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Osman Briseno

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Aug 3, 2024, 12:10:06 AM8/3/24
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Ignacio Martn Fernndez (.mw-parser-output .IPA-label-smallfont-size:85%.mw-parser-output .references .IPA-label-small,.mw-parser-output .infobox .IPA-label-small,.mw-parser-output .navbox .IPA-label-smallfont-size:100%Spanish pronunciation: [iɣˈnasjo feɾˈnandes]; born 12 January 1990) is an Argentine footballer who plays as a midfielder for River Plate.[1][2]

Fernndez appeared in 12 of the 14 matches of River's campaign in the 2018 Copa Libertadores, including both legs of the final against Boca Juniors. In the second leg, he assisted Lucas Pratto's equalizing goal, which forced the contest into extra-time; River scored twice in the added 30 minutes and won the title, which had extra significance in the fact that it was the first time a Superclsico was contested in the final of a continental competition.[12]

In the final stretch of the Srie A and the Copa do Brasil, after facing a series of muscle injuries coupled with the consolidation of Diego Costa in the starting lineup, Fernndez was restricted mainly to making second half appearances.[22] Despite this, his overall contribution to Atltico's domestic treble winning season, with 10 goals and 11 assists in 52 games, earned him nominations to both the Prmio Craque do Brasileiro and Bola de Prata awards.[23][24]

Peleterio, 32, who played for clubs such as Eibar, Brentford, and Birmingham City, declared in the video that he became a Muslim after learning about Islam through his friend of 11 years, former Kuwaiti football player Faisal Buresli, Spanish media outlet Marca said on Friday.

Born in A Pobra do Caraminal in northwestern Spain, Peleterio played for Real Madrid Castilla, Celta Vigo, Eibar, and Alaves while he was in Spain. He was also at Brentford, Birmingham City, and Aston Villa in England.

Rodriguez, born in Spain, was an inspiring story. His father, Fabriciano, arrived at Ellis Island in 1911 on board the famed Lusitania with only $30 dollars in his pocket. Two of his sons, Jesse and Kelly, both young children at the time of the move, would go on to play in the NFL. And there was no contesting that Jesse Rodriguez had been the first person of Hispanic heritage to play in the NFL -- until 2000.

For generations, historians had associated Ignacio Molinet with French heritage, because of his last name. Yet Molinet was Cuban, born in 1904 in Chaparra, a small town on the eastern part of the island.

In his early years, Molinet relocated to the United States, where both he and his older brother, Joaquin, attended Cornell. At the Ivy League school, Ignacio excelled at both basketball and football, lettering in both. When both his parents died following his junior year, he returned to his homeland in the Caribbean until the Frankford Yellow Jackets, a Philadelphia-area team, offered him a pro football contract with the budding NFL.

According to the Cornell Alumni Magazine, it's unclear why Molinet is consistently referred to as "Lou" by some football historians. For the Big Red faithful in college, he was "Molly," a shortening of his last name. To his family, he was "Iggy," an abbreviation of his first name.

Regardless of what he was called and why, Molinet's 5-foot-11, 195-pound frame made him a good candidate to be a pro fullback. In those early days of the NFL, the Yellow Jackets were a solid, successful franchise that, prior to Molinet's signing in 1927, had never endured a losing season and was coming off a championship year, during which Frankford went 14-1-1.

In a mid-October win over the Buffalo Bisons, Molinet would score his only touchdown, a 1-yard run in the fourth quarter that made it a 23-0 win over Jesse Rodriguez's future team. Statistically or even anecdotally, there isn't much more to Molinet's trailblazing career in the league; he would play in nine of the Yellow Jackets' 18 games that season, starting in just two and making a few touches that would go into the record books for posterity.

Molinet went back to Cornell, finished his degree and lived a life far away from football. So far away, in fact, that his five children would not hear any reference to his sporting past unless a Cornell play-by-play announcer mentioned him during a broadcast they happened to be listening to. At the time of his death, in 1977, even his family knew little of his sporting exploits beyond his college days. To them, he was the caring father and grandfather, a mechanical engineer who worked for an air-conditioning manufacturer for decades to support his kin.

Molinet's legacy, however, is notable to the growing fraternity of Latinos in college and pro football today. As historian Mario Longoria has noted, Molinet's signing opened the door for others who played similar positions in the coming decades. Despite the prominence of Latin American-born kickers and linemen in the modern era, the first incursions, perhaps facilitated by Molinet, tell the story of playmakers on offense, mainly fullbacks and halfbacks. Between 1927 and the early 1950s, nearly all Latinos who broke into the league played those positions.

One of them, Honduran-born Steve Van Buren, would become a six-time All-Pro and two-time NFL champion with the Philadelphia Eagles. His three consecutive rushing titles earned him a spot on the 1940s All-Decade team. His number is retired and he was enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1965.

In that same location in Canton, Ohio, Ignacio Molinet's contract is prominently displayed, a public tribute to a man whose trailblazing run in professional football had been quietly a secret for almost 75 years.

Captain Dave Ignacio was named Harvard football's most valuable player yesterday, and senior Dave Crawford was selected as the winner of the LaCroix Trophy for "enthusiasm, sportsmanship, loyalty, and team spirit."

Senior roverback Ignacio was selected by his teammates to receive the Crocker Award in recognition of the MVP honor, Crawford was chosen by a special three-man selection committee headed by freshman coach Henry Lamar.

Ignacio, the only defensive back ever to captain the Harvard squad in the two-platoon era, was the statistical leader among defensemen this fall with 71 tickles and five interceptions. Ignacio was also cited for making the key defensive play in several games.

Ignacio's biggest play of the season came last Saturday against Yale. In a play which Eli Coach Carmen Cozza called the "turning point of the game," Ignacio blocked a punt which resulted in Harvard's winning touchdown.

This paper explains the concept of support as an economic driver of football. It begins with a theoretical approach to the concept of support and a review of the literature relating to support, fan typology and factors that determine attendance at stadia. Next, factors that influence support are explained and a schema for a model of support is proposed. Finally, an analysis is carried out of the influence of attendance on revenues in Spanish professional football clubs.

An in-depth analysis of the value-creation models used by Spain's leading football clubs is conducted in contrast to those of other European clubs. Assessment is made of the results brought about by these models. Using the sport-emphasis and business-emphasis matrix, an explanation of the context in which the models are positioned is provided in an effort to generalize the findings from the analysis.

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N le 18 janvier 1990 Madrid, la capitale de l'Espagne, dans la communaut de Madrid, Nacho arrive dans le systme des jeunes du Real Madrid l'ge de 11 ans. Il a un frre cadet, lex, qui est lui aussi footballeur. Il fait ses dbuts 2008, en jouant deux matchs avec les rserves en Segunda Divisin, et par la suite ralise deux autres saisons compltes dans la mme catgorie.

Le 23 avril 2011, Nacho dispute son premier match avec l'quipe premire du Real Madrid en Liga, tant titularis comme arrire gauche lors d'une victoire l'extrieur 3-6 contre le Valence CF. Il jouera l'intgralit de la rencontre.

Il marque son unique but en slection lors de la Coupe du monde 2018, dispute en Russie, face au Portugal durant le premier tour, d'une reprise de vole spectaculaire touchant les deux poteaux (score final 3-3)[7].

Nacho a t diagnostiqu diabtique de type 1 depuis ses douze ans. Oui, je suis diabtique. Je le suis depuis que j'ai douze ans, mais je vais bien, je suis trs prudent. Si un footballeur se doit de prendre soin de lui, tant diabtique, je le fais trois fois plus a-t-il avou au journal espagnol Marca[11].

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