uruguayan football ( sports ) cabaret

football club
Club Atlético Peñarol ( spanish pronunciation : [ kluβ aˈtletiko peɲaˈɾol ] ( ) ; english : Peñarol Athletic Club ) —also known as Carboneros, Aurinegros and ( familiarly ) Manyas — is a uruguayan sports club from Montevideo. The appoint “ Peñarol ” comes from the Peñarol neighborhood on the outskirts of Montevideo. [ 2 ] Throughout its history the club has besides participated in other sports, such as basketball [ 3 ] and motorbike. [ 4 ] Its focus has constantly been on football, a sport in which the club excels, [ 5 ] having never been relegated from the lead division.

In international competition, Peñarol is the third-highest Copa Libertadores winner with five victories [ 6 ] and shares the commemorate for Intercontinental Cup victories with three. [ 7 ] In September 2009, the club was chosen as the south american Club of the Century by the IFFHS . [ 5 ] aside from football, early active agent sports sections of Peñarol are rugby union, futsal, women ‘s football and athletics. [ 8 ]

history [edit ]

Origins [edit ]

On September 28, 1891, employees of the Central Uruguay Railway Company established the Central Uruguay Railway Cricket Club ( CURCC ) of Montevideo, with the function of stimulating the drill of cricket, rugby football and “ other male sports ” ( literal from the spanish ). [ citation needed ] The Central Uruguay Railway caller had operated in Uruguay since 1878, [ 2 ] with 118 employees, 72 british, 45 Uruguayan and one German. [ 9 ] The golf club was known as CURCC in the neighborhood of Peñarol—the latter from the Peñarol neighborhood, about 10 kilometres ( 6.2 secret intelligence service ) from Montevideo, [ 2 ] whose name in turn derived from an italian city. The club ‘s first president was Frank Henderson, who remained in that situation until 1899. [ 10 ] In 1892, the CURCC shifted its focus from cricket and rugby to association football. [ 11 ] The football baseball club ‘s first game was against a team of students from the English high school and ended with a 2–0 victory. [ 9 ] In 1895, Uruguayan football player Julio Negrón was chosen as the team ‘s first non-British captain. [ 12 ]

First titles [edit ]

The 1905 CURCC team In 1900 the CURCC was one of four charter members of the Uruguay Association Football League, [ 13 ] making its debut in official contest on 10 June against Albion and winning 2–1. [ 14 ] The clubhouse won its first Uruguayan championship that year, repeating in 1901, 1905 and 1907. In 1906 Charles W. Bayne took over the railroad, and refused to sponsor the football team due to fiscal and function issues. Conflict between the company and the football club led to the rupture of their relationship in 1913. [ 15 ] In 1908, the baseball club left the Uruguayan league after the league rejected their request to replay a game with F.C. Dublín. CURCC had lost 2–3 on the road, and believed their poor show was due to refereeing mistakes caused by pressure from fanatic home fans. As a signboard of dependable faith, Nacional besides retired from the league, since both teams agreed that “ Los Partidos selenium ganan en la Cancha ”, or “ matches are won on the peddle ”. [ 13 ] Back in competition the follow year, relations between the CUR and the club became frostier after fans burned a discipline car used for rival teams. A year after the club ‘s 1911 Uruguayan championship, the clubhouse attempted reforms to its policies. Proposals included greater participation by non-CUR players and a identify change to “ CURCC Peñarol ”. In June 1913, the proposals were rejected ; the ship’s company wanted to distance itself from the club ‘s local reputation. The railroad party, decided to separate the “ foot-ball “ segment of the team from the ship’s company on Saturday 13 December 1913. That is when Peñarol was founded. The surveil day it was the first time a “ Clasico “ was officially played between Nacional and Peñarol. [ 16 ] CURCC kept playing football in the amateurism until it was dissolved on 22 January 1915 and donated all their trophies to the british Hospital of Montevideo, not to Peñarol .
Peñarol documents 1914 letter from the Uruguayan League, approving the club ‘s name change uruguayan document acknowledging Peñarol as successor of the CURCC

C.A. Peñarol [edit ]

In 1918, the club won its first domestic title under the name “ Club Atlético Peñarol ” On 12 March 1914, Peñarol replaced CURCC ‘s spot in the Uruguayan Football League after its foundation in 1913. A request submitted to the Uruguayan Football League two days subsequently and approved the play along day. [ 9 ] During its first years Peñarol was not successful, although a new stadium ( Las Acacias ) opened on 19 May 1916. [ 17 ] The club won its first two league titles in 1918 and 1920. In November 1922 the Asociación Uruguaya de Fútbol ( AUF ) disqualified Peñarol because the cabaret played an exhibition game with Racing, an Argentine club affiliated with Asociación Amateurs de Football ( a dissenter association established in 1919 that rivalized with the official entity, AFA ). [ 18 ] Peñarol and early clubs then organised a new league, the Uruguayan Football Federation ( FUF ), and the club won the 1924 championship. [ 18 ] The league was ephemeral ; Peñarol won the 1926 Copa del Consejo Provisorio, triggering a fusion between the AUF and the FUF. [ 19 ]

first european go [edit ]

