SEV Hortolândia

Social Esportiva Vitória (also known as SEV Hortolândia or SEV) was a Brazilian football located in the city of Hortolândia, São Paulo. The club was founded on 10 May 2001 as "Sociedade Esportiva Votuporanga" in the city of Votuporanga, where the club remained until 2005.[2] The club commenced activities at their new location in January 2006. SEV Hortolândia play their matches at the Estádio Municipal José Francisco Breda, which has a capacity of 10,002 spectators.

SEV Hortolândia
Nickname(s)SEV
Lobo
Founded5 October 2001 (2001-10-05)
StadiumTico Breda
Capacity10,002[1]
PresidentVictor Astini Muniz
LeaguePaulista Série B
WebsiteClub website

History

Founding

On 10 May 2001, Sociedade Esportiva Votuporanga was founded by in the city of Votuporanga. In 2002 the club competed in the now-defunct Campeonato Paulista Serie B3 (the sixth division of São Paulo football). Two consecutive promotions in 2003 and 2004 qualified Sociedade Esportiva Votuporanga for the 2005 Serie A3.

Relocation

After a bad 2005 campaign, the club relocated to Hortolândia in search of better municipal support and business sponsorship, and the club was renamed to Social Esportiva Vitória. Closer location to the state capital increased the club's chance of success.

As early as 2006, the team competed under the new name of SEV Hortolândia. The team began activities in the new headquarters on 29 January 2006, competing in the Paulista Championship Series A3. Their first match in Hortolândia was on 19 March in the Estadio José Francisco Breda Municipal. The match ended in a 2-0 defeat to Ferroviária.[3]

In 2007 the under-20 team of SEV Hortolandia participated in and won the Trinidad and Tobago international tournament. In 2008, the SEV youth team participated for the first time in a national competition, the São Paulo Junior Football Cup.

Withdrawal from professional competition

In 2011, lacking resources and support from the city, SEV did not apply for the professional license to compete in the São Paulo state league.

After two years of absence, the team returns in 2013 to the participate in the fourth division of the São Paulo championship. In 2015, the club announced permanent retirement from the championship, competing in youth competitions only.

Competition history

São Paulo State Championship

Year Competition Result Pos.
2002 Série B3 First phase 6th
2003 Série B3 Promoted 4th
2004 Série B2 Promoted 4th
2005 Série A3 First phase 16th
2006 Série A3 First phase 14th
2006 Copa FPF First phase 5th
2007 Série A3 First phase 14th
Copa Energil C Semifinal 4th
2008 Série A3 Relegated 18th
2009 Segunda Divisão First phase 41st
2010 Segunda Divisão First phase 39th
2013 Segunda Divisão Second phase 24th
2014 Segunda Divisão First phase 32nd

Copa São Paulo de Futebol Júnior

Ano Competição Desempenho Pos.
2008 Copa São Paulo Júnior First phase 73rd
2009 Copa São Paulo Júnior First phase 56th
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gollark: I'm considering somehow coordinating it with the *other* reactor which burns TBU oxide.
gollark: Otherwise it turns off.
gollark: Basically, the top one transmits the powercell's fullness level (obtained via a computercraft thing since comparators appear to not work) and the bottom one receives that, reads the reactor's buffer level (it was meant to be heat but somehow I just get the RF output buffer level), and if the powercell is below full and the buffer empty it turns the reactor on.
gollark: Some screenshots of the controllers.

References

  1. CBF
  2. Comunicação, Drive. "Federação Paulista de Futebol". 2016.futebolpaulista.com.br (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2019-09-03.
  3. "Tabela | Competições | Federação Paulista de Futebol". futebolpaulista.com.br. Retrieved 2019-09-03.


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