Daniel Cambronero

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Daniel Cambronero
Daniel Cambronero Solano.jpg
Daniel Cambronero in 2014
Personnel
Surname Daniel Arturo Cambronero Solano
birthday January 8, 1986
place of birth San JoseCosta Rica
size 183 cm
position goalkeeper
Juniors
Years station
CD Saprissa
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
2003-2007 CD Saprissa
2007-2009 Puntarenas FC at least 19 (0)
2009-2011 CF Universidad de Costa Rica 51 (0)
2011– CS Herediano 91 (0)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
Costa Rica U-17
Costa Rica U-20
Costa Rica U-23
2009– Costa Rica 2 (0)
1 Only league games are given.
As of May 27, 2016

Daniel Arturo Cambronero Solano (born January 8, 1986 in San José ) is a Costa Rican football player on the position of goalkeeper . Since 2011 he has been part of the CS Herediano squad with play in the Liga de Fútbol de Primera División , the highest Costa Rican soccer league.

Club career

Daniel Cambronero was born on January 8, 1986 in the Costa Rican capital San José and joined the youth department of the record champions CD Saprissa as a youngster . At the club from the capital suburb of Tibás, he went through all youth league classes and was in the men's squad for the first time in 2003, after having already gained his first international experience for the U-17 national team of his home country. Subsequently, he mostly acted as the second or third goalkeeper, but was with the team in 2003/04 , 2005/06 , 2006/07 , and in the Invierno 2007 four times Costa Rican football champion. He also won with the team in 2003, the Copa UNCAF Inter Clubes , Central American club championship, and in 2005 the CONCACAF Champions' Cup . In 2007 he moved as the reigning champion to league rivals Puntarenas FC , where he was the goalkeeper in his first year, but lost this position in the second year.

After a more or less unsuccessful time at the club from the port city of Puntarenas , which was only founded in 2004 , he joined the CF Universidad de Costa Rica in 2009 . At the club, which represents the state Universidad de Costa Rica , he was mostly used as a goalkeeper right from the start, but played with the team exclusively to stay up. Before that, the team had played in the Costa Rican second division for 31 years before they made it to the top football league in the country in 2007. An eleventh and penultimate place in 2008/09 was followed by the same placement in the 2009/10 season , in which one did not relegate to the second highest football league only because of the slightly better goal difference, but with the same number of points as the last placed. After the CF Universidad de Costa Rica 2010/11 could no longer keep relegation and went into the second division, Cambronero, who had meanwhile even completed an A international match for Costa Rica, left the club.

Subsequently, he moved to CS Herediano from the central Costa Rican city of Heredia , which, after he was runner-up with the men's team in the Invierno 2011, he led to the first championship title in the following Verano 2012 for almost 20 years. In the following years Cambronero acted alternately as a regular goalkeeper and then again as a permanent replacement and was able to achieve numerous runner-up placements, especially in the winter season (Invierno). To date (as of May 27, 2016) Daniel Cambronero has been runner-up four times (Invierno 2011, Invierno 2012, Invierno 2013 and Invierno 2014), as well as Costa Rican champion just as often (Verano 2012, Verano 2013, Verano 2015, Verano 2016). Furthermore, he stood with the Costa Rican record cup winner, the last title was in 1961, in 2015 in the cup final, which was only decided as the winner after the penalty shootout by CS Cartaginés .

Due to his performances in the league and in the CONCACAF Champions League , in which he has now been used annually, he also recommended himself for the national team of his home country, to which he was called up again in 2011 and this year his second and so far last international match completed. Even after that, he was often in the Costa Rican national team in 2013 and 2014, including during the 2014 World Cup in Brazil , where he was not used.

National team career

He gained his first experience in a national team of his home country in the year 2003 when he with the Costa Rican U-17 national team , among others, at the CONCACAF U-17 Championship of the year 2003 took part and itself as winners of Group B for the U-17 World Cup in Finland qualified. At the World Cup finals, he and the team made it to the quarter-finals, where they lost 2-0 to their colleagues from Argentina . With the U-20 squad of his home country he took part three years later in the Central America and Caribbean Games of 2006 , where he took third place with the Costa Ricans in the final ranking and won the bronze medal associated with it. After various other U-20 appearances and after he was also used in the U-23 squad, he made the leap into the senior national team of Costa Rica in 2009 . He made his debut on May 13, 2009 in a friendly international match against Venezuela when he was in the goal of his home country in the 1-1 draw over the full game. At the CONCACAF Gold Cup 2009 he was behind Keylor Navas as the first goalkeeper and Ricardo González as the second goalkeeper as the third goalkeeper in Rodrigo Kenton's 23-man squad and was not used as such. When Costa Rica was only denied participation in the finals in South Africa because of an offside goal from Uruguay in the World Cup qualifying playoffs , Cambronero was part of the extended Costa Rican squad, but mostly only as the third goalkeeper.

Under Ricardo La Volpe returned Daniel Cambronero back into the Costa Rican national soccer team as he in the beginning of 2011 Copa Centroamericana 2011 alongside Patrick Pemberton alternately as second or third goalkeeper behind Donny Grant was, however, this never substitute acted with the team Eliminated in the final against Honduras . Subsequently, La Volpe did not consider him further and did not take him to the CONCACAF Gold Cup 2011 or the Copa América 2011 . On December 23, 2011 he came, meanwhile under Jorge Luis Pinto , in another friendly international match against Venezuela for his second and so far (as of May 2016) last international match for Costa Rica. In the months that followed, national coach Pinto mainly relied on strong legionnaires and mostly ignored Cambronero. It wasn't until over a year later that Pinto brought him into the squad as a substitute goalkeeper behind Pemberton, which took part in the Copa Centroamericana 2013 in his own country and emerged as the winner there. The goalkeeper, who has just turned 27, sat on the substitutes' bench in all five games of his team. Towards the end of Jorge Luis Pinto's tenure, the latter often brought him into the national squad as the second goalkeeper, where he also sat on the bench in the last two preparatory games for the 2014 World Cup . He then took part in the World Cup finals in Brazil as the second Costa Rican goalkeeper behind Keylor Navas and ahead of Patrick Pemberton , where, with the exception of the last international match, the defeat on penalties against the Netherlands in the quarter-finals, in all Costa Rican encounters unused on the bench. After Pinto was sacked after the World Cup, he took part under the new coach Óscar Ramírez as the second goalkeeper behind Patrick Pemberton in the Copa Centroamericana 2014 , which Costa Rica won again. This was also the last time (as of May 2016) that Cambronero was appointed to the Costa Rican national team.

successes

with CD Saprissa
with CS Herediano
  • 4 × Costa Rican runner-ups: Invierno 2011, Invierno 2012, Invierno 2013, Invierno 2014
  • 4 × Costa Rican champions: Verano 2012, Verano 2013, Verano 2015, Verano 2016
  • 1 × cup winners : 2015
with the Costa Rican national team

Web links