Walter Ormeño

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Walter Ormeño
1ormeño.JPG
Personnel
Surname Francisco Walter Ormeño Arango
birthday December 3, 1926
place of birth LimaPeru
date of death 4th January 2020
size 192 cm
position goalkeeper
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1946-1949 Universitario de Deportes
1950 Huracan de Medellin
1951-1952 Mariscal Sucre FBC
1952-1955 Boca Juniors
1956 Rosario Central
1957 Alianza Lima
1957-1959 Club America
1959-1960 CD Zacatepec
1960-1961 Montreal
1961–1962 Club America
1962-1963 CF Atlante
1963-1964 Atlético Morelia
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1949-1957 Peru 13 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1964-1965 CF Atlante
1966 Cruz Azul
1967-1968 UNAM Pumas
1969-1970 Club America
1971-1972 CSD Comunicaciones
1973 CD Guadalajara
1974 Atlético Español
1975-1976 CD Veracruz
CSD Comunicaciones
1980-1981 Atlético Español
1981-1982 Club León
1982-1984 Necaxa
at least 1989–1990 CSD Municipal
at least 1991, at least 2000 CSD Comunicaciones
1 Only league games are given.

Francisco Walter Ormeño Arango (born December 3, 1926 in Lima - † January 4, 2020 ), also known by the nicknames Supermán , Gulliver , Gigante de Ébano ( German for the black giant) and La Pantera Negra , was originally Peruvian and later naturalized Mexican soccer player in the position of goalkeeper who worked as a coach after his active career .

Life

society

Ormeño, who was born in the La Victoria district, home of Alianza Lima , grew up in the Barranco district after his parents moved and began his professional career at Alianza's arch-rival Universitario de Deportes .

In his first season in 1946, he won the Peruvian championship title with Universitario , which he was able to win again in 1949 with the same club. At the beginning of 1950 he moved to the Colombian club Huracán , but returned to his homeland in 1951 and earned his living at Mariscal Sucre .

In 1952 he went to the Argentine top club Boca Juniors , where he was under contract for four years and with whom he won the Argentine championship in 1954 .

After two short stints at the Argentine league rival Rosario Central (1956) and his actual home club Alianza Lima (1957), Ormeño moved to the Mexican league , where he first played for Club America and then for Zacatepec . In 1960 he moved to Montreal for a one-year stint and then was under contract for one season each with América, Atlante and Atlético Morelia , where he ended his active career in 1964.

National team

Between 1949 and 1957 Ormeño completed 13 international matches for the Peruvian national team , in which he had to accept a total of 26 goals.

His first and most important internationals he played in the context of the Copa America 1949 , in which he completed all seven games for Peru, in four of them remained clean and finished third with his team.

Trainer

Ormeño began his coaching career in the 1964/65 season with his former club Atlante.

The first 13 games of the 1966/67 season he coached the CD Cruz Azul before he was replaced by Raúl Cárdenas . Then he was under contract for about two years with the Pumas de la UNAM , with whom he was runner-up in the 1967/68 season, and then with his former club América.

In 1971 he moved to the CSD Comunicaciones , with which he won both the 1st Copa Confraternidad 1970/71 and the Guatemalan championship twice in a row , before he briefly coached the CD Guadalajara in 1973 .

In the 1975/76 season he looked after the Tiburones Rojos de Veracruz before returning to Guatemala and again coached the CSD Comunicaciones and led to another championship title in the 1979/80 season. Immediately after this success he returned to Mexico, where he looked after Atlético Español , León and Necaxa over the next few years . He then went back to Guatemala and won his fourth and fifth championship titles in 1989/90 with the CSD Municipal and in 1991 again with the CSD Comunicaciónes. In 2000 he was again runner-up in the Clausura with Communicaiónes .

successes

As a player

As a trainer

swell

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Fútbol de Walter Ormeño - La dirigencia del Club Comunicaciones es otra a la que él conoció en 1970 (Spanish; accessed February 17, 2012)
  2. heraldodemexico.com.mx: Wollence Walter Ormeño, exfutbolista y director técnico de equipos mexicanos (January 4, 2020) , accessed on January 6, 2020
  3. ^ Peru - Record International Players at RSSSF
  4. South American Championship 1949 at RSSSF
  5. La Historia Azul: 40 años en Primera división (1964-2004)
  6. a b Técnicos en la historia ( Memento of March 3, 2007 in the Internet Archive ) (Spanish) on www.prensalibre.com, accessed on November 1, 2012
  7. Coach stations in Mexico (1975 to 1984)  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / bubox.mediotiempo.com  
  8. Atropellan a Walter Ormeño (Spanish; article from January 30, 2011)