Cuauhtémoc Blanco
Blanco in 2017
Governor of Morelos
Assumed office
1 October 2018
Preceded byGraco Ramírez
Municipal president of Cuernavaca
In office
1 January 2016  2 April 2018
Preceded byJorge Morales Barud
Succeeded byDenisse Arizmendi Villegas
Personal details
Born
Cuauhtémoc Blanco Bravo

(1973-01-17) 17 January 1973
Mexico City, Mexico
Political partySocial Encounter Party
(2017–present)
Other political
affiliations
Social Democratic Party
(2015–2016)
Independent
(2016–2017)
Juntos Haremos Historia
(2017–present)[lower-alpha 1]
Height5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)[1]
Spouses
Marisela Santoyo
(m. 1996; div. 2003)
    Natalia Rezende
    (m. 2015)
    Children4
    Occupation

    Association football career
    Position(s)
    Youth career
    1988–1992 América
    Senior career*
    Years Team Apps (Gls)
    1992–2007 América 308 (108)
    1997–1998Necaxa (loan) 18 (11)
    2000–2002Real Valladolid (loan) 23 (3)
    2004Veracruz (loan) 15 (5)
    2007–2009 Chicago Fire 62 (16)
    2008Santos Laguna (loan) 4 (1)
    2010 Veracruz 14 (5)
    2010–2011 Irapuato 47 (9)
    2012–2013 Dorados 40 (14)
    2013–2014 BUAP 22 (6)
    2014–2015 Puebla 19 (3)
    2016 América 1 (0)
    Total 573 (181)
    International career
    1995–2014 Mexico 119 (38)
    Medal record
    Representing  Mexico
    King Fahd Cup/FIFA Confederations Cup
    Winner1999 MexicoTeam
    Third place1995 Saudi ArabiaTeam
    CONCACAF Gold Cup
    Winner1996 United StatesTeam
    Winner1998 United StatesTeam
    Runner-up2007 United StatesTeam
    Copa América
    Third place1997 BoliviaTeam
    Third place1999 ParaguayTeam
    Third place2007 VenezuelaTeam
    *Club domestic league appearances and goals

    Cuauhtémoc Blanco Bravo (Spanish pronunciation: [kwawˈtemok ˈblaŋko]; born 17 January 1973) is a Mexican politician and former professional footballer who is the current Governor of Morelos under the coalition Juntos Haremos Historia. He formerly served as the municipal president of Cuernavaca, Morelos. As a footballer, Blanco was known for his attacking ability and played most of his career as a deep-lying forward and his last years as an attacking midfielder. Blanco is considered to be one of the greatest Mexican footballers of all time,[2][3][4][5] as well as one of the best penalty takers of all time.[6][7]

    Early life

    Blanco was born in Mexico City, in the district of Tlatilco,[8] but grew up in Tepito.[9] Born to Faustino Blanco and Hortensia Bravo,[10] he was named after the last Aztec emperor Cuauhtémoc, in which the name means "one who has descended like an eagle".[11]

    Football career

    Beginnings

    Blanco started his career with América in 1992, where he won various awards, both team-based and individual, and had various loan stints with Necaxa, Spanish club Real Valladolid, and Veracruz. In 2007, he joined the Chicago Fire,[12] with a loan stint with Santos Laguna for the 2008 Apertura championship. In 2010, he returned to Mexico to trek throughout various teams, joining Veracruz again, Irapuato, Dorados, and Puebla-based teams Lobos BUAP and Puebla, where he retired with the latter in 2015. The following year, he came out of retirement to officially end his career with América.[12]

    Club career

    Club América

    Blanco with América

    Having played most of his career in América, with 333 appearances and 135 goals, Blanco has become an idol to the club's supporters and an important figure in the history of the team.

