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Alberto Spencer

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Alberto Spencer
Image:AlbertoSpencer.jpg
Personal information
Full name Alberto Pedro Spencer Herrera
Date of birth December 6, 1937(1937-12-06)
Place of birth Ancón, Guayas, Ecuador
Date of death November 3, 2006 (aged 68)
Place of death Cleveland, Ohio, United States
Playing position Striker
Senior career1
Years Club Apps (Gls)2
1953–1959 Everest 00? (101)
1960–1970 Peñarol 510 (326)
1971–1972 Barcelona 034 0(18)
Total 00? (445)
National team
1959–1972 Ecuador 011 00(4)
1962–1964 Uruguay 004 00(1)
1 Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
2 Appearances (Goals).

Alberto Pedro Spencer Herrera (December 6, 1937November 3, 2006) was an Ecuadorian football (soccer) player, regarded as the best of his country. He is probably best known for his still-standing record for scoring the most goals in Copa Libertadores de América, the most important club tournament in South America. He was elected the 20th best South American footballer of the 20th century in a poll by the IFFHS in 2004.[1]

Contents

[edit] Biography

Born in Ancón, Guayas, Ecuador, Spencer, who was also known as "Cabeza Mágica" (Spanish for magic head) was the son of a Jamaican of British origins.

He was an ambidextrous striker with a lethal pace, off-the-ball, heading and balance skills, and excellent finishing, that tore defenses to shreds for over a decade. Since his retirement in 1973, he lived in Montevideo, Uruguay. In 1982, he was appointed consul of Ecuador in Uruguay.

Spencer suffered a heart attack on September 14, 2006 during a routine checkup with his cardiologist. He died on November 3, 2006 in a clinic in Cleveland, Ohio, United States. He is survived by his Chilean wife María Teresa, his children Alberto, Walter, Jacqueline and his grandchildren.[2]

[edit] Career

Alberto Spencer began his career at 15 playing for Everest. His jump to fame would occur when was scouted while playing on loan for Barcelona SC against Penarol in July 1959. Penarol's manager, Hugo Bagnulo, asked his scout 'Pibe' Ortega to get him from the bleachers after the game was over. He was soon transferred to Penarol where he amassed 3 Libertadores Cups, Two Intercontinental Cups, as well as several Uruguayan league titles. After his second Intercontinental Cup, he was twice tapped by Inter Milan, but ultimately Penarol's board would not sell him [3].

On the international front, Spencer holds the unique distinction of being the only goalscorer, capped by two different countries simultaneously: Ecuador, and Uruguay. He 'switched' shirts no less than four times. Incredibly, because of his last name (British ancestry from his father's side) and brilliant football skills, he was nearly capped by the England before their run into their 1966 FIFA World Cup. He played for Uruguay against England (2-1) in a friendly match at the legendary Wembley Stadium and scored, making him the first Ecuadorian-born player to score in that stadium.

His name was omitted from FIFA's, and Pelé's list of 100 greatest living players. This caused outrage among many South American journalists who despised the idea of forgetting some of the greats, like Spencer and Garrincha, in favor of commercialism. David Mellor of the Evening Standard made news with his blasting of FIFA in this respect. He was a hat-trick scorer in Peñarol's 5-0 drubbing of Pelé's Santos in 1963.

Although widely considered one of the best South American players of all time, he still remains largely an unknown figure in Europe. This is presumably due to his having never participated in a World Cup. Similar fates awaited other greats such as Alfredo Di Stéfano and George Best.

He was elected the 20th South America Player of the Century in a poll by the IFFHS in 2004.

[edit] Achievements

Spencer still maintains the South American club record in Copa Libertadores, with his tally of 54 goals between 1960 and 1972, playing for Everest of Guayaquil, Barcelona of Guayaquil, and Peñarol (Uruguay). During that period, he walked away as winner of the competition three times (1960, 1961, 1966) and was winner of the Intercontinental Cup twice, beating Eusebio's Benfica and Real Madrid, and was runner-up once. In fact, his Intercontinental goal tally is only one goal behind the all-time record of his more famous contemporary, Pelé.

Spencer was also four times the leading scorer of Uruguay's League, helping them to win the Uruguayan championship eight times during his 12-year stay. Throughout his professional career, he scored a grand total of 450 goals, surpassing 500, if friendlies were taken into account.

[edit] Trivia

  • In one of the exhibition tours that Penarol did in Colombia, one of the Millonarios players, Flaco Nestor Rossi, launched a horror-tackle on Spencer that went unpunished. Soon afterward, one of Spencer's friends in Penarol, Jose Pepe Sasía, ran after him, grabbed his neck and said:
The next time you hit the blackie i will kill you, because he is the one that feeds us
  • In 1963, Penarol was beating Pelé's Santos 5-0, when Pelé said:
Spencer tell your boys that they have to stop this now

Later on, Spencer would only smile when Pelé told a journalist he did not remember saying such thing during the game.

  • Pelé, interview with Pablo Forlan said:
Someone that headed better than me was Spencer. I was good (in heading), but he was spectacular heading the ball. In general, he would do it with a burst, but without actually sprinting.
  • Spencer was red carded for the only time in his career at a league match defending Peñarol. Three days later the team had to travel for a libertadores match, but Spencer didn't go, saying that he was too ashamed because of his expulsion. A truly Sportsmen.
  • His debut at Peñarol was in a friendly against Argentine team Atlanta (striped blue and yellow) where Peñarol wore for first and last time a plain red jersey (one of the colours of the long hated arch-rival Nacional). Peñarol won 6-2 with a Spencer hat-trick.

[edit] References

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