Players of Barcelona and Peñarol entering the lurch before their inaugural test, 5 June 1927 In 1927, Peñarol made its foremost tour to Europe, playing a sum of 19 matches against teams from Germany, Switzerland, Austria, Spain, Czechoslovakia and France. The enlistment extended from April to June. The first equal of the tour was vs. the Vienna combined, which Peñarol lost by 3–1. The Uruguayan team then played Bayern Munich ( 1–2 ), SpVgg ( 1–2 ), Hertha BSC ( Berlin ) ( 0–1 ). The beginning win was volt. Eintracht Frankfurt ( 3–1 ). The lineup for that match was Luis Biscardi, Demis D ’ Agosto, José Benincasa, Pascual Ruotta, Gildeón Silva, Antonio Aguerre, Ladislao Pérez, Antonio Sacco, Pablo Terevinto, Peregrín Anselmo, Antonio Campolo. Goals were scored by Suffiotti ( 2 ) and Ruotta. The tour continued in Switzerland, volt. young Fellows ( 1–0 ), Rapid Vienna ( 0–5 ), then facing Sparta Prague ( losing by 1–0 ). On June 5, Peñarol played its foremost game in Spain v. FC Barcelona, losing by 1–5. The irregular screen was played one day subsequently, finishing in a tie ( 1–1 ). other noteworthy games of the enlistment were the two tests v. Atlético Madrid ( 5–2 and 4–3 ). Peñarol played a sum of 19 matches in 80 days ( 6 in Spain, 5 in Germany, 4 in Switzerland and 1 in Czechoslovakia and France ), totalizing 7 wins, 4 draws and 8 losses. The team scored 32 goals and received 33, with Antonio Sacco being the topscorer with 9 goals. [ 20 ] After its beginning european enlistment in 1927, Peñarol won the Uruguayan championship in 1928 and 1929 ; the follow year, the club defeated Olimpia 1–0 in its first base game at the Centenario Stadium in Montevideo .

consolidation [edit ]

The 1928 Peñarol team, Primera División champions In 1932, Peñarol and River Plate played the first game of the professional era. Peñarol won the first Uruguayan master championship with 40 points, five more than runner-up Rampla Juniors. [ 21 ] After placing second in 1933 and 1934, the club won four straight league tournaments between 1935 and 1938 ; they besides won the 1936 Torneo Competencia. The clubhouse stayed in moment plaza until 1944, when Peñarol again won the Uruguayan Championship ( defeating Nacional in a two-game final examination, 0–0 and 3–2 ). [ 22 ] In 1945 the golf club retained the entitle, with Nicolás Falero and Raúl Schiaffino the top goal scorers of the playoffs with 21 each. [ 23 ] Peñarol was again triumphant in 1949, four points ahead of runner-up Nacional with Óscar Míguez the top scorekeeper. [ 24 ] After placing second in 1950, Peñarol won the Uruguayan Championship the follow class ; [ 25 ] this was besides the starting signal of the Palacio Peñarol ‘s four-year construction. During the 1950s, the club besides won national championships in 1953, [ 26 ] 1954, [ 27 ] 1958 [ 28 ] and 1959. [ 29 ]

International success [edit ]

