CD Ebro

Club Deportivo Ebro is a Spanish football club in Zaragoza, in the autonomous community of Aragon. Founded in 1942, it plays in Segunda División B – Group 3, holding home games at Campo Municipal de Fútbol La Almozara, which has a capacity of 1,000 seats.

Ebro
Full nameClub Deportivo Ebro
Nickname(s)Arlequinados
Founded1942 (reformed in 1961)
GroundEstadio Pedro Sancho, Zaragoza,
Aragon, Spain
Capacity1,000
PresidentJesús Navarro
Head coachManolo González
League2ª B – Group 3
2018–192ª B – Group 3, 9th

History

A lineup for a match in the 2008–09 season.

Club Deportivo Ebro was founded in two stages. Firstly, in 1942 by Mr. Calavia, competing in the Amateur Championship, since there was no Federation.[1] Second, before the 1961-62 season the enthusiastic fans such as Victoriano Herrando and Domingo Vela (who were club's presidents), Santiago Sediles, Paulino Larena, José Cester, José Gallén, Armando Guerra and other members of the Board of Directors reestablished the club.[1] In the 1970s the club played its home matches in different stadiums in Zaragoza such as Campo de Picarral and Campo de Miralbueno. The club successfully reached promotion to the Primera Regional with José Luis Bailera Martínez as a president.[2]

In 2015, CD Ebro promoted for the first time to Segunda División B after beating CD Varea in the promotion playoffs.

Stadium

Campo de La Almozara.

Ebro played its home games until 2019 in La Almozara.

In 2019, the club agreed with the Aragonese Football Federation the use of the Estadio Pedro Sancho for the 2019–20 season.

Season to season

Season Tier Division Place Copa del Rey
1965–1973 6 2ª Reg.
1973/74 7 3ª Reg. 1st
1974/75 6 2ª Reg.
1975/76 6 2ª Reg.
1976/77 6 2ª Reg.
1977/78 7 2ª Reg.
1978/79 7 2ª Reg.
1979/80 7 2ª Reg. 2nd
1980/81 6 1ª Reg. 19th
1981/82 7 2ª Reg. 6th
1982/83 7 2ª Reg. 12th
1983/84 7 2ª Reg. 7th
1984/85 7 2ª Reg. 8th
1985/86 7 2ª Reg.
1986/87 6 1ª Reg.
1987/88 6 1ª Reg. 1st
1988/89 5 Pref. 8th
1989/90 5 Pref. 1st
1990/91 4 11th
1991/92 4 10th
Season Tier Division Place Copa del Rey
1992/93 4 9th
1993/94 4 19th
1994/95 5 Pref. 4th
1995/96 5 Pref. 2nd
1996/97 4 18th
1997/98 5 Pref. 7th
1998/99 5 Pref. 2nd
1999/00 4 15th
2000/01 4 12th
2001/02 4 4th
2002/03 4 11th
2003/04 4 12th
2004/05 4 14th
2005/06 4 11th
2006/07 4 11th
2007/08 4 17th
2008/09 5 Pref. 4th
2009/10 5 Pref. 1st
2010/11 4 13th
2011/12 4 12th
Season Tier Division Place Copa del Rey
2012/13 4 3rd
2013/14 4 13th
2014/15 4 1st
2015/16 3 2ªB 10th Third round
2016/17 3 2ªB 12th
2017/18 3 2ªB 6th
2018/19 3 2ªB 9th Round of 32
2019/20 3 2ªB Round of 32

Players

Current squad

As of 2 September 2019

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK  ESP Salva de la Cruz (captain)
2 DF  ESP Carlos Barreda
3 DF  ESP Abel Moreno
4 DF  ESP José Antonio Espín
5 DF  ESP Paco Aguza
6 MF  ESP Lolo Garrido
7 FW  ESP Fran García
8 FW  ESP Álvaro González
9 FW  ESP Adrià de Mesa
No. Pos. Nation Player
10 MF  ESP Jesús Rubio
11 FW  ARG Juampa Barros
13 GK  ESP Eduardo Loscos
14 DF  ESP Rafael Parejo (on loan from Levante)
17 DF  ESP Daniel Palomares
19 FW  ESP Adrián Carrasco (on loan from Rayo Vallecano)
20 FW  CMR Stephane Emaná
21 MF  ESP Víctor Andrés
22 FW  CIV Liam Ayad (on loan from Extremadura)
gollark: It's BeOS-derived.
gollark: However, the 5/7/5 syllables about literally anything ever version is quite artistic itself, so thing.
gollark: And there's some particular structural thing beyond that which I forgot.
gollark: Yes, they are meant to be nature-themed or something.
gollark: https://www.haiku-os.org/

References

  1. "Historia del Club". CD Ebro. Retrieved 2019-12-28.
  2. "Ambición a orillas del Ebro". SportValladolid (in Spanish). 2016-11-21. Retrieved 2020-02-12.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.