- Ondino Viera
-
Ondino Viera Personal information Full name Ondino Leonel Viera Palaserez Date of birth 10 September 1901 Place of birth Cerro Largo, Uruguay Date of death 27 June 1997 (aged 95)Place of death Montevideo, Uruguay Playing position Manager Ondino Viera (10 September 1901 – 27 June 1997), in Brazil also known as Ondino Vieira, was an Uruguayan football manager. In his long lasting career he won between the 1930s and 1960s important titles with clubs in Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay and Paraguay. With the national team of Paraguay he reached second spot at the Copa América of 1963 and at the World Cup of 1966 in England he led Uruguay into the quarterfinals.
He was the manager of the Uruguay national football team during the 1966 FIFA World Cup. His son, Milton, was also in the World Cup squad.[1]
He also coached Nacional,[2] Vasco da Gama and Peñarol.[3]
He was famously quoted as saying "Other countries have their history. Uruguay has its football".[citation needed]
Clubs
- 1928: Selection of Cerro Largo
- 1930-1933: Club Nacional de Football
- 1936-1937: CA River Plate
- 1938-1941: Fluminense FC
- 1942-1946: CR Vasco da Gama
- 1947: Botafogo FR
- 1948-1949: Fluminense FC
- 1950-1953: Bangu AC
- 1953: SE Palmeiras
- 1954-1955: Atlético Mineiro
- 1955-1960: Club Nacional de Football
- 1963: National Team of Paraguay
- 1963-1964: Club Guaraní
- 1965: CA Cerro
- 1965-1967: National Team of Uruguay
- 1967: Bangu AC
- 1969: CA Colón
- 1971: Liverpool FC (Montevideo)
- 1972: CA Peñarol
Honours
- Uruguayan Championship: 1934 (?), 1955, 1956, 1957
- Argentine Primera División: 1936, 1937
- Paraguayan Primera División: 1964
- State Championship of Rio de Janeiro: 1938, 1940, 1941, Torneio Extra 1941, 1945
- Copa América: 1963 (2. Place)
References
Uruguay squad – 1966 FIFA World Cup CR Vasco da Gama – managers Platero (1922–27) · Welfare (1927–37) · Peixoto (1937) · Scarone (1937) · Freitas (1938) · Platero (1938) · Cardoso (1938–39) · Welfare (1940) · Lima (1941) · Viera (1942–45) · Santos (1946) · Costa (1947–50) · Glória (1951) · Cardoso (1952) · Costa (1953–56) · Francisco (1956–57) · Gradim (1958–59) · Yustrich (1959–60) · Nunes (1960) · Picabea (1960) · Francisco (1960–61) · Amparo (1961) · Amaral (1961–62) · Vieira (1962–63) · Glória (1963) · Pelegrini (1963) · Ferreira (1964) · Amparo (1964) · Moreira (1965–66) · Zizinho (1967) · Cardoso (1967) · Ademir (1967) · Almeida (1968) · Pinga (1969) · Evaristo (1969) · Almeida (1969) · Souza (1969) · Tim (1970) · Amaral (1971) · Chirol (1971) · Zizinho (1972) · Souza (1972) · Travaglini (1972–75) · Emílio (1976) · Fantoni (1977–78) · Froner (1979) · Glória (1979) · Fantoni (1980) · Nunes (1980) · Zagallo (1980–81) · Lopes (1981–83) · Zanata (1983) · Leal (1983) · Glória (1983) · Edu (1984–85) · Lopes (1985–86) · Garcia (1986) · Santana (1986–87) · Lazaroni (1987–88) · Zanata (1988–89) · Lelé (1989) · Cosme (1989) · Nelsinho (1989) · Portella (1990) · Zagallo (1990) · Lopes (1991) · Nelsinho (1992) · Santana (1992–93) · Portella (1993) · Pereira (1994) · Lazaroni (1994) · Nelsinho (1995) · Braga (1995) · Pereira (1995) · Zanata (1995–96) · Portella (1996) · Silva (1996) · Portella (1996) · Lopes (1996–2000) · Braga (2000) · Portella (2000c) · Tita (2000c) · Oliveira (2000) · Santana (2000–01) · Portella (2001) · Anjos (2001) · Gusmão (2001) · Evaristo (2002) · Lopes (2002–2003) · Galvão (2003) · Geninho (2004) · Santana (2004–05) · Lourenço (2005) · Renato Gaúcho (2005–07) · Roth (2007) · Romário (2007c) · Espinosa (2007) · Romário (2007–08) · Sampaio (2008) · Lopes (2008) · Tita (2008) · Renato Gaúcho (2008) · Dorival Júnior (2009) · Mancini (2010) · Gaúcho (2010) · Roth (2010) · Gusmão (2010–11) · Gomes (2011-) ·
Uruguay national football team – managers Pacheco & Foglino (1915–16) · Platero (1917–19) · Castillo (1919–20) · Figoli (1920–22) · Olivieri (1922–23) · De Lucca (1923–24) · Figoli (1924) · Meliante (1924–25) · Mazali & Figoli (1926) · Lago Millán (1927–28) · Grecco (1927–28) · Giannoti (1928) · Suppici (1928–32) · Blanco (1932–35) · Suppici (1935–41) · Cea (1941–42) · Nasazzi (1942–45) · Tejada (1945–46) · Vila Gomensoro (1946) · López Fontana (1946–49) · Marcenaro (1949) · López Fontana (1949–55) · Corazo (1955) · Bagnulo (1955–57) · López Fontana (1957–59) · Castro (1959) · Corazo (1959–61) · Fernández (1961–62) · Corazo (1962–64) · Milans (1964–65) · Viera (1965–67) · Fernández (1967–69) · Hohberg (1969–70) · Bagnulo (1970–73) · Porta (1973–74) · Schiaffino (1974–75) · Rodríguez (1975–76) · Hohberg (1976–77) · Bentacor (1977–79) · Máspoli (1979–82) · Borrás (1982–87) · Fleitas (1987–88) · Tabárez (1988–90) · Cubilla (1990–93) · Maneiro (1993–94) · Núñez (1994–96) · Ahuntchaín (1996–97) · Máspoli (1997–98) · Púa (1998–2000) · Passarella (2000–01) · Púa (2001–03) · Carrasco (2003–04) · Fossati (2004–06) · Tabárez (2006–)
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:- 1901 births
- 1997 deaths
- Uruguayan football managers
- 1966 FIFA World Cup managers
- Club de Regatas Vasco da Gama managers
- Fluminense Football Club managers
- Uruguay national football team managers
- C.A. Peñarol managers
- Club Nacional de Football managers
- Uruguayan football biography stubs
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.