Moacir Barbosa Nascimento
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Moacir Barbosa Nascimento (27 March 1921 – 8 April 2000) was a Brazilian international football goalkeeper whose career spanned 22 years. He was one of the world's best goalkeepers in the 1940s and 1950s and known for not wearing gloves because he wanted to feel the ball with his bare hands. Although he won many trophies, his fame is mainly associated with the defeat of Brazil in the decisive match of the World Cup 1950 against Uruguay.
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[edit] Success with Vasco da Gama
On the club level he had his greatest successes with CR Vasco da Gama, Rio de Janeiro. He won several trophies with this side, including in 1948 the Campeonato Sul-Americano de Campeões, the initial precursor to the Copa Libertadores.
[edit] Copa America 1949
With the national side he won the Copa America of 1949. The 7-0 win over Paraguay remains to date the highest victory in a final of this competition.
[edit] The 1950 match and its aftermath
In 1950 Brazil played Uruguay in a final match in the Maracanã stadium in Rio de Janeiro. By losing 2-1, Brazil lost the top place and the tournament. Ghiggia scored the winning goal for Uruguay.
Barbosa was blamed for the defeat and especially for Ghiggia's goal. He was to suffer for a long time in the aftermath of this match which became as Maracanaço part of Brazilian folklore. Life became a torture for him. In 2000, shortly before his death, he said in an interview: "The maximum punishment in Brazil is 30 years imprisonment, but I have been paying, for something I am not even responsible for, by now for 50 years."[citation needed]
Brazilians despised him for the rest of his days. Notably, the President of the Brazilian Football Association, who in 1993 would not allow him to commentate a broadcast of an international Brazil match.[1]
In 1963 Barbosa was given the old square goal posts from the Maracanã as a present.
[edit] Clubs
- 1940–1941: ADCI-SP
- 1942–1944: Ypiranga-SP
- 1945–1955: Vasco da Gama-RJ
- 1955–1956: Santa Cruz-PE
- 1957: Bonsuccesso-RJ
- 1958–1960: Santa Cruz-PE
- 1962: Campo Grande-RJ
[edit] Honors
With Brasil:
- Copa América: 1949
Club Level:
- Campeonato Sul-Americano de Campeões: 1948
- Torneio Rio-São Paulo: 1958
- Campeonato Carioca: 1945, 1947, 1949, 1950, 1952, 1958
[edit] Inofficial Tournaments
With Brasil:
- Copa Roca (inoff.)¹: 1945
- Copa Rio Branco (inoff.)²: 1947, 1950
¹) irregular friendly tournament between Brazil and Argentina
²) irregular friendly tournament between Brazil and Uruguay
Club Level:
- Torneio Quadrangular do Rio (inoff.)¹: 1953
- Torneio Internacional de Santiago de Chile (inoff.)²: 1953
¹) with CR Vasco da Gama, CR Flamengo (both R.d Janeiro), CA Boca Juniors and. Racing Club (both Argentina)
²) with CR Vasco da Gama, Millonarios (Bogotá) and CSD Colo-Colo (Santiago)
[edit] In Popular Culture
Barbosa plays a large role in Ian McDonald's science fiction novel Brasyl.
[edit] References & Links
- ^ Maracanã, the largest stadium of the world - Sambafoot.com
- El Mundo (Spain) - Obituary
- Excerpt on the 1950 World Cup from Futebol: The Brazilian Way of Life
[edit] Books
- Darwin Pastorin, L'ultima parata di Moacyr Barbosa (The Last Save of Moacyr Barbosa) Arnoldo Mondadori Editore, 2005 (Published in Italy) [1]
- Alex Bellos, Futebol: The Brazilian Way of Life, Bloomsbury, 2002 [2]
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