Rayo Majadahonda

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Rayo Majadahonda
Template: Infobox Football Club / Maintenance / No picture
Basic data
Surname Club de Fútbol Rayo Majadahonda
Seat Majadahonda , Spain
founding June 7, 1976
(Official Registration)
president José María Sanz
Website rayomajadahonda.es
First soccer team
Head coach Julian Calero
Venue Estadio Cerro del Espino , Majadahonda
Places 3865
league Segunda Division B
2019/20 6th place
home
Away

The Club de Fútbol Rayo Majadahonda , in German-speaking commonly known as Rayo Majadahonda , is a Spanish football club from the city of Majadahonda , a few kilometers northwest of the capital Madrid .

The club was founded in 1976 and rose to the Segunda División , the second highest Spanish football league, for the first time in the 2017/18 season , but was only able to hold out for one season and was relegated back to the third division at the end of the 2018/19 season .

history

The beginnings

Rayo Majadahonda's beginnings go back to 1958, when an amateur team called Rayo Majariego was founded here. The first team consisted mainly of young people from the Majariego municipality, which today belongs to Majadahonda; at that time a place with around 3,000 inhabitants. Because of the lower price compared to colored jerseys, white tops were provided for the players. However, as many teams in the region competed with white uniforms, you had to get creative. In order to clearly distinguish itself from other teams, it was decided to sew a red stripe diagonally from the right shoulder to the left side of the white jerseys. The color of the first pants was also white. Since it was not officially registered as a club, in the late 1950s and then as early as the early 1960s mainly friendly matches against other amateur teams from the region were played. The team coached by Antonio Ugena didn't last too long, however, as the team's treasurer ran away with all the money in the summer of 1960 and fled the city.

Then attempts were made to rebuild the financially ruined club as El Rayo Majariego Club de Fútbol ; a playing field was created next to a street in El Plantío . Emiliano Aguilar Descalzo was elected as the first chairman and Ugena acted again as football coach. The goal was to establish the team in the region in the long term. But this team was also disbanded again in the 1960s and disappeared. At the beginning of 1967 Antonio Ugena was reactivated as a coach for a tournament with the help of the football player Rufino Bustillo and other players. At the tournament, which started on February 5, 1967 and ended on May 7, 1967, the team was able to prove itself, whereupon ideas for founding a new club emerged. As Agrupación Deportiva Rayo Majariego , the team took part in tournaments of the Educación y Descanso and subsequently took up their game operations in the Grupo II de Tercera Categoría of the 1967/68 season. Under President Ángel Bustillo and Gregorio Álvarez, the AD Rayo Majariego played his games in the immediate vicinity on the Street Escudero and a little later on the grounds of the Colegio Público Bilingüe San Pío X de Majadahonda . Already in the spring season, the team was runner-up in May 1968 after a 1-0 defeat by Vista Alegre.

After two seasons in the Educación y Descanso game, the team suffered another setback in 1969. On the property on which the team played their games, the Colegio de San Pío X planned the construction of a building, which would leave the young players without a venue and the team ran the risk of breaking up as a team if they couldn't find a suitable venue to have to. Since the city at that time had another new club, the Púber Club de Fútbol, ​​which shared the same fate, it was decided to cooperate and found the Asociación Deportiva Majadahonda in 1970. For the 1972/73 season they reported Responsible the club at the Federación Castellana de Fútbol , because one intended to participate in their competitions, even if one did not have a venue. The association housed the team in the so-called Campeonato de Adheridos .

Official creation of CF Rayo Majadahonda

Due to the strong upswing in the 1970s, the image of the former small town changed, which increasingly became a growing city. The population had grown by leaps and bounds to more than 10,000 inhabitants and the call for an official football club in the city of Majadahonda grew louder and louder. Accordingly, the CF Rayo Majadahonda was founded in 1974 , which, like its predecessor teams , appeared in the colors of the franjirrojos . The new logo and the uniforms were also strongly based on the nearby Rayo Vallecano football club . The first game uniform again included a white t-shirt with a red stripe from the right shoulder to the lower left side. The socks were white with a wide red collar at the top. The pants turned out for the first time in a light blue . The club's headquarters were in what is now the “Casa Mariano” restaurant, where the previous team, when the restaurant was still a bar, was based. Under President Antonio Rodríguez, the team appeared at the Puerta de Madrid and Las Villas and made their debut in the 1974/75 season in the aforementioned Campeonato de Adheridos , in which the previous team was once active. At the same time, another sports group was founded in Majadahonda in 1975. The Club Deportivo Majadahonda San Miguel , which was financed by a brewery under President Ricardo Villaoz Vifiocos, was immediately considered a city rival. Even the clothing of the CD Majadahonda San Miguel players was evidence of this; after all, you played in reversed colors (blue top and white pants).

