José Batista Explained

José Batista
Fullname:José Alberto Batista González
Birth Date:6 March 1962
Birth Place:Colonia, Uruguay
Years1:1979–1983
Years2:1984–1985
Years3:1985–1995
Years4:1995
Years5:1996–1998
Years6:1998–1999
Years7:1999–2000
Clubs1:C.A. Cerro
Caps1:46
Caps2:42
Caps3:328
Caps4:9
Caps5:47
Goals1:6
Goals2:2
Goals3:20
Goals4:0
Goals5:3
Nationalyears1:1984–1993
Nationalcaps1:14
Nationalgoals1:1
Manageryears1:2009–2010

José Alberto Batista González (born 6 March 1962) is an Uruguayan retired footballer who played as a defender, and a manager.

He is best known for having received a red card after 56 seconds – a World Cup record – in the 1986 game against Scotland.[1] [2] [3]

Club career

Born in Colonia del Sacramento, Batista played for a number of clubs in Uruguay and Argentina, starting his career with C.A. Cerro and joining giants Club Atlético Peñarol in 1983. In 1985, he joined Deportivo Español in the latter nation, where he would spend the next decade.

Batista made a brief return to his country's top division in 1995, with Rampla Juniors. He spent his final three years with Gimnasia y Esgrima de Jujuy, Deportivo Español and Argentino de Quilmes, the latter in the Argentine second level.

International career

Batista made a total of 14 appearances for the Uruguay national team, between 1984 and 1993.[4] His debut came on 19 September in a friendly match with Peru, in Montevideo.

During the 1986 FIFA World Cup qualifiers Batista scored a crucial goal in a 2–1 home triumph over Chile, his only for the country; in the final stages' third game, on 13 June 1986, he was sent off after less than one minute of play for a reckless challenge on Scotland's Gordon Strachan,[2] as Uruguay eventually bowed out in the round-of-16.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Guinness World Records. 168. 2007. HIT Entertainment. London; New York City.
  2. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/football/article2215721.ece Football's 50 greatest hard men
  3. Web site: Top 50 hardest footballers . . 13 August 2007 . 1 May 2015 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20151019002225/http://www.empireonline.com/forum/printable.asp?m=1554851 . 19 October 2015 .
  4. https://www.rsssf.org/miscellaneous/uru-recintlp.html Uruguay – Record International Players