Raimundo Tupper
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Raimundo Tupper Lyon | ||
Date of birth | 7 January 1969 | ||
Place of birth | Santiago, Chile | ||
Date of death | 20 July 1995 | (aged 26)||
Place of death | San José, Costa Rica | ||
Position(s) | Left Back | ||
Youth career | |||
1980–1985 | Universidad Católica | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1985–1995 | Universidad Católica | 193 | (26) |
International career | |||
1987 | Chile U20 | ||
1993–1994 | Chile | 7 | (1) |
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Raimundo Tupper Lyon (1 January 1969 – 20 July 1995) was a Chilean professional football player, best known for his years with Universidad Católica. He was a left back.
Club career
Born into a family of five children (four males and one female). He studied at the St. Ignatius El Bosque, and joined the lower divisions of Universidad Católica in 1980, his first coach being former national team player Alberto Fouillioux.
He made his debut with the first team in 1985 against with Cobresal in the city of El Salvador. In 1987, he won the national title with Universidad Católica.
In 1989 Tupper joined Diego Portales University to study Engineering, which he did not finish. That year he won the Liguilla Pre-Libertadores (Chile) against Cobreloa, which enabled Católica to play in the Copa Libertadores.
Between 1989 and 1995 Mumo was a UC player, reaching with them the Copa Libertadores final in 1993, which they lost against Brazilian giants São Paulo. Previously he won the 1991 Copa Chile and also Liguilla Pre-Libertadores (Chile) in 1991, 1992 and 1994, the latter scoring a great goal against Colo-Colo.
International career
In 1987, he was called up to the Chilean under-20 national team, which won fourth place in the 1987 U-20 World Cup held in Chile, in which he played with his great friend and teammate Lukas Tudor.[1]
Death
Tupper suffered from clinical depression, which led him to commit suicide by jumping off a balcony in the ninth floor of Hotel Centro Colón in San José, Costa Rica[2] on 20 July 1995 in San José, Costa Rica, being only 26 years old. Católica was supposed to play a friendly match against Deportivo Saprissa, but the game was subsequently suspended.[3]
Currently, a white cross was built in the mountains surrounding San Carlos de Apoquindo in memory of "Mumo". Subsequently, his brother Andrés Tupper, became the General Director of Universidad Católica.
Personal life
He was nicknamed Mumo, a hypocoristic of Raimundo [es].[4]
His cousin, Rodrigo Tupper, was the priest who officiated his funeral mass and he is well-known in Chile for having left the priesthood to get married.[5]
The former Venezuela international footballer Javier González Tupper, is the son of a Raimundo's female cousin and played for Ñublense in Chile.[6]
References
- ^ Raimundo Tupper – FIFA competition record (archived)
- ^ Raimundo Tupper, el Mumo: El recuerdo imborrable de un elegido - El Observatodo (in Spanish)
- ^ Hoy se cumplen 15 años de la muerte de Raimundo Tupper - La Tercera (in Spanish)
- ^ Ortiz, Juan. "Hipocorístico: cómo se forman, ejemplos". Lifeder (in Spanish). Retrieved 22 July 2022.
- ^ Vera Valdés, Juan (20 June 2020). "Rodrigo Tupper y el presente de la iglesia: "En muchos sentidos han aprendido poco"" (in Spanish). ADN Radio Chile. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
- ^ "La fugaz historia en Chile del sobrino venezolano de Tupper" (in Spanish). AS Chile. 26 March 2017. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
External links
- Raimundo Tupper at National-Football-Teams.com
- 1969 births
- 1995 suicides
- 1995 deaths
- Chilean men's footballers
- Chile men's international footballers
- Chile men's under-20 international footballers
- Chilean Primera División players
- Club Deportivo Universidad Católica footballers
- Suicides by jumping in Costa Rica
- Diego Portales University alumni
- Men's association football fullbacks
- Footballers from Santiago