Montevideo Wanderers

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Montevideo Wanderers
Montevideo Wanderers FC.svg
Basic data
Surname Montevideo Wanderers Fútbol Club
Seat Montevideo , Uruguay
founding August 15, 1902
president Raúl Aguerrebere
Website mwfc.com.uy
First soccer team
Head coach Gastón Machado
Venue Estadio Viera
Places 12,000
league Primera División
2015/16 5th place
home
Away
Champion team from 1906

The Montevideo Wanderers Fútbol Club , Wanderers for short , (nickname: Bohemios ) is a football club from Montevideo in Uruguay .

Their home games are played by the Wanderers, who are based in the Barrio Prado in Montevideo and whose headquarters are on Avenida Agraciada 2871 , in the Estadio Viera .

history

The first two decades

The Wanderers, overshadowed by their sporty and economically influential rivals Nacional and Peñarol , were founded on August 15, 1902. Shortly after it was founded, the original club colors blue and white were changed to black and white as a sign of solidarity with the Argentine club Estudiantes de Buenos Aires . They are still the colors of the Wanderers' club to this day. The name of the association can be traced back to the brothers Enrique and Juan Sardeson, around whom the association was founded, who chose it after a trip to England.

The team that played the first game for the club consisted of the following players: Enrique Sardeson , Miguel Aphesteguy , Rafael Sardeson , Luis Carvalho Alvarez , Oscar Tálice , José A. Nicolich , R. Miguelerena , Juan Sardeson , H Ortiz Garzón , Alfredo Viera , Federico Canfield .

Right in the first two decades of its existence, the Wanderers celebrated great successes. So you became Uruguayan champions in 1906 and 1909. In 1908 and 1910 the Copa de Honor was won . The team decided in 1906, 1908, 1911, 1917, 1918 and thus five times the Copa Competencia in favor of the club. In addition, the club won the Copa Competencia Chevallier Boutell in 1911, 1917 and 1918 .

The starting eleven of the first championship consisted of the following players:
Cayetano Saporiti , Miguel Aphesteguy , Juan Carlos Bertone , Francisco Branda , Juan Sardeson , Luis Piñeyro Carve , Rafael de Miquelerena , Gilberto Peralta , Alberto Zumarán , Carvalho Alvarez and Cándido Hernández Bentancour

In 1909 these players formed the tribe of the championship team:
Saporiti; Miguel Aphesteguy, Bertone; Parravicini, Martín Aphesteguy , Arturo López ; de Miquelerena or R. Buck; Goldmishth, Luis Quaglia , Zumarán and Reba Gliatte

1920s

In 1922 the Bohemios were Uruguayan runners-up when the AUF Nacional declared champions ahead of time. In the next few seasons in the Federacion Uruguaya de Football aligned Campeonato Uruguayo de la Federacion Uruguaya de Football antretend which was by Domingo Tejera run as captain of the team 1923 champion and 1924 runner-up. In 1924 he also won the Copa Río de La Plata . In 1931, the Wanderers, now playing again under the umbrella of the AUF, secured the Uruguayan championship title.

Follow-up period (excerpt)

Since the introduction of professional football in Uruguay in 1932, the Wanderers have been one of the "long-running hits" of the Primera División . With 71 years of membership (as of the end of the 2011/12 season) in the top Uruguayan league, only the two dominant clubs Nacional and Peñarol (both 81 years and thus continuously) and Defensor Sporting (79 years) surpassed them. They are also one of the most successful teams in Uruguay in terms of points. In the eternal table of the Primera División they finished fourth after the 2011/12 season.

The first division presence was last interrupted by relegation in 1998. With the second division championship in 2000, however, the team coached by Daniel Carreño at that time soon returned to the Primera División.

