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Blanca Portillo (born 1963), Spanish actress; César Portillo (born 1968), Venezuelan basketball player; Chantal Portillo (born 1957), French writer; Dick Portillo, founder of Portillo's Restaurants; Edwin Portillo (born 1962), Salvadoran footballer and manager; Erik Portillo (born 2000), Swedish ice hockey player; Gabe Portillo, American bass ...
On 2 August 2011, Portillo signed for three years with UD Las Palmas in the second tier. [16] For the 2012–13 season, however, he moved teams again, returning to Hércules on a three-year deal. [17] In late December 2015, Portillo announced his retirement at the age of 33. [18] Subsequently, he worked as his last club's director of football. [19]
On 15 January 2015, Portillo was loaned to Segunda División's Real Betis until June, [9] with an obligatory buyout clause if the team was promoted. [10] Having contributed 21 appearances in the season, he signed a permanent three-year deal. [11] Portillo was loaned to Getafe CF of the second tier on 31 August 2016, for one year. [12]
Javier Portillo may refer to: Javier Portillo (Honduran footballer) (born 1981), Honduran football left midfielder Javier Portillo (Spanish footballer) (born 1982), Spanish football forward
Portillo was registered as a Spanish citizen at the age of four, and in accordance with Spanish naming customs (which require a person to have two surnames) his Spanish passport names him as Miguel Portillo Blyth. [11] Portillo's now well-known "love affair with trains" started when he was a youth.
Ángel Hidalgo Portillo (born 28 April 1998) is a Spanish professional golfer and European Tour player. He won the 2024 Acciona Open de España for his first DP World Tour title. He won the 2021 German Challenge on the Challenge Tour .
Manuel García Portillo (Cervera del Maestre, Castellón, 1953) is a Spanish businessman and philanthropist, [1] co-founder of Tecnidex, Chairman of the MGP Group and leader of the Origen Project. [2]
Portillo made his debut for Panama in an August 2001 friendly match against Brazil in which he came on as a last-minute substitute for Óscar McFarlane and has earned a total of 4 caps, scoring no goals. His final international was a March 2004 friendly match against Cuba. In 2015, Portillo was named in the Panama national beach soccer team. [6]