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Villarreal CF

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Villarreal
File:Villarreal cf 200px.png
Full nameVillarreal Club de Fútbol S.A.D.
Nickname(s)El Submarino Amarillo
(The Yellow Submarine)
FoundedMarch 10, 1923; 101 years ago (1923-03-10)
GroundEl Madrigal
Vila-real
Valencian Community
Spain
Capacity24,890[1]
ChairmanFernando Roig Alfonso
Head CoachMiguel Ángel Lotina
LeagueLa Liga
2010–11La Liga, 4th
WebsiteClub website
Current season

Villarreal Club de Fútbol, S.A.D. (Valencian: Vila-real Club de Futbol, S.A.D.), usually abbreviated to Villarreal CF or just Villarreal, is a Spanish Primera División football club based in Vila-real, a city in the province of Castellón within the Valencian Community. Founded in 1923, the team plays at the 24,890-seat El Madrigal stadium.

The club is nicknamed El Submarino Amarillo (Yellow Submarine) due to its yellow home kit, and due to being a low-profile team compared to Real Madrid, FC Barcelona, and Valencia CF, whom they have challenged for trophies over the last decade.

History

Early years

Villarreal CF was founded as Villarreal CD on 10 March 1923 "to promote all sports especially football." The stadium was rented for 60 pesetas a month and ticket prices were set at half a peseta for men and a quarter of a peseta for children. Women were granted free admission.[2] On 17 June 1923, CD Castellón, a modern rival of the club, played the first match against a club named after Cervantes. On 21 October of that year, Villarreal played their first game ever, playing against Castellón.[2] Villarreal started off with a kit of white shirts and black shorts, reflected in their first badge.[3]

1929–1998

Villarreal entered regional competitions within the Spanish football pyramid from 1929–30 onwards. The 1934–35 season saw the team lose to Cartagena CF when a win would see them promoted to the nationwide Second Division.[2] The following season saw Villarreal win the First Division of the region before the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War.[2]

When the war finished in 1939, the club played again in the Second Division of the region before promotion in 1950–51 to the first.[2] In 1942, the club changed their name to CAF Villarreal, with a new badge in the yellow colour of their new shirts. The "F" stood for Foghetcaz, an athletics club and supporter of the team.[3]

The name changed again to the current Villarreal CF in 1954, with a badge similar to the present one.[3] They finished seventh and then fourth twice in the First regional league before being promoted to the Tercera Liga (Third Nationwide) as champions in 1956. They were relegated in 1960–61 after finishing 14th.[2]

The club adopted their present badge in the summer of 1966.[3] In 1966–67, Villarreal returned to the Tercera as champions. In 1970, they reached the national Segunda for the first time.[2] After narrowly avoiding relegation in their first season, they were relegated the following. In 1975–76, they were relegated from the Tercera to the Regionals, but were promoted back again the next season.

In 1986–87, Villarreal were promoted to the Segunda Liga B.[2] In 1990, they finished 18th and were relegated back to the Tercera.

There were back-to-back promotions as the club returned to Segunda B and finished second, earning promotion to Segunda A for the first time. From 1992–93, Villarreal were often in low or mid-table positions, but reached the play-offs in 1997–98 by finishing fourth.[4] The two-legged play of was against Compostela. Villarreal hosted the first leg which was a 0–0 draw, but the second leg at the home of the Galician team was a 1–1 draw, thus Villarreal were promoted on the away goals rule.

Primera Liga debut

Villarreal's Primera Liga debut started with a match against then European champions Real Madrid in the Santiago Bernabéu on 31 August 1998. The first home game was against Celta de Vigo[4] the week after. Because of a difficult season, Villarreal were relegated to the Segunda División for the 1999–2000 season. By finishing third, they were then promoted back to the Primera Liga.

European qualifications

After finishing seventh on their return to the Primera, Villarreal came 15th[4] for two seasons.

2002–03

Villarreal competed in the UEFA Intertoto Cup in the summer of 2002, defeating Hafnarfjörður of Iceland, Torino of Italy, and Troyes AC of France. They lost in the final to compatriots Málaga CF, 2–1 on aggregate.[5]

2003–04

In the summer of 2003, they defeated the Dutch team SC Heerenveen in the final of the Intertoto Cup, thereby qualifying for the UEFA Cup of the upcoming season. In their major European debut, Villarreal reached the semi-finals of the UEFA Cup, losing to neighbours and eventual champions Valencia CF. In the league, Villarreal finished in eighth place.

2004–05

In the summer of 2004, Villarreal retained the Intertoto Cup, beating compatriots Atlético Madrid on penalties after the final finished 2–2 on aggregate. This qualified them to the UEFA Cup. They lost in the quarter-finals of the 2004–05 UEFA Cup to Dutch side AZ, losing 3–2 on aggregate. During the same season, Villarreal finished in third place in La Liga, earning the club their first direct qualification to a European tournament, the Champions League. The club's centre-forward Diego Forlán won the Pichichi Trophy for top scorer in the league, with 25 goals.

