[4] Alcázar spent all of his career with CE Europa, a team from Catalonia, which in the 1920s competed against the first golden generation of FC Barcelona for the supremacy of Catalan football,[2] and in fact, CE Europa finished as runner-up in 1921 and 1922, both times behind Barça, before finishing tied on 17 points in the 1922–23 Catalan Championship, which meant that the title had to be decided in a playoff match that was held on 21 March 1923 at the Girona stadium, and Alcázar netted the only goal of the match.
[2][6] Together with Mauricio, Pellicer and Cros, he formed the great attacking front of the CE Europa side that won the Catalan Championship in 1923 and then reached the 1923 Copa del Rey final, where they were beaten by Athletic Bilbao 0–1, courtesy of a goal from Travieso.
[7] According to the chronicles, Europa had more chances than its rival, but had no luck in front of goal, with the big star of the game being Athlétic's goalkeeper Manuel Vidal, who several years later would sign for Alcázar's hometown club Real Murcia.
[6] Throughout the rest of the 1920s, Europa CE remained toe-to-toe with FC Barcelona in the fight for the Catalan championship, finished as runners-up again in 1923–24, 1926–27, 1927–28 and 1928–29, but in the 1926–27 season, the Royal Spanish Football Federation decided that the regional runners-up would also compete in the Copa del Rey, so Europa, as runner-up in Catalonia, made its second participation in this competition, where they faced Real Madrid in the quarterfinals,[8] with Alcázar scoring once in the second leg to help his side to a 4–1 win[9] in an eventual playoff elimination in Zaragoza.
[8] In the summer of 1930, the president of CE Europa Joan Matas decided that his team would tour northern Europe in order to raise funds to face the third consecutive season in the First Division, and Alcázara was a member of this expedition that played 16 matches in countries such as Norway, Denmark, Sweden, Estonia, and Poland.
[12][14][15] In the summer of 1925, the then coach of Spain Fernando Gutiérrez Alzaga was relieved of his position and replaced by a triumvirate formed by Ricardo Cabot, José María Mateos, and Manuel de Castro, who decided not to summon Alcázar.
[6] Alcázar died at home in Barcelona on 6 December 1966, at the age of, from a slow and painful bone cancer that "first took his patience, then his good humor and finally his life".