Their 1959 championship qualified Peñarol for the recently created Copa Libertadores, an international rival then known as the Copa de Campeones de América. Peñarol won the first two tournaments, beating Olimpia of Paraguay in 1960 [ 30 ] and Palmeiras of Brasil in 1961. [ 31 ] That year the baseball club won its inaugural Intercontinental Cup, defeating Benfica of Portugal 2–1 in the third base crippled. [ 32 ] Peñarol won three more league titles ( 1960, 1961 and 1962 ), for five consecutive championships. Béla Guttmann coached the team in 1962. [ 33 ] [ 34 ] After a quiet year in 1963, Peñarol won the Uruguayan Championship in 1964 and 1965 and the Copa Libertadores in 1966, defeating River Plate 4–2. [ 35 ] That year the club won its moment Intercontinental Cup, defeating real madrid 2–0 in Centenario Stadium and Santiago Bernabéu. [ 36 ] During the adjacent few years the club won national championships in 1967 and 1968 and the Intercontinental Champions ‘ Supercup in 1969 ( a tournament with south american english Intercontinental Cup winners ). Peñarol had the longest undefeated run in Uruguayan league history : 56 games, from 3 September 1966 to 14 September 1968. [ 37 ] Copa Libertadores all-time circus tent scorekeeper Alberto Spencer played for Peñarol at this time. [ citation needed ] In 1970 the club again reached the Libertadores final again, losing to Estudiantes de La Plata. The golf club set a tournament record for greatest finish difference, defeating Valencia of Venezuela 11–2. With Fernando Morena as the team ‘s star, the club won the Uruguayan backing for three consecutive years, from 1973–75. After placing second in 1976 and 1977, Peñarol won again in 1978. That year, Morena set two records : most goals scored in a Uruguayan season ( 36 ) [ 38 ] and most goals scored in a single game ( seven, against Huracán Buceo on 16 July ). [ 39 ] The 1970s ended with another championship in 1979. Morena was exceed scorekeeper in the Uruguayan tournament six straight times, and top Copa Libertadores scorer in 1974 and 1975 .
After beginning the 1980s with a third-place finish in 1981, Peñarol won the Uruguayan Championship with Fernando Morena and Rubén Paz ( the tournament ‘s top scorekeeper ). The next season the cabaret again won the Copa Libertadores, defeating Cobreloa of Chile 1–0 on a goal from Fernando Morena [ 40 ] ( the tournament ‘s circus tent scorer with seven goals ) in the game ‘s final examination minutes. former that class the golf club won the Uruguayan backing and its third Intercontinental Cup, defeating Aston Villa 2–0. [ 41 ]
Despite fiscal problems during the 1980s, Peñarol won the national championship in 1985 and 1986, and a one-fifth Copa Libertadores in 1987. The club defeated América de Cali 1–0 with a goal by Diego Aguirre in the final seconds of extra meter, when a tie would have gone to the Colombians on the goal differential gear. [ 42 ] It was the one-third Copa Libertadores won by Peñarol at the Nacional de Chile, following victories in 1966 and 1982. [ citation needed ]
Blue-and-gold banner Banner awarded by FIFA for the club ‘s hundred-and-twentieth anniversary, September 2011 Peñarol celebrated its hundredth anniversary in 1991, despite a controversy ignited by archrivals Nacional concerning Peñarol ‘s 1913 list transfer. With Pablo Bengoechea and the young Antonio Pacheco on the team and Gregorio Pérez behind the bench, Peñarol again won the Uruguayan championship five straightaway times ( 1993 – 97 ). [ 43 ] The cabaret besides reached the Copa Conmebol final in 1994 and 1995, rounding out the hundred with a national championship in 1999 ( defeating Nacional 2–1 in the final, despite Julio Ribas on the bench ). [ citation needed ] The following class, Peñarol lost the Uruguayan championship final against Nacional ; many of the team ‘s players were jailed after a tournament fight. [ 44 ] Peñarol won the national championship again in 2003 for Diego Aguirre, defeating Nacional in the concluding. The baseball club did not win another national title until the 2009–10 season, when it won the Clausura tournament with 14 victories in 15 games ( 12 of them in a row ). In the Clausura final, Peñarol defeated Nacional 2–1. The backing qualified the team for the Libertadores 2011, where Peñarol reached the final with Santos. [ 45 ] The club was congratulated on its hundred-and-twentieth anniversary in September 2011 by presidents Joseph Blatter, Michel Platini. [ 46 ] and Nicolás Leoz. [ 47 ]

Crest and colors [edit ]

badge [edit ]

Throughout the golf club ‘s history minor changes have been made to its symbols, but it has kept its master colors. The carapace and flag were designed by architect Constante Facello and consist of five black stripes, four chicken stripes and eleven yellow stars on a black background ( representing the football team players ). [ 48 ]
current flag and crest of Peñarol

Uniforms [edit ]

Antique yellow locomotive with engineer The Rocket locomotive inspired Peñarol ‘s colors. Since its establish, Peñarol ‘s colors have been chicken and black. They were inspired by the Rocket locomotive designed by George Stephenson, which won an prize in 1829. [ 10 ] The inaugural jersey was a plain shirt, divided into four square sections which alternated black and scandalmongering. [ 49 ] A form had two vertical halves ( black on the right and black-and-yellow stripes on the entrust ), with black shorts and socks. Peñarol ‘s official jersey ( black and chicken stripes ) dates back to 1911 [ 50 ] and has been worn about continuously, with only rebuff variations. [ 51 ]

inspiration for romanian baseball club FC Brașov [edit ]

