1981-1984) PSV Eindhoven (1984-1985) Olympique Marseille (1985-1987) Club Bruges (1987-1988) Royal Beerschot SK Lierse Sabadell (II. Division) Buchan, Martin *1949, Scotland, center back 34 Caps (0 goals): 1971-1978 World Cup finals 1974, 1978 335 league appearances for United (4 goals) 1968-1972 Aberdeen FC 1971-1974 Manchester United 1974-1975 Manchester United (II. Division) 1975-1983 Manchester United 1983-1984 Oldham Athletic (II. Division) Buchwald, Guido („Diego“) *1961, (West) Germany, center back and midfielder 76 Caps (4 goals): 1984-1994 World Cup finals 1990 (Champion), 1994 325 Bundesliga appearances (28 goals) 1980-1983 Kickers Stuttgart 1983-1994 VfB Stuttgart 1994-1997 Urawa Red Diamonds 1997-1998 Karlsruhe SC Budai, Laszlo *1929, +1983, Hungary, outside right 39 Caps (10 goals): 1949-1959 World Cup finals 1954, 1958 1942-1947 BRSC 1947-1948 Huttler Olaj SC 1948-1950 Ferencvaros 1950-1951 Edosz 1951-1961 Kispest Honved Bulgarelli, Giacomo *1940, Italy, inside forward 29 Caps (7 goals): 1962-1967 World Cup finals 1962, 1966 392 Serie A appearances 1957-1975 Bologna Buljan, Ivan *1949, Yugoslavia (Croatia), full back and center back 36 Caps (1 goal): 1973-1981 World Cup finals 1974 1967-1977 Hajduk Split 1977-1981 Hamburg SV 1981-1982 New York Cosmos Buncol, Andrzej *1959, Poland, midfielder 48 Caps (5 goals): 1981-1986 World Cup finals 1982, 1986 UEFA Cup 1988 185 Bundesliga appearances (21 goals) 1979-1981 Ruch Chorzow 1981-1986 Legia Warsaw 1986-1987 FC Homburg 1987-1992 Bayer Leverkusen 1992-1995 Fortuna Düsseldorf (II./III. Division) 1995-1997 Fortuna Düsseldorf Burgnich, Tarcisio *1939, Italy, right full back and center back 66 Gaps (2 goals): 1963-1974 World Cup finals 1966, 1970, 1974 European Champion 1968 European Champions Cup 1964, 1965 Intercontinental Cup 1964, 1965 359 Serie A appearances for Inter (5 goals) 1958-1960 Udinese Calcio 1960-1961 Juventus 1961-1962 SS Palermo 1962-1974 Internazionale 1974-1977 SSC Napoli Buriak, Leonid *1953, Soviet Union (Ukraine), midfielder and forward 50 Caps (9 goals): 1974-1983 World Cup finals 1982 European Cup II 1975 1970-1985 Dynamo Kiev 1985-1986 Torpedo Moscow 1986-1988 Metallist Charkov 1988-1989 Kemi PS Burruchaga, Jorge Luis (“Burru”) *1962, Argentina, forward and midfielder 59 Caps (13 goals): 1983-1990 World Cup finals 1986 (Champion), 1990 Copa Libertadores 1984 Intercontinental Cup 1984 1982-1985 Independiente 1985-1992 FC Nantes 1992-1993 FC Valenciennes 1995-1998 Indepediente Busk, Søren *1953, Denmark, center back and full back 61 Caps (2 goals): 1979-1988 World Cup finals 1986 1972-1976 Golstrup IC 1976-1979 Westfalia Herne (II. Division) 1979-1982 MVV Maastricht 1982-1985 AA Gent 1985-1986 MVV Maastricht 1986-1987 AS Monaco 1987-1988 SC Vienna Butcher, Terrence Ian (“Terry”) *1958, England, center back 77 Caps (3 goals): 1980-1990 World Cup finals 1982, 1986, 1990 UEFA Cup 1981 404 league appearances (25 goals) 1977-1986 Ipswich Town 1986-1991 Glasgow Rangers 1990-1992 Coventry City 1992-1993 Sunderland FC Butragueno, Emilio (“El Buitre”) *1963, Spain, center forward 69 Caps (26 goals): 1984-1992 World Cup finals 1986, 1990 UEFA Cup 1985, 1986 Top Scorer Spain 1991 1983-1995 Real Madrid 1995-1998 Atletico Celaya Buzanszky, Jenö *1925, Hungary, right full back 48 Caps (0 goals): 1950-1956 World Cup finals 1954 Dorogoi Banyasz Buzek, Johann (“Schani”) *1938, Austria, center forward and center half 43 Caps (9 goals): 1956-1969 World Cup finals 1958 Top Scorer Austria 1956, 1966 380 league appearances (229 goals) 1954-1963 First FC Vienna 1963-1967 Austria Vienna 1967-1969 SC Vienna 1969-1970 FC Dornbirn 1970-1972 Rapid Vienna 1972-1973 Austria Klagenfurt Byrne, Roger William *1926, +1958, England, left full back and wing half 33 Caps: 1954-1957 World Cup finals 1954 1949-1958 Manchester United Byshovets, Anatoli *1946, Soviet Union (Ukraine), center forward 40 Caps (15 goals): 1966-1972 World Cup finals 1970 139 league appearances (40 goals) 1963-1974 Dynamo Kiev Cabrini, Antonio *1957, Italy, left full back 73 Caps (9 goals): 1978-1987 World Cup finals 1978, 1982 (Champion), 1986 European Champions Cup 1985 European Cup II 1984 Intercontinental Cup 1985 352 Serie A appearances (36 goals) 1975-1976 Atalanta Bergamo (II. Division) 1976-1989 Juventus 1989-1991 FC Bologna Cajkovski, Zlatko (“Tschik”) *1923, +1998, Croatia/Yugoslavia, half back 2 Caps (0 goals): 1942-1943 (for Croatia) 55 Caps (18 goals): 1946-1955 (for Yugoslavia) World Cup finals 1950, 1954 1940-1955 Partizan Belgrade 1955-1958 Cologne 1958-1960 Hapoel Haifa Caligaris, Umberto *1901, +1940, Italy, full back 59 Caps (0 goals): 1922-1934 World Cup 1934 (Champion) 1918-1928 Casale 1928-1938 Juventus Callaghan, Ian *1942, England, outside right 4 Caps (0 goals): 1966-1977 World Cup finals 1966 (Champion) European Champions Cup 1977, 1978 UEFA Cup 1973, 1976 640 league appearances (50 goals) 1959-1978 Liverpool FC Camacho, José Antonio *1955, Spain, left full back 81 Caps (0 goals): 1975-1988 World Cup finals 1982, 1986 UEFA Cup 1985, 1986 698 club games 1972-1989 Real Madrid Camsell, George Henry *1902, +1966, England, center forward 9 Caps (18 goals): 1929-1936 337 league appearances (233 goals) 1921-1922 Durham Chapel FC (regional) 1922-1923 Tow Law Town FC (regional) 1923-1924 Esh Winning FC (regional) 1924-1925 Durham City FC (II. Division) 1925-1927 Middlesbrough FC (II. Division) 1927-1928 Middlesbrough FC 1928-1929 Middlesbrough FC (II. Division) 1929-1940 Middlesbrough FC Canario, Darcy Silveira dos Santos *1934, Brazil, outside right 7 Caps (2 goals): 1956 European Champions Cup 1960 Intercontinental Cup 1960 Fairs Cup 1964 Real Madrid (1959-1962) Real Zaragoza Caniggia, Claudio Paul *1967, Argentina, forward 50 Caps (16 goals): 1987-2002 World Cup finals 1990, 1994, 2002 South American Champion 1991 1985-1988 River Plate 1988-1989 Hellas Verona 1989-1992 Atalanta Bergamo 1992-1994 Roma 1994-1995 Benfica 1995-1997 Boca Juniors 1999-2000 Atalanta Bergamo 2000-2001 Dundee United 2001-2003 Glasgow Rangers 2003-2004 Qatar SC 2004-2005 Al Arabi Cantona, Eric *1966, France, forward and midfielder 45 Caps (20 