Until 1974 foreigners could not play in the Spanish Football League. But at the beginning of the decade a large number of South American players came to compete, since those of Spanish origin were the exception. And those who didn't have direct relatives invented them.
Argentine Ramón Alberto Aguirre Suárez started playing in Granada in 1971, when he was a member of the Andalusian team. Coach Bernardino Pérez picked him up at the airport and told the defense, better known for having kicked the foremen than the ball: “Tell him that your father is Nonsense.”
During the presentation, a journalist asked him: “Then your father is Navarro, right?” And he said, "Navarro? No, from Pamplona.”
A new student has come to school. It comes from Ireland. The mother of Bilbao and the Irish father of pure strain.
The girl does not know Basque but speaks perfectly Spanish. The teacher puts him on the blackboard to introduce himself to his new colleagues and, once finished,... [+]