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词条 Óscar de Paula
释义

  1. Club career

  2. International career

  3. Honours

  4. References

  5. External links

{{spanish name 2|De Paula|Gamero}}{{Infobox football biography
| name = Óscar de Paula
| image =
| fullname = Óscar Javier de Paula Gamero
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1975|5|31|df=yes}}
| birth_place = Durango, Spain
| height = {{convert|1.80|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}
| position = Striker
| currentclub =
| clubnumber =
| youthyears1 =
| youthyears2 =
| youthyears3 =
| youthclubs1 = Olivenza
| youthclubs2 = Salesianos
| youthclubs3 = Badajoz
| years1 = 1993–1995
| years2 = 1995–2006
| years3 = 2006–2007
| years4 = 2007–2011
| clubs1 = Badajoz
| clubs2 = Real Sociedad
| clubs3 = Cádiz
| clubs4 = Ponferradina
| caps1 = 27
| caps2 = 273
| caps3 = 30
| caps4 = 114
| totalcaps = 444
| goals1 = 5
| goals2 = 57
| goals3 = 4
| goals4 = 48
| totalgoals = 114
| nationalyears1 = 1996–1998
| nationalteam1 = Spain U21
| nationalcaps1 = 8
| nationalgoals1 = 1
| manageryears1 = 2015–2016
| manageryears2 = 2016–2017
| managerclubs1 = Badajoz
| managerclubs2 = Palencia
| club-update =
| nationalteam-update =
}}

Óscar Javier de Paula Gamero (born 31 May 1975) is a Spanish retired footballer who played as a striker, and is a manager.

Most of his professional career was associated with Real Sociedad, for which he appeared in 11 La Liga seasons, playing 300 competitive matches and scoring 60 goals.

Club career

Born in Durango, Biscay, Basque Country, de Paula began his football career with lowly clubs in Badajoz as his family hailed from Olivenza (Extremadura). Being still a junior he signed with CD Badajoz, and made his professional debut midway through the 1992–93 campaign in the second division.[1]

At the beginning of 1995–96, de Paula moved back to his native region to play for La Liga side Real Sociedad. His first game came on 10 September 1995, featuring three minutes in the 2–0 home win against Sporting de Gijón;[2] he went on to spent 11 seasons at the former, all of them in the top flight.[1]

De Paula's time as a player for Real Sociedad was very successful although he was never a regular starter, more often than not scoring goals after coming in as a substitute, and usually made a good goals scored/minutes played ratio.[3] Through 1999 to 2001 he netted nine goals in each season, but made only 11 appearances in 2002–03 as they finished runners-up and, in his last year, managed just six matches (280 minutes) with three goals.

In June 2006, de Paula's contract expired[4] and he left and moved south to Cádiz CF in the second level. He "descended" yet another tier at the end of the 2007–08 campaign after joining SD Ponferradina, scoring 32 league goals in his first two seasons combined (16 apiece).[5]

De Paula netted 11 times in 25 games in 2009–10 as the Castile and León team returned to division two after a three-year absence.[5] However, Ponfe would be immediately relegated back and, aged 36, he announced his professional retirement due to a recurrent knee injury, having appeared in 444 league matches both major levels combined and scored 114 goals.[6]

International career

De Paula won eight caps for Spain at under-21 level, during slightly more than one year. His first arrived on 8 October 1996, when he started the 2–1 away victory over the Czech Republic for the 1998 UEFA European Championship qualifiers.[7]

Honours

Ponferradina
  • Segunda División B: 2007–08, 2009–10

References

1. ^Adiós de un grande a los 36 años (Farewell to a great at the age of 36); Hoy, 1 June 2011 (in Spanish)
2. ^Karpin marca diferencias y da el triunfo a la Real (Karpin makes the difference and gives win to Real); Mundo Deportivo, 11 September 1995 (in Spanish)
3. ^La cifra goleadora más sorprendente de Leo Messi (Leo Messi's most surprising scoring statistic); Sport, 16 October 2016 (in Spanish)
4. ^De Paula signs out at Real Sociedad; UEFA, 9 June 2006
5. ^Los goles de De Paula son sinónimo de victoria (De Paula's goals equal wins); Marca, 17 November 2010 (in Spanish)
6. ^Óscar de Paula se retira del fútbol tras 21 temporadas como professional (Óscar de Paula retires from football after 21 seasons as a professional); El Diario Vasco, 31 May 2011 (in Spanish)
7. ^Arnau, héroe en Praga (Arnau, hero in Prague)]; Mundo Deportivo, 9 October 1996 (in Spanish)

External links

  • {{BDFutbol|2117}}
  • {{Soccerway|oscar-de-paula-gamero/61842}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Paula, Oscar De}}

18 : 1975 births|Living people|People from Durango, Biscay|Spanish footballers|Basque footballers|Association football forwards|La Liga players|Segunda División players|Segunda División B players|CD Badajoz players|Real Sociedad footballers|Cádiz CF players|SD Ponferradina players|Spain under-21 international footballers|Spanish football managers|Segunda División B managers|CD Badajoz managers|Basque Country international footballers

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