Ramiro Blacut

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Ramiro Blacut
Ramiro Blacut.jpg
Personnel
Surname Ramiro Blacut Rodríguez
birthday January 3, 1944
place of birth La PazBolivia
position Storm
Juniors
Years station
approx. 1956-1959 Club Bolívar
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1959–? Club Bolívar
1961 Club Always Ready
1963-1965 Ferro Carril Oeste
1965-1966 FC Bayern Munich 0 (0)
000? –1971 Club Bolívar
1972-1973 FBC Melgar
1974 Club The Strongest
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1963-1972 Bolivia 23 (3)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1979 Club Bolívar
1980-1981 Club The Strongest
1982 Club blooming
1983 Club Bolívar
1984 Chaco Petrolero
1985-1986 Club blooming
1987 Deportivo Lítoral
1988-1989 Club Bolívar
1990 Club blooming
1992 Club blooming
1994 Club The Strongest
1995 Club Bolívar
1996 Club The Strongest
1997 CD Guabirá
1998 Jorge Wilstermann
1999 Real Santa Cruz
1999-2000 SD Aucas
2001-2003 CD El Nacional
2004-2005 Bolivia
? Deportivo Cuenca
? Oriente Petrolero
1 Only league games are given.

Ramiro Blacut Rodríguez [ raˈmɪɾo βlaˈkʊt roðˈrɪɣez ] (born January 3, 1944 in La Paz ) is a former Bolivian football player and coach .

Career as a player

societies

Blacut was born to Mario Blacut and Rosa Rodríguez. He played since the age of 12 for the Bolívar club , the football club based in his birthplace La Paz. At the age of 15 he made his debut in the first team. In 1961 he joined the team of the Bolivian club Always Ready for around three months on their European tour. He was also active for the La Bélgica de Santa Cruz club for half a year . Then moved to the football department of the Argentine sports club Ferro Carril Oeste from Caballito , a district of Buenos Aires , when the Greek coach Dan Georgiadis was signed there. In some sources, three seasons from 1963 to 1965 are given as the period of his engagement with the Argentines. In the Argentine capital he finished his school education with the Abitur and returned to Bolivia in 1963 for the South American Championship. After the tournament he intended to study civil engineering in Mexico. Other sources report that he made this decision in 1965 and his time at Ferro Carril Oeste, which then ended according to these sources. In Mexico, however, he met a friend who had been living in Germany for years and persuaded him to go there too. In Germany, he completed a trial session at FC Bayern Munich, which was not yet part of the Bundesliga . In July 1965 he joined the Bundesliga promoted Bayern Munich. For Bayern, however, he did not play a competitive game in the 1965/66 season . His teammates there included the young Franz Beckenbauer , Sepp Maier and Gerd Müller . With a university degree he returned to Bolivia from Germany four years later. There he was again a player of Club Bolívar in the "Liga Profesional", the semi-professional league. In December 1971, moved Blacut to Peru in Arequipa based first division FBC Melgar , which he left after two seasons in December 1973 and - back in Bolivia - the The Strongest joined. In the 1974 season, his last, he again won the double and the La Paz national championship.

National team

Blacut recorded his greatest success with the national team of Bolivia when he won the South American Championship , then called Campeonato Sudamericano , in his own country in 1963 . In the six tournament games he was used four times and achieved on March 28, 1963 in La Paz in a 3-2 victory over the selection of Argentina, the interim 2-1 lead; his only tournament hit. The team benefited from the height of the venues La Paz (3,600 m above sea level ) and Cochabamba (2,458 m above sea level) , which was unusual for other teams, and won the title, which was then played in the league system, undefeated. The final game against the "Seleção" on March 31, 1963 was decisive and had to be won, as the worst competitor Paraguay played at the same time against "La Albiceleste" and was not allowed to win. Blacut, chosen as the best player of the tournament, won the game with his team 5-4, Paraguay's selection played a 1-1 draw.

Career as a coach

Ramiro, who is a graduate of the German Sport University Cologne , began his coaching activity in January 1979 at his parent club, Club Bolívar , which he was in charge of until the end of the year - and this also in 1983, 1988 to 1989 and 1995.

The Bolivian national team trained Ramiro Blacut for the first time between 1979 and 1981. Even during the Copa America 1991 he was on the sidelines, but the team was eliminated with only two points after the group stage from the tournament.

After his first engagement at Bolívar, he worked at Club The Strongest until December 1981 , which he also coached in 1994 and 1996 from January to December.

Ramiro Blacut stayed as a coach mostly only for a short time with a club, but coached many clubs several times. While he also worked in Ecuador from 1999 onwards, before that he was only active in Bolivia. Blacut coached Club Blooming from Santa Cruz de la Sierra four times : from January to December 1982, 1985 to 1986, 1990 and 1992.

In 1984 the coach was employed by Chaco Petrolero from La Paz, in 1987 he coached the Deportivo Lítoral team from the same city. After his last engagement with Club The Strongest, Blacut went to CD Guabirá in Montero in the Santa Cruz Department in January 1997 , where he stayed until the end of the year. From January of the following year he coached Jorge Wilstermann's team , and between January and June 1999 he worked for Real Santa Cruz from Santa Cruz de la Sierra .

Then he moved to Ecuador. From July 1999 until December 2000 he coached the SD Aucas team . He then went to CD El Nacional , where he was a coach until 2003.

On April 14, 2004 Blacut was again the national coach of his home country and took over from Uruguayan Nelson Acosta . He took part with the team in the Copa America 2004 , but did not get beyond the group stage . In qualifying for the 2006 World Cup , Bolivia finished last in the South American group . On January 9, 2005, Blacut announced his resignation as national coach, since he denounced the lack of support of the Bolivian clubs.

This was followed by two short engagements at Deportivo Cuenca and Oriente Petrolero , his last position as a club coach.

Success as a player

  • 1963 South American Champion
  • Bolivian champion 1968 (with Club Bolívar) , 1974 (with Club The Strongest)
  • Bolivian National Championship of La Paz 1966, 1967, 1969 (with Club Bolívar) , 1974 (with Club The Strongest)
  • Bolivian Cup Winner 1968 (with Club Bolívar) , 1974 (with Club The Strongest)
  • DFB Cup winner 1966 (with FC Bayern Munich; not used)

Award

  • Best player of the tournament at the 1963 Copa America

Others

Blacut is the widower of his late wife María del Pilar Olmos and father of their two daughters María Juana and Andrea Patricia. During his time in Germany, he obtained a degree in construction.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e FIGURAS DE AYER: RAMIRO BLACUT (Spanish) of November 17, 2009, accessed on January 10, 2016
  2. a b c Historia • Ramiro Blacut Rodríguez ha sido uno de los inolvidables delanteros que tuvo el fútbol nacional (Spanish) from May 4, 2009, accessed on January 10, 2016
  3. a b c Ramiro Blacut: Construyendo camino (Spanish) on dechalaca.com from September 5, 2011, accessed on January 10, 2016
  4. Bolivian final tables 1950–1990 on rsssf .com
  5. ^ Bolivian cup competitions from 1960 on rsssf.com
  6. ^ Copa América - 1963 ( Memento of December 28, 2010 in the Internet Archive ) on brasilienportal.ch
  7. a b Ramiro Blacut es el nuevo técnico de la selección boliviana (Spanish) on eluniverso.com from April 14, 2004, accessed on January 10, 2016
  8. Press release on kicker .de
  9. Selección de Bolivia se quedó sin DT por renuncia de Ramiro Blacut (Spanish) on larepublica.pe from January 9, 2005, accessed on January 10, 2016
  10. Press release on kicker .de