Gustavo Costas

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Full name Gustavo Adolfo Costas Makeira
Date of birth (1963-02-28) 28 February 1963 (age 63)
Place of birth Buenos Aires, Argentina
Height 1.84 m (6 ft 0 in)
Gustavo Costas
Costas in 2012
Personal information
Full name Gustavo Adolfo Costas Makeira
Date of birth (1963-02-28) 28 February 1963 (age 63)
Place of birth Buenos Aires, Argentina
Height 1.84 m (6 ft 0 in)
Position Centre-back
Team information
Current team
Racing Club (head coach)
Youth career
Racing Club
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1981–1989 Racing Club
1989–1992 Locarno 45 (3)
1992–1996 Racing Club
1996–1997 Gimnasia de Jujuy 34 (1)
Managerial career
1998–1999 Racing Club (youth)
1999–2000 Racing Club
2001–2003 Guaraní
2003–2004 Alianza Lima
2005–2006 Cerro Porteño
2007 Racing Club
2008 Olimpia
2009–2011 Alianza Lima
2011 Al Nassr
2012–2013 Barcelona SC
2014–2015 Santa Fe
2016 Atlas
2016–2017 Santa Fe
2017–2018 Al-Fayha
2019–2021 Guaraní
2022 Palestino
2022–2023 Bolivia
2024– Racing Club
* Club domestic league appearances and goals

Gustavo Adolfo Costas Makeira (born 28 February 1963) is an Argentine football manager and former player who played as a centre-back. He is the current head coach of Primera División club Racing Club.

Costas' career is mainly linked to Racing Club, where he played for twelve seasons in two different spells, and coached in three different spells. He has also coached in Paraguay, Peru, Saudi Arabia, Ecuador, Colombia, Mexico, Chile and Bolivia.

Costas with Racing Club in 1986

Born in Buenos Aires, Costas was a Racing Club youth graduate. After making his first team debut in 1981, he saw the club's first-ever relegation from the Primera División from the stands, as he was nursing a knee injury.[1]

Costas became a key part of the team that won promotion back to the top tier in 1985, acting as team captain.[2] He later helped La Academia to win the 1988 Supercopa Libertadores, their first major title in 21 years, they then went on to win the less prestigious Supercopa Interamaricana.

Costas moved abroad in 1989, joining Swiss team Locarno. He returned to Racing in 1992, playing for four seasons before moving to Gimnasia de Jujuy in 1996, where he played until his retirement in 1997 at the age of 34.[3]

Costas played 337 matches for Racing, scoring nine goals. He became the footballer with the most appearances for the club in the professional era, and the second of their entire history (only behind Natalio Perinetti's 407 matches in the amateur era).[1]

Managerial career

Early career

After retiring, Costas joined the youth categories of his main club Racing, before being named manager of the first team along with Humberto Maschio on 17 December 1998.[4] The duo left on 23 May 2000, after a 3–0 loss to Lanús.[5]

On 1 July 2001, Costas moved to Paraguay after being named manager of Guaraní.[6] On 9 April 2003, after having altercations with the club's vice-president Juan Alberto Acosta, he resigned.[7]

Alianza Lima

Shortly after leaving Guaraní, Costas was presented at Peruvian side Alianza Lima on 18 April 2003.[8] He immediately led them to success in the 2003 Clausura, and then saw his team win the Primera División Peruana final against Sporting Cristal.

In 2004, Costas led Alianza to the Apertura 2004 title and another chance to win the final of the Primera División where they again defeated Sporting Cristal, this time 5–4 on penalties.[9]

Cerro Porteño

Costas left Alianza in December 2004 to return to Paraguay, where he took over Cerro Porteño. Under his leadership the club won both the Apertura and Clausura in 2005 to be crowned undisputed national champions.

Costas resigned from Cerro on 24 April 2007, after disagreeing with an interview from club president Luis Pettengill.[10]

Racing Club return

On 27 April 2007, Costas agreed to return to Racing Club for his second spell in charge of La Academia.[11] He was sacked on 2 December, after a poor Apertura overall.[12]

Olimpia

On 12 December 2007, Costas signed a two-year contract to manage Olimpia back in Paraguay.[13] The following 29 August, after a 4–0 loss to Universidad Católica, he was dismissed.[14]

Alianza Lima return

On 19 December 2008, Costas agreed to return to Alianza Lima on a two-year contract.[15] He led the club to the 2009 Torneo Descentralizado finals, losing to Universitario.

