Diego Perrone

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Diego Perrone
Perrone.JPG
Diego Perrone (2008)
Personnel
Surname Diego Rafael Perrone Vienes
birthday 19th November 1977
place of birth MontevideoUruguay
size 168 cm
position Storm
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1996-2003 Danubio FC 163 (49)
2003 Atlas Guadalajara 16 0(5)
2004 Danubio FC at least 10 0(0)
2004-2005 AC Lugano 16 0(6)
2005-2006 Catania Calcio 1 0(0)
2005-2006 Levadiakos 6 0(0)
2006 Nacional Montevideo 12 0(2)
2007 Olimpia Asunción 8 0(0)
2007-2008 Nacional Montevideo 9 0(0)
2008-2009 Danubio FC 23 0(5)
2009 Central Español 13 0(2)
2010–2012 / 13 Danubio FC 65 (14)
National team
Years selection Games (goals) 2
at least 2000 Uruguay U-23 at least 2 0(0)
2003 Uruguay 5 0(2)
1 Only league games are given.
As of December 31, 2015

2 As of October 16, 2012

Diego Perrone , full name Diego Rafael Perrone Vienes (born November 19, 1977 in Montevideo ) is a former Uruguayan football player .

Career

society

According to the club, the 1.68 meter tall striker began his career in Apertura in 1996 with the Uruguayan first division club Danubio . There he played in the sequence up to the Clausura 2003. During this period he was used 163 times in the Primera División . He scored 49 hits. The greatest success was winning the Torneo Apertura 2001 and the Torneo Clausura 2002. In the Apertura 2003 he joined the Mexican club Atlas Guadalajara , for which he played 16 games in the Primera División Mexico and scored five goals. Information that he was then already active in ten games for his former club in the Torneo Clasificatorio 2004, which Danubio won undefeated, refutes the information provided by the club on its website, which does not include him in the team of this tournament. Rather, it is noted there that he returned to Apertura 2004 and then contributed to the victory first at the Torneo Clausura 2004 and finally to winning the second Uruguayan championship in the club's history. He scored the championship decisive goal in the victory over Nacional Montevideo. In the 2004/05 season he then moved to the Swiss Challenge League , where he scored six goals in 16 games at AC Lugano . In the following season there was also an engagement with the Italian Serie B club Catania Calcio (one game, no goal) and one with the Greek club Levadiakos (six games, no goal). He then ended his stay in Europe and joined the 2006 Apertura Nacional Montevideo (twelve games, two goals), but moved on to the Paraguayan first division club Olimpia Asunción in the 2007 Apertura . In the 2007/08 season he was back in the Bolsos squad . Since the 2008/09 season, in which he played 23 times in the Primera División (five goals), he was back for Danubio. Another hiatus followed in the 2009 Apertura when he played 13 games for Central Español and scored two goals. In early January 2010 he returned to Danubio and completed another 65 league games, in which he scored 14 times, until his last appearance on October 21, 2012. There he moved past Rubén “Polillita” Da Silva (71 goals), the previous record scorer in the club's history, with his 72nd goal for Danubio , and has since held this title. In 2012 he also won the Torneo de Honor with his club. On March 27, 2013, he ended his active career with a 1-1 final farewell game between his home club Danubio and Athletico Paranaense .

National team

In the Uruguayan U-23 selection he was used in two international matches (no goal) at the “Torneo Preolímpico” in Brazil in 2000. Perrone also played for the Uruguayan senior team . He made his debut on June 8, 2003 under national coach Juan Ramón Carrasco when he came on in the 90th minute for Germán Hornos in the 2-0 away win in the friendly international against South Korea . In his third international game on July 24, 2003 against Peru, he was the team captain. His last appearance for the national team was on October 15, 2003 in a 2-0 away win against the Mexican national team. Perrone scored both goals of the encounter. He played a total of five international matches with the Celeste . He scored two hits.

successes

  • Uruguayan champion 2004
  • Torneo Apertura 2001
  • Torneo Clausura 2002, 2004
  • Torneo de Honor 2012
  • Record goalscorer Danubios

Private

Perrone is Álvaro Recoba's brother-in-law .

Individual evidence

  1. The date of birth is based on the source: danubio.org.uy or fichajes.com, but ESPN names January 19, 1977 and playerhistory.com November 19, 1979
  2. a b Se retiró “El Diego de la gente” ( Memento from December 31, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) (Spanish) on danubio.org.uy, accessed on December 31, 2015
  3. a b c Page no longer available , search in web archives: Profile on playerhistory.com , accessed on January 6, 2013@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / soccerdatabase.eu
  4. Campeón Clasificatorio, Clausura y Uruguayo 2004 (Spanish) on danubio.org.uy, accessed on January 6, 2013
  5. Statistics profile on ESPN Sports , accessed on August 11, 2013
  6. Player profile on fichajes.com, accessed on August 23, 2014
  7. ^ Diego Perrone in the soccerway.com database, accessed December 31, 2015
  8. a b 72 gritos a la historia de Danubio  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (Spanish) from diariolarepublica.net February 19, 2012, accessed January 6, 2013@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.diariolarepublica.net  
  9. Grandes Jugadores (Spanish) on danubio.org.uy, accessed January 6, 2013
  10. Diego Perrone se retiró del fútbol con Danubio (Spanish) on lr21.com.uy of March 28, 2013, accessed on December 31, 2015
  11. PREOLÍMPICO CONMEBOL BRASIL 2000 (Spanish) on estadisticadefutbol.blogspot.de of December 7, 2014, accessed on December 9, 2014
  12. Uruguay - International Matches 2001-2005 in the RSSSF database . Retrieved September 30, 2014.
  13. Statistical data on international appearances in the Uruguayan national team on rsssf.com , accessed on January 6, 2013