Juan Enrique Hayes
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Date of birth | 20 January 1891 | ||
Place of birth | Rosario, Argentina | ||
Date of death | 25 July 1976 | (aged 85)||
Position(s) | Striker | ||
Youth career | |||
1906 | Club Argentino | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1907–1926 | Rosario Central | 206 | (224[1]) |
International career | |||
1910–1919 | Argentina | 21 | (8) |
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Juan Enrique Hayes (Spanish: Juan Enrique Hayes, 20 January 1891 – 25 July 1976) was an Argentine footballer, who played his entire career for Rosario Central (where he spent 20 years). Hayes also played for the Argentina national team.
Nicknamed Harry, Maestro,[2] and Inglés,[3] Hayes, with 221 official goals (including AFA and Liga Rosarina competitions) is the all-time leading top scorer in the history of Rosario Central.[note 1][1] Moreover, Hayes is the most winning player with 20 official titles won (5 AFA championships, and 15 titles in Rosario regional leagues). His brother Ennis was another notable player for Rosario Central in the 1910s and 1920s.
Career
[edit]Harry Hayes was the son of English immigrants who had travelled over to Argentina on a coal ship. He was born in the Arroyito district of Rosario in 1891. As a child he attended games at the Rosario Central and dreamed of becoming a footballer.[3]
In 1906 he played a game for Club Argentino against Newell's Old Boys, for the benefit of Rosario Central. In 1905 he moved to Rosario Central at only 14 years old.[4] In 1907 he made his debut with the senior squad, where he remained until his retirement in 1926. From 1907 to 1917 Hayes was called up for the Argentina national team and other provincial sides 40 times.[2]
Hayes' was acknowledged for being an extraordinary scorer with a strong shot, apart from his dribbling ability and precision for short passes and strong shots.[4]
In 1910 Hayes made his debut for Argentina, in the unofficial South American Championship in 1910 (named Copa Centenario Revolución de Mayo,[5] held as part of the celebrations of the Argentina Centennial),[6] where he debuted scoring to Chile.[3] Hayes (the second player in Rosario Central's history to be called up for Argentina after Zenón Díaz)[3] went on to play 21 games for his country, scoring 8 goals, being also part of the Argentina squad for the 1916 South American Championship,[7] the first official national team competition in the continent.[8][9]
Post-playing career
[edit]I had a very strong shot in those times, which can be verified looking at the windows of the surrounding houses... I had never played official matches until the day when I was called due to one player of the third division hadn't attend the match so I debuted as centre forward. I don't know if I played well or not, but the fact is I scored three goals so three months after I was promoted to second division, and the following day I not only debuted in Primera but I also took my girlfriend to the matches...
Hayes in an interview published in the magazine edited for the 50th. anniversary of Rosario Central, 1949.[2]
After retiring from football, Hayes worked as advisor for Rosario Central, being also coach in the Liga Rosarina de Football.[2]
Personal life
[edit]Hayes' brother Ennis was also a notable footballer for Rosario Central and Argentina, and his son Enrique Ricardo (also commonly called "Harry") played for Rosario Central in the 1930s and 40s.
In his own words
[edit]There is a version that Alumni's legend Jorge Brown invited Hayes to join his team, but Hayes declined the offer stating that "I live for Rosario Central", which granted him a congratulation from Brown, who replied "I would have done the same for Alumni".[3]
During an interview with El Gráfico in 1961, Hayes said: "I don't like football today. Teams play not to lose, and that denatures the game"... "Making friends like I had and have nowadays, meeting celebrities, visiting countries, is what I received from football. And that's what I am intimately grateful without thinking that playing in professional era would have been more convenient (in economic terms) for me".[3]
Honours
[edit]- Copa de Competencia La Nación: 1913
- Copa Ibarguren: 1915
- Copa Honor MCBA: 1916
- Copa de Competencia Jockey Club: 1916
- Copa Competencia (AAmF): 1920
- Copa Nicasio Vila (7): 1908, 1914, 1915, 1916, 1917, 1919, 1923
- Copa Damas de Caridad: 1910, 1914, 1915, 1916
- Federación Rosarina de Football[note 2]: 1913
- Asociación Amateurs Rosarina de Football: 1920, 1921
- Copa Estímulo: 1922
Argentina
- Copa Centenario Revolución de Mayo: 1910
- Copa Newton: 1911
- Copa Premier Honor Argentino: 1911, 1913
- Copa Premier Honor Uruguayo: 1915
- Copa Lipton: 1915, 1916
- Copa Círculo de la Prensa: 1916
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b [1] Harry Hayes, at Futbolistas de Rosario Central.
- ^ a b c d Harry Hayes fue maestro de una escuela que ha perdurado en el fútbol rosarino on Oro Canalla website (archived, 25 Apr 2005)
- ^ a b c d e f Apellido inglés, talento rosarino: Harry Hayes
- ^ a b "Grandes jugadores de la historia de Rosario: Harry Hayes" by Leonardo Volpe on Historia de RC blogsite, 11 May 2010
- ^ Copa America 1910 (in German)
- ^ La celebración del Bicentenario, La Nación, 14 February 2016
- ^ Copa America 1916 at the RSSSF
- ^ Historia de la selección argentina en la Copa América on Stub Hub magazine, 8 April 2019 (archived, 12 July 2019)
- ^ Copa América: ¿Creación Argentina? by Nicolás Martins Barriga on UNLP website, 2011