- Quinta del Buitre
La Quinta del Buitre was the name given by Spanish sport journalist Julio César Iglesias to the generation of club grown Real Madrid players that dominated Spanish football in the 1980s. The name ("Vulture's Cohort") was derived from the nickname given to its most charismatic member
Emilio Butragueño . The other four members were Manolo Sanchís, Martín Vázquez, Míchel and Miguel Pardeza.Sanchís and Martín Vázquez were the first to play for the first team of Real Madrid, making their debut at Murcia on
December 4 1983 . CoachAlfredo Di Stéfano brought the youngsters in from the start. Both played surprisingly well and Sanchís even scored the winning goal. A few months later,February 5 1984 , saw the debut of Emilio Butragueño in an away game at Cádiz. "El Buitre" was an instant sensation and scored twice. Pardeza was added to the first team that same season and Míchel followed at the start of the next.With La Quinta del Buitre (reduced to four members when Pardeza left the club for Zaragoza in
1986 ) Real Madrid had one of the best teams in Spain and Europe during the second half of the 1980s, winning amongst others two UEFA Cups and 5 Spanish championships in a row. Their record was only blemished by their failure to win the European Cup.Martín Vázquez went to play for Torino in
1990 . He made a return to Real Madrid in1992 , leaving the club again for good in1995 (toDeportivo La Coruña ). Butragueño left the club in 1995 and Míchel in1996 . Both went to play forAtlético Celaya inMexico .Sanchís was the only member of La Quinta to never play for a club other than Real Madrid. By winning the Champions League twice (in
1998 and2000 ), he also managed to accomplish what La Quinta had failed to achieve in its glory days. He retired in2001 as last active member of the famous cohort.
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