Tomás Reñones

Pedro Tomás Reñones Crego (born 9 August 1960) is a Spanish retired footballer who played as a right back.

Tomás Reñones
Personal information
Full name Pedro Tomás Reñones Crego
Date of birth (1960-08-09) 9 August 1960
Place of birth Compostela, Spain
Height 1.71 m (5 ft 7 in)
Playing position(s) Right back
Youth career
Barcelona
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1980–1981 Compostela
1981–1984 Atlético Madrileño 78 (1)
1984–1996 Atlético Madrid 367 (2)
1996–1997 Marbella 30 (0)
1997–1998 San Pedro 21 (0)
Total 496 (3)
National team
1985–1989 Spain 19 (0)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

He was best known for his spell at Atlético Madrid, for which he played 12 professional seasons, also being a regular for Spain in the late 80s, representing the nation in one World Cup and one European Championship.

Club career

Tomás was born in Santiago de Compostela, Galicia. After one season with hometown's SD Compostela he joined Atlético Madrid in 1981, first playing with its B-side. In 1984–85, he made his La Liga debut and never again lost his starting XI berth, going on to amass nearly 500 overall appearances for the club.

On 25 May 1996, Tomás took the field in the 80th minute of his final game, a home fixture against Albacete Balompié, to a rapturous ovation. Although he played in only 12 matches during the campaign, he aided the Colchoneros to an historic double, and retired altogether in 1998 after two stints in the lower leagues.[1]

International career

Tomás earned 19 caps for the Spain national team, and was selected for the 1986 FIFA World Cup and UEFA Euro 1988 (both as a starter, as he appeared in seven complete matches – out of eight – combined). His debut came on 20 November 1985 in a 0–0 friendly with Austria, in Zaragoza.[2]

Post-retirement

Reñones embraced a career in politics after retiring, being elected by Grupo Independiente Liberal (GIL, founded by longtime Atlético president Jesús Gil) to the Marbella city council.

After the local mayor was arrested due to a corruption scandal, he took office in 2006 as interim, but soon faced the same charges and was arrested by the Spanish police, as part of Operation Malaya.[3]

Honours

Atlético Madrid

gollark: ```pythonimport thesaurusimport randomimport concurrent.futures as futureswords_to_synonyms = {}synonyms_to_words = {}def add_to_key(d, k, v): d[k] = d.get(k, set()).union(set(v))def add_synonyms(syns, word): for syn in syns: add_to_key(synonyms_to_words, syn, [word]) add_to_key(words_to_synonyms, word, syns)def concat(list_of_lists): return sum(list_of_lists, [])def fetch_word(word): results = concat(thesaurus.Word(word).synonyms("all")) return resultsdef add_words(words): with futures.ThreadPoolExecutor(max_workers=50) as executor: word_futures = {executor.submit(fetch_word, word): word for word in words} for future in futures.as_completed(word_futures): word = word_futures[future] try: data = future.result() except Exception as exc: print(f"Error fetching {word}: {exc}") else: add_synonyms(data, word)def getattr_hook(obj, key): results = list(synonyms_to_words.get(key, set()).union(words_to_synonyms.get(key, set()))) if len(results) > 0: return obj.__getattribute__(random.choice(results)) else: raise AttributeError(f"Attribute {key} not found.")def wrap(obj): add_words(dir(obj)) obj.__getattr__ = lambda key: getattr_hook(obj, key)wrap(__builtins__)__builtins__.engrave("Hi!")```
gollark: Ah yes. Global Interpreter Lock. Right. This may be hard.
gollark: On the plus side, you should be able to use `zilch` in place of `None` now.
gollark: The python thesaurus-izer may need some parallelization to be effective.
gollark: We could use this; it seems a cool idea.

References

  1. "Tomás, al Marbella, y Radchenko, al Rayo" [Tomás, to Marbella, and Radchenko, to Rayo]. El País (in Spanish). 7 August 1996. Retrieved 21 April 2016.
  2. "0–0: Nos congelamos todos" [0–0: We all froze] (PDF) (in Spanish). Mundo Deportivo. 21 November 1985. Retrieved 21 April 2016.
  3. Corrupción en Marbella (Corruption in Marbella); El Mundo, April 2006 (in Spanish)
  4. European Competitions 1985–86; at RSSSF
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