A late bloomer, he only reached La Liga at the age of 27, with Levante, and spent most of his career with the club while appearing in 311 competitive matches and scoring 69 goals in his first spell. He also won the 2016–17 Segunda División.[2][3]
Club career
Early career
Born in Madrid, Morales only played amateur football well into his 20s. At 10 or 11 years of age, he had unsuccessful trials with Real Madrid.[4] An Brunete youth graduate, he made his senior debut in the Tercera División with Parla.[5]
Morales signed with Fuenlabrada also in the fourth division – and the Community of Madrid – in 2010. He scored a career-best 20 goals in his only season, in an eighth-place finish.[6]
Levante
On 1 July 2011, Morales joined Levante, being assigned to the reserves in the fourth tier[7] and promoting in his first season, with the player contributing 14 goals in 41 matches.[8][9] On 17 April 2013, he agreed to a new two-year deal and was promoted to the main squad.[10]
Morales was loaned to Segunda División club Eibar on 30 July 2013.[11] He played his first game as a professional on 18 August 2013, starting in a 2–1 away win against Real Jaén.[12]
Morales scored his first professional goal on 27 October 2013, the second in the 2–0 victory at Barcelona B.[13] He added a further two in 40 competitive appearances during the campaign, helping the Basques to a first-ever promotion to La Liga.[14]
Back to Levante, Morales made his top-flight debut on 30 August 2014, starting in a 3–0 away loss to Athletic Bilbao.[15][2] He scored his first goal in the competition on 4 October, in a 3–3 draw at former side Eibar.[16]
On 29 May 2015, Morales renewed his contract with the Valencians, signing until 2019.[17] He scored 12 times in 2018–19, adding five assists for the 15th-placed team.[18]
Morales netted 13 goals in 2020–21, establishing himself as Levante's all-time scorer in the top division.[19] He repeated the feat the following season (with seven assists), but was not able to prevent relegation.[20]
^Rodríguez, M.Á. (31 March 2019). "Morales y el Eibar, amores que matan" [Morales and Eibar, love that can kill you]. Marca (in Spanish). Retrieved 21 December 2021.
^Aldunate, Ramiro (4 October 2014). "En Ipurua, hasta el rabo todo es toro" [At Ipurua, it is not over until it is over]. Marca (in Spanish). Retrieved 1 June 2015.
^Molins, José (20 May 2017). "La profesionalidad de un campeón" [The professionalism of champions]. Las Provincias (in Spanish). Retrieved 22 December 2021.