Peñarol inspired romanian club, FC Brașov to change its official colors in December 1966 from white and blue to yellow and black. The change came following a tournament of Romania ‘s Olympic football team in Uruguay. After a equal with Peñarol, Csaba Györffy, player at FC Brașov, received from Peñarol ‘s captain Alberto Spencer the shirt with which he played. Györffy was fascinated by the combination of chicken and black stripes and decided at the tax return in the country to wear the shirt during his education sessions with the team. The decision to change the colors of the cabaret was taken by coach Silviu Ploeşteanu, who considered that, in the newly colors, the team will be seen better on the field. Since January 1967, the team from Brașov has yellow-black as official colors, recalling Peñarol. [ 52 ]

Kit development [edit ]

Kit manufacturers [edit ]

Notes
  1. ^ Some sources say the CURCC colors were black and orange while others state the deprive was black and yellow .
  2. ^ The CURCC shirt suffered minor variations in this design .

Facilities [edit ]

stadium [edit ]

Small grandstand, seen from the side Estadio José Pedro Damiani, used for Peñarol ‘s allow matches Peñarol ‘s first stadium was the José Pedro Damiani, besides known as Las Acacias. It was bought in 1913 and inaugurated on 19 April 1916 with a 3–1 victory over Nacional. [ 53 ] The stadium ‘s gate was that of the former Estadio Pocitos, Peñarol ‘s first stadium where the first goal in the history of the FIFA World Cup was scored in 1930. [ 54 ] The stadium is in the Marconi neighborhood of Montevideo. Its pitch is of 37,949 squarely metres ( 408,480 sq foot ), and it has a capacity of 12,000. [ 53 ] Because Peñarol was not allowed to play there due to security concerns, [ 55 ] the clubhouse home ground was the city owned Estadio Centenario. Opened on 18 July 1930, the Centenario stadium is in Parque Batlle and can hold 65,235. [ 56 ] Las Acacias has acted as the home footing for all Peñarol ‘s Youth Teams. On 28 September 2012, the club proposed a 40,000-capacity stadium in the outskirts of Montevideo, about 7 kilometres ( 4.3 nautical mile ) from the Aeropuerto Internacional de Carrasco. [ 57 ] The list of their newest stadium is Campeón del Siglo ( CDS ), opening in March 2016 and which has been the home crunch ever since .

Palacio Peñarol [edit ]

The Palacio Peñarol, in downtown Montevideo, is the golf club ‘s headquarters and basketball stadium. It was opened on 21 June 1955 ; [ 58 ] and is located. The Palacio has 3,896 square metres ( 41,940 sq foot ) in summation to basketball, it is home the golf club ‘s museum and offices. [ 59 ] After the October 2010 collapse of the Cilindro Municipal, the Palacio Peñarol became an authoritative venue for Uruguayan basketball. [ 60 ]

Complejo Deportivo Washington Cataldi [edit ]

The Complejo Deportivo Washington Cataldi, normally known as Los Aromos, is a education ground for the independent team. [ 61 ] In Villa Los Aromos of Barros Blancos, in the Canelones department, Los Aromos was bought in 1945 ; under the guidance of architect José Donato, it was built in two years. [ 62 ]

Centro de Alto Rendimiento [edit ]

For the cabaret ‘s 118th anniversary, the Centro de Alto Rendimiento was inaugurated. The raw facility, which opened on 28 September 2009, includes five football pitches, a weight room and a secondary school with artificial turf. [ 63 ]

Frank Henderson School [edit ]

The Frank Henderson School, named in honor of the clubhouse ‘s first president, is a few kilometers away from the Centro de Alto Rendimiento. It was built to develop the club ‘s young players, and houses those who come from other areas. [ 64 ]

Supporters [edit ]

Fans at a match, May 2010 In Uruguayan football, commitment to Peñarol or Nacional divides the country. The clubs are evenly matched, and have a large sports fan base. many surveys of populace opinion have been conducted, but none have been conclusive. In 1993 the Factum confer firm reported that Peñarol was the favored team of 41 percentage of football fans, while 38 percentage supported Nacional. [ 12 ] Factum conducted another survey in 2006, confirming its previous results : Peñarol with 45 percentage and Nacional with 35 percentage. [ 65 ] MPC Consultants surveyed 9,000 Uruguayans ; Peñarol had 45 percentage of the supporters, and Nacional 38 percentage. An on-line surveil on the web page Sportsvs.com showed Nacional with 50.35 percentage and Peñarol with 49.45 percentage. [ 66 ] Since its formation, Peñarol ‘s barra brava has been involved in violence against other clubs and the Uruguayan police. Incidents provoked by these fans have cost Peñarol 31 points since 1994 ; the penalties cost the team three tournaments ( Apertura 1994, [ 67 ] Clausura 1997 [ 68 ] and Clausura 2002 ). [ 69 ]

fan club [edit ]