goals): 1987-1995 353 league appearances (127 goals) 1983-1988 AJ Auxerre 1988-1989 Olympique Marseille 1989-1990 Girondins Bordeaux 1990-1991 Montpellier HSC 1991-1992 Olympique Nimes 1991-1992 Leeds United 1992-1997 Manchester United Capkovic, Jan *1948, CSSR, outside left 20 Caps (6 goals): 1968-1974 World Cup finals 1970 European Cup II 1969 Top Scorer CSSR 1972 Inter Bratislava Slovan Bratislava Capkovic, Josef *1948, CSSR, midfielder and center back 17 Caps (0 goals): 1974-1977 European Champion 1976 European Cup II 1969 Inter Bratislava Slovan Bratislava Carnevale, Andrea *1961, Italy, forward 10 Caps (2 goals): 1989-1990 World Cup finals 1990 UEFA Cup 1989 1979-1981 US Avellino 1981-1983 Reggiana 1983-1984 US Cagliari 1983-1984 Catania 1984-1986 Udinese Calcio 1986-1990 Napoli 1990-1993 Roma 1993-1994 Udinese Calcio 1993-1994 Pescara (II. Division) 1994-1995 Udinese Calcio 1995-1996 Pescara Carrizo, Amadeo Raul (“Tarzan”) *1926, Argentina, goalkeeper 20 Caps: 1954-1964 World Cup finals 1958 518 league appearances 1945-1968 River Plate 1969-1970 Millionarios Bogota Capelle, Jean *1913, Belgium, center forward 34 Caps (19 goals): 1931-1939 World Cup finals 1934 246 league appearances (238 goals) 1929-1944 Standard Liege Capello, Fabio *1946, Italy, midfielder 32 Caps (8 goals): 1972-1976 World Cup finals 1974 292 Serie A appearances (40 goals) 1963-1967 Spal Ferrara 1967-1970 AS Roma 1970-1976 Juventus 1976-1978 AC Milan Carbajal, Antonio (“Moustache”) *1929, Mexico, goalkeeper 47 Caps: 1950-1966 World Cup finals 1950, 1954, 1958, 1962, 1966 1947-1968 FC Leon Careca, Oliveira Filho Antonio *1960, Brazil, forward 60 Caps (29 goals): 1982-1993 World Cup finals 1986, 1990 UEFA Cup 1989 Top Scorer UEFA Cup 1989 Top Scorer Brazil 1986 1977-1982 Guarani 1983-1987 FC Sao Paulo 1987-1993 SSC Napoli 1993-1994 Kashiwa Reysol (II. Division) 1995-1996 Kashiwa Reysol Carlos, Alberto Torres *1944, Brazil, full back and center back 53 Caps (8 goals): 1964-1977 World Cup finals 1970 (Champion) 1963-1966 Fluminense 1966-1974 Santos FC 1974-1977 Fluminense 1976-1977 Flamengo 1977-1980 New York Cosmos 1980-1981 California Surf 1981-1982 New York Cosmos Carnevali, Daniel *1946, Argentina, goalkeeper 27 Caps: 1972-1974 World Cup finals 1974 1964-1968 Rosario Central 1969-1970 Atlanta 1970-1973 Chacarita 1973-1979 Union Las Palmas 1979-1983 Rosario Central 1983-1984 Junior Baranquilla 1984-1988 Colon de Santa Fé Carnus, Georges *1942, France, goalkeeper 63 Caps: 1963-1973 World Cup finals 1966 1959-1961 AS Aix-en-Provence 1961-1967 Stade Français 1967-1971 AS St. Etienne 1971-1974 Olympique Marseille Carrasco, Francisco José (“Lobo”) *1959, Spain, left wing 35 Caps (5 goals): 1979-1988 World Cup finals 1986 European Cup II 1979, 1982, 1989 1978-1989 FC Barcelona 1989-1992 FC Sochaux Casagrande, Walter Junior *1963, Brazil, forward 19 Caps (8 goals): 1985-1986 World Cup finals 1986 1980-1981 Corinthians 1981-1982 Caldense 1982-1983 Corinthians 1983-1984 Sao Paulo FC 1984-1986 Corinthians 1986-1987 FC Porto 1987-1991 Ascoli 1991-1993 Fiorentina 1993-1994 Flamengo 1994-1995 Corinthians 1994-1995 Club Bresil Masters 1995-1996 Paulista 1995-1996 Sao Francisco Cascarino, Anthony Guy (“Tony”) *1962, Ireland, forward 88 Caps (19 goals): 1986-2000 World Cup finals 1990, 1994 176 league appearances (43 goals) 1981-1987 Gillingham (III. Division) 1987-1988 Millwall FC (II. Division) 1988-1990 Millwall FC 1989-1991 Aston Villa 1991-1992 Glasgow Celtic 1992-1994 Chelsea FC 1994-1996 Olympique Marseille (II. Division) 1996-2000 AS Nancy Casiraghi, Pierluigi *1969, Italy, forward 44 Caps (13 goals): 1991-1998 World Cup finals 1994 UEFA Cup 1990, 1993 1985-1989 Monza (II./III. Division) 1988-1993 Juventus 1993-1998 Lazio 1998-1999 Chelsea FC Castaneda, Jean *1957, France, goalkeeper 9 Caps: 1981-1982 World Cup finals 1982 239 league appearances 1977-1984 AS St. Etienne 1984-1986 AS St. Etienne (II. Division) 1986-1989 AS St. Etienne 1989-1990 Olympique Marseille Castro, Hector (“El Divino Manco”) *1904, +1960, Uruguay, inside and center forward 25 Caps (20 goals): 1924-1935 World Cup finals 1930 (Champion) Copa America 1926, 1935 181 league appearances (107 goals) 1921-1924 C.A. Lito 1924-1936 Nacional Montevideo Caszely, Carlos Humberto *1950, Chile, forward and midfielder 49 Caps (29 goals): 1969-1985 World Cup finals 1974, 1982 Top Scorer Copa Libertadores 1973 Top Scorer Chile 1979, 1980, 1981 1969-1973 Colo Colo 1973-1975 UD Levante (II. Division) 1975-1978 Espanol Barcelona 1978-1985 Colo Colo Causio, Franco *1949, Italy, right wing 63 Caps (6 goals): 1972-1983 World Cup finals 1974, 1978, 1982 (Champion) UEFA Cup 1977 480 Serie A appearances (66 goals) 1967-1968 Juventus 1968-1969 AS Reggina 1969-1970 SS Palermo 1970-1981 Juventus 1981-1984 AC Udinese 1984-1985 Internazionale 1985-1986 US Lecce Cavem, Dominiciano Barocal Gomes *1932, +2005, Portugal, right full back, right half back and outside left 18 Caps (5 goals): 1957-1965 European Champions Cup 1961, 1962 1955-1969 Benfica Cea, José Pedro (“El Vasco”) *1900, +1970, Uruguay, inside left 26 Caps (13 goals): 1923-1932 World Cup finals 1930 (Champion) Copa America 1923, 1924 1925-1930 Nacional Montevideo 1934-1935 Nacional Montevideo Cera, Pierluigi *1941, Italy, libero 18 Caps (0 goals): 1969-1972 World Cup finals 1970 345 Serie A appearances (4 goals) 1957-1958 Hellas Verona 1958-1964 Hellas Verona (II. Division) 1964-1973 US Cagliari 1973-1977 Cesena 1977-1979 Cesena (II. Division) Cerezo, Antonio Carlos (“Toninho”) *1955, Brazil, midfielder 58 Caps (5 goals): 1977-1985 World Cup finals 1978, 1982 Copa Libertadores 1992, 1993 Intercontinental Cup 1992, 1993 215 Serie A appearances (29 goals) 1973-1974 Atletico Mineiro 1974-1975 Nacional Manaus 1976-1983 Atletico Mineiro 1983-1986 AS Roma 1986-1992 Sampdoria 1992-1993 FC Sao Paulo 1993-1994 Cruzeiro 1994-1995 Lousano Paulista 1995-1996 FC Sao Paulo 1995-1996 America Mineiro 1996-1998 Atletico Mineiro César, Julio da Silva *1963, Brazil, center back 18 Caps (0 goals): 1986-1993 World Cup finals 1986 Champions League 1997 UEFA Cup 1993 Intercontinental Cup 1997 1980-1986 