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Muerte de Valenzuela is leaving Mexico without its three greatest sports icons

CIUDAD DE MÉXICO (AP) – The Muerte of Fernando Valenzuela laments Mexicans about the miércoles la partida, who is not only the greatest soccer player in their history, but one of three of its greatest icons in the sport along with the soccer player Hugo Sánchez and the boxer Julio Cesar Chavez.

Valenzuela, who left the 1981 Cy Young, the Mundial series and the New Year, was seen in a hospital in Los Angeles, California at the age of 63.

When the Valenzuela party transferred to the country during its ten years in the Mexican government, it was reproduced by the Sánchez militia at Real Madrid and sent Chávez under the ring.

During the new year in Valenzuela, Sánchez emigrated to Atlético Madrid, having worked for four months before returning to Real Madrid, having conquered the league five months later and having conquered Pichichi's five best players as the best player of his career.

“It's another three-point message that shocked us the most about me, my family and my spirit,” said Sánchez, now an analyst on the ESPN broadcast. “It was a great danger, it was a time when we were content with the symbol of sport.”

Chávez captured five world titles in three different areas over the last decade. Aunque Saúl Álvarez emulated the various Order fighters in different divisions, but the popularity of “Canelo” had reached the heights of “César del Boxeo”.

“A historic time for Mexican sport and good luck to coincide with it, with Julio César Chávez,” Sánchez wrote. “Algo que nos maravilló fue pensar que cuando de los tres se paralizaba el pais y ahora Fernando nos ha paralizado todos.”

Aunque Valenzuela lived in Los Ángeles, having now visited Mexico after his departure, and was part of the Mexican selection as part of the audience of the Clásicos Mundiales 2006, 2009, 2013 and 2017.

In recent years, he also spent a while with the country's ex-president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, in passionate leisure activities at a localized campsite in the Mexican capital.

“It's a punishment, you think that all Mexicans and Mexicans care about the death of Valenzuela,” she told acting President Claudia Sheinbaum. “Nuestra solidaridad with su familia y con todo México”.

After Chávez had not yet spoken out about the Valenzuela party, Sergio Pérez was one of the current sports officials who once mourned the death of “Toro de Etchohuaquila”, a rancher in the Norwegian state of Sonora November 1, 1960.

“It is a sad note for the country because it is a legend that has transcended the name of the country for many years,” said friend Sergio Pérez, the best Formula 1 driver that Mexico has seen in its history. “As a final creo que all our sentimos orgoullosos de lo que hiso, el legado que dejó como deportista y como persona all all the personas que inspiration y alegrías que nos dio.”

By Vanessa

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