Arthur Friedenreich

Artur Friedenreich (born July 18, 1892 in So Paulo) was a Brazilian football player. Nicknamed The Tiger, he was arguably the sport's first black superstar. After playing with a succession of So Paulo club sides from 1910 onwards, Friedenreich made his debut with the national team in 1914. He played twenty-two internationals, including wins in the 1919 and 1922 editions of the Copa Amrica, scoring ten goals. On Brazil's 1925 tour of Europe, he was feted as the King of Football. Friedenreich played for So Paulo clubs Paulistano (1909-1929) and So Paulo (1929-1931), before moving to Rio de Janeiro to play for Flamengo (1931-1934). He played in seven state champion sides and was top goalscorer in the Sao Paulo state championship on nine occasions. Friedenreich's 1239 career goals in 1329 matches is second only to Pel's effort of 1280. Throughout his 25-year career, he was seen as a master of the technical aspects of the game, and a champion goalscorer. He retired while playing for Flamengo in 1934 at the age of 42 and died on September 6 1969.

External links

  • http://www.futbolfactory.futbolweb.net/index.php?ff=historicos&idjugador=44
  • http://www.netvasco.com.br/mauroprais/futbr/fried.html
  • http://www.e-biografias.net/biografias/arthur_friedenreich.php
Friedenreich, Arthur Friedenreich, Arthur Friedenreich, Arthur

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
lord refa
janet albrechtsen
sixteen segment display
gender (creek)
omphalocele
clifton down
durdham down
m42 (disambiguation)
dionotus
the downs (bristol)
tracey wigginton
stewing
british ii corps
ghost (game)
british iii corps
great russian language
gracianus municeps
royal high school
archibald menzies
fano
history of the spanish language
roman departure from britain
lewis schaffer
richard spruce
ural owl
langa kaxaba
spanish phonology
hitomi (doa)
natan sharansky
nongoma
cybernetics (disambiguation)
mohabbatein
st brendan's island
paul ereng
popalzay
sea hunt
key hill cemetery
church of the province of west africa
buckling
transition (literary journal)
hms spitfire (1912)
betty oliphant
que locura
joseph hinks