Guarani FC 1986-1987 Stade Brest 1987-1990 SC Montpellier 1990-1994 Juventus 1994-1998 Borussia Dortmund 1998-1999 Botafogo 1998-1999 Borussia Dortmund 1998-1999 Panathinaikos Athens 1999-2000 Werder Bremen Ceulemans, Jan (“Caje”) *1957, Belgium, left wing 96 Caps (23 goals): 1977-1991 World Cup finals 1982, 1986, 1990 517 league appearances (230 goals) 1974-1978 Lierse SK 1978-1991 FC Bruges Cha, Bum Kun *1953, South Korea, forward 121 Caps (55 goals): 1972-1986 World Cup finals 1986 UEFA Cup 1980, 1988 308 Bundesliga appearances (98 goals) 1971-1978 Airforce Seoul 1978-1979 Darmstadt 98 1979-1983 Eintracht Frankfurt 1983-1989 Bayer Leverkusen Chalana, Fernando Albino de Sousa *1959, Portugal, midfielder 27 Caps (2 goals): 1976-1988 1976-1984 Benfica 1984-1986 Girondins Bordeaux 1986-1989 Benfica Challe, Roberto *1947, Peru, midfielder 48 Caps (4 goals): 1967-1973 World Cup finals 1970 Sporting Cristal Defensor Lima Universitario Lima Chamot, José Antonio *1969, Argentina, center back 43 Caps (2 goals): 1993-2002 World Cup finals 1994, 1998, 2002 273 league appearances (6 goals) 1988-1991 Rosario Central 1990-1991 Pisa 1991-1993 Pisa (II. Division) 1993-1994 Foggia 1994-1998 Lazio 1998-1999 Atletico Madrid 1999-2003 AC Milan 2003-2004 Leganes CF Channon, Michael Roger (“Mick”) *1948, England, forward 46 Caps (21 goals): 1973-1978 Top Scorer England 1974 549 league appearances (158 goals) 1966-1974 Southampton FC 1974-1977 Southampton FC (II. Division) 1977-1980 Manchester City 1980-1982 Southampton FC 1982-1983 Newcastle United (II. Division) 1982-1983 Bristol Rovers (III. Division) 1982-1985 Norwich City Charles, John William (“Gentle Giant”) *1931, +2004, Wales, centre forward and centre half 38 Caps (15 goals): 1955-1965 World Cup finals 1958 543 league appearances (260 goals) 1952-1957 Leeds United 1957-1962 Juventus 1962-1963 Leeds United 1962-1963 AS Roma 1963-1966 Cardiff City Charlton, Jack (“Giraffe”) *1935, England, centre back 35 Caps (6 goals): 1965-1970 World Cup finals 1966 (Champion), 1970 Fairs Cup 1968, 1971 628 league appearances (70 goals) 1952-1973 Leeds United Charlton, Bobby *1937, England, outside left and inside forward 106 Caps (49 goals): 1958-1970 World Cup finals: 1962, 1966 (Champion), 1970 European Champions Cup 1968 Golden Ball Europe 1966 Top Scorer Fairs Cup 1965 607 league appearances (197 goals) 1956-1973 Manchester United Chendo, Miguel Porlan *1961, Spain, right full back 26 Caps (0 goals): 1986-1990 World Cup finals 1990 Champions League 1998 UEFA Cup 1985, 1986 1983-1998 Real Madrid Cherry, Trevor *1948, England, center back and midfielder 27 Caps (0 goals): 1976-1980 460 league appearances (29 goals) 1965-1970 Huddersfield Town (II. Division) 1970-1972 Huddersfield Town 1972-1982 Leeds United 1982-1983 Leeds United (II. Division) 1982-1985 Bradford City (II. Division) Chiarugi, Luciano *1947, Italy, forward 3 Caps (0 goals): 1966-1974 European Cup II 1973 Top Scorer European Cup II 1973 AC Milan Chico, Francisco Aramburu *1922, +1997, Brazil, outside left 19 Caps (8 goals): 1945-1950 World Cup finals 1950 1941-1942 Gremio 1942-1955 Vasco da Gama Chidjatullin, Wagis *1959, Soviet Union, sweeper 64 Caps (8 goals): 1978-1990 World Cup finals 1982, 1990 1976-1980 Spartak Moscow 1980-1986 Karpaty Lvov 1986-1988 Spartak Moscow 1988-1989 FC Toulouse 1989-1991 Vladikavkas Chilavert, José Luis *1965, Paraguay, goalkeeper 74 Caps (8 goals): 1989-2003 World Cup finals 1998, 2002 Copa Libertadores 1994 Intercontinental Cup 1994 Golden Ball South America 1996 South America’s Best Keeper 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999 556 league appearances 1983-1984 Guarani 1984-1988 San Lorenzo 1988-1991 Real Zaragoza 1991-2002 Velez Sarsfield 2001-2002 Racing Strasbourg Chinaglia, Roberto *1947, Italy, center forward 14 Caps (4 goals): 1972-1975 World Cup finals 1974 Top Scorer Italy 1974 Top Scorer U.S.A. 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982 429 league appearances (319 goals) 1969-1976 Lazio 1976-1983 New York Cosmos Chislenko, Igor *1939, +1994, Soviet Union, center forward 54 Caps (21 goals): 1959-1968 World Cup finals 1962, 1966 Torpedo Moscow Dynamo Moscow Chivadze, Alexsandr Gavrilovich (“Chiva”) *1955, Soviet Union (Georgia), libero 52 Caps (3 goals): 1980-1987 World Cup finals 1982, 1986 European Cup II 1981 324 league appearances (44 goals) 1973-1988 Dynamo Tbilisi Chivers, Martin *1945, England, center forward 24 Caps (13 goals): 1971-1974 European Cup II 1972 278 league appearances for Tottenham (118 goals) 1962-1966 Southampton FC (II. Division) 1966-1968 Southampton FC 1967-1976 Tottenham Hotspur 1976-1978 Servette Geneva 1978-1979 Norwich City 1979-1980 Brighton & Hove Albion (II. Division) Chovanec, Jozef *1960, CSSR, midfielder 52 Caps (4 goals): 1984-1992 World Cup finals 1990 382 league appearances (59 goals) 1979-1981 RH Cheb 1981-1989 Sparta Prague 1989-1992 PSV Eindhoven 1992-1995 Sparta Prague Chumpitaz, Hector *1944, Peru, libero 105 Caps (3 goals): 1965-1981 World Cup finals 1970, 1978 Copa America 1975 456 leagues games (65 goals) 1961-1963 Unidad Vecinal (II. Division) 1964-1975 Deportivo Municipal 1976-1984 Sporting Cristal Churzilava, Murtaz *1943, Soviet Union (Georgia), center back 70 Caps (6 goals): 1965-1973 World Cup finals 1966, 1970 1961-1974 Dinamo Tbilisi Clarke, Allan *1946, England, forward 19 Caps (10 goals): 1970-1976 World Cup finals 1970 Fairs Cup 1971 395 league appearances (167 goals) 1963-1965 Walsall (III. Division) 1965-1968 Fulham FC 1968-1969 Leicester City 1969-1978 Leeds United Clausen, Nestor Rolando *1962, Argentina, full back 26 Caps (1 goal): 1983-1988 World Cup finals 1986 (Champion) Copa Libertadores 1984 Intercontinental Cup 1984 Indepediente FC Sion Clemence, Raymond Neil *1948, England, goalkeeper 61 Caps: 1972-1983 World Cup finals 1982 European Champions Cup 1977, 1978, 1981 UEFA Cup 1973, 1976 710 league appearances 1965-1967 Scunthorpe (III. Division) 1968-1981 Liverpool FC 1981-1987 Tottenham Hotspur Clijsters, Leo *1956, Belgium, sweeper 40 Caps (3 goals): 1983-1991 World Cup finals 1986, 1990 European Cup II 1988 Thor Waterschei