Daniel Enríquez

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Daniel Enríquez
Personnel
Surname Daniel Antonio Enríquez Fernández
birthday May 20, 1958
place of birth MontevideoUruguay
size 182 cm
position Defender
Juniors
Years station
1974-1988 Nacional Montevideo
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1978-1981 Nacional Montevideo
1983 Cúcuta Deportivo
1984 Peñarol
1985-1986 Deportivo Neza
1986 Puebla FC
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
at least 1977 U-20 Uruguay at least 7 (0)
Uruguay
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1986-1988 Puebla FC
1988-1989 Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León
1990-1991 Tampico-Madero FC
1991 Nacional Montevideo (Universitario)
1991 Colón Fútbol Club
1994-1996 Nacional Montevideo (assistant coach / youth)
1997-1998 Consadole Sapporo
1999 Nacional Montevideo (Formativas)
1 Only league games are given.

Daniel Enríquez (born May 20, 1958 in Montevideo , Uruguay ) is a former Uruguayan football player and coach . Since 2005 he has been sports director at Nacional Montevideo .

Player career

society

The 1.82-meter-tall defender began his career in 1979 at Nacional Montevideo , the club he had been a member of since 1974 and for which he played in the youth team of the 6th Division . There he was set up as the central defender from the start. Both in the 6th División and in the fifth ( Quinta División ) and the third ( Tercera División ) he was able to win the Uruguayan championship with his teammates. In 1978 he was in the first team for the first time. There he won the Uruguayan championship in 1980. The victory at the Copa Libertadores that year was followed by the World Cup final in February 1981, in which he - standing on the starting grid - defeated Nottingham Forest with the Montevideans . During his time with the Bolsos team , he experienced at least five coaches: Luis Cubilla , Ricardo De León , Pedro Dellacha and Juan Martín Mujica . It followed in 1982 a year in which injuries determined the Uruguayan's career and due to which he did not play a game. The following year he played for the then coached by Lóndero Colombian team Cúcuta Deportivo . There he was able to convince completely and was also in a selection of the best foreigners in Colombian football. Then, in his eyes, he made “one of the worst mistakes” of his career when he chose Peñarol 's arch-rival Nacionals for a stopover in 1984 . Hugo Fernández and Roque Máspoli led the training of the team with which he celebrated the title of the Liga Mayor and the win of the Liguilla that year . He then spent the next six years in Mexico , where he initially joined Toros de Neza from 1985 to 1986 . His coach there was Miguel Marín . Then he was also in 1986 in the ranks of Puebla FC .

National team

With the junior national team of Uruguay , he was able to win the U-20 South American Championship under coach Raul Bentancourt in 1977 . During the tournament he was used seven times (no goal). He was also a member of the squad that finished fourth in the 1977 Junior World Cup . He was later appointed to the senior national team.

Coaching

In 1986 he took up a coaching career after completing the coaching course. First he worked in Mexico until 1991. There he started in 1986 as an assistant coach at his former club Puebla . This was followed by Universidad Autonoma de Nuevo Leon and Tampico Madero as another career stations. At the same time, he also worked in various functions in football schools in various Mexican institutions. After returning to his home country in 1991, he took over the university team Nacional Universitario at Nacional . In the following season he took over his first Uruguayan first division club with the Colón Fútbol Club . His club promptly became champions of Torneo Apertura in 1991. From 1994 to 1996 he was initially assistant coach Nacionals in the Primera División and later took over the youth teams, where he won Uruguayan championship titles with the U-20s and U-23s. At that stage of his coaching career he came into contact with the Colegio Narashino in Uruguay , which ultimately resulted in his next job. So he took over the Japanese team Consadole Sapporo from 1997 to 1998 , became champions of the Japan Football League with them in 1997 and also learned the national language at that time. Since 1999 he has been working again at Nacional in various functions. After initially taking over the club's reserve team ( Formativas ) and leading it to titles, he gave up coaching in 2000 and was initially coordinator of the entire youth division in the club. He held this position until 2005. Since then he has held the office of sports director.

Others

Enríquez is married and has two children. Its activities are not limited to the soccer field. He also works as a DJ under the name DJHansamu in the field of electronic music - and here especially in the minimal field - and a member of a group called La Figari , with which he takes part in the Desfile de llamadas in the Uruguayan carnival . He also holds exhibitions of his 350-plus carnival mask collection, which consists of both local and world-class pieces, and which he began putting together during his time in Mexico in May 1985. For example, there is a permanent exhibition in the Museo del Carnaval . In addition, Enríquez has already received invitations to Argentina , Cuba and New York .

successes

As a player

society

  • World Cup (1980)
  • Copa Libertadores (1980)
  • Uruguayan Champion (1980)
  • 2 × Liga Mayor (1979, 1984)

National team

  • U-20 South American Champion (1977)

As a trainer

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Page no longer available , search in web archives: Profile on www.playerhistory.com , accessed on January 7, 2012@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / soccerdatabase.eu
  2. Sudamericanos s20: década del 70 ( Memento of the original from May 18, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (Spanish) from auf.org.uy, accessed May 11, 2015 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.auf.org.uy
  3. Internet presence of the Club Nacional (Spanish), accessed on January 7, 2012