Carlos Soca

Carlos Soca, full name Carlos Javier Soca Iturburu ( born January 24, 1969 in Montevideo ) is a former Uruguayan football player.

Association

The 1.76 meter tall left-back Soca belonged from 1988 to 1993 the squad based in Montevideo Uruguayan club Nacional on. With the Bolsos he won the Copa Libertadores in 1988, where he was in two finals against Newell's Old Boys in the grid. Although during the subsequent World Cup final on December 11, 1988 in Tokyo against PSV Eindhoven had not. His club retained but even there the upper hand. In the following year won the Copa Interamericana Nacional still Recopa Sudamericana and the. In the associated four finals he played once in each case at the beginning or came on as a substitute to train. Later he participated in the competition still ds Uruguayan league title the year 1992. 1993, he joined the Argentine club Argentinos Juniors. There, a league use in the Apertura 1993 is listed for him. In the Clausura 1994 he stood there also under contract. An insert is there but not to book. In the Apertura 1994 and Clausura 1995 he completed a total of 23 games in La Liga for the league rivals Racing Club. The 1996 season, he played again in Montevideo in Peñarol, where he was also Uruguayan champion. In 1998 he was back at Nacional under contract. In the second phase of his membership, he won the title of 1998, his second Uruguayan national championship with the Bolsos and his third overall. In 1999, he joined Juventude in Brazil. With the Copa do Brasil in 1999 he added to his success statistics add another trophy. As the last season of his career that season of 2000 is then recorded, in which he trailed off his career at Uruguayan Primera División Juventud.

National

Soca was also a member of the Uruguayan national team. His first and only international game he played on August 29, 1993, when Uruguay beat selection 4-0 in a World Cup qualifier in Venezuela. Soca, however, had already been there 37 minutes into the field for Cesilio De los Santos leave.

Achievements

  • World Cup (1988 )
  • Copa Libertadores (1988 )
  • Copa Interamericana (1989 )
  • Recopa Sudamericana (1989 )
  • 3x Uruguayan champion ( 1992, 1996 and 1998)
  • Copa do Brasil ( 1999)
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