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Estudiantes de La Plata

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Estudiantes de La Plata
Estudiantes' badge
Full nameClub Estudiantes de La Plata
Nickname(s)Los Pincharratas ("The Rat Stabbers"),
El León ("The Lion"),
El Orgullo de la Ciudad ("The Pride of the City"),
Los Capos de La Plata ("The Bosses of La Plata"),
Tricampeón ("Three-Time Champion")
Founded4 August 1905
GroundJorge Luis Hirschi Stadium,
1, 55 & 57, La Plata (temporary: Estadio Ciudad de La Plata)
Capacity(projected) 23,000
ChairmanArgentina Rubén Filipas (2008–)
ManagerArgentina Alejandro Sabella
LeagueArgentine Primera División
Clausura 20096th
Current season

Estudiantes de La Plata is a sports club in La Plata, Buenos Aires province, Argentina, with a history of achievement in professional football.

Estudiantes are the reigning South American champions having won the 2009 Copa Libertadores. As a result, the current club badge has ten stars for its six international and four local titles.

Estudiantes' rival in the La Plata derby is Club de Gimnasia y Esgrima La Plata.

History

The club was founded on 4 August 1905 by university students who felt left out by the management of Gimnasia y Esgrima La Plata, which favored indoor games over football. Its jersey had red and white vertical stripes honoring the Alumni team that dominated Argentine football in those years, with black pants and gray or black socks. In the early days, the team wore a blue blazer on top of the jersey when entering the pitch.

Estudiantes team photo from 1912

The stadium on 1st Avenue opened on 25 December 1907. Before the advent of professionalism, Estudiantes won the 1913 league title.

When professionalism was adopted in Argentina in 1931, Estudiantes had a famous offensive lineup: Lauri-Scopelli-Zozaya-Ferreyra-Guayta, known as Los Profesores (The Professors), and still regarded as one of Argentina's all-time finest. Guayta and Scopelli played for the Italy national team that conquered the 1934 World Cup. The Sbarra brothers (Raúl and Roberto) and Armando Nery were feared defensive players. Alberto Zozaya scored the first goal of professional football in Argentina and was the top goalscorer of the first professional tournament.

In 1937, a pioneering lighting system was installed in the stadium, allowing night games.

The 1950s saw the rise of goalkeeper Ogando, Garcerón, Bouché, Urriolabeitia, Infante, Antonio, and the last days of striker Manuel Pellegrina, who is the all-time top scorer with 221 goals. The team was relegated in 1953 but was promoted the following year.

In the 1960s, Miguel Ignomiriello coached the Estudiantes under-19 team known as La Tercera que Mata (The Killer Juveniles), which would evolve, together with a few acquisitions, into the team coached by Osvaldo Zubeldía that won the 1967 Metropolitano championship (since 1967, Argentina has two championships per season).

Thus, Estudiantes became the first club outside of the "five greats" (Boca Juniors, River Plate, Racing Club, Independiente, and San Lorenzo) to obtain a professional title. This opened the gates for other "small" clubs (Vélez Sarsfield won a championship in 1968 and Chacarita Juniors one year later).

Celebrations of the 1969 Libertadores Cup, El Gráfico magazine

Estudiantes went on to win the Copa Libertadores de América three years in a row (1968 to 1970), and the 1968 Intercontinental Cup against the powerful Manchester United. It lost the series against A.C. Milan (1969) and Feyenoord (1970). In 1969 the club also won the Interamerican Cup.

The last part of the Zubeldía era was marred by the antics of some players. Following a very violent Intercontinental match against Milan, the entire team was arrested on orders from Argentine President Juan Carlos Onganía; in an unprecedented step, goalkeeper Poletti was suspended for life (he was later pardoned) and did time in jail, together with teammates Aguirre Suárez and Madero. Because of several such events, it became a cliché to refer to Zubeldía's football as el antifútbol.

The Zubeldía team counted two physicians among its stars: Carlos Salvador Bilardo and Raúl Madero graduated from the University of Buenos Aires Faculty of Medicine during their playing days.

Juan Ramón Verón was the most gifted player on that team. He profited from the no-nonsense playing of Conigliaro, Echecopar, and Madero, and the tactical guidance provided by Bilardo. Right-back Manera was a very talented player, but suffered from repeated injuries and did not realize his full potential.

