Career
He is known as Louisiana Bomba Kenton ("The Kenton Bomb"). Kenton started his playing career in Costa Rica"s first division, playing for his hometown team, Limonense. Kenton retired from professional football in 1989, and began a very successful and international coaching career.
His first coaching job was as assistant coach to Bora Milutinovic in the Costa Rica"s national squad that played the 1990 World Cup held in Italy, where Costa Rica had a great performance and reached the second round, against all odds.
In Costa Rica, he has had short coaching periods at Costa Rica"s first division, with Herediano and Alajuelense during the mid-90"s, but neither team gave him enough time to build his ideas and process. So, he went back to international football and in 1998, he was asked by Milutinovic to be his assistant coach again, this time with the Nigeria national football team that played the 1998 World Cup that took place in France.
After completing the Nigeria job, he returned to take charge of Puntarenas only to be dismissed in October 1998. By the early 2000s, he took charge of the Costa Rica U23 team, and qualified them to the 2004 Summer Olympics held in Athens.
Again, his team had a great performance and reached the Quarterfinals, eliminating favorites such as Portugal.
He was then selected by Fédération internationale de football association to be part of the international official Technical Study Group for the Germany 2006 World Cup, along worldwide renowned football experts and coaches such as Francisco Maturana, Roger Milla, Andy Roxburgh, Teófilo Cubillas, Jozef Venglos, and others Costa Rica national team
In late June 2008, after Hernán Medford was ceased from his position as head coach of the Costa Rican national team, Eduardo Lee, president of the Fedefubol (Federacion Costarricense de Futbol) and the board of executives chose Rodrigo Kenton as head coach of the Costa Rican national team, to qualify for the South Africa 2010. The announcement was made unofficially by Kenton in an interview by Radio Monumental"s journalist Harrick McClean, when Fedefutbol had scheduled a press conference a week after Hernan Medford was removed.
Kenton was named head coach with less than two months to the start of the 1st group phase of the CONCACAF qualifiers for South Africa 2010.
The group included Suriname, El Salvador and Haiti. With Kenton, Costa Rica also beat Haiti and Suriname.
He was fired 15 September 2009 after the team lost three World Cup qualifying matches in a row.