Bauer (footballer) (original) (raw)
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Brazilian footballer and manager (1925-2007)
Bauer
Bauer in 1950 | |||
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Personal information | |||
Full name | José Carlos Bauer | ||
Date of birth | (1925-11-21)21 November 1925 | ||
Place of birth | São Paulo, SP, Brazil | ||
Date of death | 4 February 2007(2007-02-04) (aged 81) | ||
Place of death | São Paulo, Brazil | ||
Position(s) | Defensive midfielder | ||
Youth career | |||
1938–1945 | São Paulo | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1945–1956 | São Paulo | ||
1956 | Botafogo | ||
1956 | Portuguesa | ||
1957 | São Bento | ||
International career | |||
1949–1955 | Brazil | 26 | (0) |
Managerial career | |||
1959 | Juventus-SP | ||
1960 | Ferroviária | ||
1960 | Atlas | ||
1965 | Millonarios | ||
1973 | Comercial-MS | ||
Medal record Men's Football Representing Brazil FIFA World Cup Runner-up 1950 Brazil South American Championship Winner 1949 Brazil Runner-up 1953 Peru Panamerican Championship Winner 1952 Chile | |||
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
José Carlos Bauer (21 November 1925 – 4 February 2007), commonly known as Bauer, was a Brazilian football player and manager who played as a midfielder.
Born in São Paulo, Bauer was the son of a Swiss man and an African-Brazilian woman. He was normally a defensive midfielder, Bauer was regarded as one of the finest Brazilian midfielders of his generation.[1]
Bauer played for São Paulo and Botafogo. He won six São Paulo State Championship (1943, 1945, 1946, 1948, 1949 and 1953).
For the Brazil national team he played 29 matches, with five goals he won 1949 Copa América and participated at two FIFA World Cup finals, in 1950 and 1954. His last match in this tournament is famous Battle of Berne.
After he retired he managed Ferroviária de Araraquara. Curiously, in a trip of Ferroviária in Mozambique, Bauer saw a young Eusébio. Very impressed with him, Bauer indicated Eusébio to São Paulo, which denied him.[2] Then, he talked with his former coach in São Paulo, Béla Guttmann, about Eusébio. Guttmann, who was coaching Benfica at the time, brought him to the Estádio da Luz.[2]
Bauer died on 4 February 2007, in São Paulo.[3]
São Paulo
- Campeonato Paulista: 1945, 1946, 1948, 1949, 1953
Atlas
- Copa México: 1962
- Campeón de Campeones: 1962
Brazil
- South American Championship: 1949
- Panamerican Championship: 1952
- FIFA World Cup runner-up: 1950
- South American Championship runner-up: 1953
Individual
- ^ "Bauer".
- ^ a b "Os vice-campeões", Max Gehringer, Especial Placar: A Saga da Jules Rimet fascículo 4 - 1950 Brasil, dezembro de 2005, Editora Abril, págs. 46-47
- ^ "Bauer, Brazil midfielder who played in two World Cups, dies at 81 - International Herald Tribune".
- Bauer at National-Football-Teams.com