Jorge Alberto González Barillas (born 13 March 1958), popularly known as El Mágico (The Magical One),[2] is a Salvadoran former footballer who played mainly as a forward.
Salvadoran footballer
For other people with the same name, see Jorge González (disambiguation).
In this Spanish name, the first or paternalsurname is Gonzálezand the second or maternal family name is Barillas.
At the club level, he played mainly for FAS and Spain's Cádiz in a 24-year senior career. Punctuated by the documented and his self-admittance of his lack of discipline for the sport, he was often touted to be the greatest and most skilled footballer ever produced by El Salvador as well as among the greatest players from the CONCACAF region.[3][4]
González represented the El Salvador national team for more than two decades, taking part in the 1982 World Cup and the 1998 Gold Cup.[5][6]
Club career
Early years
Born in San Salvador, González began his professional career in 1975, representing ANTEL and Independiente F.C. over two seasons before moving to C.D. FAS in the Salvadoran Primera División.
While playing in El Salvador, González became known as Mago but later, upon transferring to Spain, his nickname was slightly changed to Mágico.[2]
Cádiz
Both Atlético Madrid and Cádiz CF became interested in acquiring González in 1982 – despite the Colchoneros' higher profile, he signed with the Andalusians. His first game in Spain came in a friendly against La Barca de la Florida, while his Segunda División debut was on 5 September 1982 in a 1–1 home draw against Real Murcia, scoring in the process.[7] He became a fan favorite thanks to his dazzling moves and goals, but was also notorious for his love of the nightlife and his sleeping habits were also brought into question, whilst his on-field abilities endeared him to the Cádiz fans enough that they overlooked his minor indiscretions; he finished his first season with 33 games and 14 goals as the team promoted to La Liga.[8]
In 1983 and 1984, Cádiz traveled to the United States. The first year it was González who was the principal attraction, but in the following the team was joined by FC Barcelona and its superstar Diego Maradona,[9] who later claimed that the Salvadoran was “without a doubt amongst the greatest ten players I have ever seen play, in all my life”.[10] His debut in the top division came on 11 September 1983 in a 1–3 home loss against the same opponent, Murcia,[11] and the club was immediately relegated.
Despite this, interest from French club Paris Saint-Germain F.C.[12] and Italian sides Atalanta BC, ACF Fiorentina and U.C. Sampdoria arose, but González opted to stay in Cádiz.[13] His stay was somewhat short-lived, however, as he was transferred to Real Valladolid in the 1985 January transfer window due to problems with manager Benito Joanet.[14] He did not get along at Valladolid, where his personal life was tightly controlled and, after playing in just nine games, he returned to Cádiz exactly one year later;[15] as a precaution against his partying, his contract was reputed to have contained a clause stipulating he was to be paid US$700 per game played and none for the ones he missed.[16]
After several coaching changes, González was finally able to shine again for Cádiz under Víctor Espárrago, still competing in a further four top-level campaigns. In all, he scored 58 goals in 194 league games for the club until his departure on 6 June 1991, aged 33.
Late career
Stadium Jorge "El Magico" González
González returned to El Salvador and FAS after Atalanta again failed to garner his services. He stayed with the team until 1999 when he retired to begin coaching as an assistant in Houston, Texas. After a short stint in the US, he returned to his homeland.
In 2001, Cádiz honored González with a testimonial match, with the proceeds going to the victims of a recent earthquake in El Salvador. In 2003, the Salvadoran National Assembly gave González the government's highest honor, the Hijo Meritísimo, and renamed the national stadium the Flor Blanca, after him.[17] On 28 August 2004, another testimonial was played in his honor, this time in El Salvador at the Mágico González Stadium, between America XI, a group of international stars, and a team made up of ex-FAS players: he played a half with either side and scored a total of three goals.[18][19]
International career
Many critics and journalists say that if González had been Argentinian or Brazilian, he would have ranked amongst the best in the world, alongside Maradona and Pelé.[20] He received the first of his 62 caps for El Salvador on 1 December 1976, in a FIFA World Cup qualification match against Costa Rica. He was also instrumental in leading the nation to the 1982 FIFA World Cup – the second time in history – where he appeared in all three group stage matches, including the 1–10 loss to Hungary.
González represented his country in 31 World Cup qualifiers,[21] and scored 21 goals in full internationals.[22]
International goals
Scores and results list El Salvador's goal tally first.[22]
A slender and highly creative forward, with superb ball-control, technical ability, and dribbling skills, González was also known for his quick feet and use of tricks and feints (including the flip flap, the Cruyff Turn, and the step over), as well as his accuracy with the ball and speed in possession – however, his talent was often overshadowed by his questionable behaviour off the pitch.[23][24][25][26][27][28][29][2] He was widely considered to be the greatest Salvadoran footballer of all time, as well as one of the best ever Latin American footballers in the history of the game; in 2000, he was named his nation's Player of the Century in IFFHS' Player of the Century Elections.[18][30][31]
A versatile forward, González was capable of playing both as a winger or as a second striker, but was also deployed as a centre-forward, as a playmaker in the number 10 role or even as a midfielder on occasion, and often wore the number 11 shirt.[28] His playing style served as an inspiration for Maradona who was a staunch admirer of the Salvadoran, describing him as one of the ten best players he had ever seen and even stating that "[w]e, in training, always tried to imitate him [González], but we couldn't."[32][33]
Personal life
González was born to a family of modest means in the Luz neighborhood of San Salvador, one of seven brothers and only one sister. His older brother, Mauricio González Pachín, was a footballer who became well known at the local level.
Mágico married Ana María Ruano, daughter of another Salvadoran football legend, Alfredo Ruano. His son, Rodrigo, also played in the country's top division, for C.D. Atlético Marte.[34]
Honours
FAS
Salvadoran Primera División: 1977–78, 1978–79, 1981, 1994–95, 1995–96
Maldonado, Julio (3 February 2003). "Mágico: el genio indisciplinado"[Mágico: the undisciplined genius]. Diario AS (in Spanish). Retrieved 10 September 2018.
Casado, Edu (13 March 2009). "Qué fue de… 'Mágico' González"[What happened to… ‘Mágico’ González]. 20 minutos (in Spanish). Retrieved 10 September 2018.
"Homenaje"[Homage] (in Spanish). Cádiz CF. Archived from the original on 13 March 2007. Retrieved 2 April 2006.
"El fútbol sería distinto sin David Vidal"[Football would be different without David Vidal]. El Día de Córdoba (in Spanish). 30 November 2007. Retrieved 12 November 2010.
Ros, Cayetano (18 March 2013). "Mágico González y los demás olvidados"[Mágico González and the other forgotten]. El País (in Spanish). Retrieved 3 March 2014.
Membreño, Orestes (10 April 2001). "¿Volverá la magia?"[Will the magic return?] (in Spanish). ElSalvador.com. Archived from the original on 16 November 2013. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
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