Santiago Ostolaza (soccer player, 1962)

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Santiago Ostolaza
Personnel
Surname Santiago Ostolaza Sosa
birthday July 10, 1962
place of birth DoloresUruguay
size 190 cm
position midfield
Juniors
Years station
Bella Vista de Dolores
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1980-1985 Bella Vista
1986-1990 Nacional Montevideo
1990-1992 Cruz Azul 72 (8)
1992-1993 Querétaro Fútbol Club 38 (2)
1993 Gimnasia y Esgrima de La Plata 12 (0)
1994 Kyoto Sanga
1995 Defensor Sporting
1995 Olimpia
1996 Nacional Montevideo 20 0(1)
1996-1997 Aurora FC ?? (0)
1997 José Gálvez 1 (0)
1998-1999 Club Atlético Rentistas ? (0)
2000 Montevideo Wanderers 18 (1)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
at least 1981 Uruguay U-20 at least 6 (0)
1983 Uruguay (Pan American team) 4 (0)
1985-1993 Uruguay 43 (6)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2001 River Plate Montevideo
2001 Deportivo Maldonado
2002 Montevideo Wanderers
2003-2004 Nacional Montevideo
2006-2007 Alacranes de Durango
2009 Guerreros FC de Hermosillo
2011 CD Espoli
2014-2015 Uruguay U-17
2015 Racing Club de Montevideo
2017 Juventud de las Piedras
1 Only league games are given.

Santiago Javier Ostolaza Sosa (born July 10, 1962 in Dolores , Uruguay ) is a former Uruguayan football player and current coach .

Player career

society

El Vasco , born in Dolores as the eldest of five brothers and a sister, Santiago Ostolaza comes from a football-loving family. His father was already active as a goalkeeper, his uncle also played for the club Bella Vista de Dolores in Barrio Sur , where Santiago Ostolaza also took his first football steps in the youth team. Ostolaza's father, also showing up for his son's youth club, like Carlos Ostolaza, Santiago's brother in 2009, was also active in the selection of Dolores. Ostolaza was ordered to the first team at the age of 15 and finally made his debut there at the age of 16. His career began in 1980 in the Primera División at Club Atlético Bella Vista . There he was part of the squad until 1985. He then moved to Nacional in Montevideo in 1986 . There he won both the Copa Libertadores and the World Cup with his teammates in 1988 . A year later he also won the Copa Interamericana and won the Recopa Sudamericana . With the 1990/91 season he took on his first foreign engagement and also played in the 1991/92 season for the Mexican club Cruz Azul . During this period he has recorded 72 appearances in the Primera División Mexico, in which he scored eight goals. Subsequently, he was under contract with Querétaro Fútbol Club and came to a further 38 first division appearances (two goals) in the 1992/93 round. For Clausura 1993 he went to the Argentine club Gimnasia y Esgrima de La Plata and played twelve goalless games for him personally. In 1994 he signed for the first time a contract for a football activity outside the Spanish-speaking area and joined the Japanese club Kyōto Sanga in the Japan Football League . Already in the Apertura 1995 he returned to Uruguay and was in the squad of the Defensor Sporting Club . Further stations were in the Clausura 1995 the Paraguayan club Olimpia , again Nacional (20 games / one goal) in Torneo Apertura 1996, in the season 1996/97 the Aurora FC and 1997 José Gálvez (one game / no goal). The Club Atlético Rentistas hired him from Apertura 1998 to Apertura 1999 . As a final career station at that time in the are in 2000 Segunda División gambling Montevideo Wanderers recorded. There he stood on the field 18 times and scored one last goal in professional football.

National team

Ostolaza became South American champions in 1981 with the Uruguayan U-20 selection as team captain alongside players like José Batista , Adolfo Barán , Jorge da Silva and Enzo Francescoli . During the tournament he was used by coach Aníbal Gutiérrez Ponce six times (no goal). With the Uruguayan team he also represented his home country at the Pan American Games in 1983 and won the football tournament there with the Celeste . He acted as team captain. In the course of the tournament he played all four games. In 1987 he participated in the pre-Olympic tournament in Uruguay's selection. The midfielder was also a member of the Uruguayan national soccer team . He took part in the 1990 World Cup and was used there in three games. Ostolaza scored in a total of 43 internationals completed from October 16, 1985 to October 13, 1993 for his home country six goals. He was most successful with his first participation in the Copa America in 1989 , when he was defeated with Uruguay in the final against Brazil. 4 years later he only reached the quarter-finals in his second and last tournament.

successes

society

  • Copa Libertadores (1988)
  • World Cup (1988)
  • Copa Interamericana (1989)
  • Recopa Sudamericana (1989)

National team

  • 1981 U-20 South American champion
  • Gold medal at the 1983 Pan American Games

Coaching

Ostolaza coached the River Plate Montevideos team at least in the early months of 2001, with no precise timing currently possible .

He has also been a coach at Deportivo Maldonado , Montevideo Wanderers , Nacional and Cerro Largo in Uruguay. In Mexico he coached the clubs Real Sociedad de Zacatecas , Alacranes de Durango and Guerreros FC de Hermosillo . Most recently he was in charge of the Ecuadorian club Espoli from March 2011 to September 2011 .

After he had been appointed coordinator of the Bella Vista youth department a few weeks earlier , he became national coach of the Uruguayan U-17 team in February 2014 as the successor to Fabián Coito, who had switched to U-20 . His coaching team consisted of Adrián Sarkissian , Gonzalo Noguera and Guillermo Souto . In the 3-0 win on May 13, 2014 against Paraguay's U-17s, he was responsible for the first time in an official international match. After missing the World Cup qualification with the U-17, he gave up this position in April 2015 and took over the training management at the first division team Racing Club de Montevideo . His work with the Montevideans ended on September 1st of the same year. On December 31, 2015 it was announced that he would from now on hold the position of sports coordinator in the junior division of Bella Vista.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Soriano // Dolores - Club Atletico Bella Vista ( Memento from December 21, 2011 in the web archive archive.today ) (Spanish), accessed on November 10, 2012
  2. Santiago Ostolaza ( Memento of the original of March 6, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (Spanish) from doloresnet.com, accessed November 10, 2012 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.doloresnet.com
  3. Recopa 1988 (English), accessed on November 10, 2012
  4. Page no longer available , search in web archives: Profile on playerhistory.com , accessed on November 10, 2012@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / soccerdatabase.eu
  5. a b c Entrevista a Santiago Ostolaza (Spanish) on auf.org.uy, accessed on January 2, 2015
  6. Juventud de América (Spanish) in La República of December 30, 2002, accessed on October 27, 2012
  7. Sudamericanos s20: década del 80 (Spanish) on auf.org.uy, accessed on May 11, 2015
  8. a b Nació Santiago Ostolaza, campeón de la Libertadores en 1988 (Spanish) of July 10, 2012, accessed on November 10, 2012
  9. Panamerican Games 1983 - Match details in the RSSSF database . Retrieved August 26, 2013.
  10. Statistical data on international appearances in the Uruguayan national team on rsssf.com , accessed on November 10, 2012
  11. ¿Por qué los técnicos uruguayos fueron defensas, goleros o mediocampistas? (Spanish) from lr21.com.uy on May 29, 2001, accessed October 27, 2016
  12. a b Santiago Ostolaza in the soccerway.com database, accessed March 17, 2016
  13. a b You're my home (Spanish) on futbol.com.uy of December 31, 2015, accessed on March 17, 2016