Club Atlético Progreso

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Progreso
Badge of the CA Progreso
Basic data
Surname Club Atlético Progreso
Seat Montevideo , Uruguay
founding April 30, 1917
president UruguayUruguay Fabián Canobbio
Website clubatleticoprogreso.com
First soccer team
Head coach Marcelo Méndez
Venue Parque Abraham Paladino
Montevideo , Uruguay
Places 7,500
league Primera División
2017 3. (after completion of the aperture)
home
Away

The Club Atlético Progreso , short Progreso , (nicknamed Gaucho del Pantanoso ) is a sports club from Montevideo in Uruguay . The club's soccer team plays in the second highest Uruguayan league, the Segunda División , in the 2016 season .

history

From the foundation to the second league promotion

The origins of the association were in 1914 in the Conventillo Balaro. The team played in the Liga Nacional until 1917 . The first pitch was near the banks of the Arroyo Miguelete . At first they played in yellow, vertically striped jerseys. At the time, one of the leading figures in the management of the club was José Vázquez, the grandfather of the future President Tabaré Vázquez . The association was officially founded on April 30, 1917 in the La Teja district. Members of the stonemasons union were involved. The first club president was Héctor Verdesio . The club name is the one on the same street ( Calle Progreso ) that as an extension of today Calle Leonardo Olivera the Calle Carlos María Ramírez , due crosses. On the other hand, the concept of progress ( Progreso is the Spanish word for 'progress') was part of the glossary of the anarchist movement, from which some of the founding members also came and who wanted to express their desire for precisely this progress. From 1918, the Progresos team took part in the game operations of the Divisional Tercera Extra after joining the Asociación Uruguaya de Fútbol (AUF) . At that time, white and red jerseys were used. The first official game was an away game against Club Maroñas on May 26, 1918, which was played on the pitch of Club Manchester and ended 2-0. In the first home game on July 7th of that year, which took place on the area then known as Parque de las Arenas , where the Escuela 170 (Escuela ANCAP) is based today, they defeated Club Constitución 3-2 in La Teja .

During the phase of the split in the organizational structure in Uruguayan football, the so-called schism , Progreso was one of the clubs that joined the Federación Uruguaya de Football in 1922 . Then one played in the Divisional Intermedia . In 1926, the club received the property of the Administración Nacional de Puertos , between Emilio Romero and Concordia streets , on which the current Abraham Paladino Park is located. From the following year, the team switched to today's jersey design of a red-striped, yellow shirt. In 1938 and 1938 they won the intermedia championship twice in a row . You took part in both years in the first division promotion relegation, but failed in 1938 at Liverpool FC and in 1939 at Bella Vista . In 1942 Progreso made his debut in the Segunda División with a 2-1 victory over Misiones. In 1945 the championship title in the Segunda División followed . The subsequent first division membership lasted only one season. In 1946, when, among other things, Pedro "Cañonero" Young was part of the team, they made their debut in the top division with a 2: 3 home defeat against the Rampla Juniors . They ended the season with only nine points on the tenth and thus last place. This resulted in direct relegation. 1956, won in the final against Club Tellier the championship of Intermedia and repeated the title in 1963. After 1975 in the now as Primera "C" another championship designated League with a victory on the final day against the Club El Puente was followed and in 1978 won the title for the sixth time at this league level, they were allowed to keep the cup permanently due to the six titles won as the first club in Uruguay. The second division title followed again in 1979. This was won in the finals against Miramar, with the second game taking place in front of more than 11,000 spectators at the Estadio Centenario . In 1970 they had also played for the third time in the club's history after 1938 and 1939 - ultimately unsuccessfully as a third party in the group - in the relegation for promotion. From 1979, Tabaré Vázquez , later President of Uruguay, also held the position of President of the Association. With the championship title now won, they returned to the Primera División alongside fellow promoted Miramar Misiones . Until 1985, the year-end table was mostly in the lower middle field of the table. In 1983 and 1985, the team achieved 6th place, the club's best placement in the top division. In 1985, the Progresos team decided the Torneo Competencia in their favor. The coach that year was Roberto Fleitas .

International competition and winning the national championship

In the following year they qualified for the first time - again as sixth in the league - for the Copa Libertadores . In the following year the qualification for this competition was achieved again. After finishing the year 1988 as 13th and thus bottom of the table, in 1989, winning the championship, achieved the greatest success in the club's history to this day.

That of Saúl Rivero trained champion team included not only the leading player Pedro Catalino Pedrucci among other players Fernando "Tajo" Silva , Próspero Silva , Leonardo Ramos , Leonel Rocco , Jonnhy Miqueiro , Víctor Silva , Eduardo "Bemba" Acosta , Luis Berger and William Gutierrez at .