    Blanco made his debut in the Mexican Primera División in 1992 at the age of 19 with América. He won his first Golden Boot with 16 goals in the Winter 1998 season for Las Águilas. He was loaned for Winter 1997 and Summer 1998 at Necaxa, in which he scored 13 goals in 28 appearances. Blanco was later loaned to Real Valladolid of La Liga for the 2000–01 season. However, he suffered a broken leg while on international duty which kept out of the side for six months. Blanco returned to Valladolid for another loan spell the following season, but he struggled with homesickness and regaining his form. He had a knack for scoring great goals in La Liga, with most notable, a free-kick against Real Madrid at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium.[13]

    He returned to Mexico and spent the 2004 Apertura season with Veracruz, where they ended up winning their group, but were defeated in the playoffs by UNAM. Blanco was a popular player during his time there. In May 2005, Blanco won his first club championship as a player, leading Club América to its tenth league title, when Club América defeated U.A.G. by an aggregate score of 7–4 (1–1, 6–3). In the next three consecutive years between 2005 and 2007, he was awarded the MVP.

    He scored his final goal during the championship final against Pachuca in 2007.

    Chicago Fire

    Blanco in Chicago in 2009 during his time with the Chicago Fire

    On 2 April 2007, Blanco ventured on to Major League Soccer in the United States and signed with Chicago Fire. He was welcomed by 5,000 fans at Toyota Park as he conducted interviews with the media, signed autographs and greeted with fans.

    He was later voted as a finalist for both the MVP and Newcomer of the Year awards in 2007.[14] Blanco was the 2007 Goal of the Year winner, for his goal against Real Salt Lake.[15]

    Blanco was the second-highest paid player in Major League Soccer, after LA Galaxy midfielder David Beckham, earning $2.7 million a year.[16] Once again, he was a finalist for the MVP of the year award.

    On 24 July 2008, in the All-Stars Game against West Ham United, Blanco won the MVP award with one assist and one goal, a game in which he only played 46 minutes. The MLS All-stars won 3–2.

    Santos Laguna (loan)

    On 19 November 2008, it was announced that Santos Laguna signed Blanco on a loan to play only for the Apertura 2008 championship, after the injury of their Ecuadorian striker Christian Benítez. Blanco was formally presented to the press the next day, wearing the number 9 jersey, and stated that he looked forward to giving Santos a back-to-back championship.[17][18][19] On 29 November 2008, Blanco scored his first goal with Santos, a penalty in the second leg of the championship quarter-finals against San Luis.

    Later career

    Blanco playing for Dorados in 2012.

    In October 2009, Blanco announced he would not be renewing his contract with Chicago Fire and would instead sign with Veracruz of the Ascenso MX beginning in January 2010.[20] However, after 6 months with Veracruz he left for Irapuato.[21] Led by Blanco, Irapuato won the 2011 Clausura, but the team failed to advance to the Primera División, losing to Tijuana in the promotional final.

    In December 2011, Blanco joined Dorados de Sinaloa of Liga de Ascenso.[22] During Apertura 2012, Blanco won the Copa MX with Dorados. Despite Blanco announcing he would retire after the end of 2012, he changed his mind and played for another six months with Dorados. However, after the tournament ended, he did not renew his contract and was released from the team in June 2013.

    Blanco signed for Lobos BUAP for the Apertura 2013 Liga de Ascenso season.[23] After one year with the club, he did not renew his contract with BUAP and was released from the club at the end of the season, in which the club failed to qualify for the play-offs.

    After considering retirement, Blanco signed with Puebla for one last season in the Liga MX. On 21 April 2015, he played in the Clausura's Copa MX final against Guadalajara, coming off the bench. Puebla went on to win the cup, and sent Blanco off as a champion in what was supposed to be the final game of his career.

    On 22 February 2016, a month into his political career, it was announced that Blanco would participate in an official Liga MX match during the Week 9 of Clausura 2016 for the club that started his career, Club América.[24] It would allow him to officially end his career, while playing for the club. On 5 March, Blanco started the match wearing a number 100 jersey, and played 36 minutes for América at the Estadio Azteca in a match against Morelia, before being replaced by Darwin Quintero.[25] During the match, Blanco demonstrated his signature move, the Cuauhtemiña, and had two shots on goal, one of which hit the crossbar from the outside of the penalty box. The match was eventually won by América 4–1.[26][27]

    International career

    Blanco represented Mexico from 1995 to 2010 (with a special appearance in 2014). He was capped 120 times and scored 38 goals. Blanco is the only Mexican to have won Confederations Cup awards, being awarded the Silver Ball and Silver Boot at the 1999 Confederations Cup after a first-place finish on home soil, until Oswaldo Sánchez's Golden Glove award in 2005. In 2010, he became the first Mexican to score at three World Cup tournaments, a feat later equalled by Rafael Márquez and Javier Hernández, appearing in the 1998, 2002, and 2010 editions of the tournament.

