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A mongrel dog, very popular in the 1940s and 50s, is being adopted again by the fans since the late 1990s. Brasiliense Futebol Clube: Jacaré An alligator: Centro Sportivo Alagoano: Azulão ("big blue") A blue bird Club Athletico Paranaense: Fura-Cão A dog in a luchador get-up; name alludes to "furacão" (hurricane), the team's nickname [8]
The Argentina national football team (Spanish: Selección de fútbol de Argentina), nicknamed La Albiceleste ('The White and Sky Blue'), represents Argentina in men's international football and is administered by the Argentine Football Association, the governing body for football in Argentina.
Argentina national football team navigational boxes (4 C, 6 P) Pages in category "Argentina national football team" The following 12 pages are in this category, out of 12 total.
His last team managed was the Venezuela national team. As a youth level coach for Argentina, he won the FIFA World Youth Championship three times, and the U20 South American Youth Championship twice. He coached the Argentina national football team in the 2006 FIFA World Cup and became coach of the Colombia national team in 2012. He subsequently ...
He wore the traditional burgundy jersey of the Venezuela national football team. His wings have the tricolor national flag, as well as its eight stars on them. Argentina 2011: Tangolero [1] An American rhea (ñandú). Its name is a portmanteau which combines the words tango and gol (Spanish for "goal"); a literal translation could be Tangoaler ...
The Argentina football champion is the winner of the highest league in Argentine football, the Primera División. The league season have had different formats, since the original double round-robin until the Liga Profesional. The champion is the team with the most points at the end of the competition.
Association football is the most popular sport in Argentina and part of the culture in the country. [3] It is the one with the most players (2,658,811 total, 331,811 of which are registered and 2,327,000 unregistered; with 3,377 clubs and 37,161 officials, all according to FIFA) [1] and is the most popular recreational sport, played from childhood into old age. [4]
The list of Argentine men's footballers in La Liga records the association football players from Argentina who have appeared at least once for a team in the Spanish league. Entries in bold denote players still active in actual season.