Santiago Silva (soccer player, 1980)

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Santiago Silva
Personnel
Surname Santiago Martín Silva Olivera
birthday December 9, 1980
place of birth MontevideoUruguay
size 183 cm
position attack
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1997 Central Español (Formativas)
1998-1999 Central Español
1999-2000 River Plate Montevideo
2001 Defensor Sporting
2002 Corinthians São Paulo
2002 Nacional Montevideo
2003 River Plate Montevideo
2003-2004 →  Energie Cottbus  (loan) 32 0(9)
2004-2005 SC Beira-Mar 30 0(8)
2005 Newell's Old Boys
2006 Gimnasia y Esgrima La Plata
2006 →  Central Español  (loan) 13 0(3)
2006-2007 Gimnasia y Esgrima La Plata 23 0(6)
2008-2009 Velez Sarsfield 21 0(7) or? (10)
2009-2010 →  CA Banfield  (loan) 35 (23) or (22)
2010-2011 Velez Sarsfield 43 (24)
2011–2012 AC Florence 12 0(1)
2012-2013 Boca Juniors 38 (13)
2013 Boca Juniors B
2013-2015 CA Lanus 54 (13) or (12)
2015 Arsenal de Sarandí 20 0(7)
2016-2017 CA Banfield 26 (11)
2017– Universidad Católica 4 0(0)
1 Only league games are given.
As of March 2, 2017

Santiago Silva , full name Santiago Martín Silva Olivera , (born December 9, 1980 in Montevideo ) is a Uruguayan football player .

Career

society

The Tanque (German: "Panzer") called 1.83 meters tall offensive player Silva was at the beginning of his career in 1997 in the ranks of the reserve team of Central Español . From 1998 he was a member of the club's professional team. At the beginning of August 1999 he moved to River Plate Montevideo within the Uruguayan capital . At the beginning of 2001 he joined Defensor Sporting . In 2002 he played for the Brazilian club Corinthians São Paulo . He then signed a contract with Nacional Montevideo , where he was planned as the successor to Richard Morales , who, however, ultimately did not leave the club. Thus, Silva did not have enough working hours. In the second half of 2002 he was part of the “Bolsos” team. In the first half of 2003 Silva was again active for River Plate Montevideo. In July 2003 he left the South American continent to continue his career on loan from Energie Cottbus in Germany. In the second division 2003/04 season he was used 32 times (nine goals) in the 2nd Bundesliga. From June 2004 a career station followed at the Portuguese first division club SC Beira-Mar , for which he completed 30 league games in the 2004/05 season and scored eight goals. From June 2005 until the end of the year, Newell's Old Boys from Argentina was his employer. In early 2006, signed him Gimnasia y Esgrima La Plata and has already lent him some four weeks later to his former club Central Español made, for which he in the Clausura 2006 13 times in La Liga aground and scored three goals. In the middle of 2006 he was active again for the lending association Gimnasia y Esgrima La Plata until the end of 2007. During this period he played 23 first division matches and scored six times into the opposing goal. From 2008 to January 2009 he was a member of the Vélez Sársfields team. Depending on the sources, the statistics show him at the club from Buenos Aires seven goals in 21 league games or ten league hits without precise details of the stakes. Silva then played 35 first division games on loan for CA Banfield until the end of 2009 and scored 23 or 22 goals, depending on the sources. He won with the team as top scorer the Apertura 2009. In January 2010 he returned to Vélez Sársfield and was until the end of August 2011 in 43 games (24 goals) of the Primera División , two encounters (no goal) of the Copa Sudamericana 2010 , six games (four goals) of the Copa Libertadores 2010 and nine clashes (four goals) of the Copa Libertadores 2011 . He left the Argentinians to take up another career position in Europe. This time he signed with Fiorentina in Italy. He was used in twelve games (one goal) in Serie A and one game (no goal) in Coppa Italia . Again he did not stay long in Europe and already started a new engagement in Argentina with the Boca Juniors in mid-January 2012 . He scored 13 times in 38 league appearances for the "Xeneizes". He also played two games (one goal) in the Copa Argentina , one (no goal) in the Super Copa, two games (one goal) in the Copa Sudamericana 2012 , eleven (three goals) in the Copa Libertadores 2012 and one (one goal ) of the Copa Libertadores 2013 . For a few weeks he still belongs to the second team of the Boca Juniors. He finally moved to CA Lanús in late July 2013 , with whom he won the Copa Sudamericana 2013 , to which he contributed with three goals in ten missions. During his club membership, which lasted until mid-March 2015, he played 54 times for the team from Lanús in the top Argentine division and scored 13 times in the opposing goal. Other international missions ( Copa Libertadores 2014 , Copa Sudamericana 2014 and Recopa Sudamericana ) were also added. He spent the rest of 2015 in the ranks of Arsenal de Sarandí . There he ran in 20 first division matches (seven goals). Since the beginning of 2016 he has once again been in the ranks of CA Banfield. He signed a one and a half year contract. There he was used in 26 first division games (eleven goals), two games of the Copa Argentina (no goal) and two matches (no goal) of the Copa Sudamericana 2016 . In mid-January 2017, he moved to Universidad Católica in Chile and has so far (as of March 2, 2017) completed four league games (no goal) with the club from Las Condes .

successes

Corinthians

CA Lanus

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f Santiago Silva in the soccerway.com database, accessed March 3, 2017
  2. a b Tanque Silva at fcenergie-museum.de, accessed on June 1, 2016
  3. a b “Era hincha de Nacional, jugué, y ya no me gustó” (Spanish) on lr21.com.uy from May 25, 2011, accessed on June 1, 2016
  4. a b c d e Santiago Silva in the database of footballdatabase.eu (English), accessed on May 31, 2016
  5. Santiago Silva in the database of kicker.de , accessed on May 31, 2016
  6. a b Santiago Silva volvió a Banfield, donde fue campeón en el Apertura 2009 (Spanish) on lanacion.com.ar of December 30, 2015, accessed on June 1, 2016