- Diego Aguirre
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Diego Aguirre Personal information Full name Diego Vicente Aguirre Camblor Date of birth 13 September 1965 Place of birth Montevideo, Uruguay Playing position Striker Senior career* Years Team Apps† (Gls)† 1985 Liverpool de Montevideo 1986–1987 Peñarol 1988 Fiorentina 1988 Olympiacos 1988–1989 Internacional 1990 São Paulo 1992 Independiente 1993–1995 Marbella 1995 Ourense 1996 Deportivo FAS 1997–1998 River Plate 1999 Rentistas Teams managed 2000-2002 Alianza San Agustin 2002 Plaza Colonia 2002-2003 Aucas 2003–2004 Peñarol 2004-2007 Montevideo Wanderers 2007 Alianza Lima 2009–2010 Uruguay U-20 2010 Peñarol 2011 Peñarol 2011– Al-Rayyan * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).Diego Vicente Aguirre Camblor (born 13 September 1965 in Montevideo[1]) is a Uruguayan former soccer player, known in his playing career for scoring the 1-0 goal in the 120th minute of the 1987 Copa Libertadores final. He is currently the head coach of Al-Rayyan.
Career
Diego Aguirre played in the 1987 Peñarol team which won the Libertadores Cup. Diego became notoriously famous for scoring the victory goal in the last seconds of the final minute of the third final match.[2]
Aguirre had a brief spell with Olympiacos in the Greek Alpha Ethniki.[3]
Honours
As player
- Peñarol
- Uruguayan Primera Division
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- 1986
- Deportivo FAS
- Salvadoran Primera División
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- 1996
As coach
- Peñarol
- Uruguayan Primera Division
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- 2003, 2009-10
References
- ^ http://www.pagineviola.com/index.php?a=scheda_articolo&id=24
- ^ http://southamerican-futbol.blogspot.com/2010/10/copa-libertadores.html
- ^ Mastrogiannopoulos, Alexander (2005-05-11). "Foreign Players in Greece since 1959/60". RSSSF. http://www.rsssf.com/players/foreign-players-in-grk6080.html.
External links
C.A. Peñarol – de Luca (1932–34) · Piendibene (1934) · Velásquez (1935–40) · Piendibene (1940–41) · de Luca (1941) · Morquio (1941) · L. Fernández (1941–42) · Harley (1942) · de Luca (1942–43) · Arremón (1943) · de Hegedüs (1943) · Tejada (1944) · Suppici (1945) · Tejada (1946) · Clulow (1947) · Galloway (1948) · Hirschl (1949–51) · López (1952–55) · Máspoli & Varela (1955c) · Hirschl (1956) · Spósito (1957) · Bagnulo (1958–59) · Scarone (1959–61) · Guttmann (1962) · Anselmo (1962) · Máspoli (1963–67) · Milans (1968–69) · Brandão (1969–70) · Máspoli (1970–71) · Hohberg (1971) · Viera (1972) · Faccio (1972–73) · Bagnulo (1973–74) · Rodríguez (1974) · Bagnulo (1974–75) · Schiaffino (1975–76) · Máspoli (1976) · Sani (1977–80) · Tuane (1980) · Prais (1980c) · Etchegoyen (1980) · Kistenmacher (1980c) · Ghiggia (1980) · Cubilla (1981) · Bagnulo (1982–83) · Balseiro (1983) · H. Fernández (1984) · Máspoli (1985–86) · Silva (1986) · Tabárez (1987) · Mazurkiewicz (1988–89) · Roque (1989) · Fleitas (1989–90) · Menotti (1990–91) · Duarte (1991c) · Ortiz (1991) · Petrović (1992) · Máspoli (1992c) · Olivera (1992c) · Faccio (1992) · Pérez (1993–95) · Fossati (1996) · Botello (1996) · Pérez (1997–98) · Ribas (1999–2001) · Pérez (2002) · Aguirre (2003–04) · Morena (2005) · Garisto (2006) · Saralegui (2006) · Pérez (2006–07) · Matosas (2007) · Saralegui (2008–09) · Ribas (2009) · Púa (2009c) · Aguirre (2010) · Keosseian (2010) · Machín (2010c) · Aguirre (2011) · Pérez (2011-) · (c) caretaker Categories:- 1965 births
- Living people
- People from Montevideo
- Uruguayan people of Basque descent
- Uruguayan footballers
- Uruguayan expatriate footballers
- Liverpool F.C. (Montevideo) players
- C.A. Peñarol players
- River Plate Montevideo players
- Olympiacos F.C. players
- Sport Club Internacional players
- São Paulo FC players
- Club Atlético Independiente footballers
- Club de Deportes Temuco footballers
- Expatriate footballers in Argentina
- Expatriate footballers in Brazil
- Expatriate footballers in Chile
- Expatriate footballers in Ecuador
- Expatriate footballers in Greece
- Expatriate footballers in Spain
- Uruguayan football managers
- Alianza Lima managers
- Montevideo Wanderers managers
- C.A. Peñarol managers
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