Juan Carlos Cabanillas

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Full name Juan Carlos Cabanillas Mendoza
Date of birth (1963-05-02) 2 May 1963 (age 62)
Place of birth Callao, Peru
Position Midfielder
Juan Carlos Cabanillas
Personal information
Full name Juan Carlos Cabanillas Mendoza
Date of birth (1963-05-02) 2 May 1963 (age 62)
Place of birth Callao, Peru
Position Midfielder
Youth career
Sport Boys
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1981–1985 Sport Boys
1986 Universitario
1986–1987 Santa Fe
1988 Montevideo Wanderers
1990–1991 Unión Huaral
1992 UTC
1992–1993 Canton Invaders (indoor) 3 (0)
1993 Deportivo Municipal
1994–1995 Sport Boys
1996 Guardia Republicana
1997 Indiana Twisters (indoor) 24 (10)
1998–1999 Baltimore Blast (indoor) 3 (0)
International career
1984–1988 Peru 6 (0)
Managerial career
2000–2001 Peru U17 (assistant)
2004 Atlético Grau
2005 Sport Boys
2006 UTC
2007 La Peña Sporting
2009 Sport Boys
2013 Walter Ormeño
2015–2016 Carlos A. Mannucci
2017–2018 Carlos Stein
2020–2021 Cantolao (assistant)
2024 Deportivo Coopsol (assistant)
2025 Deportivo Coopsol (assistant)
2025 Sport Boys
* Club domestic league appearances and goals

Juan Carlos Cabanillas Mendoza (born 2 May 1963) is a Peruvian football manager and former player who played as a midfielder.

After making his first team debut with Sport Boys in 1981, Cabanillas helped the side to win the 1984 Torneo Descentralizado before playing a friendly tournament with Peñarol in late 1985. In the following year, he joined Universitario, but moved to Santa Fe shortly after.[1]

In 1988, Cabanillas switched teams and countries again, after signing for Montevideo Wanderers in Uruguay.[2] He returned to his home country in 1990 with Unión Huaral, and had one-year spells at UTC and Deportivo Municipal[1] (aside from a short period playing indoor soccer at Canton Invaders)[3] before returning to Sport Boys in 1994.[1]

Cabanillas played for Guardia Republicana in 1996,[1] and subsequently returned to the United States in the following year, back to indoor soccer at Indiana Twisters.[3] He then spent the 1998–99 season at Baltimore Blast,[3] and subsequently retired.

International career

Managerial career

References

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