    Blanco converting a penalty against France at the 2010 World Cup

    Blanco made his debut with the senior national team under Bora Milutinovic in a friendly match against Uruguay on 1 February 1995.[28] Blanco has played for Mexico at three World Cups; he was part of the squad at France 1998, Korea-Japan 2002 and South Africa 2010.[29] He was also a member of the team that won the Confederations Cup in 1999 where he was the tournament's leading scorer with six goals, including the winning goal at the Estadio Azteca against Brazil in the final. He was awarded the "Silver Shoe" and "Silver Ball" for outstanding player of the tournament. Blanco holds the record along with Brazilian Ronaldinho as the highest scoring players in the Confederations Cup with nine goals, three in 1997 and six in 1999.

    In the selection for the final 23-man squad for the 2006 FIFA World Cup in Germany, then national team coach Ricardo La Volpe left Blanco out of the team. While the ostensible reason given was that Blanco was frequently injured and not in good form, some people considered this to be a consequence of the previous year's constant bickering, due to on-going personal problems between coach and player.[29]

    Blanco became part of the squad that played the 2007 CONCACAF Gold Cup, scoring one penalty goal, and the 2007 Copa América, where he scored 2 goals also from penalty kicks. On 13 September 2008, he earned his 100th cap for his country in its 2–1 World Cup qualifier victory over Canada at Tuxtla Gutiérrez, coming on with only 15 seconds left in regulation time. After the match, he announced his retirement from international football.[30]

    Blanco announced his return to the national team in May 2009. He became a regular member of returning coach Javier Aguirre's squad, playing in all the games throughout the Hexagonal of the World Cup Qualifying. Since then, Blanco has become an important factor in Mexico's team regaining form and confidence.

    On 10 October 2009, Blanco provoked the first opposition own goal and scored the second goal in a 4–1 victory over El Salvador to help Mexico clinch a spot in the 2010 World Cup. On 17 June 2010, he scored a penalty in the 78th minute of the 2–0 win against France at the World Cup's second round of group stage matches in South Africa.[31] With this goal he became the first Mexican to score a goal in three World Cup tournaments and the third-oldest goalscorer in World Cup history.[32][33]

    Blanco played a tribute game in 2014 against Israel at the Estadio Azteca, which symbolized his official retirement from international football. Mexico went on to win the match 3–0.

    Player profile

    Style of play

    Cuauhtemoc Blanco with Veracruz.

    Blanco is considered to be one of the greatest Mexican footballers of all time,[2][3][4][5] as well as one of the best penalty takers of all time,[6] having scored 71 out of 73 penalties in his career, giving him a 97.26% success rate from the spot.[7]

    His brash, aggressive, and confrontative playing style is reflected both on and off the field, pulling ingenious plays[34] and being combative against the press, players, and coaches alike.[35]

    Cuauhtemiña

    Blanco is also remembered for the Cuauhtemiña, or Blanco Trick, which he performed notably at the 1998 World Cup.[36] In the trick, when two or more opposition players are trying to take the ball from him, he traps the ball between his feet and jumps through the defenders – releasing the ball in the air and landing with it under control as he leaves the opposition players behind.[37] The trick is easy to perform but is eye-catching and has been incorporated as a special skill into the FIFA series of football video games.

    Celebration

    Blanco himself has accepted on Mexican television and to the press that his goal celebration is an imitation of the "Archer" celebration created by former Atletico de Madrid striker Kiko Narvaez. In a 2005 interview with Mexican newspaper El Universal, Blanco explains that while watching a Spanish league game accompanied by his teammate Germán Villa, both players agreed to celebrate their next goal by imitating the "Archer" gesture. In the end, only Blanco did it, and jokingly reprimanded Villa for not keeping his word.[38] However, the Chicago Fire official website claimed that Blanco celebrates scoring a goal by acting like the Prehispanic Tlatoani Aztec emperor Cuauhtémoc, "in order to show respect for the Mexican people, and their indigenous Amerindian heritage".[39]

    Reception

    Blanco is considered one of the most influential figures in recent Mexican footballing history. Tom Marshall of ESPN states "the battles, brawls, golazos, insults, intensity and passion with which Blanco [...] lived both on and off the pitch, he left a deep imprint on the Mexican game and a colorful story painted by the kind of character arguably lacking at present."[40]

    Career statistics

    Club

    Club performance League Cup Continental Total
    Club SeasonLeague AppsGoals AppsGoals AppsGoals AppsGoals
    América 1992–93Primera División120120
    1993–94140140
    1994–95286286
    1995–96320320
    1996–97279279
    Total 113 15 113 15
    Necaxa
    (loan)
    1997–98 Primera División 156156
    1998–99 3 5 3 5
    Total 18 11 18 11
    América 1998–99 Primera División 16161616
    1999–200029242924
    Total 45 40 45 40
    Real Valladolid
    (loan)
    2000–01La Liga3030
    2001–02203203
    Total 23 3 23 3
    América 2002–03Primera División36113611
    2003–0438203820
    Total 74 31 74 31
    Veracruz
    (loan)
    2004–05 Primera División 155155
    América 2004–05 Primera División 14 4 14 4
    2005–06287287
    2006–0734113411
    Total 76 22 76 22
    Chicago Fire 2007Major League Soccer144144
    2008277277
    200921542257
    Total 6216426618
    Santos Laguna
    (loan)
    200809 Primera División 4 1 4 1
    Veracruz 2009–10 Liga de Ascenso 14 5
    Irapuato 2010–11 Liga de Ascenso 39 8
    2011–12 8 1
    Total 47 9
    Dorados 2011–12 Ascenso MX 13 5
    2012–13 27 9 10 2
    Total 40 14 10 2
    BUAP 2013–14 Ascenso MX 22 6 1 0 23 6
    Puebla 2014–15 Liga MX 19 3 11 4 30 7
    América 2015–16 Liga MX 1 0
    Career total 573181226595187

    International

    [41][42]

    National teamYearAppsGoals
    Mexico 199510
    1996113
    1997154
    1998153
    1999188
    200045
    200145
    200271
    200320
    200420
    200540
    200610
    2007114
    200830
    200973
    2010142
    201410
    Total12038

    International goals

    Scores and results list Mexico's goal tally first.[41]
    GoalDateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
    1.21 January 1996L.A. Memorial Coliseum, Los Angeles, United States Brazil2–02–01996 CONCACAF Gold Cup
    2.7 February 1996Estadio Sausalito, Viña del Mar, Chile Chile1–01–2Friendly
    3.16 June 1996Rose Bowl, Pasadena, United States United States2–12–21996 U.S. Cup
    4.22 June 1997Estadio Félix Capriles, Cochabamba, Bolivia Ecuador1–11–11997 Copa América
    5.14 December 1997King Fahd International Stadium, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia3–05–01997 FIFA Confederations Cup
    6.5–0
    7.16 December 1997King Fahd International Stadium, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia Brazil1–12–31997 FIFA Confederations Cup
    8.7 February 1998Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum, Oakland, United States Honduras1–02–01998 CONCACAF Gold Cup
    9.2–0
    10.20 June 1998Parc Lescure, Bordeaux, France Belgium2–22–21998 FIFA World Cup
    11.6 July 1999Antonio Oddone Sarubbi, Ciudad del Este, Paraguay Venezuela1–03–11999 Copa América
    12.3–0
    13.25 July 1999Estadio Azteca, Mexico City, Mexico Saudi Arabia1–05–11999 FIFA Confederations Cup
    14.2–0
    15.4–1
    16.5–1
    17.1 August 1999Estadio Azteca, Mexico City, Mexico United States1–01–01999 FIFA Confederations Cup
    18.4 August 1999Estadio Azteca, Mexico City, Mexico Brazil4–24–31999 FIFA Confederations Cup
    19.9 January 2000Networks Associates Coliseum, Oakland, United States Iran2–02–1Friendly
    20.3 September 2000Estadio Azteca, Mexico City, Mexico Panama4–07–12002 FIFA World Cup qualifier
    21.7–1
    22.8 October 2000Estadio Azteca, Mexico City, Mexico Trinidad and Tobago1–07–12002 FIFA World Cup qualifier
    23.3–0
    24.2 September 2001Independence Park, Kingston, Jamaica Jamaica1–12–12002 FIFA World Cup qualifier
    25.2–1
    26.5 September 2001Estadio Azteca, Mexico City, Mexico Trinidad and Tobago3–03–02002 FIFA World Cup qualifier
    27.11 November 2001Estadio Azteca, Mexico City, Mexico Honduras1–03–02002 FIFA World Cup qualifier
    28.3–0
    29.3 June 2002Niigata Stadium, Niigata, Japan Croatia1–01–02002 FIFA World Cup
    30.28 February 2007Qualcomm Stadium, San Diego, United States Venezuela3–03–0Friendly
    31.10 June 2007Giants Stadium, East Rutherford, United States Honduras1–01–22007 CONCACAF Gold Cup
    32.8 July 2007Estadio Monumental de Maturín, Maturín, Venezuela Paraguay5–06–02007 Copa América
    33.14 July 2007Estadio Olímpico, Caracas, Venezuela Uruguay1–13–12007 Copa América
    34.6 June 2009Estadio Cuscatlán, San Salvador, El Salvador El Salvador1–11–22010 FIFA World Cup qualifier
    35.9 September 2009Estadio Azteca, Mexico City, Mexico Honduras1–01–02010 FIFA World Cup qualifier
    36.10 October 2009Estadio Azteca, Mexico City, Mexico El Salvador2–04–12010 FIFA World Cup qualifier
    37.17 March 2010Estadio Corona, Torreón, Mexico North Korea1–02–1Friendly
    38.17 June 2010Peter Mokaba Stadium, Polokwane, South Africa France2–02–02010 FIFA World Cup

