Franklin Lobos Explained

Franklin Lobos
Fullname:Franklin Erasmo Lobos Ramírez
Birth Date:2 June 1957
Birth Place:Copiapó, Chile
Position:Midfielder
Years1:1980–1981
Clubs1:Regional Atacama
Years2:1982
Clubs2:Deportes Antofagasta
Years3:1983–1985
Clubs3:Cobresal
Years4:1986–1987
Clubs4:Deportes Antofagasta
Years5:1988–1989
Clubs5:Cobresal
Years6:1990–1991
Clubs6:La Serena
Years7:1992
Clubs7:Santiago Wanderers
Years8:1993
Clubs8:Municipal Iquique
Years9:1994
Clubs9:Unión La Calera
Years10:1995
Clubs10:Regional Atacama
Nationalteam1:Chile Olympic

Franklin Erasmo Lobos Ramírez (born June 2, 1957 in Copiapó) is a retired Chilean footballer. Lobos debuted in 1980 for Regional Atacama, and retired in 1995, playing for the same club he started his career with. He was nicknamed El Mortero Mágico (The Magic Mortar).[1] He eventually became a miner and was one of the miners trapped underground for two months in the 2010 Copiapó mining accident. On October 13, 2010, Lobos was the 27th of 33 miners to be rescued.

Football career

Club

Lobos made his professional debut for Chilean Second Division team Regional Atacama in 1980, scoring in his first match for the club.[2] After leaving Regional Atacama in 1981, Lobos played a year with Deportes Antofagasta before moving to Cobresal in 1983.

In what would be the first of his two stints with Cobresal, Lobos tasted success in his first year as the team representing the small mining town of El Salvador won the 1983 Second Division title.[1] In the national championship of Chile of 1984, Cobresal was runner-up. Lobos returned to Deportes Antofagasta for 1986 and 1987. In 1988, he rejoined Cobresal where he played until 1989.

Until leaving high level football in 1995, Lobos played for a number of clubs including La Serena, Santiago Wanderers, Municipal Iquique and Unión La Calera.[3]

He was known for his powerful free kicks.[4]

International

Lobos represented Chile in the CONMEBOL Men Pre-Olympic Tournament, a qualifying tournament for the 1984 Olympic Games.[5]

Honours

After football

After his sporting career ended Lobos became a taxi-driver and, in 2005, a miner.[1] [6] He worked as a truck driver in the Copiapó mine,[1] where in August 2010, he was one of the 33 miners trapped in the 2010 Copiapó mining accident.[7] [8] He was the 27th miner to be rescued on October 13[9] [10] and thus holds the record for the seventh longest time ever being trapped underground. Guinness World Records was asked by the rescue team for all the miners, including Lobos, to be honored with the record.[11]

He has two daughters.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Jonathan Franklin . Trapped Chilean miners: How did a former footballing hero come to be one of the 33?. The Guardian . September 7, 2010. September 8, 2010.
  2. Web site: Above and Beyond. Thompson. Wright. Outside the Lines. ESPN. 14 October 2010.
  3. News: Manuel Rodríguez, ex entrenador de Cobresal: "Franklin Lobos es pura risa y se metió a la mina para mantener a su familia" . Noticias Web . 23 August 2010 . 23 August 2010 . Defendió también a Unión La Calera, Iquique, Wanderers, Copiapó y Antofagasta, además de Cobresal .
  4. Web site: Chilean international is among the surviving miners. August 26, 2010. FIFPro News. FIFPro. October 13, 2010.
  5. Web site: Bajo la tierra - Treinta Dos Mineros Chilenos y un Crack. Ivan. Pablo. Canaltrans.com. Spanish. 14 October 2010.
  6. Web site: Lobos, le mineur footballeur. October 13, 2010. SoFoot.com. French. October 13, 2010.
  7. http://goal.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/08/27/former-player-is-among-33-stranded-miners/?ref=soccer Former Player Is Among 33 Stranded Miners
  8. Web site: Ex futbolista se encuentra entre los mineros atrapados en Copiapó . Terra.cl . August 6, 2010 . August 8, 2010 . September 24, 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110924085633/http://www.terra.cl/deportes/index.cfm?accion=futbolnacional . dead .
  9. http://www.peoplestar.co.uk/index.html?celebs=6 « 2010 Copiapó mining rescue »
  10. News: Chile miners rescue: profiles of the 33 men. Allen. Nick. 12 October 2010. The Daily Telegraph. 13 October 2010.
  11. News: Chile miners start new lives, adjust to freedom. Warren. Michael. 14 October 2010. Yahoo!. 14 October 2010.