Ramón Carnero

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Full name Ramón Carnero González
Date of birth (1953-11-08) 8 November 1953 (age 72)
Place of birth Vigo, Spain
Height 1.77 m (5 ft 10 in)
Ramón Carnero
Personal information
Full name Ramón Carnero González
Date of birth (1953-11-08) 8 November 1953 (age 72)
Place of birth Vigo, Spain
Height 1.77 m (5 ft 10 in)
Position Defender
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
Gran Peña Celtista
1977–1978 Deportivo Alavés 1 (0)
1979 Logroñés 9 (0)
1979–1984 Arosa 31 (1)
Total 41 (1)
Managerial career
1992–1993 Celta Turista
2004 Celta Vigo (caretaker)
2004 Celta Vigo
* Club domestic league appearances and goals

Ramón Carnero González (born 8 November 1953) is a Spanish retired footballer who played as a defender,[1] and later worked as a manager.[2]

Carnero was born in Vigo in the province of Pontevedra, within the autonomous community of Galicia, and played for local minnows Gran Peña Celtista. He spent 18 months at Deportivo Alavés from the summer of 1977, making only one appearance in the Segunda División.[1] He played the last nine minutes of an away fixture against Real Zaragoza on 23 April 1978, replacing Luis Sánchez Martín as Alavés lost 10.[3] After half a season with Logroñés in Segunda División B, he joined Arosa in the Tercera División in 1979. He spent five years there, returning to the third tier for his last season after promotion in 1983.[1]

Coaching career

Carnero was the manager of Celta Vigo's B team, Celta Turista, for the 1992–93 Segunda División season.[2] They avoided relegation in 15th place,[4] but Carnero was replaced by Jacinto Barreiro the following season.[5]

When Celta first team coach Miguel Ángel Lotina was sacked in January 2004,[6] Carnero stepped in as caretaker manager.[7] His sole match in charge was a 10 win over his former club Deportivo Alavés in the quarter-finals of the Copa del Rey,[8] although Celta were still eliminated 43 on aggregate. Radomir Antić was appointed as the new manager the following day.[9]

Antić lasted only two months before quitting in March,[10] and Carnero once again stepped into the breach, taking charge until the end of the season.[8] He could not prevent Celta being relegated, and was replaced by Fernando Vázquez the following season.

Career statistics

References

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