Walter Ormeño
Walter Ormeño | ||
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Personnel | ||
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Surname | Francisco Walter Ormeño Arango | |
birthday | December 3, 1926 | |
place of birth | Lima , Peru | |
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
- Peruvian champion : 1946, 1949
- Argentine champion : 1954
As a trainer
- Guatemalan champion : 1971, 1972, 1979/80, 1989/90, 1991
swell
- Walter Ormeño: “Supermán soy yo” (Spanish; article from December 12, 2009)
- Walter Ormeño: Supermán multicolor (Spanish; article of October 3, 2011)
Individual evidence
- ^ Fútbol de Walter Ormeño - La dirigencia del Club Comunicaciones es otra a la que él conoció en 1970 (Spanish; accessed February 17, 2012)
- ↑ heraldodemexico.com.mx: Wollence Walter Ormeño, exfutbolista y director técnico de equipos mexicanos (January 4, 2020) , accessed on January 6, 2020
- ^ Peru - Record International Players at RSSSF
- ↑ South American Championship 1949 at RSSSF
- ↑ La Historia Azul: 40 años en Primera división (1964-2004)
- ↑ 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
- ↑ Coach stations in Mexico (1975 to 1984) ( page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Atropellan a Walter Ormeño (Spanish; article from January 30, 2011)
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Ormeño, Walter |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Ormeño Arango, Francisco Walter (full name) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Peruvian-Mexican soccer goalkeeper |
DATE OF BIRTH | December 3, 1926 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Lima , Peru |
DATE OF DEATH | 4th January 2020 |