José Argoitia

José María Argoitia Acha (born 18 January 1940) is a Spanish retired footballer who played as a forward.

José María Argoitia
Personal information
Full name José María Argoitia Acha
Date of birth (1940-01-18) 18 January 1940
Place of birth Galdakao, Spain
Height 1.77 m (5 ft 10 in)
Position(s) Forward
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1957–1960 Basconia 46 (9)
1960–1972 Athletic Bilbao 231 (52)
1962Indautxu (loan) 9 (3)
1972–1973 Sestao
1973 Racing Santander 5 (0)
Total 291 (64)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Football career

Born in Galdakao, Biscay, Argoitia joined Athletic Bilbao in 1960, from Basque neighbours CD Basconia. He made his La Liga debut on 2 October in a 1–3 away loss against Sevilla FC, and spent a total of 12 seasons with the club, appearing in 308 official games and scoring 70 goals.[1]

Argoitia's best input with the Lions came in the 1966–67 campaign, when he netted 11 times in 22 appearances to help his team to the seventh position. He retired in 1973 at the age of 33, after splitting 1972–73 with Sestao Sport Club in the lower leagues and Racing de Santander in Segunda División.

Argoitia popularized a dribble move known as the Diabolo.[2]

While playing for Athletic Bilbao, Argoitia scored a highly-controversial goal, known as the telegol, against UD Las Palmas during the 1970–71 La Liga season. At the second-half restart, Argoitia immediately ran towards the opponent's end of the field where he left the field near their goalpost. After a teammate sent the ball into Las Palmas' goal area, and the goalkeeper was unable to collect it, Las Palmas defender Martín Marrero attempted to clear the ball. However, at this point, Argoitia re-entered the field and snatched the ball into the net for the only goal of the match. Las Palmas protested the goal, believing it was a violation of the offside rule, and ultimately the International Football Association Board added a clarification which prohibited an attacking player from leaving the field of play without the referee's permission to avoid violating the offside rule.[3]

Honours

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.