Fabio_Ulloa

Fabio Ulloa

Fabio Ulloa

Honduran footballer (born 1976)


Fabio Renán Ulloa Castillo (born 20 August 1976) is a Honduran footballer.

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Club career

Ulloa has played professionally for Olimpia, and has won seven national championships.

Águila

He has won a Salvadoran Clausura championship with C.D. Águila in 2006, after joining them in summer 2005.[1] After a year he looked to leave them for Marathón[2] but ended up with F.C. Motagua.[3] He however returned to Aguila within a month.[4]

He joined Real Juventud before the 2009 Clausura.[5]

C.D. Necaxa

On 8 August 2010, Ulloa made his debut in the Liga Nacional de Futbol de Honduras with C.D. Necaxa against F.C. Motagua in a 3-0 win, and scored his first goal on 24 October 2010 against Deportes Savio in a 1-2 defeat.[6] He left them for Savio in 2012.[7]

International career

Ulloa played for Honduras at the 1995 FIFA World Youth Championship in the United Arab Emirates, where he was sent off against Portugal.[8]

He made his senior debut for Honduras in a May 1994 Miami Cup against El Salvador and has earned a total of 10 caps, scoring no goals. He has represented his country at the 1997 UNCAF Nations Cup.[9]

His final international was an August 2006 friendly match against Venezuela.

Personal life

Ulloa married his school sweetheart, Ivis Estela Parham with whom he has a son named Favio Ulloa Jr. Years later he remarried, Honduran TV host, Helena Alvarez with whom he has a son named Sebastian Ulloa Alvarez. He remarried for the third time and has a younger daughter. He currently lives in Santa Ana, California.

In 2001, he was jailed after being accused of raping a young woman in his apartment. He was only released after 6 days after charges against him were dropped.[10]


References

  1. Fabio Ulloa firmó con Águila - El Diario de Hoy (in Spanish)
  2. Fabio Ulloa se desahogó - El Diario de Hoy (in Spanish)
  3. Así están a diez días Archived 2013-06-02 at the Wayback Machine - El Diario de Hoy (in Spanish)
  4. El regreso del capi - El Diario de Hoy (in Spanish)
  5. Fabio UlloaFIFA competition record (archived)

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