Mario Leguizamón
Mario Leguizamón | ||
Personnel | ||
---|---|---|
Surname | Mario Evaristo Leguizamón Martínez | |
birthday | July 1, 1982 | |
place of birth | Montevideo , Uruguay | |
size | 176 cm | |
position | midfield | |
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
2000-2001 | Club Atlético Peñarol | |
2002-2003 | → Plaza Colonia (loan) | (at least 14) |
2004 | Club Atlético Peñarol | at least 17 (at least 2) |
2005 | Club Deportivo Colonia | 3 (0) |
2006 | Montevideo Wanderers | 7 (1) |
2006-2008 | Universidad San Martín | at least 33 (at least 16) |
2008 | CS Emelec | |
2009 | Deportivo Tachirá | |
2009-2010 | Durazno FC | at least 3 (0) |
2010-2011 | José Gálvez FBC | 37 (6) |
2011 | Club Guaraní | |
2011–2012 | César Vallejo | 19 (4) |
2012 | Rampla Juniors | 6 (0) |
2012-2013 | Club Sportivo Cienciano | 8 (0) |
2013 | Club Universitario de Deportes | 0 (0) |
2013-2014 | Atlético Huila | 13 (3) |
2014 | Boston River | 14 (0) |
2014 | Plaza Colonia | 8 (0) |
2015 | CD Olimpia | 13 (2) |
2015-2016 | Villa Española | 3 (0) |
2016 | River Plate Montevideo | 3 (0) |
2016– | Club Atlético Progreso | 11 (1) |
National team | ||
Years | selection | Games (goals) |
at least 2001 | Uruguay U20 | |
1 Only league games are given. As of December 31, 2016 |
Mario Leguizamón , full name Mario Evaristo Leguizamón Martínez , (born July 1, 1982 in Montevideo ) is a Uruguayan football player . Over the course of his career he has been under contract with clubs in Uruguay, Peru, Ecuador, Venezuela, Paraguay, Colombia and Honduras.
Career
societies
The 1.76 meter tall midfielder Leguizamón was at the beginning of his sporting career from 2000 to 2001 in the ranks of Club Atlético Peñarol . In 2002 and 2003 he played on loan at Plaza Colonia . In 2002 he was the most successful goalscorer of his team with 14 first division goals. Then he returned to the "Aurinegros" back, was used there in the 2004 season in 17 games of the Primera División and scored two goals. In the 2005 season Leguizamón belonged to the squad of Club Deportivo Colonia and played three first division matches (no goal). During the Clausura 2006 he was a player in the Montevideo Wanderers , where he was used in seven games in the top Uruguayan league and scored once in the opposing goal. From the beginning of July 2006 to April 2008 his first international career station followed at Universidad San Martín . In 2007 he won the national championship with the club. For the Peruvians, he played at least 33 league games and scored 16 goals. Leguizamón spent the second half of 2008 in the ranks of the Ecuadorian club CS Emelec . Deportivo Tachirá from Venezuela was his employer for the first six months of the following year . With the Venezuelans he was placed in two games (no goal) of the Copa Libertadores 2009 . At the beginning of September 2009 he was signed by the Uruguayan second division club Durazno FC , where he had at least three personally goalless appearances in the Segunda División . In January 2010 Leguizamón moved to José Gálvez FBC , for whom he appeared 37 times in the Peruvian Primera División and scored six goals. In mid-January 2011 he joined the Guaraní Club from Paraguay . An engagement with César Vallejo followed in April of that year . At the club from Peru, the statistics show him 19 appearances in the first division with four goals and two appearances (one goal) in the 2011 Copa Sudamericana . In January 2012, he switched to the Rampla Juniors , for whom he played six first division games in the 2012 Clausura without a personal goal. From mid-July of that year, he continued his career again in Peru and completed eight matches (no goal) in the Primera División for Club Sportivo Cienciano by January 2013 . Then the Club Universitario de Deportes signed him . Leguizamón left the club again in early August 2013 without playing a competitive game and was henceforth active for Atlético Huila in Colombia. There he played in 13 games in Primera A and scored three goals. In 2014, two career stages followed in his Uruguayan homeland. For Boston River in the Clausura 2014 and then for Plaza Colonia in the Hinserie of the 2014/15 season, he completed 14 and eight games in the Segunda División - each without a personal goal. At the turn of the year 2015, Leguizamón joined CD Olimpia . With the Hondurans he was used 13 times (two goals) in the national league and once (no goal) in the Liga de Campeones CONCACAF . His team won both the 2015 Clausura championship and the 2015 Copa de Honduras . In the second half of October he moved to the Uruguayan second division club Villa Española , which he left after three league appearances at the end of January 2016 in favor of the first division side River Plate Montevideo . With the Montevideans he played three league games and two games in the Copa Libertadores 2016 . As with the previous career station, he remained without a goal. In mid-August 2016, he was signed by the Atlético Progreso Club, which is part of the Segunda División . During the 2016 season he scored one goal in eleven second division appearances.
National team
Leguizamón was part of the Uruguayan U-20 selection that took part in the 2001 U-20 South American Championship in Ecuador .
successes
- Peruvian champion: 2007
- Honduran champion: Clausura 2015
- Copa de Honduras : 2015
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c d Mario Leguizamón in the soccerway.com database, accessed January 1, 2017
- ^ Uruguay 2002 Championship in the RSSSF database . Retrieved January 1, 2017.
- ↑ a b c Mario Leguizamón in the database of footballdatabase.eu (English), accessed on January 1, 2017
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Leguizamón, Mario |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Leguizamón Martínez, Mario Evaristo (full name) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Uruguayan soccer player |
DATE OF BIRTH | July 1, 1982 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Montevideo , Uruguay |