KV Mechelen Clodoaldo, Tavares Santana *1949, Brazil, midfielder 42 Caps (1 goal): 1969-1976 World Cup finals 1970 (Champion) 1966-1978 Santos FC 1979-1980 Tampa Bay Cmikiewicz, Leslaw *1947, Poland, midfielder and sweeper 59 Caps (0 goals): 1970-1979 World Cup finals 1974 229 league appearances for Legia Slask Wroclaw Legia Warsaw (1970-1979) New York Arrow Chicago Horizon Coeck, Ludo *1955, +1985, Belgium, midfielder 46 Caps (3 goals): 1974-1984 World Cup finals 1982 European Cup II 1976, 1978 UEFA Cup 1983 1972-1983 RSC Anderlecht 1983-1985 Internazionale Cohen, George *1939, England, right full back 37 Caps (0 goals): 1964-1968 World Cup finals 1966 (Champion) 1956-1968 Fulham FC 1968-1969 Fulham FC (II. Division) Colaussi, Luigi (“Gino”) *1914, +1991, Italy, outside left 26 Caps (15 goals): 1935-1940 World Cup finals 1938 (Champion) US Triestina Collovati, Fulvio *1957, Italy, center back 50 Caps (3 goals): 1979-1986 World Cup finals 1982 (Champion), 1986 1976-1982 AC Milan 1982-1986 Internazionale 1986-1987 FC Udinese 1987-1989 AS Roma 1989-1993 FC Genoa Coluna, Mario *1935, Portugal (Mocambique), linkman and inside forward 57 Caps (8 goals): 1955-1968 World Cup finals 1966 European Champions Cup 1961, 1962 1954-1970 Benfica 1970-1971 Olympique Lyon Combi, Gianpiero *1902, +1956, Italy, goalkeeper 47 Caps: 1924-1934 World Cup finals 1934 357 league appearances for Juventus 1921-1934 Juventus Conen, Edmund *1914, +1990, Germany, center forward 28 Caps (27 goals): 1934-1942 World Cup finals 1934 1931-1937 Saabrücken 1937-1944 Kickers Stuttgart 1946-1947 SG Hermsdorf 1947-1950 Kickers Stuttgart Conte, Antonio *1969, Italy, midfielder 20 Caps (2 goals): 1994-2000 World Cup finals 1994 Champions League 1996 UEFA Cup 1993 1985-1991 US Lecce 1991-2004 Juventus Conti, Bruno *1955, Italy, right wing midfielder 47 Caps (5 goals): 1980-1986 World Cup finals 1982 (Champion), 1986 1973-1975 AS Roma 1975-1976 FC Genoa 1976-1978 AS Roma 1978-1979 FC Genoa 1979-1989 AS Roma Cooper, Terence (“Terry”) *1944, England, left full back 20 Caps (0 goals): 1969-1975 World Cup finals 1970 Fairs Cup 1968, 1971 250 league appearances for Leeds (7 goals) 1963-1975 Leeds United 1974-1978 Middlesbrough 1978-1979 Bristol City (II. Division) 1979-1981 Bristol Rovers (II. Division) 1981-1982 Doncaster Rovers (II. Division) Coppell, Steven James *1955, England, right wing 42 Caps (7 goals): 1978-1983 World Cup finals 1982 312 league appearances (52 goals) 1973-1975 Tranmere Rovers (III. Division) 1974-1975 Manchester United (II. Division) 1975-1983 Manchester United Coppens, Hendrik („Rik“) *1930, Belgium, center forward 47 Caps (21 goals): 1949-1959 World Cup finals 1954 Top Scorer Belgium 1952, 1953, 1955 389 league appearances (258 goals) 1946-1961 Royal Beerschot 1961-1962 Olympique Charleroi 1962-1967 Crossing Molenbeek (II. Division) Corbatta, Orestes Omar *1936, +1991, Argentina, outside right 43 Caps (18 goals): 1956-1962 World Cup finals 1958 Copa America 1957, 1959 Racing Club Buenos Aires Corrigan, Joseph Thomas *1948, England, goalkeeper 9 Caps: 1976-1982 World Cup finals 1982 European Cup II 1970 504 league appearances 1967-1983 Manchester City 1983-1984 Seattle Sounders 1983-1985 Brighton Albion & Hove (II. Division) 1984-1985 Norwich City 1984-1985 Brighton Albion & Hove (II. Division) 1984-1985 Stoke City Corso, Mario *1941, Italy, outside/inside left 23 Caps (4 goals): 1961-1971 World Cup finals 1966 European Champions Cup 1964, 1965 Intercontinental Cup 1964, 1965 436 Serie A appearances (78 goals) 1958-1973 Internazionale 1973-1974 FC Genoa 1974-1975 FC Genoa (II. Division) Costa Pereira, Alberto *1929, +1990, Portugal, goalkeeper 22 Caps: 1955-1965 European Champions Cup 1961, 1962 1954-1967 Benfica Coutinho, Antonio Wilson Honorio *1943, Brazil, center forward 15 Caps (6 goals) World Cup finals 1962 (Champion) Copa Libertadores 1962, 1963 Intercontinental Cup 1962, 1963 Top Scorer Copa Libertadores 1963 1959-1968 Santos FC 1968-1969 Vitoria 1969-1970 Portuguesa 1970-1971 Santos FC 1970-1971 Atlas Mexico 1971-1972 Bangu Cremaschi, Atilio *1923, Chile, inside right 31 Caps (10 goals): 1946-1954 World Cup finals 1950 Union Espanola Colo Colo Santiago de Chile Crerand, Patrick Timothy (“Pat”) *1939, Scotland, half back 16 Caps (0 goals): 1961-1966 European Champions Cup 1968 425 league appearances (15 goals) 1957-1963 Glasgow Celtic 1962-1972 Manchester United Crippa, Massimo *1965, Italy, midfielder 17 Caps (0 goals): 1988-1996 UEFA Cup 1989, 1995 1982-1983 Neda (regional) 1983-1985 Saronno (regional) 1985-1986 Seregno (regional) 1986-1987 Pavia (III. Division) 1987-1988 Torino 1988-1993 Napoli 1993-1998 AC Parma Crnkovic, Tomislav *1929, Yugoslavia (Croatia), left full back 51 Caps (0 goals): 1951-1960 World Cup finals 1954, 1958 1950-1961 Dinamo Zagreb 1961-1962 Vienna SC 1962-1964 Servette Geneva Croy, Jürgen *1946, (East) Germany, goalkeeper 86 Caps: 1967-1981 World Cup finals 1974, 372 league appearances 1965-1981 Motor Sachsenring Zwickau Cruijff, Hendrik Johannes (“Johan”) *1947, Holland, center forward 48 Caps (33 goals): 1966-1977 World Cup finals 1974 Golden Ball Europe 1971, 1973, 1974 European Champions Cup 1971, 1972, 1973 Intercontinental Cup 1972 Top Scorer Champions Cup 1972 Top Scorer Holland 1967, 1972 506 league appearances (290 goals) 1964-1973 Ajax Amsterdam 1973-1978 FC Barcelona 1978-1979 Los Angeles Aztecs 1980-1981 Washington Diplomats 1980-1981 UD Levante (II. Division) 1981-1983 Ajax Amsterdam 1983-1984 Feijenoord Rotterdam Cubilla, Luis Alberto *1940, Uruguay, outside right and inside forward 38 Caps (11 goals): 1959-1974 World Cup finals 1962, 1970, 1974 Copa Libertadores 1960, 1961, 1971 Intercontinental Cup 1961, 1971 Paysandu Penarol FC Barcelona River Plate Nacional Santiago Morning Defensor Cubillas, Teofilo (“El Nene”) *1949, Peru, forward 81 Caps (26 goals): 1968-1982 World Cup finals 1970, 1978, 1982 Copa America 1975 Golden Ball South America 1972 Top Scorer Copa Libertadores 1972 Top Scorer Peru 1966, 1970, 1977 469 league appearances (268 goals) 1966-1973 Alianza Lima 1973-1974 FC Basel 1973-1977 FC Porto 1977-1978 