Huracan Buceo

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Huracan Buceo
Badge of Huracán Buceo
Basic data
Surname Club Social y Deportivo Huracán Buceo
Seat Montevideo , Uruguay
founding March 15, 1937
president Sergio Aragonés (2012)
Website huracanbuceo.com.uy
First soccer team
Venue Parque "Huracán Buceo"
Montevideo , Uruguay
Places 8,000
league no
2008/09 14. ( Segunda División )
home
Away

The Club Social y Deportivo Huracán Buceo shortly Huracán Buceo (nickname: Tricoplayeros , Funebreros ), is a sports club from Montevideo in Uruguay , the predominantly because of its football team is known.

The club is currently not participating in competitions in the context of professional football. The club's arch-rivals are CA Basáñez and Villa Española .

history

From the foundation to the rise to first class

The club, which is based in Barrio Buceo in Montevide , was founded on March 15, 1937, under the leadership of the players Hugo Baeza, Héctor Cuevas and Aparicio Chagas. The place of foundation was the street corner Miraballes / Resistencia . The club colors were chosen based on the Argentine club Chacarita Juniors . In the period that followed, changes were made to the design of the jerseys. Strong black, white and red stripes adorned the sports shirts. For the year 1942 it is - however not certain - handed down that one ran up in shirts of the Newell's Old Boys . In 1947, the association was given a real management structure for the first time. The first president was the glass factory worker Demetrio Méndez .

After initially measuring the athletic strength on a barrial level and starting in 1950 in the Liga El Diario , the club, known as Edison-Huracán Buceo , made its debut on June 27, 1952 in Extra . The first opponent there was Fraternidad , whom they defeated 3-1 away. Already in the second season in 1954 the title win in Divisional Extra was noted in the success statistics and thus secured promotion to the intermedia . In that year the Edison suffix had already been dropped. With the championship in 1960 in the Divisional Intermedia de Fútbol de Uruguay , the club set the course for the second division, where it first appeared in 1961. After relegation, they made another attempt to reach the higher leagues. 1967 succeeded with the renewed championship win of the Divisional Intermedia de Fútbol de Uruguay, the next promotion to the second division. After taking first place in the final table in the Segunda División in 1968 , but having to share it with Bella Vista , they ultimately missed promotion after the 2-0 defeat in the Estadio Centenario against the same team before with 53,583 tickets sold out house. For the first time and so far not repeatedly, two so-called "small" teams filled that stadium. More than 10,000 soccer fans had to be refused entry. In the following year, however, the club became Uruguayan second division champions.

From debut in the Primera División to expulsion from professional football

Thus, the club rose for the first time in its history in the Primera División . The official club mascot Topo Gigio was also born from this time . In the first division they made their debut with a win against River Plate Montevideo at the Estadio Saroldi in front of 6,000 spectators. The winning goal was scored by "Number 10" Huracáns, "El Tano" Alfano . In keeping with the club's name (Huracán means hurricane), the players trained by Omar Borrás (with assistant Luis Grimaldi) in 1970 as part of his first job in the Primera División continued the steep rise of the club's success curve there. They had a strong debut season in 1970 and finished third behind the two big clubs Nacional and Peñarol . In the championship round, they finished second with the Aurinegros tied on points. This was accompanied by a large audience of up to 20,000 spectators per game, which soon led to the name Huracáns as the third great (alongside Nacional and Peñarol) of Uruguayan football in the specialist press. They won the Copa Montevideo that season , which received the best-placed team after Nacional and Peñarol. That year the team consisted of Luis Aguerre , Nelson Acosta , "El Tano" Alfano , Luis Villalba , Enrique Varela and Julio Dalmao . From then on they played consistently until 1991 in Uruguay's top division. That year, however, the relegation was due, but was immediately corrected in the following year when they prevailed in the relegation games for promotion with two wins against Central Español . But the second first division stay in the club's history was significantly shorter, as relegation was on the agenda as early as 1993. 1995 succeeded with the second division championship the renewed return to the football club. Placements followed mainly in the middle of the table. In 1998, when they reached the second round of the Copa Conmebol, they also appeared internationally. In 2000, however, Huracán Buceo was only 17th and penultimate. The result of the Torneo Clasificatorio of the following year (15th overall) and finally the last place in the Torneo Permanencia , in which the relegation was played, meant going into the second division. This was followed by a sportingly disastrous second division season, in which they were knocked off, eleven points behind Club Sportivo Cerrito, bottom of the table. Despite this result, they were also eligible to start in the Segunda División in the 2003 season and were able to consolidate themselves in terms of sport by now returning to the middle of the table in tenth place. In 2004 Álvaro Regueira sat on the coaching bench of the Montevidean club and they initially played again in the upper table regions. However, a players strike followed in November / December of that year because the club, like competitor Racing, did not meet payment obligations. At the end of the season they finished seventh overall. In 2005 the economic situation of the club had come to a head that they finally withdrew from the Segunda División's game operations for financial reasons. League rival Villa Española met the same fate. It was not until the opening of the 2007/08 season that they returned to second class in the league operation, which had meanwhile been switched to the European mode with a half-series break at the turn of the year, and was 13th at the end of the season. As tables-14. you left only the two suspended clubs Basáñez and La Luz FC behind. For the following season, the association denied the club the right to start for financial reasons. Since then, Huracán Buceo is no longer represented in professional football.

