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Luís Matoso

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Brazilian footballer (1901–1985)

In thisPortuguese name, the first or maternalfamily name isMacedo and the second or paternal family name isMatoso.
Luís Matoso
Feitiço in 1936
Personal information
Full nameLuís Macedo Matoso
Date of birth(1901-12-29)29 December 1901
Place of birthSão Paulo, Brazil
Date of death23 August 1985(1985-08-23) (aged 83)
Place of deathSão Paulo, Brazil
PositionForward
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1921Corinthians1(1)
1921-1926AA São Bento?(86)
1927-1932Santos150(216)
1932-1933Corinthians11(11)
1933-1936Peñarol?(97)
1936Santos1(1)
1936-1938Vasco da Gama?(34)
1938-1939Palmeiras66(28)
1957São Cristóvão3+(3)
Total232+(443+[1])
* Club domestic league appearances and goals

Luis Macedo Matoso (29 December 1901 – 23 August 1985), known asFeitiço, was a Brazilianfootballer who played as aforward.[2][3] He played for theBrazil national team and was six timestop scorer of the State championship of São Paulo.

Life

[edit]

Born inSão Paulo, Feitiço spent his childhood and youth in the São Paulo neighborhood ofBixiga, a quarter with strong Italian influences, where he began playing football.

He started his career with a single match in 1921 forSC Corinthians Paulista. In 1923 the center-forward joinedAssociação Atlética São Bento in downtown São Paulo, where he was top scorer of theState Championship in 1923, 24 and 25, winning the title in 1925. In 1926 he joinedSantos FC where in 1927 he was part the famous hundred goals attack. He once more was top scorer of theCampeonato Paulista in 1929, 1930 and 1931.

1932 to 1933 he played again for Corinthians, where this time he scored 12 times in 12 matches. From 1933 to 1935 he played in the Uruguayan capital Montevideo forCA Peñarol, where in his first year after two hard-fought 0–0's in the championship decider againstNacional Peñarol eventually lost the third match 3–2. In 1935 Peñarol won the championship of Uruguay. In 1936 he returned briefly to Santos, where he altogether scored 216 goals in 151 matches. Later that year he moved to Rio to Janeiro to play forCR Vasco da Gama winning the State Championship in his first year, being acclaimed as best player of his side. 1938 to 1938 he played again in São Paulo, his time forPalestra Itália, today's SE Palmeiras. 1940 he returned to Rio to end his career in the north of the town withSão Cristóvão FR.

He played in 1931 in one official match for theBrazil national team, againstUruguay. He played on more occasions for the national team, but then against club teams. His major competitors here wereArthur Friedenreich,Nilo and in the end the legendary "rubber man"Leônidas da Silva.[4]

He died on 23 August 1985, in São Paulo.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Feitiço".futebol80.com.br.
  2. ^"Luís Matoso".National Football Teams. Benjamin Strack-Zimmermann. Retrieved18 February 2021.
  3. ^Luís Matoso at WorldFootball.net
  4. ^Marcelo Leme de Arruda:Seleção Brasileira (Brazilian National Team) 1923-1932,RSSSF Brazil, 2012-12-19.
Santos FC – Hall of Fame inductees


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