Chacarita Juniors

Club Atlético Chacarita Juniors (usually known simply as Chacarita) is an Argentine football club headquartered in Villa Crespo, Buenos Aires, while the stadium is located in Villa Maipú, General San Martín Partido of Gran Buenos Aires.

Chacarita Juniors
Full nameClub Atlético Chacarita Juniors
Nickname(s)Funebreros (Undertakers)
Tricolor (Three-color)
Founded1 May 1906 (1906-05-01)
GroundEstadio de Chacarita Juniors, Villa Maipú,
General San Martín Partido
Capacity19,000[1]
ChairmanHéctor López
ManagerClaudio Biaggio
LeaguePrimera B Nacional
2018–19Primera B Nacional, 24th
WebsiteClub website

The squad currently plays at Argentine Primera División, the top division of the Argentine football league system.

History

Chacarita in 1924, when winning the División Intermedia title.
The 1969 Torneo Metropolitano champions.

The club was founded on 1 May 1906, in an anarchist Library[2] on the boundary between the Villa Crespo and Chacarita neighbourhoods. After a short period of institutional crisis, the club was re-opened in 1919.

The football squad promoted to Primera División in 1924, and continued playing at the top level after football became professional in 1931.

In 1940 Chacarita was relegated to the second division, but it lasted only one season. The team then moved to the General San Martín Partido in Greater Buenos Aires, next to the autonomous city of Buenos Aires.

In 1956 Chacarita was relegated to the second division again, and won that championship the following year returning to Primera División. After 10 consecutive years at the top level, Chacarita won its only first division title, the 1969 Metropolitano championship.

In the following years the team performed badly and was relegated all the way down to the 3rd division in 1980. In 1984 Chacarita came back to the first division, but because of Hooliganism by some of its fans, the club was punished with a suspension for a month and a loss of 10 points; having missing those points, Chacarita couldn't avoid a new relegation to the second division.

After a long tenure in lower divisions (including the Primera C), Chacarita came back to the top division in 1999, where the team remained until 2004 Torneo Clausura, when it was relegated to the Primera B Nacional.

In the 2008–09 season the club finished 2nd, after a 1–0 victory against Platense, with a goal scored in the last seconds of the match. This victory secured Chacarita a return to Primera División after five years of being relegated.[3]

At the end of 2011–12 season, Chacarita finished 20th and therefore the Funebreros had to play two matches against Nueva Chicago (winner of Primera B Metropolitana's Torneo Reducido) to avoid being relegated to the lower division. Nueva Chicago won the series (1–0 and 1–1) and Chacarita was subsequently relegated.[4]

Kit evolution

1906
1920–present
1931(1)

(1) Used during the 1931 championship as a tribute to club's first jersey.[5]

Nickname

The team got the nickname of Funebreros ("Undertakers") because its ground was near the La Chacarita Cemetery. The red color in its jersey (apart from black and white) is a reference to its anarchist origins.

Stadium

Estadio Chacarita Juniors.

Chacarita's stadium was reopened on 30 January 2011, after its closure for a total rebuilt (which consisted in replacing the old wood seats for the more modern cement structures, according to safety regulations) since May 2008. As part of the celebration for the reopening, the club organized a friendly match between Chacarita and Argentinos Juniors (which ended 0–0). For this special event only 13,260 seats were available. Once the remodelling is totally finished, the stadium will be able to host an attendance of 35,000.[6]

The Governor of Buenos Aires Province, Daniel Scioli, was the most notable presence in the event and was the person who cut the ribbon to declare the stadium officially reopened. This act was made in front of the Isaac López stand, named as a tribute to the legendary goalkeeper who played the most games for Chacarita (343 matches, from 1937 to 1952).[7] Finally, a colorful set of fireworks closed the ceremony in Villa Maipú.[8]

The new stadium was erected in the same location where the old one was, in the Villa Maipú neighborhood, General San Martín Partido. The last game played by Chacarita before the remodelling had been on 21 October 2005, during a match for the Primera B Nacional championship. The rival was Tigre (which has a strong rivalry with Chacarita) and El Funebrero won 3–0.[6]

Players

Current squad

As of 24 March 2020.[9]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK  ARG Lucas Bruera
GK  ARG Sebastián Cuerdo
GK  ARG Emanuel Trípodi
DF  ARG Nicolás Chávez
DF  ARG Gian Croci
MF  ARG Gabriel Lazarte
DF  ARG Alan Ledesma
DF  ARG Diego Menghi
DF  ARG Brian Mieres
DF  ARG Alan Robledo
DF  ARG Salvador Sánchez
DF  ARG Facundo Tallarico
DF  ARG Adrián Torres
MF  ARG Hernán Da Campo
MF  ARG Juan Cruz González
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF  ARG Yair González
MF  ARG Gonzalo Groba
MF  ARG Joaquín Ibáñez
MF  ARG Rodrigo Insúa
MF  ARG Zacarías Morán (on loan from River Plate)
MF  ARG Luciano Perdomo
MF  ARG Agustín Piñeyro
MF  ARG Diego Rivero
MF  ARG Matías Sánchez
MF  URU Jim Varela
FW  ARG Ignacio Cacheiro
FW  ARG Lucas Cano
FW  ARG Ramiro Fergonzi
FW  ARG Lucas Lezcano
FW  ARG Ariel López

Out on loan

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
FW  ARG Facundo Melivilo (at Tigre until 30 June 2020)
MF  ARG Matías Nizzo (at Instituto until 30 June 2020)
MF  ARG Miguel Mellado (at OFI until 30 June 2020)
No. Pos. Nation Player
FW  ARG Elías Alderete (at Arema until 31 December 2020)
MF  ARG Juan Álvarez (at Panetolikos until 30 June 2021)

Former players

Managers

Honours

gollark: Plain ranked choice voting has problems, approval voting (or STAR voting apparently) seem better.
gollark: Also, over here there's apparently Costco (it might be a US thing too), which apparently runs on a model where they charge monthly subscriptions and limit markup on individual items a lot.
gollark: Lower prices → more betterer.
gollark: It's called "competition".
gollark: Yes, I think supermarkets mostly have significant overheads and stuff.

References

  1. https://www.estadiosdeargentina.com.ar/cancha-de-chacarita-juniors/
  2. Zmag.org Archived 7 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  3. "Un equipo de Primera" (in Spanish). Diario Olé. 8 June 2009. Archived from the original on 11 June 2009. Retrieved 16 March 2010.
  4. "En un final para el infarto, Chicago se quedó con el ascenso y condenó a Chacarita" Archived 1 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Clarín, 30 June 2012
  5. El Nacimiento de una Pasión: Historia de los Clubes de Fútbol, Alejandro Fabbri, editorial Capital Intelectual (2006) – ISBN 987-1181-83-3
  6. Chacarita anuncia inauguración del nuevo estadio Archived 20 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  7. Aniversario del fallecimiento de Isaac López Archived 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  8. Chacarita estrenó su nuevo estadio Archived 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  9. "Chacarita Juniors squad". Soccerway. 9 August 2017. Retrieved 9 August 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.