Oscar Quagliatta
Uruguayan footballer (born 1964)
Oscar Quagliatta (born October 30, 1964, in Montevideo, Uruguay) is a former Uruguayan footballer who played for clubs of Uruguay, Chile and Colombia.
Teams
Huracán Buceo 1988–1989
Liverpool 1990–1991
Huachipato 1992–1993
Liverpool 1994
Deportivo Cali 1995–1997
Central Español 1998–1999
Fénix 2000
Rentistas 2001–2003
External links
- Oscar Quagliatta at BDFA (in Spanish)
- Profile at Tenfield Digital at the Wayback Machine (archived 2 June 2012)
- v
- t
- e
- 1932: Labraga
- 1933: Young
- 1934: Ciocca
- 1935: Castaldo
- 1936: Ciocca
- 1937: Tellechea
- 1938: A. García
- 1939: A. García
- 1940: A. García
- 1941: A. García
- 1942: A. García
- 1943: A. García
- 1944: A. García
- 1945: Falero / Schiaffino
- 1946: Atilio García
- 1947: Falero
- 1949: Míguez
- 1950: Orlandi
- 1951: Hohberg
- 1952: Enrico
- 1953: Hohberg
- 1954: Romay
- 1955: Ambrois
- 1956: Carranza
- 1957: Hernández
- 1958: Pedersen
- 1959: Guaglianone
- 1960: Cabrera
- 1961: Spencer
- 1962: Spencer
- 1963: Rocha
- 1964: Salva
- 1965: Rocha
- 1966: Araquem de Melo
- 1967: Spencer
- 1968: Bareño / R. García / Rocha / Spencer
- 1969: Artime
- 1970: Artime
- 1971: Artime
- 1972: Mameli
- 1973: Morena
- 1974: Morena
- 1975: Morena
- 1976: Morena
- 1977: Morena
- 1978: Morena
- 1979: Victorino
- 1980: Siviero
- 1981: Paz
- 1982: Morena
- 1983: Luzardo
- 1984: Villarreal
- 1985: Alzamendi
- 1986: Carrasco / Miranda
- 1987: Miranda
- 1988: da Silva
- 1989: Aguirre / Miqueiro / Quagliatta
- 1990: Barán
- 1991: Valdés
- 1992: Valdés
- 1993: Cabrera
- 1994: D. Silva
- 1995: González
- 1996: González
- 1997: Bengoechea
- 1998: M. Rodríguez / Sosa
- 1999: Álvez
- 2000: Chevantón
- 2001: Marcón
- 2002: Hornos
- 2003: Medina
- 2004: Bueno / Medina
- 2005: Granoche
- 2005–06: Cardoso
- 2006–07: Díaz
- 2007–08: Porta / Stuani
- 2008–09: Pacheco / Quiñones
- 2009–10: Pacheco
- 2010–11: S. García
- 2011–12: Porta
- 2012–13: Olivera
- 2013–14: Acuña
- 2014–15: Alonso
- 2015–16: Arias / G. Rodríguez
- 2016: Fernández / P. Silva
- 2017: Palacios
- 2018: Bergessio
- 2019: Ramírez
- 2020: Bergessio
- 2021: Silvera
- 2022: Borbas
- 2023: Ramírez
![]() ![]() | This biographical article about a football forward from Uruguay born in the 1960s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e