    Filmography

    Films
    Year Title Role
    1998 Gotita de amor Himself
    2007 La familia P. Luche
    2010 Hasta que el dinero nos separe
    2010-11 Triunfo del amor Juan José Martínez
    Commercials
    Year Title Role Notes
    2009 Y tu qué sientes por ella? Himself Adidas commercial
    2010 Más Color Laundry detergent of Henkel
    Commercial with Consuelo Duval
    2011 Pepsi Commercial of his Special Edition product
    2014 Commercial with Francisco Palencia & Luis Hernández

    Political career

    Municipal president of Cuernavaca (2015–2018)

    In January 2015, Blanco registered as a Social Democratic Party candidate for the municipal presidential elections of the city of Cuernavaca, the capital of the Mexican state of Morelos,[43] and was formally nominated two months later.[44] In the 2015 legislative elections, he won in a closely contested election, narrowly defeating Maricela Velázquez of the incumbent Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI). In a subsequent vote recount Blanco was confirmed the winner of the municipal presidential race.[45][46]

    As municipal president, Blanco struggled with accusations about his residency in the city,[47][48] allegations that he had accepted a bribe to run for office,[49] and even murder. None of these allegations ever went anywhere.[50][51] In June 2016, he left the Social Democratic Party and dismissed the secretary of the city council, Roberto Yañez Moreno, which marked the beginning of a dispute between Blanco and the party.[52]

    In March 2017, he joined the Social Encounter Party (PES).[53]

    Governor of Morelos (2018–present)

    Blanco shaking hands with Enrique Peña Nieto, December 2018

    For the 2018 general elections, the National Regeneration Movement proposed having Senator Rabindranath Salazar Solorio as the candidate under the coalition Juntos Haremos Historia for the Governor of Morelos but PES, also part of the coalition, argued Blanco was the better choice for the coalition's candidate.[54] In December 2015, it was determined there would be an internal election to see who would become the candidate for the coalition.[55]

    On 28 January 2018, Juntos Haremos Historia presidential candidate Andrés Manuel López Obrador announced Blanco would be the coalition's candidate after winning the nominee process against Senator Rabindranath Salazar Solorio.[56] On 11 March 2018 he formally registered to become candidate for Governor of Morelos and on 2 April 2018, he was separated from his post as municipal president of Cuernavaca, succeeded by Denisse Arizmendi Villegas, in order to formally participate in the gubernatorial elections.[57][58] Polls indicated he was in the lead.[59][60]

