Wilmar Cabrera

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Wilmar Cabrera
Personnel
birthday July 31, 1959
place of birth CerrillosUruguay
size 182 cm
position attack
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1977-1983 Nacional Montevideo
1983-1984 Millonarios FC
1984-1986 Valencia CF 54 (22)
1986-1987 OGC Nice 27 0(7)
1987-1988 Sporting Gijón 22 0(2)
1988-1989 Deportivo Textil Mandiyú 35 0(8)
1989-1990 Necaxa 38 0(8)
1990-1991 Deportivo Textil Mandiyú
1991 Nacional Montevideo
1992-1993 Huracan Buceo (at least 12)
1994 Rampla Juniors
1995 River Plate Montevideo
1997 Juventud
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1983-1986 Uruguay 26 (6)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1996 River Plate Montevideo
1997-1998 Nacional Montevideo (LUD coach)
2000 El Tanque Sisley
2001-2004 Nacional Montevideo (U20 and U23)
2005-2006 CD El Nacional (assistant coach)
2006 Deportivo Quito
2007 LDU Loja
2008 Cerro Largo FC
at least 2010 Club Atlético Atenas
1 Only league games are given.

Wilmar Cabrera , full name Wilmar Rubens Cabrera Sappa , (born July 31, 1959 in Cerrillos , Uruguay ) is a former Uruguayan football player and current coach .

Player career

society

Cabrera, who was called Toro (in German: bull ) because of his physical appearance , began his sporting career at club level in 1977 with the Uruguayan club Nacional Montevideo , where he was part of the legendary Rey de Copas when he won both the national championship title and the 1980 team Copa Libertadores and won the World Cup . He also made it to the final of the Copa Interamericana in 1981 with Nacional . For the "Bolsos" called Montevideans he played until 1983. In the following year he was in the ranks of the Colombian club Millonarios FC . From 1984 to 1986 an engagement at Valencia CF followed. From his debut in the Primera División in the 1-0 away win over FC Elche on September 1, 1984 to his last league appearance on March 30, 1986 against Sevilla FC , he played 54 first division games there and scored 22 times in the opposing goal. From 1986 to 1987 he met seven times in 27 appearances for the French club OGC Nice and played two cup games. In the season 1987/88 he completed a total of 22 first division matches (two goals) and two UEFA Cup games (no goal) for Sporting Gijón between his first appearance on August 29, 1987 and the last game participation on May 8, 1988 . He then played from 1988 to 1989 as a player at Deportivo Textil Mandiyú with eight goals scored in 35 missions. A career station at Necaxa followed . With the Mexicans he ran in 38 games in the 1989/90 season and scored eight times in the opposing goal. From 1990 to 1991 he was then again part of the ranks of Deportivo Textil Mandiyú. In 1991 he returned to Nacional. From 1992 to 1993 he played for Huracán Buceo and was there in 1993 with twelve goals top scorer of the Uruguayan league . Further career stations were the Rampla Juniors in 1994 , River Plate Montevideo in 1995 and Juventud from Las Piedras in 1997 .

National team

The center forward was a member of the Celeste , for which he completed a total of 26 international matches between June 2, 1983 and June 16, 1986 and in which he hit the opposing goal six times. In 1983 he was involved in winning the South American Championship . He also took part in the 1986 World Cup.

successes

Coaching career

After finishing his active career, Cabrera started working as a coach. He started as a youth coordinator at River Plate Montevideoe in 1996 and was promoted to head coach that same year. A position at Nacional Montevideo as a coach of the LUD teams from 1997 to 1998 was followed by another coaching position at El Tanque Sisley's first team in 2000 . From 2001 to 2004 he was again employed as a youth coach at Nacional before he took up an assistant coach position at El Nacional in Ecuador in 2005 . He gave up his position as assistant coach to Éver Hugo Almeidas in 2006 in favor of a job as head coach at the Ecuadorian capital city club Deportivo Quito . In 2007 he stayed in the country, but changed employers and trained LDU Loja in a responsible position. In 2008 he returned to the Uruguayan Primera División and henceforth looked after Cerro Largo FC . Since at least October 2010 he was a trainer at CA Atenas de San Carlos .

Others

At the end of 2015, Cabrera was awarded an honorary pension by the state due to his difficult personal financial situation due to his footballing merits.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f g h i j k Profile on luisaguerre.com , accessed on August 20, 2016
  2. a b Wilmar Cabrera in the database of bdfutbol.com (English), accessed on August 20, 2016
  3. Wilmar Cabrera in the database of footballdatabase.eu (English), accessed on August 21, 2016
  4. Wilmar Cabrera in the database of National-Football-Teams.com (English), accessed on August 21, 2016
  5. a b Wilmar Cabrera in the database of the Base de Datos del Futbol Argentino (Spanish). Retrieved December 6, 2018.
  6. List of the top scorer in the Primera División in the RSSSF database . Retrieved August 21, 2016.
  7. Statistical data on international appearances in the Uruguayan national team on rsssf.com
  8. hoy.com.ec: El técnico “chulla” Wilmar Cabrera conoce tres secretos de El Nacional ( Memento of September 3, 2014 in the Internet Archive ), August 26, 2006. (Spanish)
  9. Atenas es cómodo puntero del ascenso (Spanish) on lr21.com.uy of October 31, 2010, accessed on January 3, 2012
  10. WILMAR CABRERA: “MI OPINION ES RETIRARSE DEL CAMPEONATO…” ( Memento of September 14, 2012 in the web archive archive.today ) (Spanish) on tenfieldigital.com.uy of November 29, 2011, accessed on January 3, 2012
  11. Una ayuda para Wilmar Cabrera (Spanish) on ovaciondigital.com.uy from December 31, 2015, accessed on August 20, 2016
  12. ^ Proyecto de Ley (Spanish) on presidencia.gub.uy, accessed August 20, 2016