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José Luis Trejo

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José Luis Trejo
Personal information
Full name José Luis Trejo Montoya
Date of birth (1951-08-04) 4 August 1951 (age 73)
Place of birth Tepeji, Mexico
Height 1.81 m (5 ft 11+12 in)
Managerial career
Years Team
1999–2003 Cruz Azul
2003–2005 Jaguares
2005 Pachuca
2005 Jaguares
2005–2006 Pachuca
2006–2007 Tigres
2007 Necaxa
2008 Morelia
2008–2009 Estudiantes Tecos
2010–2011 Puebla
2012 San Luis
2013–2014 UNAM
2019 Salamanca CF
2021–2022 Real Estelí

José Luis Trejo Montoya (born 4 August 1951) is a Mexican former professional footballer and current manager of Real Estelí.

Career

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Trejo played club football for Atlético Español and Tecos.

Trejo has coached Toros de Neza, Cruz Azul, Chiapas, C.F. Pachuca, UANL Tigres, Monarcas Morelia and Necaxa. He had managed more than 300 First Division matches.[1]

Trejo took Cruz Azul to the Copa Libertadores de América final against Boca Juniors in 2001, which made Cruz Azul the first Mexico team to reach the Libertadores final. The game ended 1–1 on aggregate, and had to be determined on penalties.

In 2006, Trejo won the Clausura with Pachuca.

One day after he won the league, Trejo signed with Tigres to be their coach for one year. Despite having a good record for the first few games, the team began showing lack of commitment. Soon, the record showed eight consecutive games without winning, including a 7–0 defeat against Toluca, and all the responsibility was put on Trejo's management. His last game with Tigres was against Pachuca, the very same team he had made champion a year before. After the team lost 5–0, he was fired on 1 October 2006. Trejo was not unemployed for long, as he was hired by Necaxa after manager Hugo Sánchez left to coach the Mexico national team.

He was fired from UAG Tecos in 2008.[2] He was next employed with the Liga MX Mexican Primera División club San Luis.

On 4 September 2013, Trejo became the new manager of UNAM. [3] On August 15, 2014, after UNAM suffered their 4th consecutive loss, Trejo was sacked and David Patiño was named interim coach.[4]

References

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  1. ^ "José luis Trejo llegará a 300 juegos como DT" [José Luis Trejo reaches 300 matches as manager] (in Spanish). Diario Deportes Record. 25 January 2011. Archived from the original on 19 February 2013.
  2. ^ "Cesa Tecos a José Luis Trejo; en su lugar nombra a Miguel Herrera - la Jornada".
  3. ^ "Trejo named Pumas coach, aiming for playoffs | Goal.com".
  4. ^ "José Luis Trejo fue cesado de Pumas".
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