Club Atlético Alto Perú

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Alto Perú
CA Alto Perú 2015.png
Basic data
Surname Club Atlético Alto Perú
Seat Montevideo , Uruguay
founding May 1, 1940
First soccer team
Venue ?
Places nb
league Segunda Division Amateur
2013/14 10. (after completion of the aperture)
home
Away

The Club Atlético Alto Perú , shortly Alto Perú , is a football club from Montevideo in Uruguay .

history

Atlético Alto Perú is located in the Montevidean Barrio Malvín Norte . It was founded on May 1, 1940. It was founded by a group of friends who lived in the vicinity of Avenida Italia and Alto Perú streets . This group of friends included Domingo López, Fermín Rodriguez, Guillermo Carmichael, Jorge and Walter Pérez, the brothers Pereyra, Camino Bonilla, Mario Frost, Camilo Bonilla Luis Panizza and Mario Rossini. Initially, the team of the club, which changed its club headquarters several times after its founding and was later based in Avenida Italia 4038 until 1982 , competed at barrial level in leagues such as the Liga El Diario, the Liga Rodelú and the Liga Malvín.

Shortly after in 1961 the UP had joined, one entered the extra B to. Two years later they rose to the Extra A. It took the same period of time to finally get into the Divisional Intermedia under the direction of coach Néstor Carballo . In 1968 they were champions of this third division, so in 1969 they were promoted to Primera B , the second highest division in Uruguay. There they made their debut in 1969 with a 2-2 home draw against Rentistas , but rose again in the same year. In the Copa Montevideo , in which the teams of the two highest Uruguayan leagues took part, they celebrated a significant 2-1 victory for the club against Defensor .

Alto Perú comes from, among others, the current national coach of Uruguay, Óscar Tabárez , but also some other important players, such as the former goalkeeper Francovic, Celso Otero and Juan Carlos Pereyra , who played for Deportivo Táchira in Venezuela, emerged from the club.

The club's team plays in the third division in the Segunda División Amateur , which is the successor league of the Liga Metropolitana Amateur . There they took 7th place in the 2011 Clausura.

successes

  • Master of Divisional Intermedia (1968)

Former trainers

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Uruguay - List of Champions Third Division (Primera C / Intermedia / Liga Amateur Metropolitana) , accessed May 30, 2013
  2. Uruguay Second Level (Primera B) 1968 , accessed May 30, 2013
  3. Uruguay 1969 , accessed May 30, 2013
  4. 6- Otros Equipos A - L (Spanish), accessed on May 30, 2013
  5. Uruguay 2010/11 , accessed May 30, 2013