Current situation

President Sergio Aragonés announced on the occasion of the 75th anniversary of the club that a return to professional football is intended, but the necessary 160,000 dollars for the AUF are currently missing. There are potential investors. Among other things, an influential Spanish club is interested in an investment. However, Huracán Buceo is indebted to Tenfield as well as to the former club and AUF president Eugenio Figueredo in the amount of around one million dollars. BPS has further liabilities. In this regard, however, there is a 20-year deferral agreement. The last open installment is also here 400,000 dollars. There are also titles obtained through legal channels from around 2001 and 2002 .

successes

  • 2 × Masters of the Segunda División (1969 and 1995)
  • Copa Montevideo 1970
  • 2 × Master of the Divisional Intermedia (1960 and 1967)

Coach history

Well-known former players

Other departments

There is also a very successful handball department within the club, which has already produced many Uruguayan national players. A swimming department, beach soccer and boxing is also still represented in 2012 by the club run by President Sergio Aragonés .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. World Stadiums - Stadiums in Uruguay
  2. ^ Uruguay Second Level (Primera B) 1968 on rsssf.com, accessed December 23, 2012
  3. Campañas históricas del deporte uruguayo - 1970: Huracán Buceo ( Memento from February 17, 2013 in the web archive archive.today ) (Spanish) from El Observador , accessed on December 23, 2012
  4. ^ Uruguay 1969 on rsssf.com, accessed December 23, 2012
  5. Campañas históricas del deporte uruguayo - 1970: Huracán Buceo ( Memento from February 17, 2013 in the web archive archive.today ) (Spanish) from El Observador , accessed on December 23, 2012
  6. ^ Uruguay - List of Final Tables 1900-2000 at www.rsssf.com, accessed December 23, 2012
  7. ^ Uruguay 2001 Championship at www.rsssf.com, accessed December 23, 2012
  8. ^ Club Social y Deportivo Huracán Buceo - Historias Tricoplayeras (Spanish; PDF file; 3.21 MB), accessed on December 23, 2012
  9. ^ Uruguay 2002 Second Level at www.rsssf.com, accessed December 23, 2012
  10. Uruguay 2003 Second Level at www.rsssf.com, accessed December 23, 2012
  11. ^ Uruguay Second Level 2004 on rsssf.com, accessed December 23, 2012
  12. ^ Uruguay Second Level 2005 on rsssf.com, accessed December 23, 2012
  13. ^ Uruguay Second Level 2006 on rsssf.com, accessed December 23, 2012
  14. ^ Uruguay Second Level 2007/08 at www.rsssf.com, accessed December 23, 2012
  15. Uruguay Second Level 2008/09 on rsssf.com, accessed December 23, 2012
  16. Uruguay 2009/10 - Segunda División Profesional on rsssf.com, accessed December 23, 2012
  17. a b Profesionales nuevamente, pero gracias a gerenciadores ( Memento of January 2, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) (Spanish) on diariolarepublica.net of March 16, 2012, accessed on December 23, 2012
  18. Descenso 1982 (Spanish) on liverpool100hechos.blogspot.de from January 11, 2016, accessed on October 29, 2016
  19. ¿Por qué los técnicos uruguayos fueron defensas, goleros o mediocampistas? (Spanish) from lr21.com.uy on May 29, 2001, accessed October 27, 2016