One of the first activities of the board under the first chairman and president Ramiro Aguilar was the registration of the team for the Tercera Regional , the eighth top division in the country, at the Federación Castellana de Fútbol. Another major focus was the construction of the club's venue; With the help of Mayor Arturo Sanz and funding from Hiper, the predecessor of today's Estadio Cerro del Espino was built. The stands of the municipal stadium were not covered; there was also no electric floodlight system . After the official registration with the association on June 7, 1976, the league competitor CD Majadahonda San Miguel was registered in the same league on September 1 of the same year. Thus, the 1976/77 season is to be regarded as historic for both city rivals, as it was after all the first in an official Spanish football league. For the first season a budget for coaches and players in the amount of 600,000 pesetas was established. The annual membership fee was set at 30 pesetas; there was also a subsidy from the city council of 100,000 pesetas. The remaining amount was collected through raffles, donations and contributions from players and coaches. The team's first coach was once again Antonio Ugena, who was able to celebrate first sporting successes with the club. With 47 points and 73 goals scored, as well as 31 goals conceded, the team finished the season in first place and made it to the next higher division, which was again the eighth highest division due to a league reform. While Rayo Majadahonda managed to rise, Majadahonda San Miguel remained in fifth place in the previous league.

In what is now Group 3 of the 3ª Categoría Preferente, Rayo Majadahonda then played for relegation, but managed to stay in the league when he was twelfth in Group 3 in the 1977/78 season. The city rival made it up this season and also appeared in Group 3 of the 3ª Categoría Preferente from 1978/79. While San Miguel managed to stay in league as 13th, Rayo ranked 17th and thus penultimate place in the group and had to relegate to the Spanish ninth division at the end of the season. In Group 9 of the 3ª Categoría, however, the team was able to immediately win the championship title and make direct promotion to the eighth level. By the end of the decade, both teams from Majadahonda were largely even and on an equal sporting level. However, that changed in the early 1980s when Rayo Majadahonda began soaring.

Rapid rise to the Tercera División

At the beginning of the new decade, the difference between the two clubs from Majadahonda became apparent. While Rayo Majadahonda was involved in the promotion to the seventh division, but did not make it due to the deduction of two points only in third place in Group 1 of the 3ª Categoría Preferente, Majadahonda San Miguel had to make the way to the ninth highest division in Spain. In the season 1981/82 Rayo changed the group within the league and appeared again in Group 3. What did not work in the previous season was done at the end of the season; As the first place in Group 1, the promotion to the seven-class 2ª Categoría was mastered for the first time in the still young club history. In this, the club appeared in the third group in 1982/83 and rose to the next higher 1ª categoría as first place in the final ranking. Here the team played in the 1983/84 season in Group 1 and finished this in second place, which was associated with a renewed promotion to the next best division. In the fifth-highest Spanish football league, the previous president Ramiro Aguilar resigned after almost a decade and handed it over to his successor Antonio Rodríguez. Under Rodríguez, the team reached a sixth place in the final ranking of the 1984/85 Preference Group 2 season; immediately afterwards Rodríguez had to give up his post as president again. Francisco Torres took over his agendas and led the team after a fourth place in 1985/86 with a second place in the 1986/87 season in the Tercera División , the Spanish fourth division. But this rise also resulted in a change at management level; After two seasons, Torres handed over to Enrique Vedia, who would subsequently become Rayo Majadahonda's president with the longest term and who still holds this office today (as of 2018). Also during this time there was a change of association on June 9, 1987, with the Federación de Fútbol de Madrid (FFM) being responsible for the clubs from the Autonomous Community of Madrid .

