Carlos Aguilera (soccer player)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Carlos Aguilera
Personnel
Surname Carlos Alberto Aguilera Nova
birthday September 21, 1964
place of birth MontevideoUruguay
size 166 cm
position attack
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1980-1982 River Plate Montevideo
1983-1984 Nacional Montevideo
1985 Independiente Medellin
1985-1986 Nacional Montevideo
1986-1987 Racing Club Avellaneda 11 0(1)
1987 Nacional Montevideo
1987-1988 Tecos 34 0(9)
1988-1989 Club Atlético Peñarol
1989-1992 CFC genoa 96 (33)
1992-1994 Torino FC 37 (12)
1994-1999 Club Atlético Peñarol at least 56 (at least 11)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1981-1983 Uruguay U20 at least 14 (at least 11)
1982-1997 Uruguay 65 (23)
1 Only league games are given.

Carlos Aguilera , full name Carlos Alberto Aguilera Nova , (born September 21, 1964 in Montevideo , Uruguay ) is a former Uruguayan football player .

Career

society

Aguilera, who is 1.64 meters or 1.66 meters tall, depending on the sources, began his sporting career at club level in 1980, initially with the Uruguayan club River Plate Montevideo . He is explicitly assigned a cadre membership in 1981 and 1982. In the 1984 and 1985 seasons he was active for Nacional Montevideo . In 1985 he made a stopover in Colombia at Independiente Medellín for a season . In the same year, but also in the following year, he is back in the Nacionals squad. Then he was in the 1986/87 season in eleven games (one goal) for the Argentine team Racing Club Avellaneda on the field. In 1987 he was again a player in Nacionals. A move to Mexico followed . There are 34 appearances for him at Tecos in the 1987/88 season of the Primera División , in which he scored a total of nine goals. In 1988 Aguilera returned to his home country, where he played for Club Atlético Peñarol until the 1989 season. From the 1989/1990 season he pursued his profession in Europe. There he played up to and including the 1991/29 season with the Italian first division promoted CFC Genoa , for which he scored 33 goals in 96 first division appearances during this period. The seasons 1992/93 and 1993/94 he spent in ranks of Turin FC . With the Turin team, for whom he met twelve times in 37 appearances in Serie A , he succeeded in winning the Coppa Italia 1992/93 in the first season . After this time, his path led again to Peñarol in 1994 . An association membership is recorded for him with the Montevideans until 1999. Up to and including the Clausura 1998, 56 missions and eleven goals for him are reported there. During this period, the Aurinegros won the Uruguayan championship in 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997 and 1999 respectively.

In the Copa Libertadores , his appearances with Nacional and Peñarol between 1983 and 1998 made him one of the record scorers in this competition and with 23 goals scored among the twenty most successful players in the Copa. In 1989 he was the tournament's top scorer with ten goals , tied with Raúl Vicente Amarilla .

On June 24, 2000, "Pato" Aguilera ended his career with a 6-2 win, held in the Estadio Centenario Peñarols farewell game against a national team.

National team

Already at the junior soccer world championship 1981 and the junior soccer world championship 1983 Aguilera came for Uruguay's junior national team in a total of seven tournament games and scored four goals. He also took part in the U-20 South American Championship in 1983 and was the top scorer of the tournament with a hit count of seven goals, in which he finished second with the Uruguayan team . During the tournament he was used by coach José Etchegoyen seven times.

The striker was a member of Celeste , for which he completed a total of 65 international matches between 1982 and 1997 and in which he scored 23 times in the opposing goal. The RSSSF , on the other hand, assumes only 64 games and 22 goals between February 22, 1982 and November 16, 1997. He then made his debut at the Nehru Cup in the encounter against the Chinese team and played his last game against Ecuador as part of the World Cup qualification for the 1998 tournament . In 1983 he was involved in winning the Copa América and tied with Jorge Burruchaga and Roberto Dinamite with a goal yield of three goals record scorer of the tournament. He was also part of the Uruguayan squad at the 1989 Copa America and played four games. He also took part in the 1986 World Cup and the 1990 World Cup. At his first World Cup he was not used. In 1990 four games were carried out with his participation. He also participated in the 1984 William Poole Cup , 1985 Copa Artigas, 1985 Kirin Cup , 1986 Marlboro Cup , 1990 Stanley Rous Cup and 1993 Copa Inca .

successes

National

International

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Profile on playerhistory.com ( memento from March 17, 2014 in the Internet Archive ), accessed on October 26, 2016
  2. a b c Carlos “Pato” Aguilera (Spanish) on padreydecano.com, accessed October 26, 2016
  3. Carlos Aguilera ( Memento of March 11, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) (Spanish) on alp.com.uy of May 9, 2012, accessed on August 9, 2013
  4. Carlos Aguilera in the FIFA database . Retrieved January 1, 2013.
  5. Sudamericanos s20: década del 80 ( Memento from June 30, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) (Spanish) on auf.org.uy, accessed on May 11, 2015
  6. Luis Suárez: el terror de los arqueros hace temblar el récord de Forlán (Spanish) in La República of November 13, 2011, accessed on January 5, 2012
  7. Statistical data on international appearances in the Uruguayan national team on rsssf.com , accessed on October 14, 2012
  8. ^ A b Carlos Alberto Aguilera - International Appearances on rsssf.com, accessed January 1, 2013