In 2010 the club attempted to increase its winnow base to improve its sustainability. During Clausura 2010 promotions were offered, market managers hired and the peñas ( local fan clubs ) encouraged. The campaign was successful ; in February 2013 the golf club had over 62,000 members, the largest sports fan club in Uruguay. [ 70 ]

Rivalries [edit ]

The Uruguayan Derby between Peñarol and Nacional goes back to 1900, the oldest football competition outside the british Islands. [ 71 ] The first base game ever played between Nacional and CURCC was on 15 July 1900 and ended 2–0 in favor of CURCC. CURCC was ahead at foremost, but Nacional caught up during the belated 1910s. Nacional took the lead by fourteen games in 1948, and would not surrender it until the late 1970s ( except concisely in 1968 ). Since then, Peñarol has been the leader ; its longest lead was 26 games in January 2004. [ 72 ] Including the amateur and professional era, league and friendly games, the teams have met 511 times in the past with 182 victories to Peñarol, 166 to Nacional and 163 ties. [ 72 ] A celebrated game for Peñarol fans is occurred on 9 October 1949 in the Uruguayan Cup first round, and is known as the Clásico de la fuga ( the “ escape bowler hat ” ). At the end of the beginning half Peñarol was leading 2–0, but at halftime Nacional decided not to return. While Peñarol fans believe that Nacional did not want to be defeated by a Peñarol team known as the Máquina del 49 ( “ Machine of 49 ” ), Nacional supporters claim it was a protest against poor officiating. [ 73 ] On 23 April 1987 for a friendly game, Peñarol and Nacional were tied 1–1 with 22 minutes remaining when three Peñarol players ( José Perdomo, José Herrera and Ricardo Viera ) were ejected after a foul and subsequent protests. Peñarol then had to face a full Nacional team with only eight players on the flip. With eight minutes remaining Diego Aguirre set up Jorge Cabrera, who scored the winning finish. This winnings by the aurinegro was known as the Clásico de los 8 contra 11 ( the “ 8 against 11 bowler hat ” ). [ 74 ] Peñarol and Nacional have faced each other in the final game of the Uruguayan Championship thirteen times, with Peñarol winning eight. The most holocene was in 2018, when Peñarol won the championship 2–1. [ 72 ]

Manyas: The Movie [edit ]

In early on October 2011 Manyas: The Movie, a documentary about Peñarol ‘s fans, was released in Uruguay. Produced by Kafka Films and Sacromonte and directed by Andrés Benvenuto, the film features interviews with fans, football journalists, psychologists and politicians. [ 75 ] Manyas: The Movie was deemed of cultural pastime by the culture and Education Ministry of Uruguay and of ministerial interest by Uruguay ‘s Ministry of Tourism and Sport. [ 75 ] The film had the most-successful premiere of any Uruguayan film, [ 76 ] selling 13,000 tickets during its beginning weekend [ 77 ] and 30,000 over its first fifteen days. [ 78 ]

World ‘s Biggest flag [edit ]

After raising $ 35,000 in raffles and donations, on 12 April 2011 Peñarol fans unveiled the largest flag ever unfurled in a stadium up to that moment. Nacional unfurled a bigger one years late that covered three stands of the stadium. The flag, 309 metres ( 1,014 foot ) long and 46 metres ( 151 foot ) across-the-board for a surface area of 14,124 square metres ( 152,030 sq foot ), covered one-and-a-half grandstands in Centenario Stadium. [ 79 ] In 2013, Club Nacional de Football displayed a masthead which was 600 metres long by 50 metres across-the-board. This is now the populace ‘s biggest ease up .
Huge black-and-gold flag elephantine flag displayed at the Centenario Stadium in Montevideo

Players [edit ]

First-team police squad [edit ]

As of 9 October 2021

note : Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality .

Out on lend [edit ]

note : Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality .

