Julio_César_Baldivieso

Julio César Baldivieso

Julio César Baldivieso

Bolivian footballer and coach (born 1971)


Julio César Baldivieso Rico (born 2 December 1971) is a Bolivian football coach and former player who played as an attacking midfielder. Baldivieso was a midfielder who played for the Bolivia national team at the 1994 World Cup and several Copa Américas.[citation needed]

Quick Facts Personal information, Full name ...

Football career

Club

Nicknamed "El Emperador", Baldivieso began his career in his native Cochabamba playing for Wilstermann in 1987. After the World Cup, he transferred to Argentine team Newell's Old Boys from Rosario, where he played until the winter of 97. Subsequently, he joined J1 League club Yokohama Marinos for a couple of years. Towards the end of his career he returned to Bolivia and played for The Strongest, and later made his final run with Aurora on and off the field as he also managed the team.[citation needed]

Throughout his career, Baldivieso also played in 46 Copa Libertadores games altogether for three different teams and scored 11 goals.[1]

International

Baldivieso made his debut for Bolivia on 14 June 1991 in a friendly match, losing 1–0 against Paraguay in Santa Cruz de la Sierra. He obtained a total number of 85 caps during his career, scoring fifteen goals. He played his last international match on 12 October 2005: a World Cup Qualifier against Peru in Tacna.[citation needed]

Managerial

During his last season as a player Baldivieso transitioned into coaching as he took over the manager position at the club. In November 2008 he won the Clausura tournament with Aurora in a very disputed 3-game final series against Blooming. On 19 July 2009, still being Aurora's manager, he made debut his own 12-year-old son, called Mauricio Baldivieso. At the end of the match he strongly criticized the referee and one opponent who made his son cry after a hard tackle. He quit Aurora 5 days later, after the club's board told him to pick between his job and his son. He also withdrew his son from the team.[2][3] On 20 May 2011 Baldivieso returned to Aurora for his second spell.[4] Later in his career he also managed Real Potosí,[5] Nacional Potosí,[6] San José,[7] Wilstermann[8] and Universitario de Sucre.[9] On 28 August 2015 Baldivieso was officially presented as the manager for the Bolivia national team.[10][11]

In late 2017, he became the first Bolivian to coach a foreign national football team from outside the Americas, when he was appointed as coach of Palestine.[12] He was released in April 2018 due to a series of controversies related between him and Saudi officials.[13]

On 31 January 2019, Baldivieso was appointed as the manager of Club Always Ready.[14] On 23 September 2019, Baldi returned to Aurora as a sporting advisor because he couldn't appear as a coach in the official matches, after he already led Club Always Ready in the current 2019 Bolivian Primera División season and, according to the rules, a head coach cannot lead to two clubs in the same contest.[15] He announced in December 2019, that he would leave the club because it wasn't the same for him to lead from the stands.[16] However, later on the same month, it was confirmed that Francisco Argüello, who had been Baldi's assistant coach during the last 4–5 years, had taken charge of Aurora and that Baldi would continue at the club as his assistant, now where he couldn't lead the team officially.[17]

Career statistics

Source: [18]

More information Club performance, League ...

National team

[19]

More information Bolivia national team, Year ...

International goals

More information International Goals, # ...

Managerial statistics

As of 27 March 2018
More information Team, From ...

Personal

His son Mauricio Baldivieso is the youngest player to have played in a professional football match.[20]


References

  1. Julio César Baldivieso asume en Aurora Archived 23 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine lostiempos.com (in Spanish)
  2. "10 Facts: Who is Julio Cesar Baldivieso?". 20 December 2017.
  3. Baldivieso se suma a Aurora, late.com.bo, 24 September 2019
  4. Julio César Baldivieso dejará Aurora, reduno.com.bo, 4 December 2019
  5. Julio César Baldivieso at National-Football-Teams.com

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Julio_César_Baldivieso, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.