Berny Peña

Bernabé "Berny" Peña
Personal information
Full name Berny Peña Pizarro
Date of birth (1980-10-19) 19 October 1980
Place of birth Carrillo, Costa Rica
Height 1.84 m (6 ft 0 in)
Playing position Defender
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2002–2004 Guanacasteca
2004–2005 Municipal Liberia 26 (3)
2005–2010 Brujas 98 (6)
2006Akratitos (loan) 12 (0)
2007Municipal Liberia (loan) 10 (1)
2009Kavala (loan) 7 (1)
2010 Municipal Liberia
2011 Deportivo Quevedo 9 (0)
2011 Platense
National team
2005 Costa Rica 5 (0)

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of June 1, 2008.


This name uses Spanish naming customs: the first or paternal family name is Peña and the second or maternal family name is Pizarro.

Bernabé "Berny" Peña Pizarro (born 19 October 1980 in Carrillo) is a Costa Rican football player.

In a 2009 Al Día poll of 71 Costa Rica Premier Division players, Peña was selected as the dirtiest player in the league. He responded, "You have never seen any of my rivals die after one of my fouls, so I don't see the dirty play people talk about".[1]

Club career

He started his career at Guanacasteca, before joining Municipal Liberia in 2004. A year later he signed for Brujas. He was sent on loan to Greek club Akratitos, where he played alongside compatriots Froylán Ledezma and William Sunsing, but could not save the club from relegation.[2] He then was loaned back to Municipal Liberia and again to Greece to play for second division Kavala.[3] In summer 2010 he returned to Liberia Mía/Águilas Guanacastecas[4][5] and later had spells in Ecuador with Deportivo Quevedo,[6] whom he left after only three months[7] and in Honduras with Platense, whom he left in November 2011 after new coach Roque Alfaro told him he did not fit into his plans.[8]

International career

He was first called up by Steve Sampson in 2004,[9] but Peña made his debut for Costa Rica in a February 2005 friendly match against Ecuador and has earned a total of 5 caps, scoring no goals. He represented his country at the 2005 UNCAF Nations Cup.[10]

His final international was a February 2005 UNCAF Nations Cup match against Honduras.

References

External links


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