Role Footballer Height 1.65 m | Playing position Position Forward Name Omar Corbatta | |
![]() | ||
Full name Omar Oreste Corbatta Fernandez Date of birth (1936-03-11)11 March 1936 Date of death 6 November 1991(1991-11-06) (aged 55) | ||
Place of death La Plata, Argentina |
El arlequ n omar oreste corbatta viejo smoking trailer oficial
Oreste Omar Corbatta Fernández (11 March 1936 – 6 November 1991) was an Argentine footballer.
Contents
- El arlequ n omar oreste corbatta viejo smoking trailer oficial
- El arlequin omar oreste corbatta documental completo
- Club career
- International career
- Personal life Tribute
- Club
- International
- References

Dubbed Arlequín and El dueño de la raya (The chairman of the sideline), he played for five clubs in his country – six in total – mainly Racing Club and Boca Juniors, winning four major titles and scoring 86 official goals with both teams combined.

An accomplished penalty kick taker and widely regarded as the best Argentine right winger of all time, Corbatta earned more than 40 caps for the national side in the 50s/60s, and represented the country at the 1958 World Cup.

El arlequin omar oreste corbatta documental completo
Club career

Born in Daireaux, Buenos Aires Province, Corbatta started his professional career in 1955 with local Racing Club de Avellaneda, making his Argentine Primera División debut on 30 April in a 0–1 loss against Club de Gimnasia y Esgrima La Plata, and helping La Academía to the 1958 and 1961 league titles.

In 1963, Corbatta joined Boca Juniors for 12 million pesos, with which Racing was able to improve the conditions in its stadium and build new sporting facilities. On 19 May 1963, he scored all the goals in a 3–0 home win against Club Atlético Vélez Sársfield, and also featured in that year's Copa Libertadores final loss against Pelé's Santos FC; in his final two years in La Bombonera, he added a further two national championships.
Corbatta joined Independiente Medellín in 1965, remaining in Colombia for three years. He returned to his country for spells with lower league sides Club Atlético San Telmo, Italia Unidos and Tiro Federal, retiring from football at the age of 38. During his professional career, he only missed four of 68 penalties.
International career
Corbatta played a total of 43 games for Argentina in which he scored 18 goals, at one time ranking in joint-13th place with Domingo Tarasconi. He was part of the Copa América-winning team in 1957, repeating the feat in 1959.
Corbatta also appeared in the 1958 FIFA World Cup in Sweden, contributing with three goals in three games in an eventual group stage exit.
Personal life / Tribute
Corbatta struggled heavily with alcoholism, playing several games in a state of full inebriation. Illiterate, he never learned to read.
Poor and alone – he married and divorced four times – Corbatta died of larynx cancer in La Plata in 1991, aged 55. In 2006, to mark the 15th anniversary of his death, he was inaugurated into the Racing Club Hall of Fame, and a bronze statue by Daniel Zimermann was unveiled. The Avellaneda municipality renamed the stadium's backstreet to "Pasaje Corbatta" in his honor.