Jorge Lozada (footballer)

Jorge Lozada
Personal information
Full name Jorge Guillermo Lozada Baldwin
Date of birth (1987-03-30) 30 March 1987[1]
Place of birth Trujillo,[2] Peru
Height 1.78 m (5 ft 10 in)[1]
Position Forward
Youth career
Universitario
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2004–2007 Universitario
2005–2007América Cochahuayco (loan)
2008 Sport Águila ? (12)
2009 León de Huánuco
2010 Defensor San José
2011 Inti Gas ? (1)
2012 José Gálvez FBC 0 (0)
2013 Carlos A. Mannucci
2014 Sport Chavelines ? (42)
2015–2016 Deportivo Hualgayoc
2017 Alfonso Ugarte de Chiclín
International career
2003 Peru U17
* Club domestic league appearances and goals

Jorge Guillermo Lozada Baldwin (born on 30 March 1987) is a Peruvian professional footballer who played as forward.

Playing career

Jorge Lozada made his debut in the Peruvian 1st division within the Universitario de Deportes in 2004 under the orders of Marcelo Trobbiani during a match on the 3rd day of the championship against FBC Melgar (result 1–1).[2] He played the last 20 minutes of the Universitario–Vélez Sarsfield match during the 2006 Copa Libertadores (result 0–1).[2]

He joined Sport Águila in 2008, where he became the top scorer in the second division championship with 12 goals.[2][3] In 2009, he joined León de Huánuco and won the Copa Perú.[2][3] The rest of his career remained unremarkable, and after a few stints with Inti Gas (now Ayacucho FC), José Gálvez FBC and Carlos A. Mannucci, he retired after a final experience with Alfonso Ugarte de Chiclín in 2017.

Although he never played for Peru at the senior international level, he was selected for the under-17 team for the 2003 South American U-17 Championship in Bolivia.[2]

Honours

Sport Águila

León de Huánuco

References

  1. ^ a b Jorge Lozada at WorldFootball.net
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h José Miguel Mercado (29 October 2015). "Jorge Lozada: De avanzada" [Jorge Lozada: Advanced]. De Chalaca (in Spanish). Retrieved 11 February 2026.
  3. ^ a b c d David Sánchez (26 October 2013). "La vida después del gol" [Life after the goal]. De Chalaca (in Spanish). Retrieved 11 February 2026.