File:Estudiantescampeon1983.jpg
Championship team of the 1983 Nacional

During the 1970 season, Carlos Bilardo retired from play and got involved in his family's furniture business. Soon he started to coach, alternating between Estudiantes and Colombian teams. He coached Estudiantes in 1982, when the team won the Metropolitano championship. Under his successor Eduardo Luján Manera, also a member of the Zubeldía team, Estudiantes won the 1983 Nacional tournament as well. Both wins were at the expense of a star-studded Independiente.

Those championship teams were anchored by a solid defense (Camino on the right and Herrera on the left were also fearsome attackers, and Brown provided security as a sweeper), and also had three creative mid-fielders (Ponce, Sabella, Trobbiani, with Russo to guard their backs) and two top-notch strikers (Gottardi and Trama).

Bilardo went on to coach the Argentine national team that won the 1986 FIFA World Cup. The captain of Estudiantes' 1982 champions, José Luis Brown, scored the opening goal in the final against West Germany. Four years later, Argentina reached the final of the 1990 FIFA World Cup. Madero was team physician on both events, and Ricardo Echevarría, also from Estudiantes, was fitness coach.

Estudiantes was relegated in 1994 and returned to the first division the next season, which was the breakout season for Juan Sebastián Verón. In the following years, the club became known the breeding ground for strikers such as Martín Palermo, Luciano Galletti, Bernardo Romeo, Ernesto Farias and Mariano Pavone, and quality players such as José Ernesto Sosa and Pablo Piatti.

Following some mediocre years, Bilardo returned as coach in 2003, and started the process of rebuilding the club in his winning ways. The later year, under coach Reinaldo Merlo, Estudiantes finished both the Apertura and the Clausura tournaments in the fourth place. Merlo's successor was Bilardo alum Jorge Burruchaga. The team made history when it came from behind (0-3 in midtime) to win 4-3 against Peru's Sporting Cristal in a Libertadores match played on 21 February, 2006.

On May 18, 2006, Burruchaga was replaced with another former Argentine great, Diego Simeone, who built the team around Juan Sebastián Verón, who returned to Estudiantes after 11 years. The Simeone team was eliminated by São Paulo in a penalty shoot-out in the quarter-finals of the 2006 Copa Libertadores, but went on to an impressive campaign in the local league.

Estudiantes defeated Gimnasia by an unprecedented 7-0 score in the derby played October 15 2006 as part of the Apertura tournament, as part of a string of 10 straight wins (tying the club record), and finished in first place tied with Boca Juniors (per the Argentine rules, goal difference is not used).

The final [1] was played on December 13, 2006; Estudiantes coming from behind to defeat Boca Juniors 2-1 and thus securing its first premiership title in 23 years. During this campaign, Estudiantes defeated all the "five greats", allowed the least goals, and three of its players (Pavone, Verón and Braña) were ranked as the league's top three by sports diary Olé [2].

Simeone left the team after the 2007 Apertura, and was replaced by former S.S. Lazio teammate Roberto Sensini. After a weak finish in the 2008 Clausura, Sensini was replaced with Leonardo Astrada. Estudiantes reached the final of the Copa Sudamericana 2008 which it lost to Brazilian side Sport Club Internacional.

On March 2009, Alejandro Sabella became head coach. The team climbed the local league standings and advanced to the final stages of the Copa Libertadores 2009, winning 2-1 on aggregate after an away win on 15 July 2009.

Titles

Osvaldo Zubeldía and Mariano Mangano with the Intercontinental Cup in 1968

Amateur era

  • Campeonato de la Federación Argentina de Football (1): 1913
  • Segunda División Argentina (1): 1911
  • Copa Río de La Plata (1): 1913

Professional era

National titles

International titles

Stadium and Training Grounds

Project of the new Estudiantes' Stadium

Jorge Luis Hirschi Stadium is located on 1st Avenue, between 55th and 57th Streets, in central La Plata. In its previous incarnation, it had room for 23,000. The cheaper stands behind the goal-lines were standing-room only. The stands next to the avenue were sitting-room, and were separated from the avenue by a row of tile trees. The opposite side was roofed and had the best seating arrangements. The noisiest fans used to occupy the 55th Street popular, while visiting fans were welcome in the 57th St. popular, opposite a technical high school (whose inconvenient location is often blamed for the small size of the pitch).

For its international games, Estudiantes has traditionally used Boca Juniors' La Bombonera.

With the erection of Estadio Ciudad de La Plata, a modern stadium built in the 1990s, both Estudiantes and Gimnasia decided initially against relocating their home games. Estudiantes was denied permission for upgrading its stadium, which was closed down in September 2005 because of new safety regulations that forbid standing-only wooden stands.

