From Quito to SaquisilĂ â A Detour That Wasnât
I hadnât planned on coming south.
After settling into Quito, I spent the first few days just walkingâtrying to reacquaint myself with the cityâs impossible altitudes and my own thoughts. I wandered from the
Centro HistĂłrico, with its gold-laced churches and echoing stones, up toward
El Panecillo, where the Virgin statue looks down over a city that never really sits still.
My phone buzzed with proposalsâoffers from mid-table clubs, whispers from Serie B. Good teams, even tempting ones. But nothing felt right. Nothing
spoke.
Then came the bus ride.
I boarded a southbound coach at
Terminal Quitumbe, not for any real reason. I just wanted out of the city for a dayâsome air, some silence, maybe to see
Cotopaxi again from closer up. I took a seat by the window. No headphones. Just the road and the clouds.
An older man sat next to me. Poncho, felt hat, warm smile. He looked like someone who had worked with animals his whole life.
We didnât speak at first. But somewhere past
Latacunga, as Cotopaxiâs snowcapped peak began to appear between the shifting fog, he turned and said:
âÂżUsted es el entrenador uruguayo? El que vino de Kosovo?â
I blinked. I nodded slowly.
âEn SaquisilĂ hay un equipo. Humilde. Pero con hambre.â
There it was.
We talked the rest of the ride. He told me about a local team, about their patchy pitch and their coach whoâd just quit after a bad run of form. He said the club didnât have muchâ
âpero tiene gente que cree.â People who believe.
He got off before me, at a market town Iâve already forgotten. But his words stayed with me.
When I stepped off the bus in Lacatunga, the altitude hit me first. Then the smell of eucalyptus, grilled corn, and faint wood smoke. The streets were mostly empty. It wasnât market day yet. But the silence had a kind of shape to it. A waiting.
Not the absence of sound, but the
presence of stillness. A stillness shaped by altitude, by earth, by time. Here, in the highlands of
Cotopaxi Province, even the wind seems to know itâs passing through something sacred.
This isnât Quito. There are no horns or sirens here. Just mountainsâ
huge, brooding, indifferent. The sky shifts quickly over
SaquisilĂ, sometimes bright blue, sometimes thick with cloud, sometimes pierced by the distant silhouette of
Cotopaxi, the volcano that sleeps with smoke rising from its mouth like a warning or a promise.
This region is
pĂĄramo country. Rugged, cold in the shade, dazzling in the sun. You see men in ponchos leading sheep across stone paths. You smell wood smoke at night and roast corn in the morning. You hear
Kichwa words in the markets, spoken softly between generations.
Cotopaxi is not a postcard. Itâs a presence. Its snowcapped summit looms behind every match, every training session, every conversation. You donât ignore itâyou
play under it. You learn to carry yourself like the people here do:
quietly, proudly, and with the kind of strength that doesnât ask to be seen.


The town of
SaquisilĂ isnât large. You could walk from one end to the other in fifteen minutes. But every
Thursday, it becomes the center of the worldâor at least of Cotopaxi. Thatâs
market day, when farmers, weavers, cheesemakers, and animal herders from all over the province fill the streets. Llamas, pigs, guinea pigs. Potatoes in burlap sacks. Handmade boots. Spices. Stories.
And in the middle of it all, tucked beside a row of eucalyptus trees and a hill that smells of earth and smoke, is the football club.
Deportivo SaquisilĂ.
No fancy complex. No glass offices. Just a pitch that fights against the highland cold, a rusty locker room that echoes too much, and a set of plastic chairs arranged like someone once cared about symmetry.
But thereâs something about itâsomething
honest.
I asked the club president what the long-term goal was. He shrugged and said:
âNo bajar. Soñar. Darle algo al pueblo.â
Donât get relegated. Dream. Give the town something.
Thatâs enough for me.
Or at least, it
sounded like enoughâuntil I stepped onto the training pitch for the first time.
I would not have understood why the president spoke like thatâ
âno bajar, soñar, darle algo al puebloââuntil I saw who was waiting for me at the training ground:
No one.