Noted players [edit ]

Néstor Gonçalves has the most official games in the club ‘s history ( 571 matches ), between 28 April 1957 and 28 November 1970. The team ‘s all-time peak scorers in the Primera División are Fernando Morena ( 203 ), Alberto Spencer ( 113 ) and Óscar Míguez ( 107 ). Morena ‘s ( whose 230 goals—203 with Peñarol and 27 with River Plate —make him the highest-scoring player in the Uruguayan League ) 440 goals with Peñarol are a read equally well. He scored the most goals in a single Uruguayan season ( 36 in 1978 ), and is the club ‘s second-best goal scorekeeper in external competition with 37 goals ( behind Alberto Spencer, who scored 58 goals between 1960 and 1970 ). Spencer and Morena are the top scorers in Copa Libertadores history, [ 80 ] with 48 and 37 goals respectively for Peñarol. [ eminence 2 ] Peñarol has made a large contribution to the Uruguayan national football team. Three Peñarol players were on the Uruguayan team which played Argentina in 1905. [ 81 ] Five Peñarol players were on the Uruguayan squad which won the 1930 FIFA World Cup : goalkeeper Miguel Capuccini, defender Peregrino Anselmo and midfielders Lorenzo Fernández, Álvaro Gestido and Carlos Riolfo. [ 82 ] Peñarol had nine players on the Uruguayan team which won the 1950 FIFA World Cup : goalkeeper Roque Máspoli, defenders Juan Carlos González and Washington Ortuño, midfielders Juan Alberto Schiaffino and Obdulio Varela and forwards Ernesto Vidal, Julio César Britos, Óscar Míguez and Alcides Ghiggia. [ 82 ] Schiaffino and Ghiggia scored the team ‘s two goals in the Maracanazo, the final examination game against Brasil. [ 83 ] Peñarol is the alone golf club which has represented Uruguay in all its World Cup appearances. [ 84 ]

Managers [edit ]

While there is no hard information about managers in the amateurish era of Uruguayan football, Peñarol has had a entire of 62 coaches during its professional era. The first coach was Leonardo de Luca, who coached the team for two years and won the Uruguayan Championship ( the first professional tournament in Uruguay ) in 1932. Of these 62 managers, 53 were Uruguayan ; two were Hungarian ( Emérico Hirschl and Béla Guttmann ), two british ( John Harley and Randolph Galloway ), one Serbian ( Ljupko Petrović ), two brazilian ( Osvaldo Brandão and Dino Sani ), one from Chile ( Mario Tuane ) and two from Argentina ( Jorge Kistenmacher and César Luis Menotti ). Hugo Bagnulo and Gregorio Pérez have coached Peñarol the longest, leading the first team for eight seasons : Bagnulo for four stints and Pérez for five. Athuel Velásquez had the longest continuous coaching menstruation for Peñarol ( five neat years, between 1935 and 1940 ). Bagnulo has the most uruguayan championships ( five ) ; Pérez and Velásquez follow, with four each. In external competition Roberto Scarone was the most successful coach, winning two Copa Libertadores and an intercontinental cup with Peñarol. [ 85 ] [ 86 ]

Professional-era managers [edit ]

caretaker managers in italics

current staff [edit ]

  • Coach: Mauricio Larriera
  • Assistant coaches: Dario Rodriguez
  • Trainers: Eduardo Del Capellán
  • Goalkeepers’ Coach: Óscar Ferro
  • Fitness coach: Alejandro Valenzuela
  • Assistant fitness coach: Sebastián Roquero
  • Head of medical department: Edgardo Rienzi
  • Club Doctor: Horacio Deccia
  • Nurses: Miguel Domínguez, Fernando Robaina
  • Kinesiologists: Marcos Sosa, Mauricio Velázquez
  • Equipier: Miguel Santos
  • Props man: Germán Pellejero

administration [edit ]

1891 photo of mustachioed man Frank Henderson, first base president of the CURCC During a suffer presided over by Roland Moor on 28 September 1891, it was stipulated that responsibility for the Central Uruguay Railway Cricket Club would belong to the principal administrator of the Central Uruguay Railway Company of Montevideo. The first president of the clubhouse was Frank Henderson, who remained in that function until 1899. [ 10 ] After Henderson CUR administrators remained as chairmen of the sports golf club until 1906, when Charles W. Bayne took over the CUR. Bayne refused to sponsor the CURCC because of vandalism by fans and absenteeism by workers. He was replaced by CUR employee Roland Moor. [ 15 ] Conflicts remained between the company and the sports golf club, which resulted in the separation of CURCC ‘s football incision from the company and a list change to Club Atlético Peñarol. [ 15 ] Jorge Clulow, an Englishman with Uruguayan nationality, was chosen president of the club ; he remained in function from 1914 to 1915. [ 85 ] [ 89 ]

Presidents [edit ]

Board members 2020–2023 [edit ]

Position Name
President Juan Ignacion Ruglio
Vice President/Treasurer Eduardo Zaidensztat
General secretary Evaristo González
Assistant Secretary Jorge Nirenberg
Assistant Treasurer Marcos Acle
Board Members Alvaro Queijo
Juan Pedro Damiani
Gaston Tealdi
Rodolfo Catino
Pablo Amaro
Guillermo Varela
AUF Delegates Gonzalo Moratorio
Juan Antonio Rodríguez
Julio Trostchansky

