Odir Jacques

Odir Jacques
Personal information
Full name Odir Jacques Ferreira
Date of birth (1946-04-02) April 2, 1946
Place of birth Cantagalo, Brazil
Height 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)
Playing position striker
Youth career
1965-1966 Bangu
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1962-1966 Bangu
1967, 1970 FAS
1968 Sonsonate
1968 Alianza (30)
1970 Atlético Marte
1970-1971 Saprissa
1971-1973 Herediano
1973-1974 Saprissa
1974-1975 Alajuelense
1975-1976 Saprissa
1976-1978 Herediano
1978-1981 Alajuelense
1981-1982 Limonense
Teams managed
1978 Herediano
1981-1982 Herediano
1983 Alajuelense
1985 Alajuelense
1985 Herediano
1985-1987 Costa Rica
1988 Alajuelense
1991 Saprissa
1992-1993 Saprissa
1997-1998 Herediano
2000 FAS
2001 Herediano
2002 San Carlos
2005 Municipal Liberia
2006 Alianza
2008 Municipal Liberia
2012 Herediano
2012 Cartaginés
2013 Pérez Zeledón
2015 Herediano

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.

† Appearances (goals)

Odir Jacques Ferreira (born 2 April 1946 in Cantagalo) is a retired Brazilian soccer striker who played most of his career in Costa Rica.

Club career

El Salvador

Before moving to Costa Rica, Jacques Ferreira started at Bangu in Brazil's Carioca League, then played for several years in El Salvador with Club Deportivo FAS. Although he failed to win any trophys in his time with FAS, he did help them to reach the championship final for three consecutive seasons in 1967/68, 1969 and 1970. He was very well known and popular with the clubs supporters as he was a very effective and consistent striker. In his few years in El Salvador he scored a total of 126 goals,[1] and is currently still listed as one of the highest goalscorers of all time. He holds a scoring record still remaining untouched, scoring 30 goals in 36 games in 1968 with Alianza.[2]

Costa Rica

From FAS, Ferreira moved to Saprissa, where he won several national championships, including the famous six consecutive championships won by Saprissa from 1972 to 1977, a record both in Costa Rica as well as in the American continent. He also played with Alajuelense and Herediano, before retiring at age 33.

Jacques was an excellent goal scorer, very quick and gifted, with great skills for shooting especially free kicks. He is always remembered by Saprissa's fans, because of his unique talents.

He was the best goal scorer in the 1972 Costa Rica's first division tournament, in which he scored 18 goals.[3] He scored 5 goals in one game against Puntarenas in May 1972.[4] He totalled 82 goals in the Costa Rican top tier.[2]

He is considered by many experts, as the best foreigner to ever play in the Costa Rica's first division.

Managerial career

After retiring, he began a very successful coaching career in Costa Rica, where he managed the three most important teams in the country, Deportivo Saprissa, Alajuelense and Herediano, becoming the only person to win a championship as a player and as a coach at the same time with Herediano in 1978. He won 3 championships with Herediano and 1 championship with Alajuelense under his coaching tenure. He also coached the Costa Rica's national squad in 1985. As a coach he discovered Costa Rica national team player greats such as Oscar Ramirez, Rolando Fonseca and Mauricio Wright among others. He had a spell again in El Salvador with FAS whom he joined in June 2000[5] before returning to Costa Rica where he was dismissed by Municipal Liberia in March 2005.[6]

In January 2006 he moved to El Salvador again to take charge at Alianza.[7] He retook the reigns at Herediano in March 2012,[8] left them for Cartaginés in August 2012[9][10] and in April 2013 he took over at Pérez Zeledón from Uruguayan Daniel Casas[11] but was dismissed already in May 2013 after only 4 games in the dug out.[12]

Jacques is the manager who led Herediano during the most matches, 234 in total.[13]

Personal life

He met his wife Ana Cecilia in El Salvador and they have three children.[2]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, April 30, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.