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词条 José Torres (footballer, born 1938)
释义

  1. Club career

  2. International career

  3. Later years / Death

  4. Honours

     Club  International  Individual 

  5. References

  6. External links

{{About|Portuguese football player||José Torres (disambiguation)}}{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2010}}{{Infobox football biography
|name = José Torres
|image = José Augusto Torres (1963).jpg
|caption = Torres in 1963
|fullname = José Augusto Costa Sénica Torres
|birth_date = {{birth date|1938|9|8|df=y}}
|birth_place = Torres Novas, Portugal
|death_date = {{death date and age|2010|9|3|1938|9|8|df=y}}
|death_place = Lisbon, Portugal
|height = {{convert|1.91|m|ftin|abbr=on}}
|position = Centre forward
|youthyears1 = 1953–1957 | youthclubs1 = Torres Novas
|years1 = 1957–1959 | clubs1 = Torres Novas | caps1 = | goals1 =
|years2 = 1959–1971 | clubs2 = Benfica | caps2 = 172 | goals2 = 151
|years3 = 1971–1975 | clubs3 = Vitória Setúbal | caps3 = 91 | goals3 = 52
|years4 = 1975–1980 | clubs4 = Estoril | caps4 = 111 | goals4 = 14
|totalcaps = 374 | totalgoals = 217
|nationalyears1 = 1963–1973 | nationalteam1 = Portugal | nationalcaps1 = 33 | nationalgoals1 = 14
|manageryears1 = 1975 | managerclubs1 = Vitória Setúbal
|manageryears2 = 1979–1981 | managerclubs2 = Estoril
|manageryears3 = 1981–1982 | managerclubs3 = Estrela Amadora
|manageryears4 = 1982–1984 | managerclubs4 = Varzim
|manageryears5 = 1984–1986 | managerclubs5 = Portugal
|manageryears6 = 1987 | managerclubs6 = Boavista
|manageryears7 = 1988–1989 | managerclubs7 = Portimonense
|manageryears8 = 1994–1995 | managerclubs8 = Portimonense
|manageryears9 = 1996 | managerclubs9 = Desportivo Beja
}}

José Augusto Costa Sénica Torres OM ({{IPA-pt|ʒuˈzɛ ˈtoʁɨʃ}}; 8 September 1938 – 3 September 2010) was a Portuguese football centre forward and coach.

Nicknamed O Bom Gigante (The Kind Giant),[1] most of his 21-year senior career was spent at Benfica, with great individual and team success (13 major titles). With the Portugal national team he participated in two World Cups separated by 20 years, one as player and the other as manager.

Club career

Born in Torres Novas, Santarém District, Torres signed with S.L. Benfica in 1959, from local Clube Desportivo de Torres Novas. Even though he appeared rarely in his first three seasons combined, he managed to score six Primeira Liga goals in as many games, paving the way for a bright future at Benfica.

In the 1962–63 season, in only 21 matches, Torres was crowned the competition's top scorer after netting 26 goals, whilst also helping the league champions to the Taça de Portugal final. It was also during this decade that he would be an instrumental figure as they reached three European Cup finals – losing all – alongside attacking partners José Augusto, Mário Coluna, Eusébio and António Simões.[2]

Torres left Benfica in 1971 at nearly 33 years of age, being involved in a deal that sent him and two teammates to Vitória de Setúbal, and promising Vítor Baptista in the opposite direction.[3] He scored an average of 13 goals per season for his next club, always in the first division – he also briefly acted as the team's player-coach in 1975 – then ended his career three months before his 42nd birthday after four years at another side in Lisbon, G.D. Estoril Praia, again in the top level, suffering relegation in his last year; in 21 seasons in the competition he amassed totals of 374 games and 217 goals, surpassing the 200 mark for Benfica alone.[2]

Torres worked as a manager in the following years, without much success. His biggest achievement was help modest Varzim S.C. to two consecutive finishes outside the relegation zone in the first division (1982–84).[4]

International career

Torres earned 33 caps for Portugal, scoring 14 goals. His debut came on 23 January 1963 in a 0–1 loss against Bulgaria for the 1964 European Nations' Cup qualification, a third-game replay. He was selected for the 1966 FIFA World Cup in England – as Augusto, Coluna, Eusébio and Simões – where he played all the matches and scored three goals, including the 2–1 winner against the Soviet Union in the third-place playoff, through his main asset, a header.[5]

Torres' last game was a 2–2 draw, again against Bulgaria for the 1974 World Cup qualifiers, on 13 October 1973 (at the age of 35).[6] It would also be longtime club and national teammates Eusébio and Simões' last international appearance.

