Rodolfo Vicente
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Raúl Rodolfo Vicente Gragovich | ||
Date of birth | 21 July 1946 | ||
Position(s) | Right winger, right midfielder | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1966–1968 | Racing Club | ||
1968–1972 | Atlanta | 120 | (8) |
1972–1973 | AEK Athens | 17 | (1) |
1973– | Chacarita | ||
–1978 | Ferro Carril Oeste | ||
International career | |||
1967 | Argentina | 1 | (1) |
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Rodolfo Vicente (born 21 July 1946) is an Argentine former professional footballer.[1] His nickname was "El Negro".[2]
Club career
[edit]Vicente started his football career at Racing Club, where he played until January 1968. There he won the Intercontinental Cup in 1967 against Celtic.[3] Afterwards, he signed to the second division side, Atlanta, where having a good presence, he played for 4 seasons. In the summer of 1972, the transfers of Latin American footballers to Greece, according to the current of the time, brought Vicente alongside Néstor Errea and Hugo Zeer to AEK Athens.[4] He never adapted and didn't to help the team in an overall bad season, where they finished at the fifth place. On 13 September 1972 he scored his first goal at the club in a UEFA Cup game at home against Salgótarján.[5] In the summer of 1973 he returned to Argentina to play for Chacarita and Ferro Carril Oeste, before retiring in 1978.[6]
International career
[edit]Vicente competed once for Argentina shaping the final 5–0 win against Colombia,[7] for the Pan American Games in 1967, where he won fifth place.
Honours
[edit]Racing Club
References
[edit]- ^ "Profile". once-onze.narod.ru. Retrieved 9 June 2012.[permanent dead link]
- ^ "Στα χνάρια του "Νέγκρο" της ΑΕΚ". aek-live.gr. 8 October 2019.
- ^ "FIFA Club World Cup UAE 2018: Statistical-kit (page 39)" (PDF). FIFA. 10 December 2018. p. 13. Retrieved 17 March 2020.
- ^ "ΑΕΚ made in Argentina". sport24.gr.
- ^ "AEK-Salgótarján UEFA Europa League 1972/73". UEFA.com.
- ^ "Ροντόλφο Βισέντε". aekpedia.com.
- ^ "Panamerican Games 1967". RSSSF.