Gustavo Alfaro

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Gustavo Alfaro
Gustavo Alfaro (2022) (cropped).jpg
Alfaro as the manager of Ecuador in 2022
Personal information
Full name Gustavo Julio Alfaro
Date of birth (1962-08-14) 14 August 1962 (age 62)
Place of birth Rafaela, Argentina
Position(s) Midfielder
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1988–1992 Atlético de Rafaela 126 (6)
Managerial career
1992–1995 Atlético de Rafaela
1995 Patronato
1996–1997 Quilmes
1998–2000 Atlético de Rafaela
2001 Belgrano
2001–2002 Olimpo
2003–2004 Quilmes
2005 San Lorenzo
2006–2008 Arsenal de Sarandí
2008–2009 Rosario Central
2009 Al-Ahli
2010–2014 Arsenal de Sarandí
2014–2015 Tigre
2016–2017 Gimnasia LP
2017–2018 Huracán
2018–2020 Boca Juniors
2020–2023 Ecuador
2023–2024 Costa Rica
2024– Paraguay
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Gustavo Julio Alfaro (born 14 August 1962) is an Argentine football manager and former player who manages the Paraguay national football team.

Contents

Although Alfaro had a short career as a footballer, he was captain of the Atlético de Rafaela when they were promoted to the Argentine Primera División in 1989. Alfaro retired as a player from football in 1992 to concentrate on his coaching career. His first league title came with Arsenal de Sarandí in the 2012 Clausura.

Coaching career

Alfaro started his career as a manager for Atlético de Rafaela and Patronato de Paraná in the early 1990s. He then had his first spell as manager of Quilmes and a second spell at Atlético de Rafaela.

In 2001, Alfaro became the manager of Olimpo and led them to the Primera B Nacional Apertura 2001 championship and promotion to the Primera. [1]

In 2003, Alfaro led Quilmes to promotion. He stayed to manage the team for the following season (2003–04), achieving a 4th and a 6th-place finish which earned them qualification for the 2005 Copa Libertadores and 2004 Copa Sudamericana tournaments.

In his only shot at an important club, Alfaro had a disastrous spell in San Lorenzo before joining Arsenal de Sarandí in late 2006. [2]

Alfaro helped Arsenal to two 5th-place finishes, allowing the club to qualify for the Copa Libertadores for the first time in their history. They also earned qualification for the 2007 Copa Sudamericana, where they beat Argentine champions San Lorenzo in the qualifying round to earn a place in the round of 16. In that stage, they faced the Brazilian team Goiás. Arsenal won 3–2 in Brazil and recorded a 1–1 draw in the second leg to win the tie 4–3 on aggregate, their official first victory over foreign opposition. Arsenal eventually reached the final of the competition, leaving a wake of sacked managers in their path, including Daniel Passarella, who resigned from River Plate after their defeat by Arsenal in the semi-finals.

In the final of the competition, Arsenal drew 4–4 with Mexican América, winning the title on the Away goals rule. This was the first major championship in the history of Arsenal de Sarandí and Alfaro's first major title.

At the end of the 2007–08 season, he was replaced by Daniel Garnero as manager of Arsenal. In October 2008, he was named the manager of Rosario Central. In 2009, he went to Saudi Arabia to work in Al-Ahli (Jeddah); he came with high expectations from the fans. He stayed as the coach for four months; on 20 November, he resigned for personal reasons.

On 17 May 2010, Arsenal de Sarandí confirmed that the new manager for next season would be Alfaro, who arrived along with assistant coaches Sergio Chiarelli, Carlos González, and Claudio Cristofanelli. [3] On 24 June 2012, Alfaro would achieve his first ever league title when Arsenal won its first league title in the club's history.

The Final Tournament of 2014 looked promising for Alfaro. He had an excellent team that would play at the Copa Libertadores. By April, the team had awful results, and he announced he would leave the club by the end of June. However, he was discharged by the club [4] and replaced by Martín Palermo.

On 2 January 2019, Boca Juniors named Gustavo Alfaro their new head coach, having his official debut on 27 January 2019, drawing 1–1 against Newell's Old Boys for the 2018–19 Super League. In the national competition, he would finish third. On 2 May, he could lift the 2018 Argentine Super Cup after playing against Rosario Central, winning a penalty shootout by 6–5 after drawing 0–0 in the ninety minutes. On 2 June, he would lose 0–2 against Club Tigre in the final of the 2019 Super League Cup in Córdoba. Beyond the title obtained, the specialized press criticized Alfaro for lacking a clear game identity in his team.

Coaching statistics

As of 19 November 2024
TeamNatFromToRecord
GWDLGFGAGDWin %
Atlético Rafaela Flag of Argentina.svg 1 July 199230 June 1996126464733164127+37036.51
Quilmes 1 July 199630 June 1997421811136047+13042.86
Atlético Rafaela 1 July 199830 June 20007231162510085+15043.06
Belgrano 1 January 200130 June 200114257820−12014.29
Olimpo 1 July 200130 June 20022413743620+16054.17
Quilmes 1 January 200323 May 2005111443631132106+26039.64
San Lorenzo 1 July 20056 February 2006228593543−8036.36
Arsenal de Sarandí 5 June 200630 June 200894392530122120+2041.49
Rosario Central 10 October 20082 March 20091422101219−7014.29
Al-Ahli Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg 22 April 200920 November 2009124441515+0033.33
Arsenal de Sarandí Flag of Argentina.svg 1 July 201015 April 2014182764759224198+26041.76
Tigre 5 September 201427 November 2015492011186258+4040.82
Gimnasia LP 21 March 201630 June 2017391513113832+6038.46
Huracán 14 July 201731 December 201846221595640+16047.83
Boca Juniors 1 January 201931 December 201950271677328+45054.00
Ecuador Flag of Ecuador.svg 26 August 202012 January 202335121494435+9034.29
Costa Rica Flag of Costa Rica.svg 2 November 20239 August 2024115241614+2045.45
Paraguay Flag of Paraguay.svg 13 August 2024present633074+3050.00
Total9493872792831,2041,011+193040.78

Honours

Manager

Olimpo
Arsenal
Boca Juniors

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References

  1. RSSSF Argentine 2nd level championship winning managers
  2. (in Spanish) Sports Ya profile [ permanent dead link ]
  3. "Gustavo Alfaro será el nuevo DT". Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 17 May 2010.
  4. http://tn.com.ar/deportes/esencial/final-abrupto-arsenal-decidio-cortar-con-el-ciclo-de-gustavo-alfaro_492166 (In Spanish)