No assistant coach. No physio. No analyst. Not even a groundskeeper. The field gate creaked open on its own, and silence stretched from one corner flag to the other.
No players.
I stood there, hands in my coat pockets, scarf twisting in the wind, staring at an empty pitch under the Cotopaxi sky. No drills set up. No cones. Just grass, uneven and overgrown, and a rusted goalpost leaning like it had given up halfway through last season.
But I didnât panic. Not this time.
Because Iâve seen this before. Iâve seen
nothing before. And Iâve turned it into
something.
Thatâs what I do.
Now, I have the confidence
sky-highânot arrogance, not illusion. Just that quiet, stubborn belief that I can build a team out of dirt, wind, and a few names scratched onto a notebook page.
And in SaquisilĂ, thatâs exactly what Iâll have to do.
So I did what any modern manager might secretly admit to doing when desperation knocks: I opened
Facebook.
Late at night, with a half-eaten plate of mote by my side and no staff in sight, I started scrolling through profiles, groups, old messages. One name kept appearing under shared contacts:
Ariel VĂ©lez. Young. Unproven. But I noticed something â heâd just finished a coaching course in
Spain. No club history. No locker rooms. Just a certificate and a few posts about tactical models and training microcycles.
I messaged him.
âEstoy en SaquisilĂ. Proyecto nuevo. Desde cero. ÂżTe animĂĄs?â
He replied a few hours later. Said heâd just returned home, hadnât found anything yet, but he was hungry to
start. Even if it meant starting in the cold shadow of Cotopaxi, with no salary guarantees, no facilities, no plan beyond belief.
âNo tengo experiencia, pero tengo todo para dar.â
That was enough.
He got on a bus the next day.
Now heâs here. Ariel VĂ©lez. No reputation. No pressure. Just a clean slate and a notebook full of dreams. He walks the pitch like heâs been here forever. He sets up cones like theyâre trophies. And when we talk football, I see it in his eyesâthe same spark I had when someone first pointed at me and said:
âYou⊠you know football, yes?â
Together, weâre building this thing from dirt.
Together, weâll try to make history.
Together, weâve made our first moves.
Weâre not a team yet. Not really. But
there are names nowânot just positions. Faces. Stories. A training plan scribbled onto the whiteboard in Arielâs chicken-scratch handwriting. A WhatsApp group with a SaquisilĂ club logo as the profile picture.
And thatâs already more than most have.
Because in this divisionâthe
Segunda CategorĂa de Cotopaxiâmany clubs start with nothing. Weâre not alone in the scramble. Teams all over the province are still calling friends, cousins, ex-academy kids, anyone who can still run ten kilometers and keep a ball under control. But
five of themâincluding
La UniĂłn de PujilĂ, the big favoriteâare already ahead. Theyâre organized. Theyâve trained. Theyâve scouted.
Weâre not scared of them. But we
see them.
This league is cruel in its simplicity.
Only the first place goes to the playoffsâone game that decides whether you climb to the national stage of the
Segunda CategorĂa or vanish into provincial memory. One game. No margin for error. No excuses.
So we build.
Weâve got one foreigner:
Caio Mota. Brazilian. 21. Strong frame, clinical instinct. The kind of striker who doesnât need ten chances. Heâs not flashyâbut
heâs decisive. And in a league this raw, that matters.
Then thereâs
Jordan Ponguillo. Right back. Product of the
Aucas academy. Fast, aggressive, no nonsense. His decisions are sharper than his first touch, but thatâs fine. He can read danger before it becomes real. A quiet leader, even at 20. Heâll anchor the defense.
And finally,
Silvano Estacio. Left-winger. Unpredictable. Came from
Daquilema F.C., but he plays like someone who grew up improvising. Sharp acceleration, great flair, and enough off-the-ball movement to create chaos. I see potential in himânot just as a winger, but maybe as a kind of wild card behind the striker.
The rest of the squad? Young, local, hungry. Some names I canât pronounce yet. Some still train in borrowed shoes. But they come. They run. They try.