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・ Teodoro Agoncillo
・ Teodoro Ardemans
・ Teodoro Benigno
・ Teodoro Borlongan
・ Teodoro Bronzini
・ Teodoro Buontempo
・ Teodoro Cano García
・ Teodoro Caruel
・ Teodoro Casana Robles
・ Teodoro Casiño
・ Teodoro Cottrau
・ Teodoro de Croix
・ Teodoro de Villa Diaz
・ Teodoro Duclère
・ Teodoro Fernandes Sampaio
Teodoro Fernández
・ Teodoro García
・ Teodoro García Simental
・ Teodoro Ghisi
・ Teodoro Goliardi
・ Teodoro González de León
・ Teodoro Hernández
・ Teodoro Kalaw
・ Teodoro Lechi
・ Teodoro Locsin, Jr.
・ Teodoro Lonfernini
・ Teodoro Maniaci
・ Teodoro Matos Santana
・ Teodoro Matteini
・ Teodoro Mauri


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Teodoro Fernández : ウィキペディア英語版
Teodoro Fernández

Teodoro Fernández Meyzán (born 20 May 1913 in Cañete — died 17 September 1996 in Lima), nicknamed "Lolo", was a Peruvian football striker. Arguably one of Peru's two most important football players〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.fifa.com/classicfootball/history/news/newsid=1511746/index.html )〕 (along with Teófilo Cubillas), he was part of the Peruvian squad that reached quarter-finals in the 1936 Olympic Games and won the 1939 Copa America, a tournament in which he emerged as the top scorer and best player. He was captain of the Peruvian national team between 1935 and 1947 scoring 24 goals in 32 matches.
Fernández is the most emblematic player in the history of club Universitario de Deportes for which he played his whole career, winning six times the Peruvian league. Although he sporadically reinforced other clubs in friendly matches, clubs such as Alianza Lima and Colo-Colo, Fernández never represented a club other than Universitario in official competitions. Known as "El Cañonero" ("The Cannoneer") due to his excellence as a centre-forward and his strong shooting, Fernández was the Peruvian league's top-scorer seven times.
==Club career==
Lolo was the seventh of Raymunda Meyzán and Tomas Fernández's eight children. He learned to play football in primary school and was soon picked up by local club Huracán de Hualcará where he immediately stood out. At the age of 16, his parents sent him to Lima to continue his studies. Lolo stayed with his brother Arturo Fernandez who was the goalkeeper for Ciclista Lima. When Arturo transferred to first division's Universitario de Deportes, he brought Lolo along to play a bit of football in training and introduced him to the club’s President, former 1930 World Cup player Placido Galindo, who decided to sign him. Lolo would remain with the club during his 22 years as a professional footballer.〔One-club man
He made his professional debut with Universitario de Deportes in a friendly match against Club Deportivo Magallanes of Chile on 29 November 1931, scoring the game's only goal. In his first season (1932) he became Peruvian top scorer, but his team finished second. The following year, they were runners-up again and Lolo again was the top scorer.
The 1934 season saw Lolo again lead the division in scoring, but this time his team won the Peruvian First Division trophy for only the second time in its history. Lolo obtained 6 local leagues as player in total, all with Universitario de Deportes: 1934, 1939, 1941, 1945, 1946 and 1949.
Several times during his career he rejected offers from teams in Chile, Argentina, and Europe among others. Some say he was once offered a "blank check" from Chile, in which he would write down the amount of money he wished to be paid and his would-be new club would pay it, whatever that amount was, but he didn't accept it.
Lolo played his last game for Universitario on 20 August 1953 at the age of 40 in the Peruvian Super Classic during which he scored a hat-trick for a 4–2 win.
Lolo is the top goalscorer for Universitario with 157 goals in 180 matches.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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