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・ Jesús Tortosa
・ Jesús Toscanini
・ Jesús Turiel
・ Jesús Unanua
・ Jesús Urbina
・ Jesús Valentín
・ Jesús Vallejo
・ Jesús Vega
・ Jesús Vera
・ Jesús Vidaña
・ Jesús Villafañe
・ Jesús Villalobos
・ Jesús Villasante
・ Jesús Vásquez
・ Jesús Vázquez
Jesús María Pereda
・ Jesús María Ramón Valdés
・ Jesús María River
・ Jesús María Sanz-Serna
・ Jesús María Satrústegui
・ Jesús María Serrano
・ Jesús María Zamora
・ Jesús María Zubiarraín Arguiñano
・ Jesús María, Aguascalientes
・ Jesús María, Córdoba
・ Jesús María, Jalisco
・ Jesús María, Nayarit
・ Jesús Mateo Calderón Barrueto
・ Jesús Medina
・ Jesús Membrado Giner


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Jesús María Pereda : ウィキペディア英語版
Jesús María Pereda

Jesús María Pereda Ruiz de Temiño (15 June 1938 – 27 September 2011), also known as Chus Pereda, was a Spanish football midfielder and manager.
In a 16-year professional career, he played mainly for Barcelona, amassing La Liga totals of 197 games and 55 goals for four teams – including Real Madrid. In 1964 he helped Spain win the European Championship, being an international throughout the decade.
After retiring Pereda was in charge of several Spanish youth teams, namely the U20s and the U21s.
==Club career==
Although born in Medina de Pomar, Burgos, Castile and León, Pereda was raised in Balmaseda in Biscay,〔("Chus" Pereda: el héroe entrañable de la Eurocopa de 1964 ("Chus" Pereda: Euro 1964's loved hero) ); El Diario Montañés, 27 September 2011 〕 and, as a schoolboy, he captained the provincial U-16 team. He began his senior career with Bilbao club SD Indautxu, where his teammates included veteran goalkeeper Raimundo Lezama and Miguel Jones – Pereda and Jones, and later a third club player, José Eulogio Gárate, were all controversially rejected by Athletic Bilbao because of their birthplaces,〔(Voluntad de tradición (Will of tradition) ); El Correo Digital 〕 with Pereda moving to Real Madrid and the others to Atlético Madrid.
With the ''Merengues'' Pereda only appeared in two La Liga games, scoring once in a 3–0 home win against Real Zaragoza as the team won the national championship. During his spell in the Spanish capital, he was also loaned to Real Valladolid in Segunda División – after falling out with coach Luis Carniglia〔– returning to the top flight with Sevilla FC and scoring 11 goals in his first season.〔(Fallece Chus Pereda, uno de los campeones de la Eurocopa'64 (Chus Pereda, one of Euro 64's champions, dies) ); El Mundo, 27 September 2011 〕
In the 1961 summer Pereda joined FC Barcelona, going on to appear in 293 official matches during eight years (104 goals).〔 During that time he won the Copa del Generalísimo twice, scoring the opening goal in the 1963 final, a 3–1 win against Zaragoza at the Camp Nou.
Aged 31, Pereda left Barcelona and joined Catalonia neighbours CE Sabadell FC, appearing rarely during the top flight season. He closed out his career after two second level campaigns with RCD Mallorca.
In 1995–96 Pereda had his first and only head coaching experience at club level, leading Xerez CD to the 11th position in Segunda División B.〔

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