Al Nassr

On 18 July 2011, Costas resigned from Alianza to sign for Al Nassr from Saudi Arabia.[16][17] He was dismissed on 30 November, with the club sitting 6th in the league table.

Barcelona SC

On 11 April 2012, Costas switched teams and countries again, after being announced as manager of Ecuadorian side Barcelona SC on a one-year deal.[18] He won the first stage which secured Barcelona a spot to the 2012 Copa Sudamericana, 2013 Copa Libertadores and the third stage of the Ecuadorian Serie A.[19] On 2 December, Barcelona won the second stage, automatically becoming the champion of the 2012 Ecuadorian Serie A.[20]

On 6 December 2012, Costas extended his contract with Barcelona until December 2013.[21] He departed on 12 August 2013, after a poor run of results.[22]

Santa Fe

On 16 May 2014, after nearly one year without a club, Costas was appointed manager of Colombian club Independiente Santa Fe.[23] He led the club to the 2014 Finalización title, but resigned the following 30 May, after elimination from the 2015 Copa Libertadores.[24]

Atlas

On 27 November 2015, Costas replaced Gustavo Matosas at the helm of Liga MX side Atlas.[25] He was sacked the following 27 April, two matches before the end of the 2016 Clausura tournament.[26]

Santa Fe return

On 21 July 2016, Santa Fe announced the return of Costas as manager.[27] He won the 2016 Suruga Bank Championship and the 2016 Finalización titles, aside from also lifting the 2017 Superliga Colombiana.

Costas resigned from Santa Fe on 9 June 2017, after a poor 2017 Apertura.[28]

Al-Fayha

On 1 November 2017, Costas replaced Constantin Gâlcă as manager of Al-Fayha back in Saudi Arabia.[29] He was sacked on 15 October of the following year, with the club in the relegation zone.[30]

Guaraní return

On 6 June 2019, Costas agreed to return to Guaraní after 16 years, being presented four days later.[31] He left by mutual consent on 28 May 2021, after a poor 2021 Apertura tournament.[32]

Palestino

On 20 December 2021, Costas replaced compatriot Patricio Graff as manager of Chilean club Palestino.[33]

Bolivia national team

On 19 August 2022, Costas confirmed as manager of the Bolivia national team, effective as the following November, once his season with Palestino ended.[34] On 23 October 2023, after a poor start in the 2026 FIFA World Cup qualifiers, he was sacked.[35]

Third spell at Racing

On 15 December 2023, Costas was officially announced as manager of Racing for his third spell.[36] On 24 November 2024, he won the year's Copa Sudamericana with the club, their first international title in 36 years. On 27 February 2025, he led the team to win their first Recopa Sudamericana, winning against Botafogo FR, which was 2024 Copa Libertadores champion.[37]

Managerial statistics

As of 29 April 2026
Managerial record by team and tenure
Team Nat From To Record
G W D L GF GA GD Win %
Racing Club Argentina 17 December 1999 23 May 2000 501418185873−15028.00
Guaraní Paraguay 1 July 2001 9 April 2003 622512259394−1040.32
Alianza Lima Peru 18 April 2003 11 December 2004 9454202014975+74057.45
Cerro Porteño Paraguay 11 December 2004 24 April 2007 117672624200118+82057.26
Racing Club Argentina 5 May 2007 4 December 2007 2495103132−1037.50
Olimpia Paraguay 1 January 2008 29 August 2008 2996143445−11031.03
Alianza Lima Peru 1 January 2009 17 July 2011 118582931169121+48049.15
Al Nassr Saudi Arabia 18 July 2011 30 November 2011 104241416−2040.00
Barcelona SC Ecuador 11 April 2012 12 August 2013 7633241911873+45043.42
Santa Fe Colombia 16 May 2014 30 May 2015 7541161811266+46054.67
Atlas Mexico 27 November 2015 27 April 2016 2145122336−13019.05
Santa Fe Colombia 21 July 2016 9 June 2017 602520157365+8041.67
Al-Fayha Saudi Arabia 6 November 2017 15 October 2018 2510783741−4040.00
Guaraní Paraguay 1 June 2019 14 June 2021 100492328146108+38049.00
Palestino Chile 1 January 2022 13 November 2022 32131094636+10040.63
Bolivia Bolivia 14 November 2022 23 October 2023 10118517−12010.00
Racing Club Argentina 15 December 2023 present 130692338205114+91053.08
Total 1,0334862473001,5131,130+383047.05

Honours

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI