Jacques Songo'o

"Songo'o" redirects here. For the football midfielder, see Franck Songo'o. For the football defender, see Yann Songo'o.
Jacques Songo'o
Personal information
Full nameJacques Celestin Songo'o
Date of birth(1964-03-17) 17 March 1964 (age 50)
Place of birthSackbayene, Cameroon
Height1.88 m (6 ft 2 in)
Playing positionGoalkeeper
Youth career
Canon Yaoundé
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1984–1989Canon Yaoundé?(?)
1989–1993Toulon22(0)
1992–1993Le Mans (loan)22(0)
1993–1996Metz101(0)
1996–2001Deportivo La Coruña150(0)
2001–2003Metz26(0)
2003–2004Deportivo La Coruña1(0)
Total322(0)
National team
1984–2002Cameroon46(0)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).

Jacques Celestin Songo'o (born 17 March 1964) is a Cameroonian retired footballer who played as a goalkeeper.

He spent the vast majority of his professional career in France and Spain – Deportivo de La Coruña, appearing in more than 200 official games over the course of six seasons and winning the 2000 La Liga championship – also representing the Cameroonian national team in four World Cups.

Club career

Songo'o was born in Sackbayene. After first establishing himself as a professional in France, with Ligue 1 outfit FC Metz, he was voted Best African Goalkeeper in 1996, then arguably lived his most successful period at Spain's Deportivo de La Coruña.

With the Galicians, he won the 1996–97 Ricardo Zamora Trophy (awarded to the best goalkeeper of the season), and was he side's undisputed starter in his first four years, which ended with the club's first-ever La Liga title. When Depor bought José Francisco Molina in 2000, Songo'o soon lost his place and was eventually transferred to old club Metz.

After two seasons, he returned to Deportivo and A Coruña, again in a free transfer. He settled there after having retired from football, aged 43.

International career

Songo'o featured for Cameroon in every FIFA World Cup from 1990 to 2002, although only as first-choice in the 1998 edition. He was also a member of the Cameroonian squad that competed at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.

In the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, Songo'o was part of Paul Le Guen's coaching staff. After the tournament, which ended in the group stage, he led Cameroon to a 3–0 victory over Poland, on an interim basis, the nation's first win in 12 competitive games.

Honours

Club

Metz
  • French League Cup: 1995–96
Deportivo

Country

  • Africa Cup of Nations: 1988, 2002

Individual

  • Zamora Trophy: 1996–97

Personal

  • Songo'o also has French citizenship.
  • Both of his sons – French U-19 international Franck (who changed his international allegiance to Cameroon in 2008 and played namely for Portsmouth and Real Zaragoza),[1] and Yann (who emerged through his father's former side Metz youth ranks) – are also professional footballers. Yann signed for Blackburn Rovers during the summer of 2013. [2]

References

External links

Cameroon squad 1992 African Cup of Nations Fourth Place
Cameroon squad 1998 African Cup of Nations
Cameroon squad 2002 African Cup of Nations Winners (4th Title)
La Liga Zamora Trophy
  • 1928–29: Zamora
  • 1929–30: Blasco
  • 1930–31: Zarraonaindia
  • 1931–32: Zamora
  • 1932–33: Zamora
  • 1933–34: Blasco
  • 1934–35: Urquiaga
  • 1935–36: Blasco
  • 1939–40: Tabales
  • 1940–41: Echevarría
  • 1941–42: Acuña
  • 1942–43: Acuña
  • 1943–44: Eizaguirre
  • 1944–45: Eizaguirre
  • 1945–46: Bañón
  • 1946–47: Lezama
  • 1947–48: Velasco
  • 1948–49: Domingo
  • 1949–50: Acuña
  • 1950–51: Acuña
  • 1951–52: Ramallets
  • 1952–53: Domingo
  • 1953–54: Otero
  • 1954–55: Alonso
  • 1955–56: Ramallets
  • 1956–57: Ramallets
  • 1957–58: Goyo
  • 1958–59: Ramallets
  • 1959–60: Ramallets
  • 1960–61: Vicente
  • 1961–62: Araquistáin
  • 1962–63: Vicente
  • 1963–64: Vicente
  • 1964–65: Betancort
  • 1965–66: Pesudo
  • 1966–67: Betancort
  • 1967–68: Junquera
  • 1968–69: Sadurní
  • 1969–70: Iribar
  • 1970–71: Abelardo
  • 1971–72: Deusto
  • 1972–73: Reina
  • 1973–74: Sadurní
  • 1974–75: Sadurní
  • 1975–76: Miguel Ángel
  • 1976–77: Reina
  • 1977–78: Artola
  • 1978–79: Manzanedo
  • 1979–80: Arconada
  • 1980–81: Arconada
  • 1981–82: Arconada
  • 1982–83: Agustín
  • 1983–84: Urruti
  • 1984–85: Ablanedo
  • 1985–86: Ablanedo
  • 1986–87: Zubizarreta
  • 1987–88: Buyo
  • 1988–89: Ochotorena
  • 1989–90: Ablanedo
  • 1990–91: Abel
  • 1991–92: Buyo
  • 1992–93: Liaño/Cañizares
  • 1993–94: Liaño
  • 1994–95: Jaro
  • 1995–96: Molina
  • 1996–97: Songo'o
  • 1997–98: Toni
  • 1998–99: Roa
  • 1999–2000: Martín Herrera
  • 2000–01: Cañizares
  • 2001–02: Cañizares
  • 2002–03: Cavallero
  • 2003–04: Cañizares
  • 2004–05: Valdés
  • 2005–06: Pinto
  • 2006–07: Abbondanzieri
  • 2007–08: Casillas
  • 2008–09: Valdés
  • 2009–10: Valdés
  • 2010–11: Valdés
  • 2011–12: Valdés
  • 2012–13: Courtois
  • 2013–14: Courtois


Source :
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