Alianza Lima 1979-1983 Fort Lauderdale Strikers 1984-1985 Alianza Lima 1985-1986 South Florida Sun (II. Division) 1986-1987 Alianza Lima Cuccureddu, Antonello *1949, Italy, center back and full back 13 Caps (0 goals): 1975-1978 World Cup finals 1978 UEFA Cup 1977 298 Serie A appearances for Juventus 1967-1969 Brescia (II. Division) 1969-1981 Juventus Cuciuffo, José Luis *1962, +2004, Argentina, full back 21 Caps (0 goals): 1985-1989 World Cup finals 1986 (Champion) Talleres de Cordoba Velez Sarsfield Boca Juniors Olympique Nimes Stade Reims Belgrano de Cordoba Cudicini, Fabio (“Ragno Nero”) *1935, Italy, goalkeeper European Champions Cup 1969 European Cup II 1968 Intercontinental Cup 1969 1955-1958 Udinese 1958-1966 Roma 1966-1967 Brescia 1967-1972 AC Milan Cullmann, Bernhard („Bernd“) *1949, (West) Germany, sweeper and midfielder 40 Caps (6 goals): 1973-1980 World Cup finals 1974 (Champion) European Champion 1980 341 Bundesliga appearances (29 goals) 1970-1984 Cologne Cunningham, Lawrence (“Laurie”) *1956, +1989, England, left wing 6 Caps (0 goals): 1979-1980 Leyton Orient (II. Division) (1974-1977) West Bromwich Albion (1976-1979) Real Madrid (1979-1983) Manchester United Leicester City Sporting Gijon Betis Sevilla Charleroi Wimbledon Rayo Vallecano Cunningham, Willie *1925, Northern Ireland, center half and full back 30 Caps (0 goals): 1951-1962 World Cup finals 1958 St. Mirren FC Leicester City (1954-1960) Dunfermline (1960-1964) Curkovic, Ivan *1944, Yugoslavia, goalkeeper 10 Caps: 1968-1970 Partizan Belgrade AS St. Etienne Cush, Wilbur William *1928, +1981, Northern Ireland, inside right and half back 26 Caps (5 goals): 1951-1962 World Cup finals 1958 Glenavon Leeds United (1957-1960) Portadown Czerniatynski, Alexander *1960, Belgium, forward 31 Caps (6 goals): 1981-1994 World Cup finals 1982, 1994 UEFA Cup 1983 Top Scorer European Cup II 1993 385 league appearances (135 goals) 1980-1981 Sporting Charleroi 1981-1982 FC Antwerp 1982-1985 RSC Anderlecht 1985-1989 Standard Liege 1989-1994 KV Mechelen 1994-1996 Germinal Ekeren 1996-1998 Germinal Beerschot Czibor, Zoltan *1929, +1997, Hungary, outside left 43 Caps (17 goals): 1949-1956 World Cup finals 1954 Fairs Cup 1960 Ferencvaros Budapest EDOSZ SC Csepel Honved Budapest AS Roma FC Barcelona Da Guia, Domingos Antonio (“El Divino Mestre”) *1912, +2000, Brazil, center half 27 Caps (0 goals): 1931-1946 World Cup finals 1938 1929-1932 Bangu 1932-1933 Nacional Montevideo 1933-1934 Vasco da Gama 1934-1935 Boca Juniors 1935-1943 Flamengo 1943-1947 Corinthians 1947-1948 Bangu Dahlin, Martin („O.J.“) *1968, Sweden, forward 60 Caps (29 goals): 1991-2000 World Cup finals 1994 133 Bundesliga appearances (60 goals) 1987-1991 Malmö FF 1992-1996 Borussia Mönchengladbach 1996-1997 Roma 1996-1997 Borussia Mönchengladbach 1997-1998 Blackburn Rovers 1998-1999 Hamburg SV Dalglish, Kenneth Mathieson („Kenny“) *1951, Scotland, inside forward and midfielder 102 Caps (30 goals): 1971-1986 World Cup finals 1974, 1978, 1982 European Champions Cup 1978, 1981, 1984 Top Scorer Scotland 1976 558 league appearances (230 goals) 1969-1977 Glasgow Celtic 1977-1988 Liverpool FC Danilo, Faria Alvim *1920, +1996, Brazil, center half 25 Caps (2 goals): 1945-1953 World Cup finals 1950 South American Champion 1949 1939-1942 America Rio de Janeiro 1942-1943 Canto do Rio de Janeiro 1944-1945 America Rio de Janeiro 1946-1954 Vasco da Gama 1955-1956 Botafogo Danner, Dietmar *1950, (West) Germany, midfielder 6 Caps (0 goals): 1973-1976 UEFA Cup 1975, 1979 198 Bundesliga appearances (27 goals) 1971-1980 Borussia Mönchengladbach 1980-1981 Schalke 04 Daraselia, Vitaly *1957, +1982, Soviet Union (Georgia), midfielder 22 Caps (3 goals): 1978-1982 World Cup finals 1982 European Cup II 1981 Dinamo Tblisi Dasaev, Rinat *1957, Soviet Union, goalkeeper 94 Caps: 1979-1990 World Cup finals 1982, 1986, 1990 Europe’s Best Keeper 1982, 1983, 1985, 1988 394 league appearances 1977-1988 Spartak Moscow 1988-1991 FC Sevilla De Agostini, Luigi *1961, Italy, midfielder 36 Caps (4 goals): 1987-1991 World Cup finals 1990 UEFA Cup 1990 1978-1982 Udinese 1982-1983 Catanzaro 1983-1986 Udinese 1986-1987 Hellas Verona 1987-1992 Juventus 1992-1993 Internazionale 1992-1995 AC Reggiana De Boer, Franciscus (“Frank”) *1970, Holland, midfielder and center back 112 Caps (13 goals): 1990-2004 World Cup finals 1994, 1998 Champions League 1995 UEFA Cup 1992 Intercontinental Cup 1995 1988-1998 Ajax Amsterdam 1998-2003 FC Barcelona 2003-2004 Galatasaray 2003-2004 Glasgow Rangers 2004-2005 Al-Rayyan De Boer,Ronaldus *1970, Holland, midfielder 67 Caps (13 goals): 1993-2003 World Cup finals 1994, 1998 Champions League 1995 Intercontinental Cup 1995 347 league appearances (86 goals) 1987-1991 Ajax Amsterdam 1991-1994 FC Twente Enschede 1993-2000 Ajax Amsterdam 1999-2002 FC Barcelona 2001-2003 Glasgow Rangers De Goey, Eduard Franciscus (“Ed Konijn”) *1966, Holland, goalkeeper 31 Caps: 1991-1998 World Cup finals 1994, 1998 European Cup II 1998 503 league appearances 1985-1990 Sparta Rotterdam 1990-1997 Feijenoord Rotterdam 1997-2003 Chelsea FC 2003-2005 Stoke City (II. Division) De Jong, Theo *1947, Holland, midfielder 15 Caps (3 goals): 1972-1974 World Cup finals 1974 UEFA Cup 1974 1966-1970 Blau-Wit 1970-1972 NEC Breda 1972-1977 Feijenoord Rotterdam 1977-1981 Roda Kerkrade 1981-1983 Seiko Hong Kong 1983-1984 FC Den Bosch De Kock, Johan *1964, Holland, center back 13 Caps (0 goals): 1993-1997 UEFA Cup 1997 449 league appearances (61 goals) 1984-1987 FC Groningen 1987-1994 FC Utrecht 1994-1996 NAC Breda 1996-2001 Schalke 04 de la Torre, Orlando (“Chito”) *1943, Peru, center back 39 Caps (0 goals): 1967-1973 World Cup finals 1970 Sporting Cristal De Napoli, Fernando *1964, Italy, midfielder 54 Caps (1 goal): 1986-1992 World Cup finals 1986, 1990 European Champions Cup 1994 UEFA Cup 1989 1983-1986 Avellino 1986-1992 Napoli 1992-1994 AC Milan 1994-1997 Reggiana De Sisti, Giancarlo *1943, Italy, inside forward and midfielder 29 Caps (4 goals): 1967-1972 World Cup finals 1970 European Champion 1968 478 Serie A appearances (50 goals) 1960-1965 AS Roma 1965-1974 Fiorentina 1974-1978 AS Roma De