- Striker for Vélez Sarsfield (1967-1973, 1980-1984), Stade de Reims (France, 1973-1977, 1984-85), Paris Saint-Germain (France, 1977-1979) and RC Strasbourg Alsace (France, 1979-80).
- Won the Argentina Primera División (1968 Nacional) with Vélez Sarsfield.
- Top Scorer of the Argentina Primera División (1970, 1971, 1981) and the Ligue 1 (1973-74, 1975-76, 1976-77, 1977-78, 1978-79).
- Vélez Sarsfield's all-time top scorer (206 goals).
- 14 appearances for Argentina National Football Team (1970-1972); scored 8 goals.
- Father of Mauro Bianchi and Brenda Bianchi.
- Over his entire career, he officially scored 411 goals in 586 matches.
- Head coach of Stade de Reims (France, 1984-1988), Ogc Nice (France, 1989-90), Vélez Sarsfield (1993-1996), A.S. Roma (Italy, 1996-97), Boca Juniors (1998-2001, 2003-04, 2013-14) and Atletico Madrid (Spain, 2005-06).
- As a coach, he won three Argentine Championships (1993 Clausura, 1995 Apertura, 1996 Clausura), Copa Libertadores (1994) Copa Intercontinental (1994) and the Copa Interamericana (1996) with Vélez Sarsfield; four Argentine Championships (1998 Apertura, 1999 Clausura, 2000 Apertura, 2003 Apertura), three Copa Libertadores (2000, 2001, 2003) and two Copa Intercontinental (2000, 2003) with Boca Juniors.
- Father-in-law of footballer Eduardo Domínguez.
- Named South American Coach of the Year: 1994, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2003.
- Played well over 300 games for Vélez Sarsfield.
- Played well over 200 games at Ligue 1.
- Played well over 150 games for Stade de Reims.
- Broken Roger Piantoni record on the Stade de Reims's list of the Ligue 1 top goalscorers with 115 goals.
- Finished under of the Francois M'Pelé record on the Paris Saint-Germain's list of the all-time top goalscorers with 71 goals.
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