CD Magallanes

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Magallanes
Badge from CD Magallanes
Basic data
Surname Club Deportivo Magallanes
Seat Maipu
founding 1897
president Pablo Vera Lillo
Website cdmagallanes.cl
First soccer team
Head coach Ariel Pereyra
Venue Estadio Santiago Bueras
Places 8,000
league Primera Division B
2019 15th place
home
Away

The Club Deportivo Magallanes is a Chilean football club from Maipú , Santiago de Chile . Founded in 1897, the club dominated the early days of professionalism in Chilean football and became four times Chilean champions in the 1930s. The last big success was the advance into the final of the Chilean Cup 2011. The club currently plays in the second division, Primera División B. Magallanes plays its home games at the Estadio Santiago Bueras in Maipú , which has space for around 4,000 spectators.

Various names for the club are Carabeleros , based on an earlier club coat of arms that represented a caravel - the visual execution of the coat of arms gave the club the nickname Pulpo ("octopus") - Academia after the professional work, and Albicelestes , "sky blue -Weisse “, according to the club colors.

history

Magallanes team in 1910

The club was founded on October 27, 1897 under the name Atlético Escuela Normal FC in Maipú , a municipality on the outskirts of the Chilean capital Santiago . After the CD Santiago Wanderers, founded in Valparaíso in 1892, and the CD Unión Española , which has since been disbanded and started in May 1897, Magallanes is now the third oldest football club in Chile. In 1904, the association changed its name to Club Social y Deportivo Magallanes , in a patriotic gesture thematizing the territorial conflict between Argentina and Chile in the Strait of Magellan .

In the first national team of Chile , which was put together on the occasion of the Campeonato Sudamericano held in Buenos Aires in 1910 for the centenary of the Argentine revolution of 1810 , there was a player from Magallanes in Carlos Hormazábal .

In 1908, 1913, 1916, 1920 and 1921 Magallanes won the championship of the Asociación de Fútbol de Santiago and in 1926 that of the Liga Metropolitana , which the club joined in 1923. In the title wins of 1921 and 1926, the club remained unbeaten. National competitions did not yet exist in that era. In 1925, a spin-off from the club, whose ringleaders included David Arellano , one of the great stars of that era, was today's record champion of Chile, CSD Colo-Colo .

The championship team from 1933
The championship team from 1935
The club's last championship team from 1938

In the 1930s, the club dominated football in Chile and won the first three championships after the introduction of the professional league between 1933 and 1935, as well as another title in 1938. Because of the equal number of points, a playoff against Colo-Colo was necessary in 1933, the Magallanes with a hit by international Arturo Carmona and an own goal by Colo-Colo defender Clodomiro Lorca won 2-1. The following year, Magallanes defended the unbeaten title with just one tie two points ahead of Audax Italiano , who also remained undefeated . Only Colo-Colo managed to survive one season unbeaten at the championships of 1937 and 1941. With 14: 1 and 11: 0 successes over Santiago National FC and Morning Star , Magallanes also achieved two of nine double-digit victories in the championship so far (2011). With the success of 1935, the club won the league that now only consisted of six teams, again ahead of Audax, the third title in a row. That year, Guillermo Ogaz became the first championship scorer from the ranks of Magallanes with 12 goals.

In the following two seasons, Magallanes had to be content with second place, clearly beaten. The champions were Audax and in 1937 Colo-Colo, headed by Arturo Torres - the player- coach of the first three championship teams in Magallanes - brought in the first national championship title in the club's history. In 1937, however, a 2-0 final victory over Audax succeeded in winning the Campeonato de Apertura , a pre-season tournament held until 1950. In 1938 Magallanes won his last championship title to date. In 1942 and 1946 Magallanes drew attention again through runner-up championships. In 1946 Magallanes was a bit unhappy when he was one point ahead of that season after the round two. The clubs in the first half of the table played again in a single round for championship points and Magallanes was two points behind Audax in the overall accounting. In addition, Magallanes moved into the final of the Campeonato de Apertura again in 1941, but this time lost to Audax with 1: 2.

In the 1983/84 season Magallanes qualified by a fourth place in the league for a Liguilla , a small league competition in which the second to fifth of the championship played off the second participant next to the champions at the Copa Libertadores 1985 . Magallanes won the Liguilla but was in the Libertadores group stage behind CA Peñarol and Colo-Colo, and in front of CA Bella Vista from Uruguay only third and eliminated.

In 1960 Magallanes was relegated for the first time for two years from the first division, 1974 for four years. 1986 followed another relegation from the first division. 1492 spectators watched the last first division game in the club's history, a 1-1 draw against Audax. 1993 followed the decline in the third division, the highest amateur league, for the time being for two years.

In 2000 the club was privatized and used eight coaches over the next four years without any progress being made visible. In 2006, he left again in the third division. 2010 Magallanes rose again to the second division. In 2011, the second division was able to reach the finals of the Copa Chile for the first time . After a 1-0 win against CD Universidad Católica in the first leg , it was 0-1 in the second leg after 90 minutes. In the subsequent penalty shootout, Magallanes lost 4-2.

successes

Known players

  • ChileChile David Arellano , is said to be the inventor of the fall retractor, from 1919 to 1925 at Magallanes, later at Colo-Colo until his death in 1927
  • ChileChile Antonio Arias , 30-time international and World Cup participant from 1974, employed by Magallanes between 1965 and 1968
  • ChileChile Ivo Basay , started his career at Magallanes, later a. a. at Colo-Colo and Stade Reims, later coach in Chile
  • ArgentinaArgentina José Borello , for example active at Club Olimpo and Boca Juniors, at the end of his career at Magallanes in the 60s
  • ChileChile Carlos Ibáñez , who took part in the 1950 World Cup, played at Magallanes throughout his career
  • ChileChile Adolfo Nef , 42 internationals in the goal of Chile, 1982 to 1987 with Magallanes, previously with Universidad de Chile and Colo-Colo
  • ChileChile Juan Olivares , 33 caps for Chile and a World Cup participant from 1966 and 1974, for Magallanes between 1974 and 1976
  • ChileChile Alberto Quintano , last position as an active member of Magallanes in 1982, previously 47 international matches and participation in the 1974 World Cup
  • ChileChile Humberto Suazo , made his professional debut with Magallanes, today a multiple national player and active with CF Monterrey in Mexico
  • ChileChile Arturo Torres , World Cup participant from 1930, member of the successful Magallanes team, later also the club's coach
  • ChileChile Carlos Vidal , as well as Torres player of the 1930s with Magallanes and World Cup participant from 1930, also under contract with Audax Italiano
  • ChileChile Guillermo Yávar , well-known player and coach, two-time World Cup participant, 1961 to 1965 Magallanes as first station as a footballer

Well-known trainers

  • HungaryHungary Ferenc Plattkó , Hungarian coach, with Magallanes in 1945, also coach of Barcelona, ​​Boca Juniors and River Plate
  • ChileChile Osvaldo Heriberto Hurtado , as a player a. a. in Cádiz and Charleroi, coach of Deportes Magallanes since 2008
  • ChileChile Francisco Valdés , a 52-time national player and two-time World Cup participant, in 1997 briefly coach of Magallanes

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Estadio , Club Deportivo Magellanes (from December 28, 2011)
  2. Juan Pablo Andrés, Eli Schmerler: Chile - Foundation Dates of Clubs , Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation , July 24, 2003
  3. Karel Stokkermans, et al .: Double Digits Domestical , Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation , December 21, 2011

Web links

Commons : Deportes Magallanes  - Collection of images, videos and audio files