Statistics [edit ]

1900 CURCC team In 1982, Peñarol became the first club in the world to win the Intercontinental Cup for a third prison term ( the former had been in 1961 and 1966, displayed on the image ) Peñarol played 26 seasons of the Uruguay Association Football League, from its universe in 1900 until the end of the amateur era in 1931 ( lacking 1923–26, when the club was disaffiliated from the AUF ). [ 90 ] During this period Peñarol won the Uruguayan Championship nine times, with its best years in 1900 and 1905 [ 91 ] ( when the club won the championship without conceding any points ). Peñarol was undefeated in 1901, [ 92 ] 1903 [ 93 ] and 1907. [ note 4 ] [ 94 ] Its worst class was 1908 ; the team left the league after ten games, forfeiting the other eight. [ 95 ] Peñarol ‘s largest goal dispute in a crippled during its amateurish earned run average was in 1903, when they defeated Triunfo 12–0. [ 96 ] The cabaret placed second gear in 1923 ( when they scored a record 100 goals ), and won in 1924 ; its most impressive victory was a 10–0 win over Roberto Cherry during the delete 1925 season. [ 96 ] Both tournaments were organised by dissident body Uruguayan Football Federation ( FUF ). Since the beginning of the professional era in 1932, Peñarol and Nacional are the only teams who have played every season for the Uruguayan backing. [ note 5 ] [ 97 ] Peñarol has the most Uruguayan League titles ( winning 38 times between 1932 and 2013 ) and the greatest numeral of undefeated championships ( 1949, 1954, 1964, 1967, 1968, 1975 and 1978 ). [ 98 ] Its best performances were in 1949 and 1964, seasons when the team scored 94.44 percentage of possible points ; its worst season was 2005–06, when it finished in 16th place after winning 32.32 percentage of possible points. [ 99 ] A 12-point deduction given the team by the AUF because of unrest after a bet on with Cerro relegated them to that position. [ 100 ] Peñarol ‘s best victory was a 9–0 win against Rampla Juniors in 1962 ; its worst get the better of was 0–6 against Nacional. On the external scene, its best result was an 11–2 winnings over Valencia of Venezuela on 15 March 1970 ; its worst was against Olimpia of Paraguay, a 0–6 loss on 10 December 1990 during the Supercopa Sudamericana. Peñarol holds a number of national and international records. The baseball club has the longest undefeated ply in the Uruguayan league : 56 games, from 3 September 1966 to 14 September 1968. [ 37 ] This is besides the longest undefeated run in south american master football ( second place if amateur leagues are counted ). [ 101 ] It was the beginning club to win the Copa Libertadores de América undefeated, in 1960. [ 102 ] Peñarol has the greatest number of appearances in the Copa Libertadores ( 40 ), [ 103 ] and the most appearances in the finals ( 10 ). [ 103 ] The clubhouse holds the record for the biggest succeed ( 11–2 against Valencia ), [ 102 ] and the biggest goal dispute in a two-legged elimination ( defeating Everest from Ecuador 5–0 and 9–1 ). [ 102 ] Peñarol is one of the teams with five intercontinental Cup appearances, the beginning to reach that number .

Honours [edit ]

National [edit ]

International [edit ]

friendly external [edit ]

  • Mohammed V Trophy (1): 1974

south american Club of the Century [edit ]

Football-shaped trophy, mounted on a base trophy awarded by the IFFHS In 2009, the International Federation of Football History & Statistics released a list of the best club of the twentieth century on each continent. The administration awarded points for each victory in a quarterfinal or higher in external rival but only took into account games played after 1932 for the Professional earned run average. Peñarol was the number-one team in South America, above Independiente of Argentina and arch-rivals Nacional. [ citation needed ]

other sports [edit ]

basketball [edit ]

Peñarol ‘s basketball records date back to the former 1920s, when Club Piratas was formed ; in 1931, it became Peñarol. [ 3 ] Its first league crippled ( in the fourth class of Uruguayan basketball ) was played in 1940. By 1943 the team, playing in the first class for Ramón Esnal, finished third. The keep up class Peñarol won the Federal Championship, a tournament attracting the best basketball teams in Montevideo ; in 2003, the league changed its name to Liga Uruguaya de Basketball. In 1945, Peñarol jumped from the Uruguayan Basketball Federation to play in a new league ; [ 3 ] when the nouveau-riche league failed, the club rejoined the confederation in 1947. In 1952 Peñarol again won the Federal Championship, winning the Winter Tournament in 1953 and 1955. [ 112 ] After a low menstruation ( with relegation in 1968 ), Peñarol won the Uruguayan Championship in 1973, 1978, and 1979 ; the latter was the first professional tournament in league history. [ 3 ] In 1982 the clubhouse enjoyed its most successful season, winning the Federal Championship and [ 3 ] the Winter Tournament [ 112 ] The club besides won the Campeonato Sudamericano de Clubes in 1983. In 1985 the club was relegated, beginning a downward coil which ended with its ejection from the league in 1997. however, the club rejoined in 2018 the Federación Uruguaya de Basket Ball, in the third tier. [ 3 ]

bicycle [edit ]