After leaving Varzim, aged 46, Torres was named national team manager. In the last match of the 1986 World Cup qualifiers in West Germany, Portugal needed a win to qualify. Prior to the game in Stuttgart he uttered "Please allow me to dream", and his side eventually won it 1–0 thanks to a Carlos Manuel goal;[1] the finals in Mexico, however, would be marred by the Saltillo Affair, with Portugal being eliminated after the first round.

{{Ig header|n=José Augusto Torres|ref=}}{{Ig match
| n=1
| d1=29 April 1964
| st=Hardturm| ci=Zurich| co=Switzerland
| o=Switzerland
| sc=0–1
| fr=2–3
| comp=Friendly}}{{Ig match
| n=2
| d1=17 May 1964
| st=Estádio Nacional| ci=Lisbon| co=Portugal
| o=England
| sc=1–0
| fr=3–4
| comp=Friendly}}{{Ig match
| n=3
| d1=17 May 1964
| st=Estádio Nacional| ci=Lisbon| co=Portugal
| o=England
| sc=2–2
| fr=3–4
| comp=Friendly}}{{Ig match
| n=4
| d1=18 June 1966
| st=Hampden Park| ci=Glasgow| co=Scotland
| o=Scotland
| sc=0–1
| fr=0–1
| comp=Friendly}}{{Ig match
| n=5
| d1=21 June 1966
| st=Idrætsparken| ci=Copenhagen| co=Denmark
| o=Denmark
| sc=0–2
| fr=1–3
| comp=Friendly}}{{Ig match
| n=6
| d1=21 June 1966
| st=Idrætsparken| ci=Copenhagen| co=Denmark
| o=Denmark
| sc=1–3
| fr=1–3
| comp=Friendly}}{{Ig match
| n=7
| d1=26 June 1966
| st=Estádio Nacional| ci=Lisbon| co=Portugal
| o=Uruguay
| sc=1–0
| fr=3–0
| comp=Friendly}}{{Ig match
| n=8
| d1=26 June 1966
| st=Estádio Nacional| ci=Lisbon| co=Portugal
| o=Uruguay
| sc=2–0
| fr=3–0
| comp=Friendly}}{{Ig match
| n=9
| d1=26 June 1966
| st=Estádio Nacional| ci=Lisbon| co=Portugal
| o=Uruguay
| sc=3–0
| fr=3–0
| comp=Friendly}}{{Ig match
| n=10
| d1=3 July 1966
| st=Estádio das Antas| ci=Porto| co=Portugal
| o=Romania
| sc=1–0
| fr=1–0
| comp=Friendly}}{{Ig match
| n=11
| d1=13 July 1966
| st=Old Trafford| ci=Manchester| co=England
| o=Hungary
| sc=3–1
| fr=3–1
| comp=1966 FIFA World Cup}}{{Ig match
| n=12
| d1=16 July 1966
| st=Old Trafford| ci=Manchester| co=England
| o=Bulgaria
| sc=3–0
| fr=3–0
| comp=1966 FIFA World Cup}}{{Ig match
| n=13
| d1=28 July 1966
| st=Wembley Stadium (1923)| ci=London| co=England
| o=Soviet Union
| sc=2–1
| fr=2–1
| comp=1966 FIFA World Cup}}{{Ig match
| n=14
| d1=12 November 1967
| st=Estádio das Antas| ci=Porto| co=Portugal
| o=Norway
| sc=1–0
| fr=2–1
| comp=Euro 1968 qualifying}}{{Ig footer}}

Later years / Death

Torres settled in Lisbon with his wife after his retirement from the football world, with pigeon racing as his main hobby. On 3 September 2010, just five days short of his 72nd birthday and after a long battle with Alzheimer's disease, he died from heart failure.[1]

Honours

Club

Benfica
  • Primeira Liga: 1959–60, 1960–61, 1962–63, 1963–64, 1964–65, 1966–67, 1967–68, 1968–69, 1970–71[7]
  • Taça de Portugal:[8] 1961–62, 1963–64, 1968–69, 1969–70
  • Taça de Honra (3)[8]
  • European Cup: Runner-up 1962–63, 1964–65, 1967–68

