Ángel Castelnoble

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Ángel Castelnoble
Personnel
birthday 1944 or 1945
place of birth MontevideoUruguay
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1961– Montevideo Wanderers
0000-1978 Guaraní
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1980 Montevideo Wanderers
1981 Miramar Misiones
1982 Nacional Montevideo
1983 Montevideo Wanderers
1984 Olimpia
1985 Guaraní
1986 Huracan Buceo
1988 Club Sport Emelec
at least 1992–1993 Uruguay U20
1993 Uruguay U-17
1994-1995 Montevideo Wanderers
1996 Club Sport Emelec
1997 Millonarios
1998 Danubio FC
2000 Club Social de Deportes Rangers
2000 Huracan Buceo
2002 Club Atlético Cerro
at least 2004 Uruguay U-16
2008/2009 Rampla Juniors
1 Only league games are given.

Ángel Castelnoble (* 1944 or 1945 in Prado , Montevideo ) is a former Uruguayan football player and coach .

Player career

Castelnoble started playing football at the age of eight. His career as a player began in 1961 with the Montevideo Wanderers . Obdulio Varela paved the way for him to the Uruguayan Primera División . Castelnoble played for teams in Uruguay, Argentina and Paraguay . Most recently, the attacking midfielder was active for Guaraní until 1978 when he had to end his playing career after a foul by Tito Veras at the age of 33 due to a broken tibia and fibula in 1979 .

Coaching

Then Castelnoble began his coaching career. He coached the Montevideo Wanderers and was runner-up with them in 1980. His players at the time included Ariel Krasowsky , 18-year-old Enzo Francescoli and Jorge Barrios . In 1988 he led the Ecuadorian club Club Sport Emelec to win the Copa Guayaquil . Before the club also won the championship title in the same year, he left the club for financial reasons, so this title went to successor Juan Ramón Silva .

At least from 1992 to 1993 he held the office of the Uruguayan junior national coach. In 1992, in this role, he led the Uruguayan U-20 national team to the Vice-South American Championship title at the U-20 South American Football Championship in 1992 , thus qualifying for the 1993 Junior World Cup . There he took fifth place with the Celeste.

Castelnoble also coached the teams of the Paraguayan clubs Olimpia and Guaraní, among others . In his native Uruguay, he was the coach of River Plate and Huracán Buceo . In Argentina he coached Banfield . In 1997 he was the coach of the Colombian club Millonarios . In 2004, he and Gustavo Ferrín were responsible for the Uruguayan U-16 selection at the U-16 South American Championship in Paraguay in 2004 and finished fourth with the team. In the 2008/09 season he worked as a trainer for the Rampla Juniors .

Castelnoble was also president of the Uruguayan coaching association Asociación Uruguaya de Entrenadores de Fútbol (Audef). As such, he was re-elected in February 2001.

Private

In 1997 Ángel Castelnoble had been married for 30 years and had three children. Apart from his coaching activity, his center of life was in Montevideo at that time. He also owned a country house in La Floresta .

successes

  • Vice South American Champion 1992
  • Copa Guayaquil 1988
  • Uruguayan runner-up in 1980

Individual evidence

  1. V. LOS AÑOS MAGROS OCHENTAS ( Memento of 8 February 2013, Internet Archive ) (Spanish), accessed on May 10, 2013
  2. Juveniles, cuando campeonar era costumbre ( Memento from April 6, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) (Spanish) in El Observador from January 6, 2013, accessed on May 10, 2013
  3. Púa es perdedor? (Spanish) in La República on February 9, 2000, accessed May 10, 2013
  4. Sub 15 ( Memento of March 10, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) (Spanish) at www.conmebol.com, accessed on November 24, 2013
  5. Se viene el Sudamericano Sub-15 ( Memento from June 23, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) (Spanish) on cambiodefrente.com from November 16, 2013, accessed on November 24, 2013
  6. Ángel Castelnoble in the database of weltfussball.de, accessed on May 10, 2013
  7. Angel Castelnoble reelecto presidente de los entrenadores (Spanish) in La República on February 20, 2001, accessed on May 10, 2013
  8. EL ÚLTIMO DE LA FILA (Spanish) on www.eltiempo.com from January 30, 1997, accessed May 10, 2013