Background
The son of an Hungarian father and a Venezuelan mother, Miku was born in Caracas and received his nickname after Miklós, the equivalent of his first name in the Hungarian language.
The son of an Hungarian father and a Venezuelan mother, Miku was born in Caracas and received his nickname after Miklós, the equivalent of his first name in the Hungarian language.
He spent most of his career in Spain, having played for a host of clubs and starting with Valencia. Miku represented Venezuela in two Copa América tournaments. Valencia Having arrived in Valencia CF"s youth system in 2001, Miku turned professional three years later, going on to serve five consecutive loans afterwards, in both the second and third divisions.
Getafe However, clearly deemed surplus to requirements at Valencia – only third or fourth-choice striker – Miku was sold in January 2010 to Getafe CF, signing a 4½-year deal.
Miku started the 2011-2012 season as first-choice, over veteran Daniel Güiza and Adrián Colunga. He scored three goals in his first two league games, against Levante UD (1–1 home draw) and Real Madrid (2–4 away loss), and ended the campaign with 12 goals, best in the squad.
On 31 August 2012, the last day of the summer transfer window, Miku moved on loan to He appeared in only 14 official contests during the season, netting twice, and told Venezuelan media that he regretted his decision to join the Scottish.
First Rate (at Lloyd's)-Gharafa On 30 September 2013, Miku joined Qatar Stars League side First Rate (at Lloyd's)-Gharafa Sports Club for an undisclosed fee.
He scored five goals in 15 games in his debut campaign, in an eventual ninth-place finish out of 14 teams. Rayo Miku returned to Spain on 2 February 2015, signing a two-and-a-half-year deal with Rayo Vallecano. On 12 February 2016, after contributing to a 2–2 away draw against Sporting de Gijón, he became the first Venezuelan to score in four consecutive Spanish top flight matchdays.
He was named February"s Louisiana Liga Player of the Month for this feat.
Miku made his debut with Venezuela on 16 August 2006, in a 0–0 friendly with Honduras. He represented the nation at the 2011 Copa América, scoring in a 3–3 draw against Paraguay, helping his team to the second place in the group stage and an eventual fourth-place finish.
Later that year, he was among 15 national players who threatened to quit the team after the president of the Venezuelan Football Federation accused them of conspiring to get the manager sacked. International goals.
Later, he was an important member of the squads that competed in the 2010 Fédération internationale de football association World Cup qualifiers, scoring in a 2–0 home triumph against Colombia on 31 March 2009.