José Luis Saldivar

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José Luis Saldivar
Personnel
Surname José Luis Saldivar Berrones
birthday March 8, 1954
place of birth Ciudad VictoriaMexico
date of death 20th August 2014
Place of death Leon , Mexico
size 171 cm
position midfield
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1975-1988 CF Monterrey 63 (16)
1978-1979 CD Tampico 18 0(2)
1979-1984 Atlético Potosino 96 0(7)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1992-1993 Tampico-Madero FC
1996 Club León
2000 Club León
2003 CD Irapuato
2003-2004 Club León
2004 Cruz Azul
2005 UAT Correcaminos
2005 Club León
2006 Lagartos de Tabasco
2006 Dorados de Sinaloa
2007 Tampico-Madero FC
2009 UAG Tecos II
1 Only league games are given.

José Luis Saldivar (born March 8, 1954 in Ciudad Victoria , Tamaulipas , † August 20, 2014 in León ) was a Mexican football coach and previously player who played in midfield .

Life

Stations as a player

Saldivar played his first game in the Mexican Primera División on November 1, 1975 in the dress of the CF Monterrey against the CF Atlante . In the same game Saldivar scored his first goal in the top Mexican league and saved his team by his equalizer to 1-1 in the 84th minute from a possible home defeat. In his first season in 1975/76 Saldivar brought it to a total of 34 missions and twelve hits. Both were his personal records that he could never reach again.

His second most appearances (29) he reached in the 1980/81 season for Atlético Potosino and in the same season he scored three goals, as well as in the seasons 1976/77 and 1979/80; his second most successful seasons in this regard.

On May 18, 1984 Saldivar played his last appearance in the first Mexican league wearing Atlético Potosino, of all things, in a home game against his former club Monterrey, which ended 1-1.

Stations as a trainer

His first major success as a coach celebrated Saldivar in the 1992/93 season when he won the runner-up in the Segunda División with the Tampico-Madero FC he coached .

Ten years later he celebrated his greatest success as a coach by winning the second division championship with the CD Irapuato in the 2002/03 season and the associated promotion to the first division. In the promotion finals at the end of the season, the Freseros prevailed against their arch-rival León , where Saldivar was head coach several times both before and after. So he celebrated his debut in the ranks of the Esmeraldas in the Mexican Primera División, which he coached for the first time on February 24, 1996 in the home game against Club América (2: 2) and which he then won through victories over Atlas (2: 1), Toluca (2: 0), Necaxa (3: 1) and Atlético Celaya (2: 0) led to the Repechaje , where they failed against the Tigres (1: 4 and 3: 1).

The start of the 2003/04 season was extremely successful for the newly promoted Irapuato with three wins and two draws from the first five games. But after only one win and one draw could be retracted in the next six games, Saldivar was sacked after a 3-1 home defeat against Necaxa on October 5, 2003.

Soon afterwards he was again committed by Club León, with whom he again won the championship of the Primera División 'A' in the Clausura 2004 , but at the end of the season he failed in the promotion finals against the Dorados de Sinaloa (1: 2 and 2: 2) and thus missed the return of the Esmeraldas to the Primera División.

His last position as head coach was Saldivar in the second half of the second division season 2008/09 in the service of UAG Tecos II , with whom he lost his last league game as a coach on May 3, 2009 with 0-2 at Club Tijuana (0-2).

On August 20, 2014, José Luis Saldivar died of a heart attack.

Successes (as a trainer)

swell

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Fallce José Luis Saldivar