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Oliver Sonne: his Peruvian roots, how he plays, and why he is a priority for Juan Reynoso’s next call-up

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Last April, the national team coach traveled to Denmark to meet Sonne, part of a European/Asian tour that Reynoso led to strengthen the group that will play in the Qualifiers. He then said in Videna: “We are interested in inviting players of Peruvian descent. It is a niche that must be exploited. If they are young, the better.” He was referring to the Peruvian-Danish and Diego Kochen, the young goalkeeper of Barcelona from Spain, who is also monitored from Videna.

In cold Denmark then, Reynoso and Sonne sat at the table to talk about the plans that exist in the national team, and which include the footballer who plays defense. Up to three sources with whom DT spoke about the footballer, indicate that in addition to being a winger, his projection as a winger is of interest, given his technique for hitting the ball and his youth, versus the full-backs that the national team currently has (Advíncula 33 , Pole 28). Sonne is 22.

DT journalist Jean Pierre Maraví was able to find out, with information from workers at his current club, Silkeborg IF, that it was not only a dinner between Oliver Sonne, Juan Reynoso and their technical command. They also went to the club facilities to talk and exchange information with the technical command of the Danish club and work together to better evaluate the work of the right back. However, from the Danish Silkeborg IF they prefer not to delve deeper: “The club is focusing on football at the moment,” they told us.

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The projection in the FPF was that the documentation that Sonne was missing – DNI, passport – could be ready in three months. Six hours passed: a few hours ago, Anita, her mother, obtained her DNI and then everything happened at 10 km / h. Oliver Sonne arrived yesterday morning at the Peruvian embassy in Stockholm, Sweden, and registered his birth certificate. What’s missing now? That the Chancellery in Stockholm send the suitcase of documentation to Peru and after that the certification process begins at the Chancellery, which in turn will process it in Reniec. All this should happen within a period of 72 hours – that is, the weekend. Until the closing of this edition, and in response to our queries, Reniec had not officially commented on the issue. The media wave has been, by far, bigger than the one that brought Gianluca Lapadula to Lima.

And happily, it turned out well.

Source: Elcomercio

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