Once Caldas
Once Caldas | ||||
Basic data | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Surname | Once Caldas SA | |||
Seat | Manizales | |||
founding | 1959 | |||
president | Tulio Mario Castrillón | |||
Website | oncecaldas.com.co | |||
First soccer team | ||||
Head coach | Hubert Bodhert | |||
Venue | Estadio Palogrande | |||
Places | 28,678 | |||
league | First division , Colombia | |||
2019 Apertura | 10th place (league phase) | |||
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Once Caldas is a Colombian football club from Manizales , the capital of the Departamento de Caldas . The club colors are green, white and red. The team mostly plays in white and is therefore also called el blanco blanco .
history
The association was created in 1959 by merging the associations Once Deportivo and Deportes Caldas to Once Caldas. In 1961, the club played for the first time in the top Colombian league. The first international appearance took place in 1998 when you could qualify for the Copa Conmebol . In 1999 and 2002, Once Caldas achieved participation in the Copa Libertadores . 2003 succeeded for the second time winning the Colombian championship. The first championship was won by the predecessor club Deportes Caldas in 1950. In 2009 and 2010, two more semi-series championship titles followed.
In 2004, Once Caldas surprisingly won the Copa Libertadores in their third participation, making them the second team from Colombia after Atlético Nacional from Medellín in 1989 to succeed. After the team was able to keep a 0-0 draw in the first leg in Buenos Aires against the Argentine representative and high favorite Boca Juniors and the second leg ended 1-1, Once Caldas won the decisive penalty shoot-out 2-0. On December 12, 2004, the team played in Tokyo against FC Porto for the World Cup , but lost 7: 8 on penalties after a goalless game and extra time.
Stadion
Once Caldas plays its home games at the Estadio Palogrande . There is room for 36,553 people in the fully roofed stands. The multi-purpose stadium, inaugurated in 1994, was built on the site of the Estadio Fernando Londoño y Londoño, which was built in 1936 and has a capacity of 16,000 .
The stadium's name comes from a large tree called a "large stake" that was on an estate here in the early 1930s. The stadium was also the venue for the 2001 Copa America .
Athletic course
successes
- Copa Libertadores : 2004
- Masters of Colombia : 1950 (as Deportes Caldas), 2003-I, 2009-I, 2010-II
- Participation in the Copa Libertadores : 8 ×
- 1999 : group stage
- 2002 : group stage
- 2004 : winner
- 2005 : Round of 16
- 2010 : Round of 16
- 2011 : quarter-finals
- 2012 : qualification
- 2015 : qualification
- Participation in the Copa Sudamericana : 1 ×
- 2019 : 1st round
- Participation in the World Cup : 1 ×
- 2004: losing finalist
- Participation in the Recopa Sudamericana : 1 ×
- 2005: losing finalist
- Participation in the Copa Conmebol : 1 ×
- 1998 : 1st round
Season dates since 2010
Playtime | league | League level | space | Final round |
---|---|---|---|---|
2010-I | Liga Postobón | I. | 10. | - |
2010-II | Liga Postobón | I. | 2. | 1. Group B champions |
2011-I | Liga Postobón | I. | 1. | Quarter finals |
2011-II | Liga Postobón | I. | 3. | Final runner-up |
2012-I | Liga Postobón | I. | 17th | - |
2012-II | Liga Postobón | I. | 15th | - |
2013-I | Liga Postobón | I. | 7th | 4. Group A |
2013-II | Liga Postobón | I. | 6th | 4. Group B |
2014-I | Liga Postobón | I. | 5. | Quarter finals |
2014-II | Liga Postobón | I. | 5. | 4. Group A |
2015-I | League Águila | I. | 13. | - |
2015-II | League Águila | I. | 5. | Quarter finals |
2016-I | League Águila | I. | 10. | - |
2016-II | League Águila | I. | 13. | - |
2017-I | League Águila | I. | 16. | - |
2017-II | League Águila | I. | 17th | - |
2018-I | League Águila | I. | 8th. | Quarter finals |
2018-II | League Águila | I. | 2. | Quarter finals |
2019-I | League Águila | I. | 10. | - |
highlighted in green: master |
Trainer
- Carlos Alberto (1989–1990)
- Luis Montoya (2003-2004)
- Flabio Torres (2013-2015)
- Javier Torrente (2015-2016)
- Hernán Alberto Lisi (2016-2017)
- Francisco Maturana (2017)
- Hubert Bodhert (2017–)
Former players
- Edwin Congo
- Sergio Galvan
- Elkin Soto
- John Viafara
- Dayro Moreno
- Arnulfo Valentierra
- Juan Carlos Henao
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Flabio Torres - Profile on soccerway.com , accessed October 16, 2016
- ↑ Javier Torrente - Profile on soccerway.com , accessed January 5, 2017
- ↑ Hernán Alberto Lisi - Profile on soccerway.com , accessed June 23, 2017
- ^ Francisco Maturana - Profile on soccerway.com , accessed November 30, 2017
- ↑ Hubert Bodhert - Profile on soccerway.com , accessed January 19, 2018