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Francisco Mateo

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Full name
  
Francisco Mateo

Name
  
Francisco Mateo

Playing position
  
Defender

Place of birth
  
Algeciras, Spain


Francisco Mateo Tweets with replies by francisco mateo boricuaso31 Twitter

Date of birth
  
(1917-05-15)May 15, 1917

Date of death
  
July 21, 1979(1979-07-21) (aged 62)

Place of death
  
Strasbourg, France

Profesor Francisco Mateo Gonzales (Profesor Paco)


Francisco "Paco" Mateo (15 May 1917 in Algeciras - 21 July 1979 in Strasbourg) was a Spanish-French footballer who played as a professional for Valencia, Bordeaux and Strasbourg. He also was a coach and manager for RC Strasbourg.

Contents

Francisco Mateo Francisco Mateo famara83 Twitter

Bio

Mateo started his career as a promising youngster playing for a Spanish club in Tétouan, Morocco and quickly attracted the attention of the biggest clubs in the Spanish mainland, joining Sevilla FC and then FC Barcelona before the outbreak of the Spanish civil war. Mateo chose the Republican side, spending most of the war in Valencia. Towards the end of the conflict, he was imprisoned due to his political leanings but was released on the insistence of the Girondins de Bordeaux and was therefore able to emigrate to France shortly before the outbreak of World War II.

In Bordeaux, Mateo played for the Girondins in a local league as the French Championship had been disbanded due to the war. He also met his wife, an Alsatian who had been evacuated to south-west France in 1939. When the war was terminated, he accompanied his wife back to Alsace and quickly joined RC Strasbourg where he played until the end of the decade, reaching the final of the cup in 1947.

After the end of his playing career, Mateo continued as a youth coach for RC Strasbourg where he taught the likes of Gilbert Gress, Gérard Hausser, Albert Gemmrich or Léonard Specht. He was responsible for the first team between October 1970 and June 1971 but was not able to save Strasbourg from relegation. He died in 1979, shortly after Strasbourg's first and only championship crown.

References

Francisco Mateo Wikipedia