Jump to content

Ricardo Valencia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ricardo Valencia
Personal information
Full name Ricardo Ovidio Valencia
Date of birth 1927
Place of birth Santa Ana, El Salvador
Date of death April 20, 2010(2010-04-20) (aged 83)
Position(s) striker
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1949–1960 FAS (62)
1955,1957 Once Municipal
1959 Atletico Constancia
International career
1953–1955 El Salvador 26 (5)
Medal record
Representing  El Salvador
Men's Football
Central American and Caribbean Games
Gold medal – first place 1954 El Salvador Team Competition
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Ricardo Ovidio Valencia (born 1927 – died April 20, 2010, in Santa Ana, El Salvador) was a Salvadoran footballer who played most of his career in C.D. FAS.

Playing career

[edit]

Club career

[edit]

Nicknamed el Chilenito (the little Chilean), Santa Ana-born and raised Ricardo Valencia joined the newly formed team FAS in 1949. He spent 10 years with the club scoring 62 goals and winning 3 titles including one where the entire FAS team was made up of players from Santa Ana. He also played for Once Municipal during 1955 and 1957.

In 1959, he was sold to Atletico Constancia for one colon he played there for one year and then returned to FAS before retiring from football.[1]

International career

[edit]

Valencia has made 26 appearances for the El Salvador national football team, scoring five goals. In 1954 he won the gold medal with the Salvadoran team in the Juegos Deportivos Centroamericanos, winning the group which contained Mexico, Colombia, Cuba and Panama.[2]

Retirement and death

[edit]

After retiring from football, Valencia worked for the Comisión Ejecutiva Hidroeléctrica del Río Lempa (CEL) for more than 30 years. He still remained active with the El Salvador national team and C.D. FAS.

On April 20, 2010, Ricardo Valencia died after suffering respiratory insufficiency, brought on by a pulmonary fibrosis. He is buried at the Cementerio Santa Isabel, de Santa Ana next to his wife Rosa Isabel de Valencia.[3]

Honours

[edit]

Domestic

[edit]
1951-52, 1953–54, 1957–58

International

[edit]
1954

References

[edit]
[edit]