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Mario Jacquet

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Mario Jacquet
Born(1946-07-29)July 29, 1946
Asunción, Paraguay
January 10, 2026(2026-01-10) (aged 79)January 10, 2026(2026-01-10) (aged 79)
💼 Occupation

Mario César Jacquet Martínez (Asunción; July 29, 1946 – January 10, 2026)[1] was a soccer player and coach. As a player, he performed as a midfielder and developed much of his career in Spain; he later managed clubs such as Cerro Porteño and Barcelona SC, and the Paraguay U-20 football team, with which he qualified for the FIFA World Cup 1999.[2]

Trajectory

He made his professional debut in 1966 playing for Club Nacional (Paraguay), at the age of He was then transferred to Cerro Porteño. After his good performances, in 1971, he emigrated to Spanish football, signing for Burgos Club de Fútbol, then moved to Real Oviedo where he became a benchmark of the time at the club. Also passed by Real Valladolid and Elche Football Club.

Subsequent to his retirement as a professional player, he began his career as a coach managing National, then managed Cerro Porteño, the club where he feels most identified. Two years later, he left the porteña bench and moved on to manage the Paraguay Under-20 Football Team, in the 1999 South American, qualifying for the world cup in the category held in Nigeria after falling before Uruguay.

After concluding this last tournament, he headed to the Alianza Atlético of Peru, where, in a little-remembered performance, he failed to conclude the Clausura Tournament.

In 2001 he won the national title with Cerro Porteño after defeating in the final Guaraní, at the Estadio Defensores del Chaco. The following year, he led it to the Libertadores, the team fell eliminated in the group stage after being beaten by two points to São Caetano and Cobreloa, after which, he ended his link as technical director of the cyclone.

In 2006 he took over the bench of Barcelona de Guayaquil.

In mid-2014 he took over the management of Sol de América, where he was until the 2015 Apertura Tournament, with a balance of 31 points, the product of eight wins, seven defeats and the same number of draws.[3]

Clubs

As a player

Club Country Year
Nacional  Paraguay 1966-1967
Cerro Porteño 1968-1971
Burgos C. F.  Spain 1971-1972
Real Oviedo 1972-1977
Real Valladolid 1977-1981
Elche C. F. 1981-1983
Orihuela Deportiva 1984-1986

As a coach

Club (*) Country Year
Nacional  Paraguay 1996
Cerro Porteño 1997-1998
Paraguay U-20 1998-1999
Alianza Atlético  Peru 1999
Cerro Porteño  Paraguay 2001-2002
Sportivo Luqueño 2003
Guarani 2004
October 12 2005
Barcelona  Ecuador 2006-2007
Macará 2008-2009
Sportivo Luqueño  Paraguay 2010
Liga de Portoviejo  Ecuador 2011
Sportivo Carapeguá  Paraguay 2012
Elche Ilicitano  Spain 2013
Deportivo Capiatá  Paraguay 2013-2014
Sol de América 2014-2015
Rubio Ñu[4] 2015
National 2016
Guaireña 2020


(*) including the national team.

Honors

As a player

National titles

Title Club Country Year
First Division Cerro Porteño  Paraguay 1970
Second Division Real Oviedo  Spain 1974-75

As a coach

National titles

Title Club Country Year
First Division Cerro Porteño  Paraguay 2001


References

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  3. "Mario Jacquet was fired from Sol de América" (in Spanish). hoy.com.py. 31 May 2015.CS1 maint: Unrecognized language (link)
  4. "Jacquet takes command of Rubio Ñu - Football - ABC Color". www.abc.com.py (in español). Retrieved 2025-02-27.

 Newfoundland



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