International

Portugal
  • FIFA World Cup: Third-place 1966

Individual

  • Primeira Liga: Top scorer 1962–63
  • European Cup: Top scorer 1964–65

References

1. ^{{cite web|url=http://tv1.rtp.pt/noticias/index.php?t=Morreu-Jose-Torres.rtp&article=372396&visual=16&layout=55&tm=44|title=Morreu José Torres|trans-title=José Torres has died|publisher=Rádio e Televisão de Portugal|language=Portuguese|date=3 September 2010|accessdate=3 September 2010|deadurl=yes|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110125080421/http://tv1.rtp.pt/noticias/index.php?t=Morreu-Jose-Torres.rtp&article=372396&visual=16&layout=55&tm=44|archivedate=25 January 2011|df=dmy-all}}
2. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.oribatejo.pt/2010/09/03/morreu-jose-torres-%E2%80%9Co-bom-gigante%E2%80%9D/|title=Morreu José Torres – “um jogador que não jogava em piloto automático”, diz autarca torrejano|trans-title=Death of José Torres – “a player who did not play in auto pilot”, says Torres Novas council|publisher=O Ribatejo|language=Portuguese|date=3 September 2010|accessdate=23 October 2018}}
3. ^Vítor Baptista. Não foi o maior mas podia muito bem ter sido (Vítor Baptista. Not the greatest but he could have been); i, 19 July 2010 (in Portuguese)
4. ^{{cite news|url=https://tribunaexpresso.pt/a-casa-as-costas/2018-07-22-Manuel-Jose-parte-II-Nos-anos-90-compravam-se-arbitros-como-se-compram-tremocos.-Trios-de-arbitragem-nao-era-so-o-arbitro|title=Manuel José, parte II: “Nos anos 90 compravam-se árbitros como se compram tremoços. Trios de arbitragem, não era só o árbitro”|trans-title=Manuel José, part II: “In the 90s you bought referees like you bought peanuts. Refereeing teams, not just the referee”|publisher=Expresso|last=Simões de Abreu|first=Alexandra|language=Portuguese|date=22 July 2018|accessdate=23 October 2018}}
5. ^{{cite news|url=https://expresso.sapo.pt/desporto/2016-07-13-A-lenda-dos-Magricos-comecou-ha-50-anos|title=A lenda dos Magriços começou há 50 anos|trans-title=The legend of the Magriços started 50 years ago|publisher=Expresso|language=Portuguese|date=13 July 2016|accessdate=25 May 2017}}
6. ^{{FIFA player|61699|José Torres}}
7. ^{{cite magazine|date=April–June 2017|title=Especial 'Tetra'|trans-title='Tetra' special edition|language=Portuguese|magazine=Mística|location=Portugal|publisher=Impresa Publishing|issue=33|page=|issn=3846-0823}}
8. ^{{cite magazine|date=May 2015|title=Bicampeões para a história|trans-title=Back-to-back champions for the ages|language=Portuguese|magazine=Visão|location=Portugal|publisher=Impresa Publishing|page=49|issn=0872-3540}}

External links

{{Commons category}}
  • {{ForaDeJogo}}
  • {{ForaDeJogo manager}}
  • {{NFT player}}
  • Portugal stats at Eu-Football
{{Navboxes
| title = Portugal squads
| bg = #900020
| fg = gold
| bordercolor = #006600
| list1 ={{Portugal Squad 1966 World Cup}}{{Portugal Squad 1986 World Cup}}
}}{{Navboxes
| title = Awards
| bg = gold
| fg = navy
| bordercolor = black
| list1 ={{Bota de Prata winners}}{{UEFA Champions League top scorers}}
}}{{Navboxes
| title = Managerial positions
| list1 ={{G.D. Estoril Praia managers}}{{Boavista FC managers}}{{Portugal national football team managers}}
}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Torres, Jose}}

22 : 1938 births|2010 deaths|People from Torres Novas|Portuguese footballers|Association football forwards|Primeira Liga players|S.L. Benfica footballers|Vitória F.C. players|G.D. Estoril Praia players|Portugal international footballers|1966 FIFA World Cup players|Portuguese football managers|Primeira Liga managers|LigaPro managers|Vitória F.C. managers|G.D. Estoril Praia managers|C.F. Estrela da Amadora managers|Varzim S.C. managers|Boavista F.C. managers|Portimonense S.C. managers|Portugal national football team managers|1986 FIFA World Cup managers

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