    On 1 July 2018, he won the 2018 gubernatorial elections by a landslide,[61] becoming the first former footballer to win a state governor election in Mexico.[62] He began his term as Governor on 1 October 2018.[63] His greatest challenges as governor are finding adequate funding for the state university (UAEM) and resolving the high incidence of crime in the state. Only three months into his term, he was already faced with marches denouncing his administration.[64] On 13 February 2019 Blanco formally charged his predecessor, Graco Ramirez, with organized crime, operations with resources of illicit origin, and tax fraud.[65]

    One year into his governorship, people began to doubt Blanco's administration. Politically, he disputed with Morena and PT, partners in Juntos Haremos Historia that got him elected. He promoted PES, which has been dissolved on a national level but remains strong locally.[66] Crime rose significantly, with a 680% increase in cases of extortion, 375% increase in kidnappings, and 41% increase in murders. More than eighty women were killed in 2019, 22 of which were classified distinctly as femicide. Additionally, a tax debt of MXN$302,230 (US$15,800) from his time as a footballer was pardoned by the federal Tax Administration Service, raising questions of corruption.[67] Roberto Soto Pastor, a former collaborator of Graco Ramirezs, sued Blanco for hiring several members of his family and friends, including: his half-brother Ulises Bravo, sister-in-law Liu León Luna, uncles Carlos Juárez López, Jaime Juárez López, and Armando Shajid Bravo López, and a close friend named Baltazar Jonathan Alegría Mejía. All receive salaries that range from MXN $45,000 to $60,000 (US$2,300 to $3,100) per month. The suit says their hiring is a violation of Código Penal de Morelos, Artículo 276 (Morelos penal code, Article 276) which prohibits nepotism.[68][69] President Andrés Manuel López Obrador personally called Blanco out for nepotism in a meeting on 11 October.[70] The governor denies allegations of nepotism.[71]

    On 8 January 2020, Arias Consultores released a poll that describes the best and worst governors. Sinaloa governor Quirino Ordaz Coppel is chosen best, while Puebla governor L. Miguel Barbosa Huerta was declared the worst. Cuauhtemoc Blanco was second-to-last at No. 31.[72]

    Personal life

    He was previously married to Marisela Santoyo from 1996 to 2003, with whom he has a son, Cuauhtémoc Jr., born the same year of their wedding.[73] After their separation in 2000, Blanco had an affair with Liliana Lago, which produced a daughter, Bárbara, born in 2002.[74] In 2015, Blanco married Natalia Rezende.[75] The couple have a son named Roberto, born in 2016.[76]

    He appeared on the North American front cover of the FIFA 10 video game along with Frank Lampard and Sacha Kljestan.[77]

