Mariano Amaro
Portuguese footballer
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Mariano Rodrigues Amaro | ||
Date of birth | (1914-08-07)7 August 1914 | ||
Place of birth | Lisbon, Portugal | ||
Date of death | 22 May 1987(1987-05-22) (aged 72) | ||
Place of death | Portugal | ||
Position(s) | Midfielder | ||
Youth career | |||
Sport Adicense | |||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1934–1948 | Belenenses | 213 | (3) |
International career | |||
1937–1947 | Portugal | 19 | (0) |
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Mariano Rodrigues Amaro (7 August 1914 – 22 May 1987) was a Portuguese football midfielder and manager.
Club career
Amaro was born in Lisbon. He spent his entire career with local club C.F. Os Belenenses, always in the Primeira Liga.[1]
In the 1945–46 season, captain Amaro contributed 22 appearances as the team won the national championship for the first and only time in their history.[2]
International career
Amaro earned the first of his 19 caps for Portugal on 28 November 2017, in a 2–1 friendly win against Spain in Vigo. Before that match he, alongside teammates João Azevedo, Artur Quaresma and José Simões, refused to perform the fascist salute, being subsequently questioned by PIDE.[3]
See also
References
- ^ "23/05/1987 – Morte de Mariano Amaro (Capitão da equipa campeã em 1946)" [23/05/1987 – Death of Mariano Amaro (Captain of the champion team in 1946)] (in Portuguese). C.F. Os Belenenses. 22 May 2014. Retrieved 9 May 2020.
- ^ Teixeira, Jorge Miguel. "Portugal 1945–46". RSSSF. Retrieved 9 May 2020.
- ^ De Melo, Afonso (14 June 2018). "Portugal-Espanha. "Franco! Franco! Franco! Salazar! Salazar! Salazar!"" [Portugal-Spain. "Franco! Franco! Franco! Salazar! Salazar! Salazar!"]. i (in Portuguese). Retrieved 9 May 2020.
External links
- Mariano Amaro at ForaDeJogo (archived)
- Mariano Amaro national team profile at the Portuguese Football Federation (in Portuguese)
- Mariano Amaro at National-Football-Teams.com
- Mariano Amaro at EU-Football.info
- v
- t
- e
C.F. Os Belenenses – managers
- Costa (1919–22)
- A. Pereira (1922–37)
- C. de Oliveira (1937–38)
- A. Silva (1938–39)
- Hertzka (1939–40)
- Scopelli (1939–41)
- Faroleiro (1941–43)
- Peics (1943–44)
- A. Silva (1944–47)
- Scopelli (1947–48)
- Quaresma (1948–49)
- Martini (1949–50)
- Peics (1950–51)
- A. Silva (1951–52)
- Vaz (1951–53)
- Buchelli (1953–54)
- Riera (1954–57)
- Herrera (1957–58)
- Di Pace (1958–59)
- Vaz (1958–59)
- Glória (1959–61)
- Soares (1961–62)
- Vega (1961)
- José do Carmo (1961–62)
- Pisa (1961–62)
- Vaz (1962–64)
- Zubieta (1964)
- José do Carmo (1964)
- Fuchs (1964–65)
- Amaro (1964–65)
- Vieira (1965–66)
- Pérez (1966–67)
- M. de Oliveira (1967–68)
- C. Silva (1968)
- Zubieta (1968–69)
- Wilson (1969–70)
- Meirim (1970–71)
- Serpa (1971)
- Moreira (1971–72)
- Scopelli (1972–74)
- Bandeira (1974–76)
- Correia (1976–77)
- Medeiros (1977–79)
- Juca (1979–80)
- Hagan (1980–81)
- Bandeira (1981)
- Artur Jorge (1981)
- Vingada (1981)
- Gomes (1981)
- R. Dias (1981–82)
- Castro (1981–82)
- Amado (1981–82)
- Vicente (1981–82)
- Mendes (1982–84)
- Mourinho (1982–83)
- Melia (1983–86)
- Depireux (1986–87)
- Peres (1987–88)
- Mortimore (1988–89)
- Mladenov (1989)
- Moisés (1989–90)
- Lopes (1990)
- Moisés (1990)
- Depireux (1990–91)
- Moisés (1991)
- Braga (1991–94)
- José António (1993–94)
- Romão (1993–94)
- Alves (1994–96)
- Quinito (1996)
- Vítor Manuel (1996–97)
- Mladenov (1997)
- Cajuda (1997–98)
- V. Oliveira (1998–00)
- Peres (2000–02)
- Nené (2002)
- Manuel José (2002–03)
- Bogićević (2003–04)
- Inácio (2004)
- Carvalhal (2004–05)
- Couceiro (2005–06)
- Jesus (2006–08)
- Mior (2008)
- Pacheco (2008–09)
- Rui Jorge (2009)
- C. Pereira (2009)
- Conceição (2009–10)
- Gregório (2010)
- Brito (2010)
- Mota (2010–12)
- Marco Paulo (2012)
- van der Gaag (2012–13)
- Marco Paulo (2013–14)
- Vidigal (2014–15)
- Simão (2015)
- Sá Pinto (2015)
- Velázquez (2015–16)
- Machado (2016–17)
- Paciência (2017–18)
- Silas (2018)
- N. Oliveira (2018–21)
- Martins (2021–22)
- B. Dias (2022–23)
- Faísca (2023–)