Osvaldo Nardiello Explained

Osvaldo Nardiello
Fullname:Ángel Osvaldo Nardiello
Birth Date:31 August 1936
Death Date:[1]
Years1:1955–57
Clubs1:Newell's Old Boys
Caps1:56
Goals1:12
Years2:1958–62
Clubs2:Boca Juniors
Caps2:107
Goals2:44
Years3:1963–65
Clubs3:Estudiantes LP
Caps3:40
Goals3:9
Years4:1965–66
Clubs4:Chacarita Juniors
Caps4:27
Goals4:6
Years5:1967
Clubs5:San Lorenzo (MdP)
Caps5:10
Goals5:0
Nationalteam1:Argentina
Nationalyears1:1959–1962
Nationalcaps1:11
Nationalgoals1:3

Ángel Osvaldo Nardiello[2] (Rosario, Santa Fe, 31 August 1936 – 26 May 2020)[3] was an Argentine footballer that played as right winger.[3] [2]

He played in eleven matches for the Argentina national football team from 1959 to 1962.[4] He was also part of Argentina's squad for the 1959 South American Championship that took place in Argentina.[5]

Biography

A native of Rosario, Santa Fe, Nardiello debuted with Newell's Old Boys in 1955, playing there until 1957. Nicknamed Motoneta because of his speed, Nardiello would be soon called up to play with the Argentina national team

Nardiello then moved to Boca Juniors, where he debuted in July 1958.[2] He was part of the team that won the 1962 Argentine Primera División championship after eight seasons without titles. Some of Nardiello's teammates in Boca Juniors were Antonio Roma, Silvio Marzolini, Antonio Rattín, Juan José Pizzuti, and Brazilian forwards Paulo Valentim, Mauro Rapahel (Maurinho), and Almir Moraes Albuquerque.[3] He stayed in Boca Juniors for two years, playing 29 matches with 21 goals scored in Primera División.[2]

After his tenure on Boca Juniors, Nardiello then played for Estudiantes de La Plata, Chacarita Juniors, and San Lorenzo de Mar del Plata.[6] In local football, he played a total of 240 matches scoring 71 goals. In the Argentina national team, Nardiello played 12 matches scoring five goals, three of them to Brazil.[3]

Nardiello was also famous for his addition to tobacco, he died after being six days in a coma. He had been an emergency operation due to a peritonitis.[1]

Titles

Boca Juniors
Argentina

Notes and References

  1. https://www.infobae.com/deportes/2020/05/26/murio-el-ex-campeon-con-boca-y-la-seleccion-argentina-angel-osvaldo-nardiello/ Murió el ex campeón con Boca y la selección argentina Ángel Osvaldo Nardiello
  2. https://www.historiadeboca.com.ar/jugadores/angel-osvaldo-nardiello/281/1958/1958/7.html Angel Osvaldo Nardiello
  3. https://www.pagina12.com.ar/268329-fallecio-osvaldo-motoneta-nardiello Falleció Osvaldo Nardiello
  4. Web site: Osvaldo Nardiello . National Football Teams . 9 June 2021.
  5. Web site: South American Championship 1959 (1st Tournament) . RSSSF . 9 June 2021.
  6. https://www.bdfa.com.ar/jugadores-OSVALDO-ANGEL-NARDIELLO-1758.html Osvaldo Nardiello