Ricardo Caruso Lombardi Explained

Ricardo Caruso Lombardi
Fullname:Ricardo Daniel Caruso Lombardi
Height:1.66 m
Birth Date:10 February 1962
Birth Place:Buenos Aires, Argentina
Years1:1981
Caps1:5
Goals1:0
Years2:1982–1983
Years3:1984
Years4:1985
Years5:1986–1989
Years6:1989–1990
Years7:1990–1992
Caps7:10
Goals7:0
Manageryears1:1994–1995
Manageryears2:1995–1996
Manageryears3:1996
Manageryears4:1997
Manageryears5:1997–1998
Manageryears6:1998–1999
Manageryears7:2000
Manageryears8:2001–2002
Manageryears9:2002–2003
Manageryears10:2003–2006
Manageryears11:2007
Manageryears12:2007–2008
Manageryears13:2009
Manageryears14:2010
Manageryears15:2011–2012
Manageryears16:2012
Manageryears17:2013
Manageryears18:2014
Manageryears19:2014
Manageryears20:2015
Manageryears21:2016
Manageryears22:2016
Manageryears23:2017
Manageryears24:2019
Manageryears25:2019–2020
Manageryears26:2024

Ricardo Daniel Caruso Lombardi (born 10 February 1962) is an Argentine football manager and former who played as a midfielder.

Caruso Lombardi is best known for saving teams from being relegated to second division.

Playing career

Born in Buenos Aires, Lombardi started his playing career with Argentinos Juniors in 1981. His career was then mostly in the lower leagues of Argentine football apart from 1984 when he played a single season for Club Atlético Atlanta in the Primera Division.

In 1986, he was part of the Deportivo Italiano team that won the Primera B championship.

Managerial career

After retirement, Caruso Lombardi took up coaching, initially in lower league teams. In the 1995–96 season, he won the Primera B Metropolitana (third division) with Sportivo Italiano, and in the 2004–05 he won it again with Tigre.

Caruso Lombardi was then in charge of Argentinos Juniors, until resigning five games into the 2007 Apertura tournament, despite his team's 3–2 win over Boca Juniors only three weeks previously. He was then hired by Newell's Old Boys, with which he obtained his second victory over Boca in the same 2007 Apertura tournament, beating them 1–0.

On 24 February 2009, Caruso Lombardi became Racing Club's head coach, signing a two-year contract. He helped Racing avoid relegation in his first season; however, he resigned in October 2009, after coaching 11 games without a win in the Apertura tournament. After three years, on 17 December 2009, the coach returned to Tigre, replacing Diego Cagna.

Caruso Lombardi has a preference towards using physically tall footballers on all the positions of the field.[1] In 2010, while coaching Tigre, he was accused by one of his players (Juan Camilo Angulo) of requesting a bribe to put him on the first team.[2] The coach denied the truth of the accusations.

On 8 March 2011, Caruso Lombardi was appointed as head coach of Quilmes, with the club languishing at the bottom of the table and fighting relegation. It is expected that he would remain in that role until his contract expired in June 2012.[3] After a successful spell at Quilmes, during the night of 3 April of the next season, he signed a contract with San Lorenzo de Almagro, replacing Leonardo Madelón in the charge, after their bad results.[4]

On 26 February 2019, Lombardi was appointed as the manager of San Martín Tucumán.[5]

Honours

Player

Deportivo Italiano

1985–1986

Manager

Deportivo Italiano

1995–1996

Tigre

2004–2005

Notes and References

  1. News: Un 9 de alta costura . Olé . 2009-06-10 . es . 2010-07-04 .
  2. News: Caruso contraataca: juicio a sus acusadores . Federico Reyes da Roza . . es . 2010-12-04 . 2010-12-04 .
  3. News: El Quilmes de Caruso ya está en marcha . Club official website . es . 2011-03-08 . 2011-03-10 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110312234221/http://www.quilmesaclub.org.ar/futbol/futbol-noticias/625-entrenamiento.html . 2011-03-12 .
  4. News: Ricardo Caruso Lombardi se convirtió en el nuevo entrenador de San Lorenzo . . es . 2012-04-03 . 2013-04-04.
  5. https://www.lagaceta.com.ar/nota/799119/deportes/caruso-lombardi-nuevo-tecnico-san-martin.html Caruso Lombardi es el nuevo técnico de San Martín