    Honours

    América

    Dorados

    Irapuato

    Puebla

    Mexico

    Individual

    See also

    Notes

    1. He represented the coalition Juntos Haremos Historia for the 2018 elections

    References

    1. "Cuauhtemoc Blanco". ESPN. ESPN Internet Ventures. Archived from the original on 24 October 2012. Retrieved 11 January 2011.
    2. 1 2 "The decisive goal: Blanco bags Mexico's maiden title". FIFA.com. 19 April 2017. Archived from the original on 20 April 2017. Retrieved 27 September 2018. Cuauhtemoc Blanco Bravo is without doubt one of the finest players Mexico has ever produced
    3. 1 2 "Cuauhtémoc Blanco – Los diez mejores futbolistas mexicanos de la historia" [Cuauhtémoc Blanco – The ten best Mexican footballers in history]. Marca (in Spanish).
    4. 1 2 Villegas Gama, Karla. "Ranking the Best 20 Mexican Players of All Time". Bleacher Report. Retrieved 1 August 2018.
    5. 1 2 Cleary, Stephen. "Best Mexican Soccer Players of All Time". Cleats. Retrieved 1 August 2018.
    6. 1 2 "The best penalty takers of all time". BARÇA NÚMEROS. 27 March 2018. Retrieved 27 July 2018. According to this analysis and to the dataset we have used, Cuauhtémoc Blanco (71 scored out of 73 total penalties) is our best penalty taker. [...] Also, according to our results, we can say that Blanco is probably the best penalty taker in the world, but we cannot say that with absolute certainty. What we can say is that, from all the players we have considered and according to our methodology, Blanco has the highest probability of being better than the rest (around 66% probability that he is a better penalty taker than Alexander and Le Tissier (and so on).
    7. 1 2 Fiori, Stefano (31 December 2018). "Chi sono i rigoristi migliori della storia del calcio?". Fox Sports (in Italian). Retrieved 4 November 2019.
    8. "Cuauhtémoc Blanco cumple 46 años de vida". 17 January 2019.
    9. "Cuauhtémoc Blanco regresa a su antiguo barrio". 10 August 2018.
    10. "La última 'Cuauhteminha'".
    11. Elzaurdia, Paco (2013). Superestrellas del Futbol: Cuauhtémoc Blanco. Mason Crest. ISBN 9781422291573.
    12. 1 2 thesefootballtimes.co https://thesefootballtimes.co/2018/04/12/emperor-cuauhtemoc-blanco/. Retrieved 25 December 2018. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
    13. S.A., Sarenet. "El gozo de marcar en el Bernabéu – Real Valladolid C. F." realvalladolid.elnortedecastilla.es. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
    14. "MLSnet.com: Press release". 2007 MLS award finalists & announcement schedule. Archived from the original on 29 December 2007. Retrieved 29 October 2007.
    15. Media Player Archived 22 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine
    16. "Mr. White Gets to 100 Caps (Maybe), Walks Away". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 22 July 2011. Retrieved 21 September 2008.
    17. Blanco va a Santos pero sólo para la Liguilla Archived 23 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine
    18. Blanco quiere el bicampeonato para el Santos Archived 5 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine
    19. "Blanco loaned to Santos Laguna". Chicago.fire.mlsnet.com. 6 June 2010. Archived from the original on 2 January 2009. Retrieved 18 June 2010.
    20. "Cuauhtemoc Blanco to leave Chicago Fire for Mexico". usatoday.com. 29 October 2010. Retrieved 18 June 2010.
    21. "Cuauhtémoc Blanco confirma su pase al club Irapuato". CNN Mexico (in Spanish). 16 July 2010. Archived from the original on 27 January 2012. Retrieved 6 April 2012.
    22. "Cuauhtémoc Blanco es nuevo jugador de los Dorados de Sinaloa" (in Spanish). 22 December 2011.
    23. "Cuau, nuevo jugador de Lobos BUAP". record.com.mx. 6 June 2013. Archived from the original on 9 June 2013. Retrieved 1 June 2013.
    24. "Club America to give Cuauhtemoc Blanco special farewell in Liga MX". espnfc.us. 22 February 2016.
    25. "Informe Arbitral, América 4-1 Morelia". LigaMX.net.
    26. "Cuauhtemoc Blanco farewells Club America, Estadio Azteca in style". espnfc.com. 6 March 2016.
    27. "Regalan goles al 'Cuau'". Televisa Deportes. 5 March 2016. Archived from the original on 9 March 2016. Retrieved 8 March 2016.
    28. "Los 13 momentos más destacados de Cuauhtémoc Blanco". Heraldo de Mexico. 17 January 2020.
    29. 1 2 "Cuauhtémoc Blanco Worthy of World Cup Cameo". Inside Futbol. 28 June 2010. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
    30. "Blanco calls it a day". FIFA. 12 September 2008. Archived from the original on 24 June 2013. Retrieved 20 June 2013.
    31. Dawkes, Phil (17 June 2010). "France 0–2 Mexico". BBC Sport. Retrieved 17 June 2010.
    32. "Mexico tops France to close in on knockout round". The Sports Network. 17 June 2010. Archived from the original on 22 June 2011. Retrieved 17 June 2010.
    33. Ramírez, Armando (19 June 2010). "Temo Seguiría Como Tiburón". Récord (in Spanish). Diario Record. ISSN 1665-2134.
    34. Fernandez de Castro, Rafael (8 June 2015). "Can Mexico's most controversial soccer star score the most improbable goal of his career?". Splinter News. Retrieved 27 September 2018. The soccer star was known for his ingenuity in the field with famous tricks like the celebrated Cuatemiña and controlling the ball with his butt and his camel-hump back.
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    39. "Chicago Fire Player Bio". Chicago Fire S.C. Archived from the original on 25 February 2009. Retrieved 9 May 2009. Blanco is equally creative with his goal celebrations. To honor Mexican tradition and history, Blanco strikes the iconic pose of prehispanic ruler Tlatoani Cuauhtémoc...
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    75. "Se casa Cuauhtémoc Blanco con modelo brasileña".
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