Caracas F.C. Players - Alejandro Guerra, Alexander David Gonzalez, Alfredo Graciani, Andreas Vogler (Footballer), Andree Gonzalez, Andres Rou (Paperback)


Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 45. Chapters: Alejandro Guerra, Alexander David Gonzalez, Alfredo Graciani, Andreas Vogler (footballer), Andree Gonzalez, Andres Rouga, Andre Filipe Saraiva Martins, Anthony Baffoe, Arnaldo Sialle, Carlos Macchi, Cesar Baena (footballer), Cesar Eduardo Gonzalez, Cristian Gil Mosquera, Dario Figueroa, David Andrew McIntosh, Dioni Guerra, Edder Perez, Elmo Bovio, Elvis Martinez, Emiliano Dudar, Emilio Renteria, Felix Golindano, Fernando Calcaterra, Fernando Martinez (footballer), Fidel Amado Perez, Franklin Lucena, Gabriel Miranda, Gabriel Urdaneta, Gamadiel Garcia, Giovanni Savarese, Hector Bidoglio, Hector Gonzalez (Venezuelan footballer), Ivan Velasquez, Jaime Bustamante, Javier Toyo, Jorge Alberto Rojas, Jorge Serna, Jose Manuel Rey, Jose Mera, Juan Arango, Juan Carlos Letelier, Juan Cominges, Juan David Valencia, Juan Francisco Guerra, Juan Pablo Galavis, Julio Cesar Baldivieso, Leonel Vielma, Louis Angelo Pena, Luis Carlos Cabezas, Luis Manuel Seijas, Luis Vallenilla, Marlon Bastardo, Miguel Echenausi, Miguel Mea Vitali, Nelson Barahona, Nelson Carrero, Oscar Echeverry, Oswaldo Vizcarrondo, Paul Cominges, Pedro Acosta, Rafael Castellin, Rafael Mea Vitali, Raul Gonzalez Guzman, Renny Vega, Roberto Silva, Rodrigo Prieto (footballer), Rodrigo Teixeira, Rolando Alvarez, Rolando Escobar, Romulo Otero, Ronald Vargas, Stalin Rivas, Victor Ramon Ferreira, Wilson Carpintero. Excerpt: Juan Fernando Arango Saenz (born 17 May 1980) is a Venezuelan professional footballer who plays for Borussia Monchengladbach in Germany, as an attacking midfielder. Having played more than 100 times for Venezuela, he is one of the few Venezuelan players ever to play for a first division team in any of the major European leagues - he spent the better part of his career in La Liga with Mallorca, appearing in more than 200 official games - and is widely regarded as the best player the country has ever produced. Arango's parents are Colombian, having emigrated to Venezuela before he was born, in the city of Maracay. He started playing as a professional at the age of sixteen with Nueva Cadiz FC, which ascended to the Venezuelan first division the following season under the name Zulianos FC. The following year he joined Caracas Futbol Club but, after six months playing with the team, was bought by Mexico's Club de Futbol Monterrey. Arango played for two other Mexican clubs, C.F. Pachuca and Puebla FC, until 2004, when he joined La Liga side RCD Mallorca in Spain (coached by Benito Floro, also his boss at Monterrey) on a one-year link, with an option for a further three. Earlier that summer, he appeared in all three group stage matches during the Copa America. On 20 March 2005, Arango suffered a serious injury after a brutal collision with Sevilla FC's defender Javi Navarro. He fell unconscious, broke his cheekbone, swallowed his tongue and got serious cuts in his face; he returned to play a month later and, in 2005-06, was the team's top scorer with 11 league goals. In 2006, EFE chose Arango as the third best Latin American player in the Spanish league, with the first place taken by Pablo Aimar. The following year, he also obtained a Spanish passport, in March. On 9 March 2008 he scored his first hat-trick for Mallorca, in a 7-1 home thrashing of Recreativo de Huelva, with teammate Daniel Guiza - who finished as the season's Pichichi - adding two; he only missed one leagu

