Juan Samudio

Juan Eduardo Samudio ( born October 14, 1978 in Asunción, Paraguay ) is a Paraguayan national football team. The striker is División with 116 hits the scorer of the first Paraguayan league, the Primera. In the main, he played for the top club Club Libertad, with which he was national champion five times.

Career

Juan Samudio debuted at Libertad in March 1997. Later that year, he took part in the Paraguay U -20 World Cup in Malaysia. After the descent of Libertad from the first division in 1999, he moved to Club Guaraní, but in 2000 returned to his old stamping ground. With Libertad he succeeded in the same year of the comeback. Already in 2002, 2003 and 2006, he won the national championship with Libertad. In 2002 and 2004 he was also appealing with 23 or 23 season hits league scorer.

In October 2002, the burly, 1.79 m tall striker in Logroño was in a 0-0 draw against Spain his debut in the national team of Paraguay. By July 2003, he came six more inserts for Paraguay in which he scored two goals.

In 2007 he had the opportunity to transfer abroad and joined the Mexican first division club Querétaro FC. However, even in the first half he went down with Querétaro and returned to Paraguay.

There he joined first again Guaraní and played with the club in the Clausura championship. From 2008 to 2009 he was back in the ranks of Libertad and won two more championships with the club. In June 2008, he scored his one hundredth goal in the Primera División. In September of that year he scored his 108th goal and became the leading scorer of the league and overtook Mauro Caballero.

In mid-2009 he moved to Ecuador to Barcelona SC Guayaquil. Until then, he scored a total of 116 goals in the Primera División Paraguay, of which 111 are for Libertad and five for Guaraní.

In 2011 he returned to Paraguay and joined the first division club Sportivo Luqueño.

His status as top scorer of the national league is definitely due to the fact that traditionally play the strongest Paraguayan striker, as historically Arsenio Erico and Delfin Caceres, or for example between 2000 and 2010 José Cardozo and Roque Santa Cruz for foreign clubs. This also explains the relatively small number of his matches.

455012
de