Jorge Campos

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Jorge Campos Navarrete
Image:Jorge Campos.jpg
Personal information
Full name Jorge Campos Navarrete
Date of birth October 15, 1966 (1966-10-15) (age 42)
Place of birth    Acapulco, Mexico
Height 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)
Playing position Goalkeeper, Striker[1]
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
1988–1995
1995–1996
1996–1997
1997
1998
1998–1999
1999–2000
2000–2001
2001–2002
2002–2004
Pumas
Atlante
L.A. Galaxy
Cruz Azul
Chicago Fire
Pumas
Tigres
Pumas
Atlante
Puebla FC
199 (35)
026 0(1)
043 0(0)
002 0(0)
008 0(0)
043 0(2)
017 0(0)
026 0(0)
033 0(0)
021 0(0)   
National team
1991–2004 Mexico 130 0(0)

1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only.
* Appearances (Goals)

Jorge Campos Navarrete (nicknamed El Brody or Chiqui-Campos) (born October 15, 1966) is a Mexican football coach and former goalkeeper, one of the most notable Mexican players of the 1990s. Campos was a particularly eccentric player, known for his constant play outside the penalty area, his acrobatic style in goal, and his attire. His strength in goal was his leaping ability and speed, which made him able to overcome his relatively low height of 1.65 m (5 ft 5 in).

Born in Acapulco, Mexico, Campos also made for an effective striker [1], an example of rare versatility in football. At times, he would start a game in goal, and transfer upfield later in the match, mostly at the club level. His trademark, self-designed bright kits contributed to his popularity.

Contents

[edit] Club career

Campos started his career in 1989 in Mexico with Pumas UNAM. At that time the club's first-choice goalkeeper was Adolfo Rios but, because Campos desired first-team opportunities, he asked to be used as a striker. He performed notably in his first season, scoring 14 goals and even challenging for the title of top-goalscorer.

In the following seasons he earned the position of first-choice goalkeeper and won the 1990-1991 championship with Pumas UNAM.

He also won the championship with Cruz Azul in the 1997 winter season, though he was forced to play second-fiddle to first-choice goalkeeper Oscar Perez. He was regularly used as a substitute striker during this period.

As well as Pumas UNAM and Cruz Azul in the Mexican Primera Division, Campos also played for such clubs as Atlante, UANL Tigres, and Puebla.

He also played in the United States, where he starred in Major League Soccer's first three seasons for the Los Angeles Galaxy and Chicago Fire.

[edit] Career statistics

[2]

Club performance League Cup League Cup Continental Total
Season Club League Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
Mexico League Cup League Cup North America Total
1988-89 Universidad Nacional 7 0
1989-90 40 14
1990-91 44 2
1991-92 37 3
1992-93 7 1
1993-94 34 2
1994-95 36 6
1995-96 Atlante 23 1
USA League Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup League Cup North America Total
1996 Los Angeles Galaxy Major League Soccer 24 0
Mexico League Cup League Cup North America Total
1996-97 Atlante Primera División 16 0
USA League Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup League Cup North America Total
1997 Los Angeles Galaxy Major League Soccer 19 0
Mexico League Cup League Cup North America Total
1997-98 Cruz Azul Primera División 2 0
1997-98 Universidad Nacional Primera División 10 0
USA League Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup League Cup North America Total
1998 Chicago Fire Major League Soccer 8 0
Mexico League Cup League Cup North America Total
1998-99 Universidad Nacional Primera División 33 6
1999-00 16 0
1999-00 Tigres Primera División 17 0
2000-01 Atlante Primera División 26 0
2001-02 Universidad Nacional Primera División 33 0
2002-03 Puebla Primera División 26 0
2003-04 2 0
Total Mexico 409 35
USA 51 0
Career Total 460 35

[edit] International career

On the international stage, Campos started for Mexico in the 1994 and 1998 World Cups as the first choice goalkeeper, and went on to collect 130 caps for his country.

At the 1999 New Year's Cup in Hong Kong, in which Mexico was invited as well as Egypt and Bulgaria, Campos' father was kidnapped back home and Campos returned to Mexico to attend to the matter.[3] Campos was invited several times to play with the Rest of the World Team against clubs like Real Madrid, F.C. Barcelona, and AC Milan.

After retiring from both club and international football in the early 2000s, Campos became an assistant coach to Ricardo Lavolpe, the former head coach of the Mexican National Team. He was an assistant director of the National team that played in the 2006 FIFA World Cup.

His last game with Mexico was in 2004 when they played against Tecos

[edit] Miscellaneous

  • Although he played most of the time as a goalkeeper, in his spells with Pumas, he had periods in which he was used regularly as a striker.
  • In some of his teams, as he was known for being capable to play as a striker, he was registered with the number '9', a number that is usually reserved for strikers.
  • Curiously, when he was registered with the number '9' (as he was intended to be used sometimes as a striker) he played regularly as goalkeeper, and when he was registered with the number '1' (he was intended to be the first-choice goalkeeper) he had periods of being used regularly as a striker.
  • He scored a notable bicycle kick goal for Atlante in the 1997 season. In that game, he started as goalkeeper, but as the forwards were failing to score a goal, the coach replaced a field player with another goalkeeper to send Campos to the attack.
  • A homage to Jorge Campos appears in the internationally famous Japanese comic Captain Tsubasa, as Ricardo Espadas, captain and goalkeeper of the Mexican football team. Espadas scores Mexico's only goal in their match against Japan, which ended 2-1.
  • He owns a fast food franchise, Sportortas-Campos¨, specializing in tortas.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b "Jorge Campos". Retrieved on 2008-09-21.
  2. ^ ホルヘ・カンポス
  3. ^ Phil Davidson, Top footballer's father kidnapped, The Independent, Feb 19 1999, Accessed 5 June 2008

[edit] External links

Persondata
NAME Campos, Jorge
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Navarette Campos, Jorge (full name)
SHORT DESCRIPTION Professional football player and coach
DATE OF BIRTH October 15, 1966
PLACE OF BIRTH Acapulco, Mexico
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH
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