During the 2005 Apertura tournament, Estudiantes played its home games in the nearby Gimnasia stadium, and after that in the Quilmes field. There, Estudiantes made history with a come-from-behind 4-3 Libertadores win against Sporting Cristal.

On April 2006 a court decree allowed the re-opening of 1 y 57, but mayor Julio Alak intervened again to avoid this from happening. [3]. Estudiantes contemplated building a new stadium in the port town of Ensenada, a few kilometers east of La Plata. In August 2006, an agreement was reached [4] to build sitting room for 20,000 and using the city stadium for games exceeding that capacity.

Renovation work on the stadium started in 2007. In 2008, the projected capacity of the stadium was set at 23,000.

Meanwhile, Estudiantes settled in the new stadium, where it earned five consecutive derby wins, and had a streak of 37 games undefeated in the local league (2007-2009).

Estudiantes' training grounds in the Country Club premises (in City Bell, north of La Plata) are among the most advanced in Argentina. Many facilities were financed by Juan Sebastián Verón while he played in Europe. Verón was also instrumental in the negotiations over the stadium, meeting then president Néstor Kirchner to unlock the process that was being stalled by mayor Alak [5].

Fan Base

File:Estudiantes de La Plata logo.png
Estudiantes' badge

Following its international successes in the 1960s, Estudiantes gained followers outside of the La Plata area.

Within the La Plata area, Estudiantes was traditionally regarded as the club of the middle class, while rival side Gimnasia y Esgrima was identified with the working class. This characterization was blurred with time. There used to be much discussion about which club has the larger following, but Estudiantes seems to have pulled forward[6]. Support for Estudiantes has always been much stronger outside the La Plata area; within the city, the difference is much smaller.

For several periods in the club's history, a cadre of fans from Buenos Aires (los porteños) were a powerful element within the base. A noted fan since the 1970s is el pelapapas ("the potato peeler", after his job as a kitchen hand), famous for lighting bonfires during games, juggling and performing other stunts.

In the 1983 presidential election, Estudiantes fans were, together with their peers from Vélez Sarsfield, the first to voice their support for eventual winner Raúl Alfonsín in his bid against the Peronistas. The friendship with Vélez supporters has since vanished, especially after an Estudiantes win denied Vélez the 2003 championship.

Estudiantes fans are on friendly terms with most clubs from the South side of Greater Buenos Aires who make it to the top divisions. This was especially true of Quilmes and Temperley. Platense, from the North side of Greater Buenos Aires, held a special place in the hearts of Estudiantes fans, as it cemented Gimnasia's relegation in 1979 (Platense currently plays in the lower divisions).

On an international note, Estudiantes is friendly with the Uruguayan fan base of Peñarol.

Author Ernesto Sabato is an Estudiantes sympathizer. Even though his interest in football is limited, the club has honored Sabato with a ceremony in which he was given a No. 10 jersey.

Nicknames

The nickname pincharratas (the rat stabbers), often shortened to pinchas, is generally attributed to the laboratory work done by the many Medicine students among the club's early members. This nickname extends to the fans.

Another version maintains that the name comes from the nickname of one Felipe Montedónica, a bodyguard of the team in the 1910s, who was known as "el pincharratas".

A third version claims that the early training fields were infested with rats, and the players spent much time and effort chasing after them.

Fans also call the team el león (the lion), el orgullo de la ciudad (the pride of the city), los capos de La Plata (the bosses of La Plata), and Tricampeón (three-time champion) because of its Libertadores three-peat.

List of Famous Players

To appear in this section a player must have played at least 50 games for the club
Los Profesores ("The Teachers"): Miguel Angel Lauri, Alejandro Scopelli, Alberto Zozaya, Manuel Ferreira and Enrique Guaita

Los Profesores

1930s-1960s

Zubeldía's team

1970s-1980s



Bilardo's champions

1980s-present

see also ‹The template Category link is being considered for merging.› Category:Estudiantes de La Plata footballers

Current Squad

Top Goalscorers

References

  1. ^ "Apertura 2006 playoff game - Tactical Formation". Football-Lineups.com. Retrieved April 22. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  2. ^ Ole newspaper: Equipo embrujado
  3. ^ Ole newspaper: La cancha tuvo otro pinchazo
  4. ^ Volver a casa at Olé Template:Es icon
  5. ^ La Nacion newspaper: La Plata hace su felicidad: "Verón, Verón...
  6. ^ Por siempre, primeros Template:Es icon

External links

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