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11-805: Beto is a surname, and a nickname for the given names Alberto, Albertino, Adalberto, Berthony, Heriberto, Norberto, Roberto, Humberto, or Benito. It occurs mostly in Portuguese- and Spanish-speaking countries and communities. Notable people with the name include: Given name or nickname [ edit ] Arts and entertainment [ edit ] Beto Benites , Peruvian actor Beto Carrero (1937–2008), Brazilian theme park owner and entertainer Beto Cuevas (born 1967), Chilean singer and artist Robert de la Rocha , American artist Beto Guedes (born 1951), Brazilian musician, singer and songwriter Gilbert Hernandez (born 1957), American cartoonist best known for

22-597: A striker . In a professional career which spanned 18 years (nearly 700 official games and more than 250 goals), he played for San Lorenzo in four different spells. Additionally, he represented clubs in France, Chile , Japan and Portugal . Acosta appeared with Argentina in two Copa América tournaments. Born in Arocena, Santa Fe Province , Acosta started playing professionally at Unión de Santa Fe , making his top division debut one month shy of his 20th birthday, in

33-480: A 0–0 home draw against Argentinos Juniors . Two years later he transferred to San Lorenzo de Almagro , scoring 34 goals in his first two seasons combined, that being the first of the four spells with the club in an 18-year career. In 1990 Acosta had his first abroad experience, with France's Toulouse FC . After a poor second season he left in December 1991, having played in seven matches with just one goal, with

44-691: A 1972 United States Supreme Court case against George Beto [REDACTED] Name list This page or section lists people that share the same given name or the same family name . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change that link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Beto&oldid=1254010925 " Categories : Given names Surnames Spanish-language hypocorisms Portuguese masculine given names Spanish masculine given names Masculine given names Masculine hypocorisms Hidden categories: Articles with short description Short description

55-507: Is different from Wikidata All set index articles Beto Benites Beto Benites (born c. 1970) is a Peruvian actor, casting director, and producer. In 2011, he played the part of Don Luis Sandoval, the drug lord in Olivier Megaton 's film Colombiana , starring Zoe Saldana . Alberto Acosta Alberto Federico 'Beto' Acosta Tabizzi (born 23 August 1966) is an Argentine retired footballer who played as

66-573: The Love and Rockets comics Beto O'Byrne , American playwright Beto (Portuguese singer) (1967–2010), Portuguese singer Albertino João Santos Pereira Beto Pérez , Colombian dancer Beto Quintanilla , Mexican singer and musician Politics [ edit ] Beto Mansur (born 1951), Brazilian politician and soybean farmer Robert "Beto" O'Rourke (born 1972), American Democratic politician, candidate for president in 2020, and former US Representative Beto Richa (born 1965), governor of

77-456: The 2007 summer he returned to his country, joining fourth division team Club Atlético Fénix 's coaching staff and coming out of retirement for a few months. Having collected 19 caps for Argentina during three years, Acosta represented the nation in two Copa América tournaments. In the 1993 edition in Ecuador, he converted his penalty shootout attempts in both the quarter-finals and

88-2740: The Brazilian state of Paraná 2011–2018 Sports [ edit ] Football [ edit ] Beto (footballer, born 1946) , full name Roberto Hermont Arantes, Brazilian football midfielder Beto (footballer, born 1959) , full name Roberto Gilmar Hinterholz, Brazilian football goalkeeper Beto (footballer, born 1973) , full name Valberto Amorim dos Santos, Brazilian football defensive midfielder Beto (footballer, born 1975) , full name Joubert Araújo Martins, Brazilian football midfielder Beto (footballer, born May 1976) , full name Roberto Luís Gaspar de Deus Severo, Portuguese football defender Beto (footballer, born November 1976) , full name Gilberto Galdino dos Santos, Brazilian football midfielder Beto (footballer, born 1979) , full name Roberto Mendes da Silva, Brazilian football Beto (footballer, born 1980) , full name Cícero Herbete de Oliveira Melo, Brazilian football striker Beto (footballer, born February 1981) , full name Luiz Alberto de Sousa, Brazilian football left-back Beto (footballer, born October 1981) , full name André Roberto Soares da Silva, Brazilian football striker Beto (footballer, born 1982) , full name António Alberto Bastos Pimparel, Portuguese football goalkeeper Beto (footballer, born 1984) , full name Roberto Fronza, Brazilian football centre-back Beto (footballer, born 1986) , full name Webert da Silva Miguel, Brazilian football midfielder Beto (footballer, born 1987) , full name Alberto Antônio de Paula, Brazilian football striker Beto (footballer, born 1998) , full name Norberto Bercique Gomes Betuncal, Portuguese football striker Beto Acosta (born 1966), Argentine football striker Beto Carranza (born 1972), Argentine football midfielder Beto Naveda (born 1972), Argentine football striker Beto Acosta (born 1977), Uruguayan football striker Beto Gonçalves (born 1980), Indonesian football striker Beto Navarro (born 1989), American soccer defender Zé Beto (1960–1990), Portuguese footballer Other sports [ edit ] Bobby Ávila (1924–2004), Mexican Major League Baseball player Roberto Seabra (born 1976), Brazilian water polo player Other [ edit ] Beto Laudisio (died 2012), Brazilian student who died in Australian police custody Beto Ortiz (born 1968), Peruvian journalist, TV personality, and writer Carlos Alberto Rentería Mantilla (born 1945), Colombian narcotrafficker and crime boss Surname [ edit ] George Beto (1916–1991), American criminologist, educator Cruz v. Beto ,

99-620: The club eventually ranking 16th – he returned to San Lorenzo, where he scored a further 19 league goals, which earned him a transfer to country giants Boca Juniors . Acosta spent the following three years out of Argentina, starting and ending with Club Deportivo Universidad Católica in Chile where he rejoined former San Lorenzo teammate Néstor Gorosito . In 1994, he was crowned the top scorer in South American football, netting 33 times in only 25 matches. Also during that debut campaign, he

110-520: The following campaign, but was deemed surplus to requirements after the signing of Mário Jardel , and returned to San Lorenzo for the fourth and last time, netting always in double digits until his 2004 retirement at the age of 37. Although still physically fit, the scorer of 300 goals in 666 official games opted to retire, instead of being coerced into retirement later on. Acosta kickstarted his managerial career in Romania , with FCM Dunărea Galaţi . In

121-618: Was unable to further help the team for five matches (four after assaulting C.F. Universidad de Chile 's Luis Musrri ); in between his spell with Universidad, he played in the J1 League for Yokohama Marinos . In December 1998, Acosta signed with Sporting Clube de Portugal . In his first full season , the 33-year-old striker scored 22 goals, helping the Lisbon side to the Primeira Liga championship after an 18-year wait. He added 14

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