Valencia CF (youth)

Valencia Club de Futbol Juvenil are the under-19 team of Spanish professional football club Valencia. They play in the Group VII of the División de Honor Juvenil de Fútbol where their main rivals are Villarreal and Levante.

Valencia Juvenil
Full nameValencia Club de Fútbol Juvenil
Nickname(s)Los Che
Els Taronges (The Oranges)
Los Murciélagos (The Bats)
GroundCiudad Deportiva de Paterna, Paterna,
Valencia, Spain
Capacity4,000
OwnerPeter Lim
CoachMista
LeagueDivisión de Honor
2018-19División de Honor, Gr. 7, 3rd
WebsiteClub website

They also participate in the national Copa de Campeones Juvenil and the Copa del Rey Juvenil, qualification for which is dependent on final league group position, and have taken part in the continental UEFA Youth League.

Juvenil A

Current squad

As of September 2017

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  ESP Emilio Bernad
GK  PAR Diego Huesca
DF  ESP Marc Baró
DF  ESP De La Cruz
DF  ESP Carlos Badal
DF  ESP Hugo Guillamón
DF  ESP Iñaki Pardo
No. Pos. Nation Player
DF  ESP Pablo Seguí
DF  ESP Xavi Estacio
MF  ESP Samuel Saiz
MF  ESP José Alba
MF  ESP Vicente Ezquerdo
MF  KOR Kangin Lee
FW  ESP Alejandro Esteso

Season to season (Juvenil A)

Superliga / Liga de Honor sub-19

Seasons with two or more trophies shown in bold[1]

: :Season: :LevelGroupPositionCopa del Rey JuvenilNotes
1986–87232ndN/A
1987–88252ndN/APromoted via play-off
1988–89110thRound of 16
1989–9014thQuarter-final
1990–9118thRound of 16
1991–9217thRound of 16
1992–9315thQuarter-final
1993–9412ndQuarter-final
1994–9517thRound of 16

División de Honor Juvenil de Fútbol

Seasons with two or more trophies shown in bold[1]

*Season*LevelGroupPositionCopa del Rey Juv.Copa de CampeonesEurope/notes
1995–96131stRound of 163nd in group of 3N/A
1996–97134thN/AN/A
1997–98131stRound of 16Runners-up
1998–99133rdQuarter-finalN/A
1999–00134thN/AN/A
2000–01134thN/AN/A
2001–02136thN/AN/A
2002–03132ndSemi-finalN/A
2003–04132ndRound of 16N/A
2004–05133rdRound of 16N/A
2005–06136thN/AN/A
2006–07171stWinnersRunners-up
2007–08175thN/AN/A
2008–09175thN/AN/A
2009–10171stSemi-finalRunners-up
2010–11172ndRound of 16N/A
2011–12171stQuarter-finalQuarter-finalN/A
2012–13173rdN/AN/AN/A
2013–141VII1stRound of 16Quarter-finalN/A
2014–151VII2ndSemi-finalN/AN/A
2015–161VII3rdN/AN/A2nd in group, Round of 16
2016–171VII2ndRound of 16N/AN/A
2017–181VII2ndQuarter-finalN/AN/A
2018–191VII3rdN/AN/A4th in group
2019–20[lower-alpha 1]1VII2ndN/AN/A4th in group
  1. In March 2020, all fixtures were suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Spain. On 6 May 2020, the Royal Spanish Football Federation announced the premature end of the leagues, revoking all relegations, declaring each divisional leader as champion and cancelling the Copa del Rey Juvenil and the Copa de Campeones for the season.[2]

Honours

National competitions

See also

References

  1. Historical Spanish Juvenile Competition Results
  2. "Comunicado de la RFEF en relación con las competiciones no profesionales del fútbol español" [RFEF announcement in relation to the non-professional competitions in Spanish football] (in Spanish). RFEF. 6 May 2020.
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