In the first season after promotion, the club reached a top 5 position, but could not hold it in the following years and was mostly to be found in the second half of the table. After a 15th place in the 1988/89 season, a 14th place in 1989/90 and an eleventh place in the 1990/91 season, the club from Majadahonda came back to the top of the table for the first time in four years. On rank 5 in the 1991/92 season they slide back to positions 8 and 11 in the two following seasons. During this time, the team took part in the Copa del Rey for the first time in their history in 1992/93 . After a 3-1 defeat in the first leg against Real Aranjuez CF , the team suffered an even more pronounced defeat in the second leg with a 2: 6, which resulted in the early withdrawal from the competition. After Rayo Majadahonda had completed his last competitive game against RSC Alcalá on January 9, 1994 at the Cerr del Espino, this was temporarily closed to make renovations and increase capacity. In the meantime, the club called the Las Rozas CF venue its new home. With a point behind the DAV Santa Ana rangierend ended Rayo Majadahonda the season 1994/95 on the second place of the group 7, and thus just missed the rise in the Spanish low ranks, the Segunda División B . A year passed and Rayo Majadahonda was able to maintain his consistency. As the first place in Group 7, the team under the coach Juan Navarro Fernandez finished the 1995/96 season with eight points ahead of the next-placed pursuer AD Orcasitas . Nevertheless, the club remained in the Spanish fourth division, as it failed in the subsequent promotion play-offs to the competition. This season was also accompanied by the reopening of the converted Estadio Cerro del Espino on September 13, 1995. Diego Simeone became the first player to score a goal in a friendly between Rayo Majadahonda and Atlético Madrid at the new stadium and defeat Rayo Majadahonda 1-0.

First breakthrough in the Segunda División B

Under José Miguel Polo as coach at the end of the 1996/97 season, he was promoted to the next higher division. Although you couldn't prove yourself consistently in the play-offs, the promotion was due to a stroke of luck. Since the Real Madrid B team relegated from the second to the third division, the club's C team had to move from the third division to the fourth division Tercera Division. The now free space in Segunda B was taken by CF Rayo Majadahonda. On July 13, 1997, the Majadahonda Municipality, those in charge of Atlético Madrid, with whom Rayo Majadahonda had had a close relationship for two years, and those in charge of Rayo Majadahonda reached an agreement. 600 million pesetas should flow into the expansion of the local sports complex, with which the expansion into a sports city should take place. The administration and maintenance of the 60,000 square meter area was to be taken over for 50 years. The first ideas based on this already existed in 1995, but initially failed because Rayo Majadahonda, as the beneficiary of Cerro del Espino, had signed a four-year lease. Subsequently, the club even waived its usufruct in order to advance the expansion. Among other things, the construction of three pitches was assured for the football school and training facility of the club founded on January 7, 1991. In addition, the club should receive further substantial annual cash injections from Rayo Vallecano in order to promote football in the region and to ensure the club's liquidity . Since the agreement reached did not include any kind of subsidiarity, the two clubs remained largely independent. Later problems with the environmental protection ordinance, which barely prevented the expansion, were subsequently also resolved.

The first third division season in the club's history was hardly marked by sporting success. In Group 1 of the Segunda División B, the team competed against teams from Madrid, Galicia , Asturias , Extremadura and Castile-La Mancha in the 1997/98 season and could only rarely celebrate successes here. The coach Antonio Iriondo , who looked after the team since 1994, was followed in the spring of 1998 by Santiago Martín, with whom Majadahonda finished the season in 18th place in the final standings. As a result, the league could no longer be held and the club had to return to the Tercera División. But here too there was no sporting success, whereupon they slipped into the Spanish fifth division with a 20th place at the end of the season; Ten points were missing in the end for a possible relegation. At the turn of the millennium, the turnaround succeeded and Rayo Majadahonda rose to his "regular league" as first place in group 1 of the Preferente. The team almost received the reputation of an elevator team in the 2000/01 season when it celebrated first place in Group 7 of the Tercera División at the end of regular time. However, you failed in the subsequent promotion play-offs to the competition and had to stay in fourth division. Due to its position in the table, however, the club qualified for Copa del Rey 2001/02 , but retired from this again early. A 0-0 draw in the first leg was followed by a 2-0 defeat in the second leg against UD Vecindario and the associated end.

Stuck in the Spanish fourth class

At the league level, things were not very satisfactory for the club in 2001/02; With a 14th place in the final ranking they could keep the league, but reached - with the exception of the relegation season - the worst placement for twelve years. The reason given is the departure of some leading players. This changed again with the following season, when Majadahonda found itself back on the front table positions in Group 7 of the Tercera División. Under the new coach Juan Navarro, who had replaced Felipe Prieto Delcán at the beginning of the season, they reached fourth place and were able to prevail in the promotion play-offs against Real Titánico CCD Cerceda and La Bañeza FC and the renewed promotion to the third highest football league of the Country celebrations. Despite the efforts of coaches Juan Navarro and Chema Santos, Majadahonda failed again in 2003/04 because of relegation. With just two wins and ten draws from 38 championship games, the team rose again to fourth division as the clear last in Group 2. Even across the group, Rayo Majadahonda was the worst team this season in Segunda División B with 16 points. After repeated relegation, the club from northwest Madrid got stuck in the fourth division. In the next few years the team slipped further and further in the final ranking (8th place in 2004/05, 9th place in 2005/06, 10th place in 2006/07 and a 12th place in the 2007/08 season). Under the training manager and former Spanish national player Manuel Sánchez Delgado , known as Manolo , a sporting success set in again. As third in Group 7, the team moved into the final play-offs in 2008/09, but lost after a 1-1 draw in the first leg against the short-lived CD La Unión 0-1 in the second leg and was eliminated in the second round the play-offs. Majadahonda ended the decade under coach Pablo López Salgado with a ninth place in the 2009/10 season.

Due to the pressure of financially better positioned clubs, the club could hardly break away from the middle of the table in the following years. However, at that time there was no longer any risk of coming close to a relegation zone and could at least establish oneself in the league. After a tenth place in the 2010/11 season under coach Santiago Martín Prado and an eleventh place in the 2011/12 season, in which Óscar Garro appeared as a coach, Antonio Iriondo, who had been with the team in the 1990s, took over had looked after, the coaching office. With Iriondo, success also came back; an eighth place in 2012/13 was followed by a seventh place in 2013/14. The following season 2014/15 became historically significant, in which the club made it into the Spanish third division for the third time in its history. Above all , it was thanks to the offensive players Álvaro Portilla , who became the top scorer in Group 7 with 24 goals, and Borja Acha that Majadahonda finished the regular season in first place at the end of the season with seven points ahead of the closest pursuers. In the play-offs, the team trained by Iriondo prevailed after a 2-2 draw in the first leg with 3-0 in the second leg against the Condal Club and thus achieved promotion to the Segunda División B.

Relegation to Segunda División B and promotion to the second division

Unlike the last two times, relegation could be maintained in the 2015/16 season; with a 14th place at the end of regular time, the league could be held, albeit just barely. For the third time in the club's history, the team took part in the Spanish Football Cup in 2015/16 . As in the other two participations, the team was eliminated in the first round after the Canary Islands CD Mensajero won 2-0. Antonio Irondo formed his teams into a title contender in the following years and achieved the best result in the club's history with fourth place in the Segunda División B 2016/17. With this placement, Rayo Majadahonda qualified for the subsequent promotion play-offs, as well as for the Copa del Rey 2017/18 . In the play-offs, however, they failed clearly against Racing Santander , when they were clearly defeated with a total score of 1: 6 from the two legs. Even when they took part in the Copa del Rey four times , the team did not make it past the first round and lost in this, if only just, with 0: 1 against Unión Adarve .

In the league, however, it went according to plan for Irondo's troops this season and the goal set before the start of the season to move into the play-offs again was achieved. Rayo Majadahonda even surpassed the previous season's performance and finished it with 70 points in first place in Group 1 of Segunda División B. The team qualified once again for the play-offs and the Spanish Football Cup. After a narrow progress due to the away goals rule in the first play-off round, the round of the four group winners of the regular time, against FC Cartagena, the team lost in the final for the championship title to the RCD Mallorca . This subsequently rose together with Rayo Majadahonda, since both teams had emerged victorious from the first play-off games, in the Segunda División . Thus, Rayo Majadahonda was represented in the second highest Spanish football league for the first time in its history in the 2018/19 season . The team played its home games in the nearby Wanda Metropolitano , which has also been the home of Atlético Madrid since 2017 , as it does not have a stadium suitable or approved for professional football . The search for such a home turned out to be very difficult at the beginning, although an agreement between the responsible parties of both associations could only be found after the city council was involved and mediated. Thus, the club was able to secure a new home just a few weeks before the start of the season.

