Humberto Andrés Suazo Pontivo (Spanish pronunciation: [umˈbeɾto ˈswaso]; born 10 May 1981), nicknamed Chupete (in English, Lollipop), is a Chilean professional footballer who plays as a striker for Primera B de Chile club San Luis de Quillota.
According to his 2010 FIFA World Cup profile, Suazo was known for his "keen positional sense and ability to finish with either foot".
In 2000, he won the Milk Cup, an international youth football tournament held annually in Northern Ireland.
In 2003, Suazo turned heads with his new club San Luis Quillota of the Chilean third division, when he scored 40 goals in one season.
Even though Colo-Colo exited the tournament early, Suazo showed his ability by scoring a hat-trick against Chivas.
In the 2006 Apertura tournament in Chile, Suazo led all scorers with 14 goals in 33 games[5] on the way to capturing Colo-Colo's 24th national championship.
In the 2007 Apertura tournament, Suazo finished as the leading goal scorer, also scoring in the final match against Palestino.
Suazo's performance during his first tournament wasn't what was expected (only three goals in twelve games) and combined with conflicts with teammates and coaches.
On 4 January, Humberto called for a press conference, and in front of television cameras and news media, he acknowledged the fact that his performance and attitude wasn't positive during his first 6 months with the club, but that from now on, he was determined to change things.
Suazo then scored three more goals in the playoffs, one in the quarter-final first leg against Chivas, and two more against Santos Laguna in the semi-finals, though Monterrey were unable to advance to the final.
In the final's first leg, he gave an extraordinary game and helped Monterrey get back from a 3–1 loss at halftime in their home stadium to win 4–3, with Suazo scoring two of the goals.
In the second leg, he made a pass for his colleague, Aldo de Nigris, and then scored a goal himself in injury time to secure the title.
In this tournament he exceeded all the expectations from fans and the media, scoring 10 goals in the tournament and giving Monterrey their fourth league title in December 2010, plus obtaining the 2010-11 CONCACAF Champions League against Real Salt Lake the following May, making Monterrey the CONCACAF representative in the 2011 FIFA Club World Cup, He followed this success by winning the 2011–12 CONCACAF Champions League for the second time in a row, defeating Santos Laguna.
They reached the semi-finals of the Apertura 2014 but lost 3–0 on aggregate against America in what would prove to be Suazo's final game for Rayados, finishing with a total of 121 goals in 252 appearances and six official titles[13] In 2015, he returned to Colo-Colo and announced his retirement from football on 14 January 2016.
In January 2007, he was awarded world's top goal scorer of 2006 by the International Federation of Football History & Statistics in Salzburg, Austria.
He finished as CONMEBOL's top scorer of the 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification with 10 goals, one ahead of Brazilian striker Luís Fabiano.