Adolfo Barán

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Adolfo Barán
Personnel
Surname Adolfo Barán Flis
birthday November 22, 1961
place of birth MontevideoUruguay
size 185 cm
position striker
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1980-1982 Club Atlético Rentistas
1982 Cúcuta Deportivo
1983-1987 Bella Vista
1988-1989 Peñarol Montevideo
1989 Defensor Sporting
1990 Peñarol Montevideo
1991-1992 Independiente Santa Fe
1993 Bella Vista
1994 Racing
1995 Club Atlético Basáñez
1995 Everton de Viña del Mar
1996 Real España
1996 Club Atlético Rentistas
1997 Racing
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
at least 1981 Uruguay U20 at least 6 (at least 1)
1987-1989 Uruguay 4 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1998 Racing Club de Montevideo
1999 Racing Club de Montevideo
at least 2003 Bella Vista (youth coach)
2012-2014 Club Atlético Rentistas
2016– Club Atlético Atenas
1 Only league games are given.

Adolfo Barán (born November 22, 1961 in Montevideo , Uruguay ) is a former Uruguayan football player and coach.

player

society

Barán, who played in the position of striker , began his career in 1980 with Rentistas in Uruguay. In 1982 he moved to Colombia to Cúcuta Deportivo . He returned to his homeland in 1983 and played for the Montevidean club Bella Vista until 1987 . A first time at Peñarol followed, from 1988 to 1989 . About a stopover in 1989 at Defensor Sporting , he returned to the Aurinegros and was in the 1990 season with 13 goals top scorer in the Primera División , the top division of Uruguay. In that season he also managed the curiosity of not only being the most successful shooter in the league, but also the goalkeeper with the fewest goals conceded of the season. This was due to the fact that he replaced the sent off Fernando Álvez in the encounter against Bella Vista in the position of goalkeeper and only had to accept one goal. In the further progress of his career he played for Independiente Santa Fe (1991-1992), again Bella Vista (1993) and Racing (1994). In 1994 he was the Segunda División's top scorer with 14 goals scored . The following year, he was responsible for Club Atlético Basáñez and Everton de Viña del Mar active. In 1996 he moved abroad again briefly to Real España , but in the same year he returned to Rentistas, the starting point of his career. In 1997 he ended his racing career.

National team

At the beginning of his career he was a member of the Uruguayan youth national team, which reached the quarter-finals of the 1981 World Cup . There he was used twice in the group stage. Barán also became South American champions in 1981 with the Uruguayan U-20 team alongside players like José Batista , Santiago Ostolaza , Jorge da Silva and Enzo Francescoli . During the tournament he was used by coach Aníbal Gutiérrez Ponce four times (one goal). Later he was active as a national team player for his country and completed four international matches for the Uruguayan national soccer team between 1987 and 1989 .

successes

  • 1981 U-20 South American champion
  • Top scorer 1990 (Primera División, Uruguay)
  • Top scorer 1994 (Segunda División, Uruguay)

Trainer

After his active time, he held the coaching position at Racing Montevideo in 1998 and stepped in again at the end of the 1999 second division season. At least in early 2003 he was also U-17 and U-20 coach of Bella Vista. Since July 2012 he has been the coach of the Uruguayan first division club Rentistas . With the club from Montevideo, he reached sixth place in the 2013/14 season. His team qualified for the Copa Sudamericana 2014 . At the end of May 2014, he extended his contract for another year. His coaching staff consisted of Fernando "Topo" Rosa , Gabriel Da Silva and Nicolás Barlocco . In December 2014, his time as a coach at Rentistas ended. Since July 2016 he has been coaching the second division club Atlético Atenas .

Others

Barán's son Agustín Barán moved from the Peñarols youth team to the professional squad and became Uruguayan champion in 2012/13. The U-20 international was seen as a great hope for the future of Uruguayan football and aroused the interest of foreign clubs as early as 2012. His two sons Santiago Barán and Nicolás Barán also play for Uruguayan professional clubs.

Web links

  • Adolfo Barán in the database of the Base de Datos del Futbol Argentino (Spanish). Retrieved January 20, 2012.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ List of the top scorer of the Primera División on the website of the Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation
  2. El increible record de Adolfo Baran (PDF; 263 kB) (Spanish) in Mundo Deportivo of December 27, 1990, p. 22; Retrieved January 20, 2012
  3. a b GOLEADORES DIVISIONAL “B” / SEGUNDA DIVISIÓN PROFESIONAL - 1990/2003. ( Memento of May 6, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) (Spanish) by Gabriel Ladetto, accessed on January 21, 2012
  4. Uruguay's World Cup squad on the official FIFA website ( Memento from October 6, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
  5. Adolfo Barán in the database of FIFA (English)
  6. Juventud de América (Spanish) in La República of December 30, 2002, accessed on October 27, 2012
  7. Sudamericanos s20: década del 80 (Spanish) on auf.org.uy, accessed on May 11, 2015
  8. Sigue su preparación la selección sub 17 (Spanish) in La República of 28 March 2003, accessed December 21, 2012
  9. ^ A b Adolfo Barán in the soccerway.com database. Retrieved October 3, 2016.
  10. Adolfo Barán Acordo renovación de contrato con Rentistas (Spanish) on 29 May 2014. Retrieved on June 20, 2014
  11. Peñarol prueba dupla Olivera-Zalayeta ante selección de Paysandú (Spanish) of August 3, 2012, accessed on December 23, 2012
  12. Agustín Barán, futuro de primera en Peñarol (Spanish) on tenfield.com.uy of November 13, 2012, accessed on December 28, 2014