In the following year they started for the third time in the international competition in the Copa Libertadores and reached the 2nd round. In the seasons after winning the championship the success failed and they only occupied places 11, 12 and 9. Only in 1993 they placed themselves again as fifth in the upper table area. In 1994 they were only just about to stay in the league as the bottom of the table. Also in 1995 you left only Basáñez behind at the end of the season . This resulted in the second first division relegation. After a 3-1 win against El Tanque Sisley in 2001, they were relegated to the Torneo Clasificatorio without a win and with only five draws at the bottom of the table and immediately relegated after a last place in Torneo Permanencia 2002.

In 2006 the club was again second division champions and rose to the Primera División . The players on the promotion team included Héctor Búrguez , Denis Manzzi ; Rodrigo Gómez , Luis Almada , Julio Ramírez , Gustavo Flores , Héber Méndez ; Sergio Silvera , Darío Larrosa , Mario Piñeyro , Marcelo Alexandrovicius , Danilo Asconeguy , Agustín Márquez , Cristian Yaguno , Jorge Díaz , Claudio Pasadi , Juan Rottondo Wilson Martirena , Néstor Silva , Ignacio Palermo and Francisco Salomón . As a coach, it was again master coach Saúl Rivero responsible. There Progreso took 13th place in the final ranking in the following season 2006/2007. This had two relegation games against table 14. Rocha FC for relegation, won by the team coached by Ildo Maneiro . In the following 2007/2008 season, however, the relegation could no longer be prevented after the season ended in 14th place in the table. The regulations regarding relegation provided after that season that the two seasons 2006/07 and 2007/08 were combined into an overall table and the teams in the last three positions in the ranking were relegated. In that table Progreso was the bottom of the table. In the 2009/2010 season, the club joined the Segunda División and finished in 7th place in the final table. After the club was excluded from the game for financial reasons in the 2010/2011 season, the team now managed by coach Leonardo Ramos succeeded in the following season after the two final games (first leg: 3-1 win, second leg: 2-0 defeat ) against Huracán del Paso de la Arena on June 30, 2012 promotion to the Primera División for the 2012/13 season . There they stayed only for a one-year guest appearance and after a 15th place in the season-end table due to the penultimate position, which they also occupied in the relegation ranking, they returned to the second division. In the Segunda División, too, they only occupy twelfth and thus third from bottom place in the table after the 2013 Apertura. The coach since the beginning of the 2013/14 season has been Santiago Paz .

successes

Seniors

  • 1 × Uruguayan champion: 1989
  • 3 × Masters of the Segunda División : 1945, 1979 and 2006
  • 1 × Torneo Competencia win : 1985
  • 3 × participation in the Copa Libertadores : 1990 2nd round reached
  • 4 × Masters of Intermedia: 1938, 1939, 1956 and 1963
  • 2 × champions of Primera C: 1975 and 1978

Juniors

  • Master of Sexta-B: 1996

Current squad season 2016

Source: (as of December 10, 2016)

goal Defense midfield attack
German Correa UruguayUruguay
Lucas Michelena UruguayUruguay
Martín Tejera UruguayUruguay
Álvaro Villete UruguayUruguay
Gustavo Barros UruguayUruguay
Carlos Canobbio UruguayUruguay
Walter Fernández UruguayUruguay
Daniel Leites UruguayUruguay
Steve Makuka UruguayUruguay
Matias Massa UruguayUruguay
Pablo Pírez UruguayUruguay
Sebastian Burgos UruguayUruguay
Julián Gottesman UruguayUruguay
Mario Leguizamón UruguayUruguay
Javier Méndez UruguayUruguay
Christian Pérez UruguayUruguay
Sergio Perez UruguayUruguay
Jonathan Piñeiro UruguayUruguay
Pablo Porcile UruguayUruguay
Heber Ratti UruguayUruguay
Fabricio Santos UruguayUruguay
Jackson Valencia ColombiaColombia
Diego Blanco UruguayUruguay
Sebastián Gularte UruguayUruguay
Guillermo Maidana UruguayUruguay
Facundo Mesones UruguayUruguay
Daniel Messina ArgentinaArgentina
Ignacio Nadal UruguayUruguay
Leonardo Novo UruguayUruguay

