Claudio Biaggio
Personal information
Full name Claudio Darío Biaggio
Date of birth (1967-07-02) 2 July 1967
Place of birth Santa Rosa, La Pampa, Argentina
Height 1.77 m (5 ft 10 in)
Position(s) Forward
Team information
Current team
Nacional Potosí (manager)
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1986–1988 General Belgrano
1989 All Boys de Santa Rosa 7 (3)
1989–1990 Peñarol
1990–1992 Danubio 48 (24)
1992–1996 San Lorenzo 95 (36)
1996–1997 Bordeaux 16 (7)
1997–1999 San Lorenzo 74 (29)
1999–2001 Colón 50 (16)
2001 Avispa Fukuoka 12 (2)
2002 Deportivo Cuenca 5 (0)
2002 Danubio 12 (5)
2003 Oriente Petrolero 15 (13)
2004 La Plata FC 9 (5)
2005 Juventud de Las Piedras 16 (4)
2006 Deportivo Laferrere 8 (2)
2006 Estudiantes de Río Cuarto 6 (1)
2007 Teodelina FBC
2009–2010 Ferro Carril Sud 23 (5)
2010 Atlético Tapalqué
International career
1995 Argentina 1 (0)
Managerial career
2014–2017 San Lorenzo (youth)
2017 San Lorenzo (caretaker)
2017–2018 San Lorenzo
2020 Chacarita Juniors
2021 Sud América
2022 The Strongest
2023 Always Ready
2023 The Strongest
2024– Nacional Potosí
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Claudio Darío Biaggio (born 2 July 1967) is an Argentine football manager and former player who played as a striker.[1] He is the current manager of Bolivian club Nacional Potosí.

During his professional career he played for important clubs in Argentina (Belgrano, San Lorenzo de Almagro and Colón de Santa Fe), Uruguay (Peñarol and Danubio), France (Girondins de Bordeaux), Japan (Avispa Fukuoka), Ecuador (Deportivo Cuenca) and Bolivia (Oriente Petrolero). He also earned one cap with the Argentina national team in 1995.

Coaching career

San Lorenzo

Born in Santa Rosa, La Pampa, Biaggio started his coaching career as a youth coach in San Lorenzo, before he was named manager of San Lorenzo's reserve team in January 2014.[2]

On 22 November 2017, Biaggio was named interim manager of San Lorenzo for the rest of 2017, after the departure of Diego Aguirres.[3] In December 2017, he was named permanently manager of the club.[4] However, he decided to step back at the end of October 2018 after a defeat to Club Atlético Temperley.[5] During the 2017/2018 season, Biaggio led 43 games, won 19, drew 13 and lost 11.

Chacarita Juniors

On 28 February 2020, Biaggio was appointed manager of Chacarita Juniors.[6]

Career statistics

Club

[7]

Club performance League
Season Club League AppsGoals
Argentina League
1992–93San Lorenzo AlmagroPrimera División105
1993–94305
1994–953315
1995–962211
France League
1996–97Girondins BordeauxDivision 1162
Argentina League
1996–97San Lorenzo AlmagroPrimera División168
1997–983416
1998–99245
1999–00ColónPrimera División2811
2000–01225
Japan League
2001Avispa FukuokaJ1 League122
Venezuela League
2002Deportivo CuencaSerie A00
Uruguay League
2002DanubioPrimera División125
Bolivia League
2003BolívarLiga Profesional00
CountryArgentina 21981
France 162
Japan 122
Venezuela 00
Uruguay 125
Bolivia 00
Total 26090

International

[7]

Argentina national team
YearAppsGoals
199510
Total10

Honours

San Lorenzo

Danubio

Ferro Carril Sud

References

  1. "Claudio Biaggio". BDFA (in Spanish). Retrieved 27 October 2018.
  2. Claudio Biaggio es el flamante entrenador de la reserva de San Lorenzo, archivo.laarena.com.ar, 21 January 2014
  3. Claudio Biaggio asume como técnico interino de San Lorenzo, tycsports.com, 22 November 2017
  4. Fútbol: Claudio Biaggio fue ratificado como DT de San Lorenzo, analisisdigital.com.ar, 7 December 2017
  5. Claudio Biaggio renunció a la dirección técnica de San Lorenzo: quiénes son los dos candidatos a reemplazarlo, infobae.com, 31 October 2017
  6. Claudio Darío Biaggio, nuevo Director Técnico Archived 2020-03-24 at the Wayback Machine, chacaritajuniors.com.ar, 28 February 2020
  7. 1 2 Claudio Biaggio at National-Football-Teams.com
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