Pedro Cardoso (footballer)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

José Pedro Cardoso (born 14 July 1975)[1] is a Uruguayan former footballer who played as a forward. He helped Rocha F.C. to the Apertura title in the Uruguayan Primera División in 2005–06, finishing the season as top scorer with 17 goals. He also represented Peñarol and River Plate Montevideo in the top flight, with less success. He was called up to the Uruguay national football team in 2006, but withdrew through injury.

Club career[edit]

Rocha[edit]

Born in Rocha, Cardoso spent his early career in amateur football, broken cruciate ligaments since the age of 15 and missing two years of play at Huracán Buceo from 1997. He signed with Rocha F.C. in the Uruguayan Primera División in 2000, and winning an Apertura title with the club in the Uruguayan Segunda División in 2003–04.[1][2]

In 2005–06 in the Uruguayan Primera División Cardoso was the top scorer with 17 goals, helping his team to the Apertura title before losing overall to Club Nacional de Football 6–1 on aggregate.[1] Rocha qualified for the Copa Libertadores in 2006, with Cardoso scoring their first continental goal on 7 March, opening a 3–2 win at L.D.U. Quito in which he scored twice.[3]

Cardoso's performances for Rocha resulted in interests from other clubs. He received a million-dollar offer from a Japanese club managed by a Spaniard, but it fell through due to third parties; approaches from Ecuador after playing well there in the Copa Libertadores also collapsed.[2] He once rejected a move to Boca Juniors of Argentina because he would have missed his mother's cooking, and in 2005 he was turned down by Peñarol manager Fernando Morena.[4]

Later carer[edit]

In 2006, Cardoso transferred to Peñarol, the club that he and his father supported. The move was not a success as manager Gregorio Pérez told Cardoso that he wanted a taller centre-forward, and therefore played him sparingly. After being unused completely in a crucial game against Danubio F.C. he chose to return to Rocha.[1][2]

After his spell in Montevideo, Cardoso returned to his hometown club, and reflected in 2022 that this was the point when alcohol began to affect his career.[2] He went back to the capital city to play for River Plate F.C. where he scored one goal in the Apertura stage of 2007–08, then concluded his career back in his native Rocha Department.[5]

International career[edit]

Cardoso was called up to the Uruguay national football team in April 2006 for a friendly tour of the United States, Europe and Africa, at the start of Óscar Tabárez's second tenure as manager.[6] Training twice a day, 31-year-old Cardoso withdrew on the sixth day of the training camp due to a flare-up of his chronic ligament injury.[2]

Personal life[edit]

Cardoso had four children, all daughters. As of 2022, he worked with one of his daughters and her husband, selling hamburgers in Rocha. He was also painting houses and mowing lawns.[2]

Honours[edit]

Rocha

Individual

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d "pedro del gol Cardoso [sic]" [Pedro Goal Cardoso] (in Spanish). La Red 21. 10 August 2011. Retrieved 24 May 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Romero, Juan Pablo (12 February 2022). "Pedro Cardoso: jugar con los ligamentos rotos por 15 años, su curiosa llegada a Peñarol y el pase caído por un millón" [Pedro Cardoso: playing with broken ligaments for 15 years, his curious arrival at Peñarol and the failed million-dollar transfer]. El País (Uruguay) (in Spanish). Retrieved 24 May 2024.
  3. ^ "Fantástico triunfo de Rocha ante Liga de Quito" [Rocha's fantastic triumph over Liga de Quito] (in Spanish). La Red 21. 8 March 2006. Retrieved 24 May 2024.
  4. ^ "Cardoso todavía sueña con el pase" [Cardoso still dreams of a transfer]. El País (Uruguay) (in Spanish). 11 April 2005. Retrieved 24 May 2024.
  5. ^ "¿Qué hacen los últimos goleadores del Uruguayo?" [What did the latest top scorers of the Uruguayan Primera División do?]. El Observador (in Spanish). 30 December 2015. Retrieved 24 May 2024.
  6. ^ "Refuerza en los dos extremos" [Reinforcements at both ends] (in Spanish). ESPN. 24 April 2006. Retrieved 24 May 2024.