Sordi, Newton *1931, Brazil, right full back 22 Caps (0 goals): 1955-1961 World Cup finals 1958 (Champion) 1949-1952 XV de Piracicaba 1952-1965 Sao Paulo FC De Wolf, Michel *1958, Belgium, left full back 42 Caps (1 goal): 1980-1994 World Cup finals 1986, 1990, 1994 KAA Gent KV Kortrijk RSC Anderlecht Deak, Ferenc (“Bamba”) *1922, Hungary, center forward 20 Caps (29 goals): 1946-1949 Top Scorer Hungary 1946, 1947, 1949 238 league appearances (305 goals) 1940-1944 Szentörinci AC (III./II. Division) 1944-1947 Szentörinci AC 1947-1950 Ferencvaros Budapest 1950-1954 Ujpest Dozsa 1954-1955 Spartacus Budapest (II. Division) 1955-1957 Egyertertes Budapest (II. Division) 1957-1958 Siofok (II. Division) Dean, William Ralph (“Dixie”) *1907, +1980, England, center forward 16 Caps (18 goals): 1927-1932 Top Scorer England 1928, 1932 369 league appearances, 320 goals 1924-1925 Tranmere Rovers 1925-1938 Everton FC 1938-1939 Notts County Decker, Karl *1921, Austria, inside forward 8 Caps (8 goals): 1942 (for Germany) 25 Caps (19 goals): 1945-1952 (for Austria) Top Scorer Germany 1943, 1944 302 league appearances (288 goals) 1938-1952 FC First Vienna 1952-1956 Sturm Graz Degryse, Marc *1965, Belgium, forward 63 Caps (23 goals): 1984-1996 World Cup finals 1990, 1994 543 league appearances (212 goals) 1983-1989 Club Bruges 1989-1995 RSC Anderlecht 1995-1996 Sheffield Wednesday 1996-1998 PSV Eindhoven 1998-1999 AA Gent 1999-2002 Antwerp Del Bosque, Vicente *1950, Spain, midfielder 18 Caps (1 goal): 1975-1980 1971-1972 Cordoba 1972-1973 CD Castellon 1973-1984 Real Madrid Del Sol, Luis *1935, Spain, inside right and half back 16 Caps (3 goals): 1960-1966 World Cup finals 1962, 1966 European Champions Cup 1960 Intercontinental Cup 1960 1955-1959 Betis Sevilla 1959-1962 Real Madrid 1962-1970 Juventus 1970-1971 AS Roma Demianenko, Anatoli *1959, Soviet Union (Ukraine), left full back and center back 80 Caps (6 goals): 1981-1989 World Cup finals 1982, 1986 European Cup II 1986 Dynamo Kiev Demol, Stéphane *1966, Belgium, midfielder 38 Caps (1 goal): 1986-1991 World Cup finals 1986, 1990 1983-1988 RSC Anderlecht 1988-1989 Bologna 1989-1990 FC Porto 1990-1991 FC Toulouse 1991-1994 Standard Liege 1993-1994 Cercle Bruges 1994-1995 Sporting Braga 1994-1995 Panionios Athens 1995-1996 FC Lugano 1996-1998 Toulon Dermendjiev, Dinko *1941, Bulgaria, midfielder 58 Caps (19 goals): 1966-1977 World Cup finals 1966, 1970 Botev Plovdiv Deschamps, Didier *1968, France, midfielder 103 Caps (4 goals): 1989-2000 World Cup finals 1998 (Champion) European Champion 2000 Champions League 1993, 1996 Intercontinental Cup 1996 436 league appearances (17 goals) 1985-1990 FC Nantes 1989-1990 Olympique Marseille 1990-1991 Girondins Bordeaux 1991-1994 Olympique Marseille 1994-1999 Juventus 1999-2000 Chelsea FC 2000-2001 FC Valencia Devrindt, Johan *1944, Belgium, center forward 22 Caps (15 goals): 1964-1975 World Cup finals 1970 435 league appearances (174 goals) 1964-1970 RSC Anderlecht 1970-1972 PSV Eindhoven 1972-1974 Club Bruges 1974-1976 SC Lokeren 1976-1980 FC Winterslag 1980-1981 La Louviere (II. Division) 1981-1982 Tienen (III. Division) Dewalque, Nicolas *1945, Belgium, sweeper 33 Caps (0 goals): 1967-1975 World Cup finals 1970 296 league appearances (15 goals) 1963-1975 Standard Liege Deyna, Kazimierz *1947, +1989, Poland, inside forward and midfielder 102 Caps (45 goals): 1968-1978 World Cup finals 1974, 1978 1965-1966 LKS Lodz 1966-1977 Legia Warsaw 1977-1980 Manchester City 1981-1987 San Diego Sockers Diaz, Ramon Angel *1959, Argentina, center forward 24 Caps (10 goals): 1979-1982 World Cup finals 1982 Top Scorer France 1991 501 league appearances (215 goals) 1974-1982 River Plate 1982-1983 SSC Napoli 1983-1986 US Avellino 1986-1988 Fiorentina 1988-1989 Internazionale 1989-1991 AS Monaco 1991-1993 River Plate 1993-1995 Yokohama Marinos Didi, Valdir Pereira *1928, +2001, Brazil, linkman and midfielder 68 Caps (20 goals): 1952-1962 World Cup finals 1954, 1958 (Champion), 1962 (Champion) European Champions Cup 1960 349 league appearances (130 goals) 1947-1948 Madureira 1949-1955 Fluminense 1956-1958 Botafogo 1959-1960 Real Madrid 1960-1964 Botafogo 1964-1966 Vera Cruz Dienst, Robert („Der Blade“) *1928, Austria, center forward 27 Caps (12 goals): 1949-1957 World Cup finals 1954 Top Scorer Austria 1951, 1954, 1957 340 league appearances (320 goals) 1943-1948 Floridsdorf AC 1948-1961 Rapid Vienna 1961-1962 First SC Schwechat Dietz, Bernhard (“Enatz”) *1948, (West) Germany, left full back and center back 53 Caps (0 goals): 1974-1981 World Cup finals 1978 European Champion 1980 495 Bundesliga appearances (77 goals) 1969-1982 MSV Duisburg 1982-1987 Schalke 04 Diogo, Victor Silva Hugo *1958, Uruguay, full back 33 Caps (1 goal): 1979-1986 World Cup finals 1986 Copa Libertadores 1982 Intercontinental Cup 1982 Penarol Di Gennaro, Antonio *1958, Italy, midfielder 15 Caps (4 goals): 1984-1986 World Cup finals 1986 1976-1980 Fiorentina 1980-1981 Perugia 1981-1988 Hellas Verona 1988-1991 AS Bari Di Livio, Angelo (“Soldatino”) *1966, Italy, midfielder 40 Caps (0 goals): 1995-2002 World Cup finals 1998, 2002 European Champions Cup 1996 Intercontinental Cup 1996 1985-1986 Reggiana (II. Division) 1986-1987 Nocerina (II. Division) 1987-1989 Perugia (II. Division) 1989-1993 Padova (II. Division) 1993-1999 Juventus 1999-2002 Fiorentina 2002-2004 Fiorentina (III./II. Division) 2004-2005 Fiorentina Di Matteo, Roberto *1970, Italy, midfielder 34 Caps (2 goals): 1994-1998 World Cup finals 1998 European Cup II 1998 1988-1991 FC Schaffhausen 1991-1992 FC Zürich 1992-1993 FC Aarau 1993-1996 Lazio 1996-2002 Chelsea FC Di Méco, Eric *1963, France, left full back 23 Caps (0 goals): 1989-1996 Champions League 1993 1980-1994 Olympique Marseille 1994-1997 AS Monaco Di Stéfano, Alfredo (“Saeta Rubia”) *1926, Argentina/Spain, center forward 6 Caps (6 goals): 1947 (for Argentina) 31 Caps (23 goals): 1957-1961 (for Spain) World Cup finals 1962 Copa America 1947 European Champions Cup 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960 Intercontinental Cup 1960 Golden Ball Europe 1957, 1959 Top Scorer Champions Cup 1958, 1962 Top