In a project I'm working on, I have a Score class, defined below in score.h. I am trying to overload it so, when a << operation is performed on it, _points + " " + _name is printed. 
Here's what I tried to do:
ostream & Score::operator<< (ostream & os, Score right)
{
    os << right.getPoints() << " " << right.scoreGetName();
    return os;
}
Here are the errors returned:
score.h(30) : error C2804: binary 'operator <<' has too many parameters
(This error appears 4 times, actually)
I managed to get it working by declaring the overload as a friend function:
friend ostream & operator<< (ostream & os, Score right);
And removing the Score:: from the function declaration in score.cpp (effectively not declaring it as a member).
Why does this work, yet the former piece of code doesn't?
Thanks for your time!
EDIT
I deleted all mentions to the overload on the header file... yet I get the following (and only) error. binary '<<' : no operator found which takes a right-hand operand of type 'Score' (or there is no acceptable conversion) 
How come my test, in main(), can't find the appropriate overload? (it's not the includes, I checked)
Below is the full score.h
#ifndef SCORE_H_
#define SCORE_H_
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
#include <iostream>
using std::string;
using std::ostream;
class Score
{
public:
    Score(string name);
    Score();
    virtual ~Score();
    void addPoints(int n);
    string scoreGetName() const;
    int getPoints() const;
    void scoreSetName(string name);
    bool operator>(const Score right) const;
private:
    string _name;
    int _points;
};
#endif
 
     
     
     
    