Football at the 1951 Pan American Games

The first edition of the football tournament at the Pan American Games was held in Buenos Aires, Argentina, from February 25 to March 8, 1951. Five teams did compete, after Brazil withdrew on February 16, 1951.[1][2]

Football – Men's tournament at the 1951 Pan American Games
VenueEstadio Presidente Perón
Dates27 February – 7 March
Medalists
Gold medal 
Silver medal 
Bronze medal 
1955»

Paraguay participated with the club side Club Sport Colombia, strengthened with some guest players from other clubs. Costa Rica and Venezuela entered their full national teams (as they only had amateur football domestically).[3]

Competition

Final table

The Argentina squad, champions
Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Argentina 4400162+148
 Costa Rica 421191235
 Chile 412186+24
 Venezuela 410351492
 Paraguay 40135941

Match results

Argentina 50 Venezuela
Pellejero 13', 22'
Intini 48'
Baiocco
Report
Referee: Alfredo Rossi (ARG)

Costa Rica 50 Chile
Zeledón 5'
Armijo 62'
Esquivel 15'
Apiolaza 75'
Referee: Wally Muller (AUT)

Argentina 71 Costa Rica
Intini 10', 17'
Cupo 35', 39', 85'
Pellejero 41'
Baiocco 81'
Zeledón 27'
Referee: Ernest Wilbraham (ENG)

Paraguay 23 Venezuela
Vaccaro 16'
Insfrán 81'
Díaz 50'
Monterola 69' (pen.)
Olivares 74'
Referee: Luis Ventre

Paraguay 01 Costa Rica
Herrera
Referee: José Yacovino (ARG)

Argentina 21 Chile
Martínez 64'
Cupo 67' (pen.)
Apiolaza
Referee: Wally Muller

Venezuela 13 Costa Rica
Díaz 38' Armijo 55'
Murillo 67'
Zeledón
Referee: Alfredo Rossi (ARG)

Chile 11 Paraguay
Villablanca Cabrera
Referee: Ernest Wilbraham (ENG)

Chile 41 Venezuela
Saavedra 17', 23', 46'
Araya 66'
Rodríguez 79'
Referee: Robert Aldrige (ENG)

Argentina 20 Paraguay
Cupo 43'
Martínez 67'
Referee: Ernest Wilbraham (ENG)
 1951 Pan American Games winners 

Argentina

First title

Medalists

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Men's football[4]  Argentina [5]

Ángel Ambrosini (DF)
Miguel Ángel Baiocco (FW)
Roberto Comaschi (MF)
Ángel Cuccero (FW)
Norberto Cupo (FW)
Rogelio Domínguez (GK)
José Giarrizo (FW)
Carlos Glini (DF)
Roberto Infantino (MF)
Juan Intini (FW)
Carmelo Longo (FW)
Alfredo Martínez (FW)
Juan Carlos Mendiburu (FW)
Manuel Miranda (FW)
Carlos Mousegne (DF)
Enrique Olivero (DF)
José Pellejero (DF)
Arturo Rodenak (GK)
René Segini (FW)
Perfecto Seijo (DF)
Alejandro Simion (DF)
Osvaldo Vallone (MF)

Guillermo Stábile (Head coach)

 Costa Rica
Carlos Alvarado
Rodolfo Sanabria
Mario Cordero
Alex Sánchez
Nelson Morera
José Luis Quesada
Léon Alvarado
Elías Valenciano
Constantino Tulio Quiros
Héctor Julio González
Evelio Alpizar
Sigifrido Alvarado
Álvaro Murillo
Rodolfo Herrera
Miguel Ángel Zeledón
José Manuel Retana
Rafael Ángel García
Alberto Armijo
Walker Rodríguez
Rafael Campos
Jorge Quesada
Raúl Jiménez

(M – Ricardo Saprissa / Luís Cartín)
 Chile
Mario Pizarro
A. Cerda
Domingo Massaro
Jorge García
Isaac Carrasco
Salvador Arenas
Hugo Nuñez
Alberto Rojas
Ernesto Saavedra
Arnoldo Weber
Roberto Apiolaza
Jorge Villablanca
Jorge Esquivel
Pedro Arraya
J.C. Briones
Juan Carlos González
O. Labbe
P. Valenzuela
P. Magoyanes
F. Buzada

(M – Luís Tirado)

Goalscorers

Norberto Cupo, top scorer with 5 goals

There were 40 goals scored in 10 matches, for an average of 4 goals per match.

5 goals

  • Argentina Norberto Cupo

3 goals

  • Argentina José Pellejero
  • Argentina Juan Intini
  • Argentina Miguel Angel Baiocco
  • Chile Ernesto Saavedra
  • Costa Rica Miguel Angel Zeledón[6]

2 goals

  • Argentina Alfredo Martínez
  • Costa Rica Alberto Armijo
  • Chile Roberto Apiolaza
  • Venezuela César Díaz

1 goal

  • Chile Pedro Arraya
  • Chile Jorge Esquivel
  • Chile Jorge Villablanca
  • Costa Rica Rodolfo Herrera
  • Costa Rica Álvaro Murillo
  • Paraguay Eladio Cabrera
  • Paraguay Antonio Insfrán
  • Paraguay Adolfo Vaccaro
  • Venezuela Gastón Monterola
  • Venezuela Hely Olivares
  • Venezuela Enrique Rodríguez

Source: RSSSF

Bibliography

  • Olderr, Steven (2009). The Pan American Games: A Statistical History, 1951-1999, bilingual edition. McFarland & Company. ISBN 0786443367. ISBN 9780786443369.

References

  1. "Sports 123: Football: Pan American Games". Archived from the original on July 19, 2011. Retrieved February 15, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  2. "Hickok Sports: Pan American Games: Soccer Medalists". Archived from the original on November 13, 2011. Retrieved February 15, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  3. "1951 Pan Am Games football competition". RSSSF.com. Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation.
  4. "I PANAMERICAN GAMES 1951 (Avellaneda) - Match Details". RSSSF. Retrieved 12 February 2023.
  5. Historial de participaciones de la Selección Argentina en los Juegos Panamericanos on AFA.org, 26 Jul 2019
  6. Aquella vez que Costa Rica se dividió en dos equipos by Rodrigo Calvo, 27 Feb 2021
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.