José Chiarroni

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Full name José Chiarroni Pazos
Date of birth (1898-01-06)6 January 1898
Place of birth Vigo, Galicia, Spain
Date of death 10 March 1944(1944-03-10) (aged 46)
José Chiarroni
Personal information
Full name José Chiarroni Pazos
Date of birth (1898-01-06)6 January 1898
Place of birth Vigo, Galicia, Spain
Date of death 10 March 1944(1944-03-10) (aged 46)
Place of death Galicia, Spain
Position(s) center-forward
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1914–1923 Real Vigo Sporting
1923–1924 Celta de Vigo
1924–1929 Deportivo de La Coruña
International career
1922–1923 Galicia
Medal record
 Galicia
Prince of Asturias Cup
Silver medal – second place1922-23 Prince of Asturias CupTeam[1]
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

José Chiarroni Pazos (6 January 1898 - 10 March 1944) was a Spanish footballer of the 1920s who played as a center-forward.[2]

Born in Vigo, Galicia, he began playing football at his hometown club Real Vigo Sporting in 1914, and he helped Sporting to win five Galician Championships in 1913–14, 1916–17, 1918–19, 1919–20 and 1922–23.[3] He remained there until Sporting was merged with Fortuna de Vigo in 1923, to form Celta de Vigo. The Celta presentation match was held on 14 September 1923 between an A and a B team formed with the players from the club, taking advantage of the large team available that they had, however, both Chiarroni and Ramón González were absent from it.[4] Coincidence or not, the two of them, along with Luis Otero, not satisfied with the discipline of this new club, left the entity before the start of the 1923 Galician Championship to sign for Deportivo de La Coruña, which was one of the triggers of the historical rivalry between the Vigo and Coruña teams. Celta sued Deportivo for bribery and these protests led the Galician Federation to suspend the three "runaway" footballers for a season, accusing them of professionalism, while Deportivo was forbidden to line them up in the Galician Championship.[5][6] However, Deportivo appealed to the Royal Spanish Football Federation, which ruled in favor of Deportivo and annulled the sanction against the club on the understanding that there had been no bribery, urging the Galician Federation to readmit Deportivo to the championship, although it maintained the sanction on the three players for having duplicate records.[7][8] The Galician Federation agreed by majority to accept the verdict of the Spanish Federation.[9]

With Celta he only played friendly matches, such as the one held in the summer of 1924 against the Uruguay national team which would go on to win the 1924 Summer Olympics in Paris.[10] At the end of his suspension in 1924, he officially became part of the Deportivo team, where he remained until 1929, winning the Galicia Championship two more times.

International career

Honours

References

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