Mauricio Illesca

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Full name Mauricio Leonel Illesca Carreño
Date of birth (1972-01-05) 5 January 1972 (age 54)
Place of birth Concepción, Chile
Height 1.84 m (6 ft 0 in)
Mauricio Illesca
Personal information
Full name Mauricio Leonel Illesca Carreño
Date of birth (1972-01-05) 5 January 1972 (age 54)
Place of birth Concepción, Chile
Height 1.84 m (6 ft 0 in)
Position Striker
Youth career
Escuela Barrabases
1984–1989 Universidad de Chile
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1990–1994 Universidad de Chile 11 (1)
1992Santiago Wanderers (loan) 20 (15)
1993Deportes La Serena (loan) 0 (0)
1994O'Higgins (loan) 18 (0)
1995 Colo-Colo 8 (6)
1996 Audax Italiano 25 (12)
1997 Las Palmas 5 (0)
1997 Audax Italiano 9 (5)
1998 Santiago Wanderers 8 (2)
1999 Deportes Concepción 6 (4)
2000 Ferro Carril Oeste 0 (0)
2000 Coquimbo Unido 7 (1)
2000 Santa Fe 2 (0)
Total 119 (46)
International career
1991 Chile U20
1997 Chile 1 (0)
* Club domestic league appearances and goals

Mauricio Leonel Illesca Carreño (born 5 January 1972) is a Chilean former professional footballer who played as a striker for clubs in Chile and abroad.

Born in Concepción, Chile, as a child, Illesca was with Escuela Barrabases from San Eugenio neighborhood [es], Estación Central, Santiago.[1] Then he joined Universidad de Chile youth system at the age of 12 and made his professional debut in a 1990 Copa Chile match versus Soinca Bata [es], scoring a goal in the 2–1 win.[2] In 1992, he and his fellow Rodrigo Goldberg were loaned to Santiago Wanderers in the Chilean Segunda División. He is well remembered by the club fans due to the fact that he became the team goalscorer with 15 goals.[3] In Chile, he also played for Deportes La Serena, O'Higgins, Colo-Colo,[4][5] Audax Italiano, Deportes Concepción and Coquimbo Unido.[2]

After a good season with Audax Italiano,[6] in 1997 he had a brief step with Spanish club UD Las Palmas, making five appearances.[7]

His last club was Independiente Santa Fe in Colombia, playing the last match in December 2000 versus América de Cali,[8] becoming the four Chilean to play for the club after Carlos Molina, Juan Ramón Garrido and Luis Ceballos.[9]

International career

Illesca represented Chile at under-20 level in the 1991 South American Championship.[10]

At senior level, he was a substitute in the World Cup qualification matches versus Peru[11] and Bolivia[12] in 1997. In addition, he took part in the friendly match versus Millonarios in October 1997.[13]

Personal life

Since he was a child, Illesca is nicknamed Bototo (Boot), like a comics character from Chilean magazine Barrabases [es], whose name coincides with the Escuela Barrabases where he began his career.[2]

As a curiosity, the news about the arrest of a drug trafficker nicknamed Bototo Illesca, like Mauricio, was shown in a Chilean TV program from Mega channel in 2011. His former fellow footballer Tincho Gálvez thought that it was about Mauricio and called him, realizing that their nicknames matched.[2]

Post-retirement

References

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