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Gustavo Domingo Quinteros Desábato (born 15 February 1965) is a football manager and former professional player who played as a defender.[1] He is the manager of Argentine club Vélez Sarsfield. Born in Argentina, he played for the Bolivia national team.

Playing career

Club

His clubs as a player include The Strongest and San José in Bolivia. He also played for San Lorenzo de Almagro, Argentinos Juniors and Talleres de Remedios de Escalada in his native Argentina.

International

The defender played 26 international matches and scored once for the Bolivia national team,[2] including two appearances in the 1994 FIFA World Cup.[3] His only goal came in a friendly match against Honduras on January 29, 1993, when he opened the score in the 3–1 win in the Estadio Felix Capriles, Cochabamba.

Managerial career

Quinteros with Emelec in 2014

After retiring as a player, Quinteros became a manager at San Lorenzo's youth academy. In 2003, he had a brief spell as first team manager. In 2005, he managed the Bolivian Club Blooming and they took a national title, his first Aerosur Cup. Due to his notorious success, he took on management of the Argentine San Martín de San Juan in the Primera B Nacional.

In 2007, Quinteros returned to Blooming, the institution where he built up his coaching reputation and became an idol. The following year he won the Aerosur Cup for the second time in his managerial career and guided the team back to the championship finals; however, they lost to Aurora on penalty kicks (3–4) after a draw during regulation time in a decisive third match played at Sucre's Estadio Patria.

By January 2009 when his contract expired Quinteros decided to move on, and took over La Paz club Bolívar, where he won the Aerosur Cup and the Apertura title. Due to some disparities with the president, Quinteros left the club at the end of the year. By January 2010 he was in charge of Oriente Petrolero. During his stint at Oriente his success continued taking the team to an Aerosur Cup and the Clausura 2010 title.

On 5 November 2010, Quinteros was named the new manager of the Bolivia national team. On 3 July 2012, he presented his letter of resignation and called a press conference to announce his imminent departure from the national team.[4][5]

On 9 July 2012, Quinteros was formally introduced as the new manager for Ecuadorian club Emelec.[6] After a stint in the Middle East, and a lacklustre season in Tijuana, he became manager of Colo Colo.

Managerial statistics

As of match played 5 June 2024
Managerial record by team and tenure
Team Nat From To Record
G W D L GF GA GD Win %
Blooming Bolivia 15 January 2005 30 June 2006 66 35 10 21 114 101 +13 053.03
San Martín de San Juan Argentina 1 July 2006 30 June 2007 40 19 15 6 54 32 +22 047.50
Blooming Bolivia 1 July 2007 31 December 2008 65 30 14 21 107 89 +18 046.15
Bolívar 1 January 2009 31 December 2009 40 20 14 6 67 40 +27 050.00
Oriente Petrolero 1 January 2010 31 December 2010 57 32 9 16 97 59 +38 056.14
Bolivia 1 January 2011 3 July 2012 16 1 6 9 13 26 −13 006.25
Emelec Ecuador 8 July 2012 15 March 2015 156 86 31 39 236 146 +90 055.13
Ecuador 16 March 2015 12 September 2017 33 13 6 14 53 42 +11 039.39
Al-Nassr Saudi Arabia 2 October 2017 31 January 2018 14 6 3 5 25 17 +8 042.86
Al-Wasl United Arab Emirates 1 July 2018 19 October 2018 9 2 2 5 9 16 −7 022.22
Universidad Católica Chile 1 January 2019 31 December 2019 39 24 6 9 69 37 +32 061.54
Tijuana Mexico 1 January 2020 12 June 2020 16 7 4 5 22 20 +2 043.75
Colo-Colo Chile 6 October 2020 15 December 2023 154 79 42 33 237 148 +89 051.30
Vélez Sarsfield Argentina 23 December 2023 present 23 11 8 4 25 22 +3 047.83
Total 728 365 170 193 1,128 795 +333 050.14

References

External links

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