Khác biệt giữa bản sửa đổi của “Oscar Tabárez”

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In 1980, one year after retiring as a player, Tabárez took up coaching, starting with his last club. The following year, he was named the [[Uruguay national under-20 football team|Uruguay under-20 team]] manager (he would coach the side on two separate occasions), subsequently working in many clubs in his country, without settling anywhere. However, in [[1987 Copa Libertadores|1987]], he led national giants [[C.A. Peñarol]] to their fifth [[Copa Libertadores|Libertadores Cup]], beating [[América de Cali]]. This success was fundamental in his appointment as manager of the [[Uruguay national football team|Uruguayan national team]], which he led to the [[round of 16]] of the [[1990 FIFA World Cup]] in [[Italy]], losing precisely against [[Italy national football team|the hosts]]. He later coached [[Argentine Primera División|Argentine League]] powerhouse [[Boca Juniors]] for two years.
 
After leading [[Cagliari Calcio]] of [[Serie A]] to the ninth place in the [[1994–95 Serie A|1994–95 season]], Tabárez was hired by league powerhouse [[A.C. Milan]], but his spell would only last a few months: after an [[Supercoppa Italiana|Italian Supercup]] defeat against [[ACF Fiorentina]], at the [[San Siro]], a 2–3 loss at against [[Piacenza Calcio]] for [[1996–97 Serie A|the league]] cost him his position, being replaced by [[Arrigo Sacchi]], as the ''Rossoneri'' eventually languished into the 11th place.<ref>{{citechú thích web|url=http://sport.sky.it/sport/calcio_italiano/2009/09/03/allenatori_milan_leonardo_si_confronta_coi_grandi.html|title=Leo avvisato: da Sacchi a Terim, al Milan o stelle o stalle (Leo warned: from Sacchi to Terim, at Milan you either star or crash)|publisher=Sky.it|language=Italian|date=3 September 2009|accessdate=7 July 2010}}</ref>
 
Tabárez then worked with [[Real Oviedo]] in [[Spain]], with the [[Asturias]] club eventually only [[1997–98 La Liga|maintaining]] [[La Liga|top division status]] in the promotion/relegation playoffs against [[UD Las Palmas]] (4–3 on aggregate). He then returned to Caglari, being sacked after one draw and three losses.
 
After two years in Argentina, with [[Club Atlético Vélez Sarsfield]] and Boca, Tabárez spent four years away from football management. In 2006, after Uruguay had missed on three out of four [[FIFA World Cup]] qualification campaigns, he took charge of the national team,<ref>{{citechú thích web|url=http://www.fifa.com/worldcup/news/newsid=700966.html|title=Away curse stalks Uruguay|publisher=[[FIFA|FIFA.com]]|date=28 February 2008|accessdate=7 April 2009}}</ref> starting with a fourth place finish in the [[2007 Copa América|2007]] [[Copa América]], in [[Venezuela]].
 
After a successful playoff against [[Costa Rica national football team|Costa Rica]], Tabárez and the ''Charrúas'' [[2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL)|qualified]] for the [[2010 FIFA World Cup|2010 World Cup]] in [[South Africa]], where the national team reached the semi-finals for the first time in 40 years, only conceding five goals in six matches until that point (Uruguay ended the competition in fourth place, after a 2–3 defeat against [[The Netherlands national football team|Germany]]).<ref>{{citeweb|url=http://soccernet.espn.go.com/report?id=264122&league=FIFA.WORLD&cc=5739&ver=global|title=Khedira completes comeback|publisher=[[ESPNsoccernet]]|date=10 July 2010|accessdate=14 July 2010}}</ref>