Peñarol has participated in the Vuelta Ciclista del Uruguay ( Tour of Uruguay ) since it began in 1939. Although the team ride well during its early years, it was not until the one-ninth edition ( in 1952 ) that a Peñarol cyclist would win the race ( Dante Sudatti, with an overall prison term of 48 hours, 38 minutes and 38 seconds ). Peñarol cyclists besides won the general categorization 1953 and 1956 ; in the latter class, the club won the team championship. After again winning the team championship in 1959, Peñarol would entirely win one person championship in 1964. The team subsequently improved, winning three individual titles in a course from 1989 to 1991 and the team victory in 1990 and 1991. 2002 was the one-fourth year that the baseball club won both the individual and team classifications. [ 4 ] Peñarol has competed in other road races, including José María Orlando ‘s 1990 victory in the Rutas de América. [ 113 ]

Futsal [edit ]

Peñarol began playing futsal in 1968. During its first two decades, the cabaret won on the national and international levels ( including a victory in the 1987 World Interclub Championship ). In 1995 FIFA took over the sport, and Peñarol began competing in AUF tournaments. The team won the foremost three Uruguayan Championships ( 1995, 1996, and 1997 ), besides finishing at the top in 1999 and 2004. It won another three back-to-back tournaments in 2010, 2011 and 2012. [ 114 ]

Beach soccer [edit ]

In January 2013 Peñarol inaugurated its beach soccer section. [ 115 ] Diego Monserrat, goalkeeper of the Uruguay national team for many years, was the initiation ‘s first coach in this frolic, while besides goalkeeper Felipe Fernández was the clubhouse ‘s foremost captain. [ 115 ] On the second gear half of the like calendar month, Peñarol won one of the three groups of five teams, that formed the qualification tournament to the “ Super Liga ”, name given to the Uruguayan Championship of the discipline. [ 116 ] After victories on quarterfinals and semi-finals, Peñarol was declared champion of the tournament without the motivation of a final, after the other semi-final was suspended. [ 117 ]

rugby [edit ]

Peñarol have announced that they will form a rugby union section to compete in the inaugural address 2020 temper of the Superliga Americana de Rugby, to be start in February 2020. [ 118 ] Peñarol Rugby will be the only representative of Uruguay at the competition. [ 119 ] [ 120 ]

Notes [edit ]

  1. ^[1] Controversy exists on the date of the establish of C.A. Peñarol. The club ‘s official stead assumes a deepen of diagnose of CURCC ( founded on September 28, 1891 ). On the other hired hand, some historians state that “ C.A. Peñarol ” was established on December 13, 1913 .
  2. ^Alberto Spencer scored 54 times in the Copa Libertadores, 48 with Peñarol and 6 with Barcelona
  3. ^ year denotes acknowledge of prize
  4. ^ furthermore, in 1903 CURCC did not lose during the regular season, but lost the tiebreaker final examination against Nacional 2–3 .
  5. ^ In 1948 the tournament was cancelled because of a musician strike .
  6. a b[104] and CONMEBOL[105] recognising Peñarol as CURCC’s continuity, the club included those championship in their list of honours. On the other side, some historians say that football became active in CURCC until its dissolution in 1913 so Peñarol was a different institution.[1] Titles won by the CURCC. With FIFAand CONMEBOLrecognising Peñarol as CURCC ‘s continuity, the club included those championship in their list of honours. On the other side, some historians say that football became active in CURCC until its dissolution in 1913 so Peñarol was a different institution .
  7. ^[106] apart from the 51 AUF titles, the cabaret besides won the 1924 and 1926 titles of championships organised by dissident bodies “ Federación Uruguaya “ ( dissentient soundbox ) and “ Consejo Provisorio ” ( an fusion tournament after the FUF was dissolved and its clubs returned to the AUF ), respectively. Nevertheless, those titles have not been recognised by AUF .
  8. a b c Established before CONMEBOL was created, this Cup was organized by the Argentine and Uruguayan Associations, between teams that belonged to them .
  9. ^ Fourth oldest football tournament, organized by the IFA W.B. ), and played between the local clubs of West Bengal and other invite ones .

References [edit ]