Oscar Briceño Explained

Oscar Briceño
Fullname:Oscar Alberto Briceño Bueno
Birth Date:6 September 1985
Birth Place:Cúcuta, Colombia
Position:Forward
Years1:2003–2006
Years2:2007–2009
Years3:2008–2009
Years4:2010
Years5:2010
Years6:2011–2012
Years7:2012–2013
Years8:2013–2015
Years9:2015–2016
Clubs1:Deportes Tolima
Clubs2:Millonarios
Clubs3:Herediano (loan)
Clubs4:Alianza Atlético
Clubs5:Herediano
Clubs6:Monagas SC
Clubs7:Mineros de Guayana
Clubs8:Deportivo Anzoátegui
Clubs9:Deportivo Pasto
Caps1:95
Caps2:37
Caps3:26
Caps4:9
Caps5:12
Caps6:31
Caps7:18
Caps8:40
Caps9:29
Goals1:18
Goals2:3
Goals3:7
Goals4:0
Goals5:2
Goals6:5
Goals7:3
Goals8:5
Goals9:4
Nationalyears1:2003–2005
Nationalteam1:Colombia Under-20
Nationalcaps1:3
Nationalgoals1:1
Pcupdate:February 26, 2013
Ntupdate:February 26, 2013
Nationalyears2:2005
Nationalteam2:Colombia
Nationalcaps2:1
Nationalgoals2:0

Oscar Briceño (born September 6, 1985) is a Colombian retired footballer who played as a forward.

Club career

Briceno started his career at Deportes Tolima in 2003, and played a few games in the 2003 Finalizacion, where Tolima won its first ever title against Deportivo Cali on penalties. He was also part of Tolima's runner-up campaign in 2006 where they lost the finals to Cúcuta Deportivo, club where his Colombia youth national team teammate Macnelly Torres played at.

In 2007, he joined Millonarios.[1] He played the entire 2007 season with the club, including the 2007 Copa Sudamericana, and played the 2008 Apertura.

In summer 2008, he joined Herediano of Costa Rica on a one year loan deal. He returned for the 2009 Finalizacion where he was rarely used by head coach Óscar Quintabani.

In January 2010 he moved to Peru, joining Alianza Atlético.[2] His spell at the club was short, and in July 2010 he rejoined Herediano for the 2010-11 season. This was also a six-month spell, and in January 2011 he was on the move again, joining Monagas of Venezuela.

In August 2012 he joined Mineros de Guayana. In summer 2013 he joined Deportivo Anzoátegui, before making a return to Colombia by signing with Deportivo Pasto in 2015.[3] He left the club after the 2016 Apertura and retired.

International career

He played with the Colombia U-20 at the 2003 FIFA World Youth Championship in UAE, helping Colombia finish third by beating Argentina 2-1. He also played with the U20's at the 2005 South American U-20 Championship hosted in Colombia, and which Colombia won. He scored a goal in the group stage victory over Venezuela.

He was capped once at senior level, playing in a loss to Panama at the 2005 CONCACAF Gold Cup.

Career statistics

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
ClubSeasonLeagueCupContinentalOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Millonarios2009Categoria Primera A5050
Alianza Atletico2010Peruvian Primera Division8080
Herediano2010–11Costa Rican Primera Division131131
Monagas2010-11Venezuelan Primera Division15120171
2011-12Venezuelan Primera Division27431305
Total42551476
Mineros de Guayana2012-13Venezuelan Primera Division18330213
Deportivo Anzoategui2013-14Venezuelan Primera Division20 4 2 0 22 4
Career total150 19 0 0 5 0 5 1 163 20

Titles

Club

Deportes Tolima

International

Colombia U-20

References

  1. Web site: 6 January 2007 . Millos cambia para buscar la 14 . 2024-10-23 . El Tiempo . spanish.
  2. Web site: 14 January 2010 . Óscar Briceño se convirtió en nuevo jugador del Alianza Atlético peruano . futbolred.com . spanish.
  3. Web site: 27 January 2016 . En Pasto se acabó la paciencia: a volver a meterse a los ocho mejores . 2024-10-23 . futbolred.com . spanish.

External links