Eduardo Acevedo

Mario Acevedo Eduardo Cardozo ( born September 25, 1959 in Montevideo, Uruguay ) is a former Uruguayan football player and current coach.

  • 2.1 Achievements

Playing career

Association

Acevedo began his sporting career at club level first with the Uruguayan club Defensor, where he played from 1979 to 1986 in the Uruguayan Primera División. During this time he was involved in the 1981 profit of Liguilla Pre- Libertadores. In 1986 he moved to Spain to Deportivo La Coruña and was there in the 1986/87 season to five appearances ( no goals ). From there, he found his way to UAG Tecos. For the Mexicans, he completed between 1987 and 1990 80 games in which he hit the opponent's goal once. In the 1991/92 season he joined the Japanese club Toshiba SC. After this last period abroad as a player he was, until 1995, in Uruguay at Fénix (1993 ), Rentistas (1994 ) and South America (1995 ) is active, before he ended his career.

National

The defender was a member of Celeste, for which he completed a total of 41 matches between 11 August 1983 to 16 June 1986, where he met the opposing goal once. In 1983 he was involved in winning the South American Championship. He also took part in the World Cup 1986.

Achievements

  • Winner Copa América 1983
  • Winners of the Liguilla Pre- Libertadores 1981

Coaching career

Acevedo coached the 1996 club Sud América Defensor 1998 and from 1999 until his resignation in June 2001 Deportivo Maldonado. Maybe a re- brief phase followed as coach of Defensor Sporting 2002 he was coach in Mexico at Gavilanes de Nuevo Laredo. In the Apertura 2003 and Clausura 2004 he sat with UAG Tecos in the dugout. In 2004, he was then up to 2005 Monarcas Morelia under contract before he returned for a second term in the 2005 Apertura and the Clausura 2006 Tecos. On 25 February 2009 he took over the training led by interim coach Richard Martinez and replaced the previously migrated to the Bolivian club Blooming Pablo Repetto as coach of CA Cerro. His thereat coaching team was made up of his brother Alejandro Acevedo and Eduardo Arismendi. With Cerro, he managed to win in the Liguilla Pre- Libertadores in 2009, thus qualifying for the group stage of the Copa Libertadores 2010. Beginning of August 2009 he left Cerro however, and took on 5 August of that year, the coach of Nacional as successor to the sacked on the previous day Gerardo Pelusso. After his time at Nacional, where his contract was not renewed because of the lack of expected profit but the championship, he was coach of the Mexican club Estudiantes Tecos. This is already third investment in Mexico, in which he succeeded Miguel Herrera, began on 8 September 2010. In December 2010, Danubio FC gave his commitment for the position of head coach known as the successor Gustavo Matosas for February 2011 launching subsequent season. It should stand him Javier Valdecantos as co- trainers. In May 2011, he was replaced after a few months due to poor results and replaced by Gustavo Machain. On March 9, 2012, reported that Acevedo would take over as coach of the Argentine club Banfield. Acevedo took the train with the team, only eight of the possible 42 points. Thus Banfield dismounted in the Primera B Nacional. End of June 2012, he was then, as the club president Carlos Portell his departure from Argentine club known.

Achievements

  • Winners of the Liguilla Pre- Libertadores 2009

Others

Acevedo is the uncle of the soccer player Matías Cabrera, whose coach, he was during his tenure at Cerro Nacional also.

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