Constantino Mohor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Full name Constantino Segundo Mohor Sanhueza
Date of birth (1934-09-17)17 September 1934
Place of birth Los Sauces, Chile
Date of death 30 December 2018(2018-12-30) (aged 84)
Constantino Mohor
Personal information
Full name Constantino Segundo Mohor Sanhueza
Date of birth (1934-09-17)17 September 1934
Place of birth Los Sauces, Chile
Date of death 30 December 2018(2018-12-30) (aged 84)
Place of death Maipú, Chile
Height 1.70 m (5 ft 7 in)
Position Defensive midfielder
Youth career
1950 Escuela Normal Victoria
1951–1952 Victoria (city team)
1952–1954 University of Concepción
1954–1955 Palestino
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1955–1961 Palestino
1961 Colo-Colo
1962–1963 Santiago Morning 54 (9)
1964–1965 Calvo Sotelo
1965–1966 Hospitalet
1966 Unión La Calera 29 (1)
1967–1968 Deportes Concepción 38 (2)
International career
1958 Chile B 2 (0)
1959–1960 Chile 1 (0)
Managerial career
1975 Rangers
Ñublense
Guanacasteca
1985–1988 General Velásquez
* Club domestic league appearances and goals

Constantino Segundo Mohor Sanhueza (17 September 1934 – 30 December 2018) was a Chilean football player and manager.

Early years

Born in Los Sauces, Chile, Mohor represented the team of the normal school of Victoria commune at the age of 16 and the team of the same city a year later, playing also for the teams of another communes such as Mulchén, Los Ángeles and Traiguén. Then, he represented the team of University of Concepción in regional tournaments where competed teams of industries such as Fanaloza.[1]

In Chile

He joined Palestino after a trial in 1954 with the Serbian Miodrag (or Milan) Stefanović[2] as coach, winning in 1955 both the Primera División and the reserves national championship.[3]

After playing for Palestino, in October 1961 he played for Colo-Colo. In 1962 he switched to Santiago Morning.[3] In his stint with the club, it is remembered a tragic car accident that he and three fellows suffered in January 1963, when they came back to Santiago after a match against Deportes La Serena, dying his fellow Jorge Huasito Fuenzalida.[4]

After a stint in Spain, he played for Unión La Calera (1966)[5] and Deportes Concepción (1967–68), with whom he won the 1967 Segunda División and got promotion to the top division, being well remembered along with his Argentine fellow Óscar Coll.[6]

In Spain

Thanks to the journalists Renato González [es] and Raúl Matas, he went to Spain and met entrepreneur Luis Guijarro, getting trials with Atlético Madrid and Real Betis.[7] However, he played in the Segunda División for Calvo Sotelo (1964–65) and Hospitalet (1965–66), where he coincided with his compatriot Jaime Ramírez.[3]

As an anecdote, he was registered as born in 1937 since foreign players over 30 year-old couldn't be signed.[3]

International career

In 1958 he represented a Chile national team that played two friendlies against the Austrian club First Vienna. Then, he took part of Chile squad in the 1959 South American Championship in Buenos Aires.[3] He made his official debut in a friendly match against Uruguay on 5 June 1960.[8]

Coaching career

At professional level, he coached Rangers, Ñublense, among others.[6] In 1986, he won the Chilean Tercera División with General Velásquez.[9] In addition, he has been one of the four Chilean managers who have worked in Costa Rica along with Hugo Tassara, Román Soto and Javier Mascaró,[10] being the coach of Guanacasteca.[11]

Outside of coaching professional clubs, he worked for the Ministry of Sports of Chile and also coached youth teams.[12]

Personal life

His family came to Southern Zone of Chile from Palestine at the end of the 19th century and his father put a shop in Los Sauces.[1]

He graduated as a teacher at the normal school of Victoria, where he coincided with José Santos Arias and Caupolicán Peña, who were footballers and managers later.[3]

Honours

References

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