Antoni Ramallets Simón (1 July 1924 â 30 July 2013) was a Spanish football goalkeeper and manager.
He spent most of his career atÃÂ FC Barcelona, during the 1950s and early 1960s, winning theÃÂ Ricardo Zamora TrophyÃÂ as the best goalkeeper inÃÂ La LigaÃÂ on five occasions, and 18 major club honours.
He representedÃÂ SpainÃÂ in theÃÂ 1950 FIFA World CupÃÂ and, in the 1960s, managed several clubs in his country, notably winning two major trophies withÃÂ Real Zaragoza.
Ramallets signed foràFC Barcelonaàin 1946 at the age of 23, fromàReal Valladolid, where he also spent his first season after being purchased, on loan. He returned to the club to play second-fiddle toàJuan Velasco, making hisàLa Ligaàdebut in a 2âÂÂ1 win againstàSevilla FC, on 28 November 1948. Although this was his only appearance duringàthe season, he eventually became the starter, being an essential defensive unit as his team - then namedàClub de Fútbol Barcelonaà- went on to win six leagues and fiveàdomestic cups; in theà1951âÂÂ52 campaign, asàBarçaàwon five major trophies, he contributed with 28 league games, being awarded his firstàRicardo Zamora Trophy.
During the 1950s, Ramallets was a prominent member of the successful Barcelona side that also included Joan Segarra, MariàGonzalvo, László Kubala, Sándor Kocsis, Evaristo, Luis Suárez and Zoltán Czibor. During his spell with the club he made 538 appearances, including 288 in the domestic league; on 6 March 1962 the Blaugrana played a testimonial in his honour against Hamburger SV, winning 5âÂÂ1.
Ramallets coached several teams over the following decade, including old acquaintance Valladolid. In the 1963âÂÂ64 campaign he led Real Zaragoza to the fourth place in the league, the Spanish Cup and the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup â a competition he had won twice as a player with Barcelona â defeating fellow league team Valencia CF in the latter.
Ramallets played 35 games for Spain during 11 years, making his debut against Chile on 29 June 1950, during the 1950 FIFA World Cup in Brazil. During the tournament he earned the nickname The Cat of Maracanã, helping the nation to the second group stage.
Ramallets also played seven games for the unofficial Catalan national side.
Ramallets died in his Vilafranca del Penedès home near Barcelona, on 31 July 2013. He was 89 years old.
Barcelona
Zaragoza