On December 12, 2011, Alfredo Arias , who until then had been the coach of the youth team ( Quinta ) of the Montevideans and was active as a player in 1977 and from 1979 to 1983 for the club, took over as coach of Carreño. He signed a one-year contract. He was assisted by the former Wanderers player Vicente Estavillo as assistant coach . The coaching team was completed by Ignacio Berriel . With a sixth place in the table in the 2012/13 season, the Wanderers qualified for the 2013 Copa Sudamericana . In the 2013/14 season they finished 4th in the table after the Apertura. The 2014 Clausura then finished first in the table. In the overall table for the year, they also took first place after the return series. With that, the Wanderers were already playing the most successful season in the club's history since the introduction of professional football in Uruguay before the subsequent championship decision-making games against the Apertura winner Danubio . In addition, you entered with one of the youngest teams in the championship round. In the semifinal against Danubio played on May 25, 2014, the Wanderers lost 3-0. This ultimately resulted in two final games that were decisive for the 2013/14 championship. After the first final at the Estadio Luis Franzini ended 0-0 on June 3, 2014 , the Wanderers lost the second final game, accompanied by four sent-offs, on June 8, 2014 at Gran Parque Central on penalties, after it was 2-2 Extension. Thus the Wanderers were only runner-up.

The following season 2014/15 ended only 11th in the overall table. However, they presented the most successful Uruguayan team in the Copa Libertadores 2015 and advanced to the last sixteen. There they failed at the Racing Club from Argentina . On June 14, 2015 it was announced that coach Alfredo Arias and his team, which at that time consisted of Nacho Berriel and Samantha Rodríguez, would not continue their cooperation with the club after around four years of activity. The 2015/16 season ended 5th in the overall table.

Participation in the Copa Libertadores

The association also took part in international competitions several times. 1975 they qualified for the first time for the Copa Libertadores . After failing there in previous participations ( 1983 , 1986 , 1988 ) in the group phase at the beginning, they advanced to the second round as part of the 2002 competition . In the round of 16 they were defeated by Peñarol on penalties 3-0, after they went 2-2 on both sides.

successes

Current squad season 2016

Source: (as of October 23, 2016)

goal Defense midfield attack
Leonardo Burián UruguayUruguay
Ignacio De Arruabarrena UruguayUruguay
Mauro Silveira UruguayUruguay
Federico Andueza UruguayUruguay
Diego Barboza UruguayUruguay
Federico Barrandeguy UruguayUruguay
Gastón Bueno UruguayUruguay
Emiliano Díaz UruguayUruguay
Mauricio Gomez UruguayUruguay
Emanuel Gularte UruguayUruguay
Lucas Morales UruguayUruguay
Martín Rivas UruguayUruguay
Nicolás Rodríguez UruguayUruguay
Manuel Castro UruguayUruguay
Adrian Colombino UruguayUruguay
Franco Gentile UruguayUruguay
Ignacio González UruguayUruguay
Santiago Martínez UruguayUruguay
Ignacio Neira UruguayUruguay
Gabriel Perez UruguayUruguay
Nicolás Queiroz UruguayUruguay
Rodrigo Rivero UruguayUruguay
Matías Santos UruguayUruguay
Joaquín Vergés UruguayUruguay
Santiago Bellini UruguayUruguay
Sergio Blanco UruguayUruguay
Emiliano Coitiño UruguayUruguay
Rodrigo de Olivera UruguayUruguay
Isaías Del Balle UruguayUruguay
Santiago Gáspari UruguayUruguay

Coach history

List of previous presidents

  • 1902-1903: Juan Sardeson
  • 1904–1904: Horacio Tráppani
  • 1905-1905: Enrique Sardeson
  • 1906-1907: Miguel Aphesteguy
  • 1908–1908: Américo Pedragosa Sierra
  • 1909–1910: Alfredo Le Blas
  • 1911–1911: Américo Pedragosa Sierra
  • 1912–1912: Héctor Ortiz Garzón
  • 1913–1914: Alfredo Víctor Viera
  • 1915–1919: Héctor Rivadavia Gómez
  • 1920–1922: Abel Zamora
  • 1923–1923: Héctor Rivadavia Gómez
  • 1923–1924: Luis Alberto Fernández Gastelú (FUF)
  • 1924-1925: Jaime Calafat
  • 1926–1930: Alfredo Víctor Viera
  • 1931–1932: Luis Fernández Gastelú
  • 1933-1935: Carlos Bastos
  • 1936–1938: Juan Ferrando
  • 1939-1940: Juan Ponce de León
  • 1941-1941: Luis Castagnola
  • 1942–1943: Luis Fernández Gastelú
  • 1944–1945: Alberto Belbussi
   