Scorer Argentina 1947 Top Scorer Colombia 1951, 1952 Top Scorer Spain 1954, 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959 521 league appearances (377 goals) 1945-1946 River Plate 1946-1947 Huracan 1947-1949 River Plate 1949-1953 Millionarios Bogota 1953-1964 Real Madrid 1964-1966 Espanol Barcelona Dirceu, José Guimaraes *1952, Brazil, forward 28 Caps (3 goals): 1972-1986 World Cup finals 1974, 1978, 1982 1970-1972 Curitiba 1972-1976 Botafogo 1976-1977 Fluminense 1977-1978 Vasco da Gama 1978-1979 America de Mexico 1979-1982 Atletico Madrid 1982-1983 Hellas Verona 1983-1984 Napoli 1984-1985 Ascoli Calcio 1985-1986 Como Calcio 1986-1987 US Avellino 1987-1988 Vasco da Gama 1988-1989 Miami Sharks (regional) 1989-1990 Empoli (III. Division) 1990-1991 Bologna 1991-1992 Empoli (III. Division) 1993-1994 Ancara (III. Division) 1994-1995 Yucatan Mexico Djorkaeff, Jean *1939, France, right full back 48 Caps (3 goals): 1964-1972 World Cup finals 1966 1958-1966 Olympique Lyon 1966-1970 Olympique Marseille 1970-1971 Paris St. Germain (II. Division) 1971-1972 Paris St. Germain 1972-1974 FC Paris Dobias, Karol *1947, CSSR (Slovakia), right full back and center back 67 Caps (6 goals): 1967-1980 World Cup finals 1970 European Champion 1976 344 league appearances (20 goals) 1965-1967 Banik Handlova 1967-1977 Spartak Trnava 1977-1980 Bohemians Prague 1980-1985 SC Lokeren Dobrovolski, Igor *1967, Soviet Union/Russia, midfielder 29 Caps (8 goals): 1986-1992 (for Soviet Union/C.I.S.) 18 Caps (2 goals): 1992-1998 (for Russia) World Cup finals 1990 1984-1996 Dinamo Moscow 1996-1997 Fortuna Düsseldorf 1997-1999 Fortuna Düsseldorf (II. Division) Dockx, Jean Baptiste (“Papa Doc”) *1941, Belgium, midfielder and sweeper 35 Caps (3 goals): 1967-1975 World Cup finals 1970 European Cup II 1976, 1978 394 league appearances (45 goals) 1957-1967 KV Mechelen 1967-1971 Racing White Bruges 1971-1978 RSC Anderlecht Domenghini, Angelo (“Mesciani”) *1941, Italy, right wing midfielder 33 Caps (7 goals): 1963-1972 World Cup finals 1970 European Champion 1968 European Champions Cup 1965 Intercontinental Cup 1964 1960-1964 Atalanta Bergamo 1964-1969 Internazionale 1969-1973 US Cagliari 1974-1976 AS Roma Domergue, Jean-Francois *1957, France, left full back 9 Caps (2 goals): 1984-1987 European Champion 1984 1975-1980 Girondins Bordeaux 1980-1982 OSC Lille 1982-1983 Olympique Lyon 1983-1986 FC Toulouse 1986-1988 Olympique Marseille 1988-1989 SM Caen Donadoni, Roberto *1963, Italy, left wing midfielder 63 Caps (5 goals): 1986-1996 World Cup finals 1990, 1994 European Champions Cup 1989, 1990, 1994 Intercontinental Cup 1989, 1990 261 Serie A appearances for Milan (18 goals) 1981-1984 Atalanta Bergamo (II. Division) 1984-1986 Atalante Bergamo 1986-1996 AC Milan 1996-1997 New York Metro Stars 1997-1998 AC Milan 1998-1999 Al-Ittihad Dorigo, Anthony Robert (“Tony”) *1965, England (Australia), left full back 15 Caps (0 goals): 1989-1993 World Cup finals 1990 469 league appearances in England (18 goals) 1983-1987 Aston Villa 1987-1991 Chelsea FC 1991-1997 Leeds United 1997-1999 Torino 1998-2000 Derby County Dossena, Giuseppe *1958, Italy, midfielder 38 Caps (1 goal): 1981-1987 World Cup finals 1982 (Champion) European Cup II 1990 Pistoiese Cesena Bologna Torino Udinese (II. Division) Sampdoria Douglas, Bryan *1934, England, outside right 36 Caps (11 goals): 1958-1963 World Cup finals 1958, 1962 1954-1958 Blackburn Rovers (II. Division) 1958-1966 Blackburn Rovers 1966-1969 Blackburn Rovers (II. Division) Drake, Edward Joseph (“Ted”) *1912, +1995, England, center forward 5 Caps (6 goals): 1935-1938 Top Scorer England 1935 168 league appearances for Arsenal (124 goals) 1931-1934 Southampton FC 1933-1945 Arsenal FC Dremmler, Wolfgang *1954, (West) Germany, full back and midfielder 27 Caps (3 goals): 1981-1984 World Cup finals 1982 310 Bundesliga appearances (15 goals) 1974-1979 Eintracht Braunschweig 1979-1986 Bayern Munich Dropsy, Dominique *1951, France, goalkeeper 17 Caps: 1978-1981 World Cup finals 1978 1972-1976 US Valenciennes 1973-1984 Racing Strasbourg 1984-1994 Girondins Bordeaux Ducadam, Helmuth (“Ducki”) *1959, Romania, goalkeeper 2 Caps: 1982 European Champions Cup 1986 Europe’s Best Keeper 1986 1977-1983 UT Arad 1983-1987 Steaua Bucarest Dumitrache, Florea *1948, Romania, center forward 27 Caps (15 goals): 1968-1974 World Cup finals 1970 Top Scorer Romania 1969, 1971 1965-1978 Dinamo Bucarest Dunai, Antal *1943, Hungary, center forward 31 Caps (9 goals): 1969-1973 Top Scorer Fairs Cup 1969 Top Scorer Hungary 1967, 1968, 1970 327 league appearances (203 goals) 1961-1964 Pecsi Dozsa 1964-1976 Ujpest Dozsa 1976-1977 Debreceni Vasutas 1977-1979 Debreceni Vasutas (II. Division) 1979-1980 Chinon Indre et Loire (regional) 1980-1981 1. FC Simmering (II. Division) Dunga, Carlos Gaetano Bledorn Verri *1963, Brazil, midfielder 91 Caps (6 goals): 1982-1998 World Cup finals 1990, 1994 (Champion), 1998 Copa America 1989, 1997 358 league appearances (38 goals) 1983-1984 Internacional 1984-1985 Corinthians 1985-1986 Santos FC 1986-1987 Vasco da Gama 1987-1988 Pisa 1988-1993 Fiorentina 1992-1993 Pescara 1993-1995 VfB Stuttgart 1994-1998 Jubilo Iwata 1998-1999 Internacional Dunne, Anthony (“Tony”) *1941, Ireland, full back 33 Caps (0 goals): 1962-1975 European European Champions Cup 1968 414 league appearances for United (2 goals) 1958-1960 Shelbourne 1960-1973 Manchester United 1973-1978 Bolton Wanderers (II. Division) 1978-1979 Bolton Wanderers Dusbaba, Johnny *1956, Holland, center back 4 Caps (0 goals): 1977-1978 European Cup II 1978 ADO Den Haag Ajax Amsterdam RSC Anderlecht NEC Breda Dzajic, Dragan (“Magic”) *1946, Yugoslavia (Serbia), outside left 85 Caps (23 goals): 1964-1979 World Cup finals 1974 585 league appearances (175 goals) 1963-1974 Red Star Belgrade 1974-1975 OGC Nice 1975-1977 SEC Bastia 1977-1979 Red Star Belgrade Eckel, Horst („Windhund“) *1932, (West) Germany, right half back 32 Caps (0 goals): 1952-1958 World Cup finals 1954 (Champion), 1958 1950-1961 Kaiserslautern 1961-1966 Röchling Völklingen (II. Division) Eder, Aleixo de Assis *1957, Brazil, left wing 52 Caps (9 goals): 1979-1986 