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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 45. Chapters: Alejandro Guerra, Alexander David Gonzalez, Alfredo Graciani, Andreas Vogler (footballer), Andree Gonzalez, Andres Rouga, Andre Filipe Saraiva Martins, Anthony Baffoe, Arnaldo Sialle, Carlos Macchi, Cesar Baena (footballer), Cesar Eduardo Gonzalez, Cristian Gil Mosquera, Dario Figueroa, David Andrew McIntosh, Dioni Guerra, Edder Perez, Elmo Bovio, Elvis Martinez, Emiliano Dudar, Emilio Renteria, Felix Golindano, Fernando Calcaterra, Fernando Martinez (footballer), Fidel Amado Perez, Franklin Lucena, Gabriel Miranda, Gabriel Urdaneta, Gamadiel Garcia, Giovanni Savarese, Hector Bidoglio, Hector Gonzalez (Venezuelan footballer), Ivan Velasquez, Jaime Bustamante, Javier Toyo, Jorge Alberto Rojas, Jorge Serna, Jose Manuel Rey, Jose Mera, Juan Arango, Juan Carlos Letelier, Juan Cominges, Juan David Valencia, Juan Francisco Guerra, Juan Pablo Galavis, Julio Cesar Baldivieso, Leonel Vielma, Louis Angelo Pena, Luis Carlos Cabezas, Luis Manuel Seijas, Luis Vallenilla, Marlon Bastardo, Miguel Echenausi, Miguel Mea Vitali, Nelson Barahona, Nelson Carrero, Oscar Echeverry, Oswaldo Vizcarrondo, Paul Cominges, Pedro Acosta, Rafael Castellin, Rafael Mea Vitali, Raul Gonzalez Guzman, Renny Vega, Roberto Silva, Rodrigo Prieto (footballer), Rodrigo Teixeira, Rolando Alvarez, Rolando Escobar, Romulo Otero, Ronald Vargas, Stalin Rivas, Victor Ramon Ferreira, Wilson Carpintero. Excerpt: Juan Fernando Arango Saenz (born 17 May 1980) is a Venezuelan professional footballer who plays for Borussia Monchengladbach in Germany, as an attacking midfielder. Having played more than 100 times for Venezuela, he is one of the few Venezuelan players ever to play for a first division team in any of the major European leagues - he spent the better part of his career in La Liga with Mallorca, appearing in more than 200 official games - and is widely regarded as the best player the country has ever produced. Arango's parents are Colombian, having emigrated to Venezuela before he was born, in the city of Maracay. He started playing as a professional at the age of sixteen with Nueva Cadiz FC, which ascended to the Venezuelan first division the following season under the name Zulianos FC. The following year he joined Caracas Futbol Club but, after six months playing with the team, was bought by Mexico's Club de Futbol Monterrey. Arango played for two other Mexican clubs, C.F. Pachuca and Puebla FC, until 2004, when he joined La Liga side RCD Mallorca in Spain (coached by Benito Floro, also his boss at Monterrey) on a one-year link, with an option for a further three. Earlier that summer, he appeared in all three group stage matches during the Copa America. On 20 March 2005, Arango suffered a serious injury after a brutal collision with Sevilla FC's defender Javi Navarro. He fell unconscious, broke his cheekbone, swallowed his tongue and got serious cuts in his face; he returned to play a month later and, in 2005-06, was the team's top scorer with 11 league goals. In 2006, EFE chose Arango as the third best Latin American player in the Spanish league, with the first place taken by Pablo Aimar. The following year, he also obtained a Spanish passport, in March. On 9 March 2008 he scored his first hat-trick for Mallorca, in a 7-1 home thrashing of Recreativo de Huelva, with teammate Daniel Guiza - who finished as the season's Pichichi - adding two; he only missed one leagu

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Books LLC, Wiki Series

Country of origin

United States

Release date

November 2012

Availability

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First published

November 2012

Authors

Creators

Dimensions

246 x 189 x 3mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

118

ISBN-13

978-1-155-33266-6

Barcode

9781155332666

Categories

LSN

1-155-33266-0



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