Relegation to the third division at the end of the 2018/19 season

Rayo Majadahonda started in the Segunda División on August 19, 2018 in front of 18,433 spectators, Majadahonda's largest number of spectators this season, with a 1: 2 away defeat against Real Zaragoza . It was only in the third game of the season that the team was able to score their first points against Gimnàstic de Tarragona , who was in last place at the time, in which it won the match 1-0. After another 1-0 victory over CD Lugo in round 4, the team coached by Antonio Iriondo reached ninth place at the same time, the highest position in the table this season. After that, after a short up-and-down, the team slipped in the direction of relegation places from the 14th round of the championship, but could not hold up until shortly before the end of the season and on matchday 39 slipped back to a relegation place for the first time since the start of the season. Despite a few narrow defeats, a win and a draw in the last four league games were not enough to maintain relegation. With 47 points achieved - the next-placed non-relegated CD Lugo had 45 points - Rayo Majadahonda was in 19th place in the final classification and then relegated to the third-class Segunda Division B. In the Copa del Rey 2018/19 , the team made it to the third round after a 2-1 away win over UD Las Palmas in round 2 and was eliminated in this, after a 1-1 draw at the end of regular time and extra time, on penalties against Sporting Gijón .

After relegation, the club returned to the Estadio Cerro del Espino; Before the start of the season, Julian Calero , who had previously been an assistant coach for the Spanish national team , took over as coach at Rayo Majadahonda. As after the promotion to the second division, almost the entire squad was replaced after relegation from this; transfermarkt.de's database lists 22 additions and 21 departures for the 2019/20 season alone. Majadahonda started largely successfully in the Segunda División B 2019/20 and soon made it to the top of the table. Currently (as of January 11, 2020) Rayo Majadahonda ranks fourth after 19 league games, which would mean a place in the promotion play-offs at the end of the season. In the Copa del Rey 2019/20 , after a 1-0 win over Racing de Ferrol in round 1, the team was eliminated on 11 January 2020 in the second round on penalties against CD Tenerife .

A condition for appearing in a professional league at all was for Rayo Majadahonda to outsource his professional game operations to a Sociedad Anónima Deportiva within a year . After the founding of Club de Fútbol Rayo Majadahonda SAD , the 30-year-old Alejandro Arribas , at that time an active professional player at Real Oviedo and a former junior player at Rayo Majadahonda, became the club's majority shareholder in September 2019 . At that time, Enrique Vedia Pesquera was still president of the club, which had 162 members and 93 shareholders until the takeover by Arribas. In the same month he retired after 32 years at the head of the Madrid suburban club and handed over the office of president to José María Sanz, who already spoke of investing three million euros in the club when he took office.

Reserve team

A reserve team was established as early as 1997. However, this was not used in official competitions until 2000 and this year started in the fifth class Preferente . The team was active in this until 2010. The team was then dissolved in 2011, after which the club had no second men's team for the next few years. On July 4, 2018 , an agreement was reached with the CDF Tres Cantos , which was represented in the country's fourth-highest division for the first time in the 2017/18 season, that it will henceforth act as the reserve team for Rayo Majadahonda.

More teams

In addition to various youth teams, Rayo Majadahonda also has a team in the Liga F7 Asturias , as well as three e-sports teams ( PC , PlayStation 4 and Xbox One ).

Venues

After Rayo Majadahonda's official registration with the Football Association, his home site became the Estadio Cerro del Espino , named after the hill of the same name on which it was built. The stadium, which was built on the old road between Majadahonda and Pozuelo , initially had no stands and no electrical floodlights.

It was not until 1995 that a completely redesigned new building with a capacity of 3,376 visitors was erected on the hill from which you can see Madrid in a north-westerly direction. Today, the stadium and its surrounding fields not only serve as the home of Rayo Majadahonda, but also as the training ground for the first division club Atlético Madrid . Furthermore, the reserve and youth teams as well as the women's team of Atlético Madrid play their home games on this complex, known as the sports city . In 1997 it was expanded into the aforementioned sports city - a joint project of the city administration, Rayo Majadahonda Atlético Madrid - for a sum of 600 million pesetas . In the time of the renovation before moving into finished Cerro del Espino in 1995, the club completed its home games at Estadio NAVALCARBON , the stadium of Las Rozas CF . The club’s football school, called La Oliva , is located a few hundred meters from the stadium and its side seats and has two seats with a small, uncovered grandstand with around 175 seats and the associated infrastructure.