World Cup finals 1982, 1986 1975-1976 America Minas Gerais 1977-1979 Gremio Porto Alegre 1980-1985 Atletico Minas Gerais 1984-1985 Internacional Limeira 1985-1986 Palmeiras 1986-1987 Santos FC 1986-1987 Sport Recife 1987-1988 Botafogo 1988-1989 Atletico PR 1988-1989 Ceno Porteno (Paraguay) 1989-1990 Fenerbahce 1990-1991 Atletico Minas Gerais 1991-1992 Union Sao Joao 1992-1993 Cruzeiro 1993-1994 Atletico Minas Gerais 1994-1995 Union Sao Joao Eder, Norbert *1955, (West) Germany, midfielder and center back 9 Caps (0 goals): 1986 World Cup finals 1986 286 Bundesliga appearances (11 goals) 1973-1978 Nuremberg (II. Division) 1978-1984 Nuremberg 1984-1988 Bayern Munich 1988-1990 FC Zürich Edevaldo, de Freitas *1958, Brazil, center back 18 Caps (1 goal) World Cup finals 1982 1979-1981 Fluminense 1981-1983 Internacional RS 1983-1985 Vasco da Gama 1985-1986 Sporting Lisboa 1985-1986 Botafogo 1986-1987 Bangu 1987-1988 Villa Nova 1988-1989 America Rio de Janeiro 1989-1990 Pouso Alegre 1990-1991 America Rio de Janeiro 1990-1991 Castelo 1991-1992 Portuguesa 1991-1992 Izabalense 1992-1993 Portuguesa 1993-1994 Muniz Freire 1994-1995 Barra 1995-1996 Portuguesa 1996-1997 Mesquita 1997-1998 Jararepagua Edinho, Edino Nazareth Filho *1955, Brazil, full back and center back 46 Caps (3 goals): 1977-1986 World Cup finals 1978, 1982, 1986 1975-1982 Fluminense 1982-1987 Udinese Calcio 1987-1988 Flamengo 1988-1989 Fluminense 1989-1990 Gremio Edu, Jonas Eduardo Americo *1949, Brazil, outside left and outside right 41 Caps (8 goals): 1966-1974 World Cup finals 1966, 1970 (Champion), 1974 1965-1976 Santos FC 1976-1977 Corinthians 1977-1978 Internacional RS 1978-1983 Monterrey 1983-1984 Sao Cristovao 1984-1985 Nacional AM 1985-1986 Dom Bosco Edström, Ralf *1952, Sweden, center forward 40 Caps (15 goals): 1972-1980 World Cup finals 1974, 1978 Top Scorer Sweden 1972 1969-1970 Degerfors IF 1970-1973 Atvidaberg FF 1973-1977 PSV Eindhoven 1977-1979 IFK Gothenburg 1979-1981 Standard Liege 1981-1983 AS Monaco 1983-1985 Örgryte IS Edwards, Duncan *1936, +1958, England, left half 18 Caps (5 goals): 1955-1958 151 league appearances (20 goals) 1952-1958 Manchester United Effenberg, Stefan („Effe“) *1968, Germany, midfielder 35 Caps (5 goals), 1991-1998 World Cup finals 1994 European Champions Cup 2001 Intercontinental Cup 2001 370 Bundesliga appearances (71 goals) 30 Serie A appearances (5 goals) 1987-1990 Borussia Mönchengladbach 1990-1992 Bayern Munich 1992-1994 Fiorentina 1994-1998 Borussia Mönchengladbach 1998-2002 Bayern Munich 2002-2003 VfL Wolfsburg 2003-2004 Al Arabi Eijkelkamp, René Antonius Maria *1964, Holland, forward 6 Caps (0 goals) 1981-1986 Go Ahead Eagles Deventer 1986-1990 FC Groningen 1990-1993 KV Mechelen 1993-1995 Club Bruges 1995-1997 PSV Eindhove
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http://soccerfootballwhatever.blogspot.com/2017/01/
en
Soccer, football or whatever
http://soccerfootballwhatever.blogspot.com/favicon.ico
http://soccerfootballwhatever.blogspot.com/favicon.ico
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[ "football or whatever", "View my complete profile" ]
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I am Lincoln W Chan from Hong Kong also aka Excapegoat at bigsoccer. This blog is mainly about all-time teams.
en
http://soccerfootballwhatever.blogspot.com/favicon.ico
http://soccerfootballwhatever.blogspot.com/2017/01/
I am Lincoln W Chan from Hong Kong also aka Excapegoat at bigsoccer. This blog is mainly about all-time teams.
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https://www.citizen.digital/sports/inside-peles-tomb-in-worlds-tallest-cemetery-photos-n319776
en
Inside Pele's tomb in world's tallest cemetery (PHOTOS)
https://citizentv.obs.af…ew-og_image.webp
https://citizentv.obs.af…ew-og_image.webp
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[ "Pele", "Brazil", "Citizen TV", "Citizen Digital", "Tomb" ]
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2023-05-16T07:57:11
Brazil opened Pele's gilded, football-turfed tomb to the public Monday.
en
/favicon-16x16.png
Citizen Digital
https://www.citizen.digital/sports/inside-peles-tomb-in-worlds-tallest-cemetery-photos-n319776
Pele, who died on December 29 at age 82 after a battle with cancer, was laid to rest at the Ecumenical Memorial Cemetery in Santos, Brazil. It is a high-rise, 14-story mausoleum that holds the Guinness world record for the tallest cemetery on Earth. Fans were greeted by two life-size golden statues of the player nicknamed "O Rei" -- The King -- whose remains rest inside a large golden vault displayed in the middle of a 200-square-meter (more than 2,000-square-foot) room carpeted in artificial turf. "It surpassed my expectations. It's a really beautiful place," said Ronaldo Rodrigues, 44, a businessman who was first in line to visit the tomb, along with his wife. "I hope lots of tourists will come visit and get to know a little about Pele's story, what he represented for Santos, Brazil and the entire world." Born Edson Arantes do Nascimento, Pele is the only player in history to win three World Cups (1958, 1962 and 1970). He scored a world record 1,281 goals during his more than two-decade career with Santos (1956-74), the New York Cosmos (1975-77) and the Brazilian national team. In tears, Pele's son Edinho told reporters who flocked to the southeastern port city that the family was still struggling to cope with their loss. "But we're also very proud and happy at all the affection and reverence that's kept pouring in," he said. For now, entries to the tomb are limited to 60 people a day, via a sign-up form on the cemetery's website. Topped with a cross, Pele's golden vault has black etchings on its sides depicting his 1,000th goal and his famous raised-fist goal celebration. The room is wallpapered with images of fans in a football stadium. The resort-like cemetery also features an auto museum that now includes the Mercedes Benz S-280 the company gave Pele in 1974 to commemorate his 1,000th goal. "It's a place that's rich in detail, all lovingly assembled in tribute, as the 'King' deserves," cemetery manager Paulo Campos told AFP.