Rubén Omar Romano Explained

Rubén Omar Romano
Fullname:Rubén Omar Romano Cachía
Birth Date:18 May 1958
Birth Place:Buenos Aires, Argentina
Years1:1977–1978
Years2:1979–1981
Years3:1981
Years4:1981–1983
Years5:1983–1984
Years6:1984–1985
Years7:1985–1986
Years8:1986–1987
Years9:1988–1990
Years10:1990–1991
Years11:1991–1992
Years12:1992–1993
Years13:1993–1994
Years14:1994–1995
Caps1:58
Caps2:26
Caps4:73
Caps5:37
Caps6:32
Caps8:38
Caps9:39
Caps10:38
Caps11:37
Caps12:24
Caps13:34
Caps14:30
Goals1:5
Goals2:3
Goals4:24
Goals5:11
Goals6:9
Goals8:7
Goals9:4
Goals10:9
Goals11:11
Goals12:8
Goals13:4
Goals14:12
Manageryears1:1996
Manageryears2:1997–1998
Manageryears3:1998–2000
Manageryears4:2000–2002
Manageryears5:2002–2004
Manageryears6:2004
Manageryears7:2005
Manageryears8:2006–2007
Manageryears9:2008
Manageryears10:2010–2011
Manageryears11:2011
Manageryears12:2012–2013
Manageryears13:2013–2014
Manageryears14:2015
Manageryears15:2018
Manageryears16:2023
Managerclubs1:América (Assistant)
Managerclubs2:Atlas (Assistant)

Rubén Omar Romano Cachía (born May 18, 1958, in Buenos Aires) is an Argentine former footballer and current manager.

Footballer career

Romano played in Argentina for Club Atlético Huracán before leaving for Mexico in 1980 to play for Club América. He played in seven other Mexican clubs: León, Necaxa, Puebla, Querétaro, Cruz Azul, Atlante, and Veracruz.[1] He was a left footed player with a great talent for free kicks as well as an extraordinary playmaker. His best times were in León and Atlante.

He retired as a player at Atlante after the 1994–1995 season and scored 2 goals in his last game (Atlante 6-6 Puebla). In total, Romano scored 102 goals in the Mexican Football League. He is listed among the 100 best scorers of all time in Mexico.[2]

Head coach

The same year he became the assistant coach for Ricardo La Volpe of Club Atlas.

He also worked as a coach for Celaya, Tecos, Morelia, Pachuca, and Cruz Azul. With Pachuca, he qualified for the Copa Libertadores.

Cruz Azul qualified for the Mexican playoffs in Romano's first season with the team, but lost to rivals América. Romano has qualified for the playoffs on six occasions for different teams.

Romano was kidnapped on July 19, 2005, near Xochimilco, in Mexico City by Omar Sandoval Orihuela.[3] He was rescued on the night of September 21 of 2005, 65 days after the kidnapping, by agents of the Federal Investigation Agency. Replacing him in the interim was Isaac Mizrahi Smeke, who coached the first few weeks of Cruz Azul's season. Romano returned to work a few days after his release, while Orihuela received twenty-six years imprisonment for the kidnapping.[3] He was relieved of his duties with the club on December 9, 2005, after coaching for eleven matches[4] during which time Cruz Azul won two, drew three and lost five. Mizrahi was then named permanent head coach of the club.

Afterwards, Romano was hired by Atlas. He ended the regular season in last place as he didn't win the last 11 matches.

He was named head coach of Club América on February 18, 2008, due to president Guillermo Cañedo White's dismissal of Daniel Alberto Brailovsky after a run of disappointing results. On April 30, 2008, Romano finally announced his resignation from the team right after a 4–2 loss to Flamengo in the Copa Libertadores. Club América won the next three matches, including a 0–3 against Flamengo in the Maracanã Stadium. He was presented as the head coach of Santos Laguna on December 5, 2009. With the Santos Laguna, on his first tournament he got the team to the final, and on the second tournament he had the Santos on the first place on the table and of goals. He ceased to coach Santos Laguna on February 20, 2011, after losing several home games and making obscene gestures at the fans.

On August 14, 2013, Rubén Omar Romano replaced Manuel Lapuente at Puebla. He was reported on September 19, 2016, to have accepted the managerial position for a struggling CF America nearing their centenary anniversary. Club America officials later retracted the offer due to fan backlash.[5]

See also

Managerial statistics

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Tijuana20152015
Total

Notes and References

  1. http://www.clarin.com/diario/2005/11/06/policiales/g-05903.htm Clarín article
  2. https://archive.today/20130629212900/http://msn.mediotiempo.com/jugador/ruben-omar-romano&todos=1&id_liga=1 Stats
  3. https://amp.foxsports.com/stories/soccer/man-gets-26-years-for-romano-kidnap Man Gets 26 Years For Romano Kidnap
  4. Web site: soccernet article . 2006-07-16 . 2012-03-24 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120324085937/http://soccernet.espn.go.com/news/story?id=351825&cc=5901 . dead .
  5. Web site: Romano in as Puebla's new manager as Lapuente moves on Goal.com.