Coach history

President

  • 1917–1918: Héctor Verdesio
  • 1920: Ignacio Reyes Molné
  • 1926-1929: Ovidio Carrica
  • 1930: Esteban Etcheberry
  • 1935: Abraham Paladino
  • 1938–1944: Víctor Chalá
  • 1945–1946: Juan Antonio Giribaldi
  • 1947-1948: Pedro Yanuzzi
  • 1949: Francisco Giordano
  • 1950: Raúl Llorens
  • 1951: Juan Antonio Giribaldi
  • 1952: Juan Pablo Flores
  • 1953–1954: José Villaba
  • 1955: José Pablo Flores
  • 1956–1959: José Ramón Pereira
  • 1960–1961: Luis Vidal Zaglio
  • 1962: Alberto Benítez
  • 1963: Luis Vidal Besas
  • 1964–1965: Alberto Benítez
  • 1966–1967: Fernando Martínez Arnay
  • 1968: Luis Vidal Zaglio
  • 1969: Hugo Carrica
  • 1970–1972: Ángel Garazza
  • 1973-1974: Luis Vidal Zaglio
  • 1975–1977: Ángel Garazza
  • 1978: Martín Aparikián
  • 1979-1989: Tabaré Vázquez
  • 1990: Nelson Hermida (interim)
  • 1991-1998: Daniel Marsicano
  • 1999-2000: Raul Figuerola
  • 2001-2002: Daniel Serratto
  • 2003-2005: Miguel Machado
  • 2006-2010: Gabriel Franco
  • 2011–: Eusebio Javier

Well-known former players

Others

The club also offers a home to other sports. These are futsal , taekwondo , boxing, cycling and bocce. In the football area there is also a baby fútbol department and various youth teams.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Estadios de Uruguay - Estadio Abraham Paladino
  2. Club Atlético Propgreso (Spanish) on www.el-area.com, accessed on 23 December 2013
  3. Hoy hace 103 años nacia Pedro “Cañonero” Young ( Memento of the original from December 24, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , August 11, 2013, from www.clubatleticoprogreso.com (Spanish), accessed December 23, 2013  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.clubatleticoprogreso.com
  4. Club Atlético Propgreso (Spanish) on el-area.com, accessed on 23 December 2013
  5. Se Metio en lahistoria de nuestro Futbol: Se cumplió 13 años del título uruguayo de Progreso en 1989. In: La República . December 15, 2002, accessed January 8, 2014 (Spanish).
  6. Feliz cumpleaños Fernando “Tajo” Silva (Spanish) on www.clubatleticoprogreso.com, accessed on December 23, 2013
  7. Hoy cumple 55 años Próspero Silva ( Memento of December 24, 2013 in the Internet Archive ), August 8, 2013, at www.clubatleticoprogreso.com (Spanish), accessed on December 23, 2013
  8. Club Atlético Propgreso (Spanish) on el-area.com, accessed on 23 December 2013
  9. Uruguay - List of Final Tables 1900-2000 , accessed December 23, 2013
  10. ^ Uruguay 2002 Championship , accessed December 23, 2013
  11. ^ Uruguay Second Level 2006 on rsssf.com, accessed December 24, 2013
  12. Club Atlético Propgreso (Spanish) on el-area.com, accessed on 23 December 2013
  13. ^ Uruguay 2006/07 on rsssf.com, accessed June 30, 2012
  14. Uruguay 2007/08 on rsssf.com, accessed June 30, 2012
  15. Season data 2009/2010 - Segunda División Profesional on rsssf.com, accessed on June 30, 2012
  16. ^ Segunda División Profesional 2010/11 on rsssf.com, accessed June 30, 2012
  17. Progreso ascendió a Primera División - Están del Coco (Spanish) on www.futbol.com.uy of June 30, 2012, accessed on June 30, 2012
  18. Posiciones 2013-2014 on elascenso.com, accessed December 23, 2013
  19. Plantel ( Memento of April 3, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) on clubatleticoprogreso.com, accessed on December 23, 2013
  20. La B también existe ( Memento of December 24, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) (Spanish), accessed on December 23, 2013
  21. Club Atlético Propgreso (Spanish) on www.el-area.com, accessed on 23 December 2013
  22. Squad on soccerway.com , accessed December 10, 2016
  23. ¿Por qué los técnicos uruguayos fueron defensas, goleros o mediocampistas? (Spanish) from lr21.com.uy on May 29, 2001, accessed October 27, 2016
  24. Leonardo Ramos - Profile on soccerway.com , accessed October 16, 2016
  25. Progreso espera para definir nuevo DT (Spanish) on tenfield.com.uy of December 26, 2012, accessed on December 23, 2013
  26. Ven a ese guacho Rodao (Spanish) on aguantenche.com.uy of January 4, 2013, accessed on December 23, 2013
  27. Carlos Barcos es el nuevo entrenador de Progreso ( Memento of April 29, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) (Spanish) on ovaciondigital.com.uy of April 28, 2013, accessed on December 23, 2013
  28. Jump up ↑ Santiago Paz - Profile on soccerway.com , accessed October 16, 2016
  29. ^ Juan Duarte - Profile on soccerway.com , accessed April 21, 2017
  30. Gabriel Añón - Profile on soccerway.com , accessed October 4, 2016
  31. Club Atlético Propgreso (Spanish) on el-area.com, accessed on 23 December 2013