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Miguel Riffo

Miguel Riffo
Personal information
Full name Miguel Augusto Riffo Garay
Date of birth 21 June 1981
Place of birth Santiago, Chile
Height 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)
Position(s) Defender
Club information
Current team
Deportes Iquique (manager)
Youth career
1992–2001 Colo-Colo
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2001–2010 Colo-Colo 212 (10)
2011 Santiago Morning 30 (4)
Total 242 (14)
National team
2007 Chile 9 (0)
Teams managed
2013–2015 Colo-Colo (assistant)
2015 Unión La Calera
2018– Deportes Iquique
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Miguel Augusto Riffo Garay (born 21 June 1981) is a Chilean former professional football player and the current manager of Deportes Iquique.

Club career

Product of Colo-Colo youth ranks, he won eight titles in his career with that club, being his most successful moment with the coach Claudio Borghi, when he also was named during the 2007 season at the Chilean Primera División Best Eleven. Although Riffo was born with a club foot, that complicated him very much, because he had to make several operations in his foot.[1] In the 2010 season, he abandoned the club, because the Argentine coach Diego Cagna not considered him for the next season and in January 2011, he signed for Santiago Morning.

In March 2012, he announced his retirement from professional football, because Morning was relegated to the Primera B and also Riffo was titled as football coach at the ANFP, the last season that he played.

International career

He also has represented the Chilean national team on several occasions. He played in one game during the Copa América 2007 versus Brazil in which he committed a penalty. Later in the match Riffo was injured for the tournament. Riffo played in the first four games of the 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification for Chile. Riffo started the first four games receiving a yellow card against Argentina. However, he was not recalled after the fourth match for the rest of the qualification process.[2]

Honours

Club

Colo-Colo

  • Primera División (7): 2002–C, 2006–A, 2006–C, 2007–A, 2007–C, 2008–C, 2009–C
  • Copa Sudamericana: Runner-up 2006

Individual

  • Primera División de Chile Team Of The Season: 2007

References

External links

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