  • 1946–1946: Rodolfo Viera
  • 1947-1948: Eduardo Cuneo
  • 1949-1950: Esteban Bacigalupi
  • 1951–1952: Luis Fernández Gastelú
  • 1953-1953: Fernando Fariña
  • 1954-1960: Luis Alberto Castagnola
  • 1961–1964: Walter Lanfranco
  • 1965–1965: Nicolás Algorta
  • 1966-1966: Ulises Morassi
  • 1967–1968: Raúl Ponce de León
  • 1969–1970: Hugo Castagnola
  • 1971-1984: Mateo Giri
  • 1985-1986: Héctor Pirez
  • 1987–1988: Ramón Méndez
  • 1989–1990: Walter Lanfranco
  • 1991-1994: Hugo Castagnola
  • 1995-1996: Alberto Rey
  • 1997-1998: Carlos Maresca
  • 1999-2006: Walter Devoto
  • 2007-2008: Alvaro Ezcurra
  • 2008-2010: Guillermo Raggio

Former players

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Directiva (Spanish) at mwfc.com.uy, accessed December 28, 2012
  2. Reseña histórica (Spanish) at www.mwfc.com.uy, accessed on April 22, 2014
  3. Un siglo de gloria (Spanish) at www.mwfc.com.uy of July 7, 2009, accessed on April 22, 2014
  4. Domingo Tejera's biography on the Montevideo Wanderers website (Spanish), accessed on December 30, 2011
  5. ^ Uruguay - All-Time 1932-2012 (Professional Era) at www.rsssf.com, accessed December 28, 2012
  6. Alfredo Arias es el nuevo DT de Wanderers  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (Spanish) at elobservador.com.uy on December 12, 2011, accessed on January 29, 2012@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / elobservador.com.uy  
  7. Godoy es prioridad en Wanderers ( Memento of December 20, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) (Spanish) on cambiodefrente.com of January 3, 2012, accessed on January 29, 2012
  8. Arias: “Yo quiero salir campeón” ( Memento from July 28, 2012 in the web archive archive.today ) (Spanish) on www.diariolarepublica.net from January 13, 2012, accessed on January 29, 2012
  9. A las páginas de gloria (Spanish) at www.montevideo.com.uy of May 18, 2014, accessed on May 18, 2014
  10. Fixture Campeonato Uruguayo 2013/2014 de Primera División. Clausura ( Memento of November 26, 2017 in the Internet Archive ) (Spanish) at www.auf.org.uy, accessed on May 18, 2014
  11. Danubio 3 - 0 Wanderers (Spanish) at www.auf.org.uy, accessed June 1, 2014
  12. La pinta es lo de menos (Spanish) on futbol.com.uy of June 3, 2014, accessed on June 8, 2014
  13. Salvador del título (Spanish) on futbol.com.uy of June 8, 2014, accessed June 8, 2014
  14. Tables for the 2014/15 season ( memento from November 26, 2017 in the Internet Archive ) on auf.org.uy, accessed on June 12, 2015
  15. La lógica de los ciclos (Spanish) on futbol.com.uy of June 14, 2015, accessed on June 14, 2015
  16. Uruguay 2015/16 on rsssf.com, accessed October 28, 2016
  17. Cuarto Capítulo 1973-1991 (Spanish) on mwfc.com.uy, accessed December 28, 2012
  18. Quinto Capítulo 1992-2012 (Spanish) at mwfc.com.uy, accessed December 28, 2012
  19. Squad on soccerway.com , accessed October 23, 2016
  20. ¿Por qué los técnicos uruguayos fueron defensas, goleros o mediocampistas? (Spanish) from lr21.com.uy on May 29, 2001, accessed October 27, 2016
  21. Rocha Gano y espera por Miramar o Progreso (Spanish) in La República of 13 March 2007, accessed on February 21, 2015
  22. Carreño's profile on soccerway.com , accessed January 29, 2012
  23. Gastón Machado - Profile on soccerway.com , accessed October 23, 2016
  24. List of presidents on the official website