Abdón Porte

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Abdón Porte
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Personal information
Date of birth 1893
Place of birth Libertad, Durazno Department, Uruguay
Date of death 5 March 1918(1918-03-05)
Place of death Montevideo, Uruguay
Position(s) Midfielder
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1910 Colón
1911 Libertad
1911-1918 Nacional 207
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Abdón Porte (1893 - 5 March 1918) was an Uruguayan footballer. He played as defensive midfielder. Nicknamed El Indio he won many titles with his club Nacional, and also a Copa América with the Uruguay national team. He committed suicide on March 5, 1918, after shoting himself in the center of the field at Estadio Gran Parque Central, an incident still remembered by the sport community of Uruguay.[1]

Biography

Club career

File:Abdon porte nacional.jpg
Porte with the Nacional jersey.

Porte arrived in Montevideo in 1908, where he played for Colón, then moving to defunct club Libertad. He was later transferred to Nacional, debuting on March 12, 1911,[2] v. Dublin F.C. Porte played as a right back.

Playing for Nacional, Porte gained notability being also team's captain. He was defined as a fierce midfielder and good at stopping rival players and heading the ball. He played a total of 207 games for Nacional, winning 19 titles with the club.[3]

Porte was cited by writers Xosé de Enríquez in his book Hacia el Campo van los Albos[4]

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"(Porte) was a typical defensive man of combative style: tenacious, centre-back of a brilliant period of Uruguayan football. Abdón Porte was notable, with well-known defensive and collaborative extraordinary virtues that will be remembered for a long time by older fans. He was a good guy, "friend of his friends"; gauchazo for doing good. Calm on the field although rivals kick him until he breaks.

— Luis Scapinachis [5][6]

Porte would play his last match v. Charley F.C. (Nacional won by 3-1) before committing suicide one day later.

International career

Porte was a member of the Uruguay squad that won the 1917 South American Championship but did not play a game at the tournament.[7]

Death

Before starting the 1918 season, Nacional's committee decided to replace Porte by defender Alfredo Zibechi as starting player, sending Porte to the bench due to his poor performance during the last games played with the club. On March 4, Nacional played Charley F.C., winning by 3-1 with Porte playing the entire match at a good level. That night, executives and players met at the club headquarters for a celebration as it was usual by then. Porte left the club at 1:00 a.m. and took a tram to the Estadio Gran Parque Central, Nacional's venue.

Once Abdón Porte arrived to Parque Central, he went into the centre of the field and shot himself. His body and a suicide note were found the next morning.[8] Few hours after, a dog found his body, drawning it to his master, Severino Castillo. Porte's body had two letters, one for the president of Nacional and the other to a relative.[9]

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"Dear Doctor José María Delgado: I ask you and other members of the committe to take care of my family and my dear mother, as I did. Goodbye, dear friend of life"

— Letter to the president of Nacional, José M. Delgado.[6]

People of Uruguay was shocked with the news. Porte was buried at Cementerio de La Teja.[6] Montevideo Wanderers offered Nacional to play a friendly match for the benefit of Porte's family while the rest of Uruguayan clubs expressed their solidarity to Nacional.[10]

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"Nacional was Porte's ideal, he loved the club like a believer loves his faith, like a patriot loves his flag"

— Numa Pesquera, Nacional's executive.[10]

Legacy

Writer Horacio Quiroga inspired on Porte's death to write his short tale, Juan Polti, published in 1918 on Atlántida magazine of Buenos Aires.[11] Other Uruguayan writer, Eduardo Galeano, remembered Porte in the short tale "Muerte en la cancha", from his book El Fútbol a Sol y Sombra.[8]

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"After the game v. Charley, the Nacional committe decided that Alfredo Zibechi would play as centre back. Porte would be replaced. He would be a substitute player. He could not stand the impact: he wrote a letter, went to Parque Central (which had been a theatre for Porte's greatest achievements) and put an end to his life on the old field, where he had played brilliantly.(...) Five days later, Nacional played v. Wanderers F.C. in solidarity with Porte's family. We attended that game, where the remember of the Indio floated among us. When the attendance set their distrated eyes to the midfield... they were looking for Porte. We had seen many times there; He had felt asleep there. Maybe the old mindwill tower is still looking at that point"

— Chronicle by Uruguayan journalist Diego Lucero.

The club named "Abdón Porte" the western stand of Gran Parque Central.[12] On March 2008 the Uruguayan Post Office printed a stamp honoring Porte.[13] On August, 2013, Nacional's supporters made a mosaic with the face of Abdón Porte.[14]

Honors

Clubs

(All titles won with Nacional):

National team

References

  1. "Abdón Porte: A manera de biografía" on Nacional digital.com
  2. "Una historia de amor por Nacional", El Observador, 5 Mar 2015
  3. "Abdón Porte, dueño de sangre tricolor" by Federico Coguzza
  4. Decano.com: Extracto de "Hacia el campo van los albos" by Xosé de Enríquez, 2000
  5. Gambeteando Frente al Gol: Anécdotas y Relatos Deportivos, págs. 70-71 by Luis Scapinachis - Editorial Barreiro & Ramos, Montevideo, (1964)
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Homenaje a Abdon Porte, martir del amor al equipo.
  7. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  8. 8.0 8.1 El Fútbol a Sol y Sombra by Eduardo Galeano - Siglo XXI Ediciones (2003) - ISBN 9788432311345
  9. "Diario La Prensa: "Abdón Porte: suicidio en la cancha de Parque Central", La Prensa
  10. 10.0 10.1 "La muerte de Abdón Porte" on Decano.com
  11. "Periodistas inauguran el primer clásico en "papel y tinta"", El Espectador, 8 Nov 2013
  12. "Abdón Porte, el ídolo que se suicidó en el campo de juego" by Waldemar Iglesias, Clarín, 7 Jan 2015
  13. "Administración Nacional de Correos - "Homenaje a Abdón Porte", Correo del Uruguay
  14. "Bueno y si es dos veces Bueno, mejor", Tenfield.com