After the successful promotion to the Segunda División at the end of the 2017/18 season, Rayo Majadahonda needed a stadium that was suitable or approved for professional football. This was subsequently found with the Wanda Metropolitano , the new home of Atlético Madrid since 2017 .

After relegation at the end of the 2018/19 season, the club returned to its own stadium.

President

  • 1976-1984: Ramiro Aguilar
  • 1984–1985: Antonio Rodríguez
  • 1985-1987: Francisco Torres
  • 1987-2019: Enrique Vedia Pesquera
  • since 2019: José María Sanz Martín

literature

  • Alberto Martín Vara: 25 años del Rayo en Majadahonda . Ediciones Ergón, Madrid 2002, ISBN 978-84-8473-065-1 .
  • Vicent Masià Pous: Historia básica de los principales clubs de fútbol españoles. 2009

Web links and sources

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f g h i j k l Rayo Majadahonda in La Fútbolteca (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  2. TERCERA DIVISIÓN (GRUPO 7) 1987-88 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  3. TERCERA DIVISIÓN (GRUPO 7) 1988-89 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  4. TERCERA DIVISIÓN (GRUPO 7) 1989-90 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  5. TERCERA DIVISIÓN (GRUPO 7) 1990-91 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  6. TERCERA DIVISIÓN (GRUPO 7) 1991-92 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  7. TERCERA DIVISIÓN (GRUPO 7) 1992-93 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  8. TERCERA DIVISION (GRUPO 7) 1993-94 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  9. COPA DEL REY 1992-93 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  10. TERCERA DIVISION (GRUPO 7) 1994-95 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  11. TERCERA DIVISIÓN (GRUPO 7) 1995-96 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  12. TERCERA DIVISION (GRUPO 7) 1996-97 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  13. a b c SEGUNDA DIVISIÓN B (GRUPO 1) 1997-98 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  14. TERCERA DIVISION (GRUPO 7) 1998-99 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  15. TERCERA DIVISIÓN (GRUPO 7) 2000-01 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  16. FASE DE ASCENSO A SEGUNDA DIVISIÓN B 2000-01 (GRUPO A1) on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  17. a b COPA DEL REY 2001-02 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  18. TERCERA DIVISIÓN (GRUPO 7) 2001-02 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  19. TERCERA DIVISIÓN (GRUPO 7) 2002-03 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  20. FASE DE ASCENSO A SEGUNDA DIVISIÓN B 2002-03 (GRUPO A1) on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  21. a b c SEGUNDA DIVISIÓN B (GRUPO 2) 2003-04 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  22. SEGUNDA DIVISIÓN B (GRUPO 1) 2003-04 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  23. SEGUNDA DIVISIÓN B (GRUPO 3) 2003-04 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  24. SEGUNDA DIVISIÓN B (GRUPO 4) 2003-04 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  25. TERCERA DIVISIÓN (GRUPO 7) 2004-05 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  26. TERCERA DIVISIÓN (GRUPO 7) 2005-06 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  27. TERCERA DIVISIÓN (GRUPO 7) 2006-07 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  28. TERCERA DIVISIÓN (GRUPO 7) 2007-08 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  29. TERCERA DIVISION (GRUPO 7) 2008-09 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  30. FASE DE ASCENSO A SEGUNDA DIVISIÓN B 2008-09 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  31. TERCERA DIVISIÓN (GRUPO 7) 2009-10 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  32. TERCERA DIVISIÓN (GRUPO 7) 2010-11 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  33. TERCERA DIVISIÓN (GRUPO 7) 2011-12 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  34. TERCERA DIVISIÓN (GRUPO 7) 2012-13 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  35. TERCERA DIVISIÓN (GRUPO 7) 2013-14 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
  36. a b TERCERA DIVISIÓN (GRUPO 7) 2014-15 on arquero-arba.futbolme.net (Spanish), accessed on August 1, 2018
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