2005–06

Villarreal defeated the Premier League's Everton in a play-off for the Champions League group stages. The group saw Villarreal go undefeated and nearly had 34 red cards, drawing both games against Mancheseter United and achieving a draw and a win each against Lille OSC of France and Benfica of Portugal. The win over Benfica was away and both teams advanced to the last 16.[6]

The club then drew 3–3 against Rangers of Scotland in the Last 16, advancing on away goals due to a 2–2 draw at Ibrox. In the quarter-finals, Villarreal beat Internazionale on away goals after finishing 2–2 on aggregate. The club bowed out in the semi-finals against Arsenal, losing 1–0 away at Highbury. Juan Román Riquelme had a penalty saved by Jens Lehmann in the home game, which finished 0–0. Arsenal went on to lose in the final in Paris to another Spanish club, FC Barcelona.

Villarreal finished 7th in La Liga, which only earned an Intertoto Cup position.

2006–07

Villarreal contested the Intertoto Cup in the summer of 2006 and was knocked out in its first game, to NK Maribor of Slovenia. The first leg was lost 2–1 at home and the away game was a 1–1 draw.[7] The team came 5th in La Liga.

2007–08

Villarreal gained their best league position this season, finishing second to Real Madrid, and also reached the last 32 in that season's UEFA Cup. After defeating BATE Borisov of Belarus in a play-off, the team won Group C unbeaten.[8] Their group opponents were Fiorentina of Italy, Czech club Mladá Boleslav, IF Elfsborg of Sweden, and AEK Athens of Greece.

In the last 32, Villarreal were defeated by eventual champions Zenit Saint Petersburg, losing the first leg 1–0 in Russia to a Pavel Pogrebnyak goal. The second leg was won 2–1 by Villarreal at El Madrigal, but Zenit advanced on away goals.

Rivalries

Villarreal has supported a long rivalry with CD Castellón for geographical reasons, since both are from the province of Castellón. They also rival Valencia CF, since the two are the most competitive teams of the Valencian Community; this clash is called the "Derby de la Comunitat."

Records

  • Villarreal's biggest league win at home has been achieved three times. The score of 5–0 was the result against UD Salamanca (1998–99 in Segunda), Celta de Vigo (2002–03 in Primera), and CD Tenerife (2009–10 in Primera). The most goals in a game was six, at home to Racing de Santander in 2003–04 (Primera).[9]
  • The largest away win was at Las Palmas by 5–1 in 2000–01 (Primera) and 4–0 at Real Sociedad in the same league during the 2004–05 season.[9]

Club colours

The club's famous yellow kit dates back to 1947. With the new season fast approaching, the son of the then Villarreal president travelled to Valencia to purchase replacements of the club's official kit of white shirts and black shorts. Discovering that the shop had neither in stock, he instead bought the only colour that they did have, which happened to be yellow. The players agreed that the shirts were suitable, although they weren't keen on the black shorts, so the president's son travelled to Castellón and purchased a batch of white shorts. The players voted that they should be dyed blue.[10] After remaining as the club's official kit for some time, the yellow shirts and blue shorts combination was last worn in the 2002–03 season, and the club has since sported all yellow kits.[11] Away colours have often been navy blue.

From 2005 to 30 June 2011, the shirt sponsor was "Aeroport Castello", an airport. Since that date, they have worn unsponsored shirts. The kit is made by the Chinese company Xtep, having previously been produced by Puma of Germany.

Honours

Domestic

European

Season to season

Season Division Place Copa del Rey
from 29–30 Regional
to 55–56 Regional
1956/57 8th
1957/58 5th
1958/59 6th
1959/60 12th
1960/61 14th
from 61–62 Regional
to 66–67 Regional
1967/68 3rd
1968/69 9th
1969/70 1st
1970/71 16th
1971/72 17th
1972/73 12th
1973/74 12th
1974/75 8th
1975/76 13th
Season Division Place Copa del Rey
1976/77 Regional
1977/78 15th
1978/79 13th
1979/80 9th
1980/81 16th
1981/82 7th
1982/83 14th
1983/84 13th
1984/85 14th
1985/86 6th
1986/87 3rd
1987/88 2ªB 2nd
1988/89 2ªB 4th
1989/90 2ªB 18th
1990/91 2nd
1991/92 2ªB 2nd
1992/93 13th
1993/94 16th
Season Division Place Copa del Rey
1994/95 10th
1995/96 15th
1996/97 10th
1997/98 4th
1998/99 18th
1999/00 3rd
2000/01 7th Round of 32
2001/02 15th Quarter-finals
2002/03 15th First Round
2003/04 8th Round of 16
2004/05 3rd Second Round
2005/06 7th Round of 16
2006/07 5th Round of 16
2007/08 2nd Quarter-finals
2008/09 5th Round of 32
2009/10 7th Round of 16
2010/11 4th Quarter-finals
2011/12

Top scorers in Primera Liga

Nickname and mascot

The team is nicknamed El Submarino Amarillo (the Yellow Submarine) because of their yellow strip. The mascot (named Groguet, "Little Yellow") is characterised as a submarine in human form. He made his debut on 26 October 2001 and was named in December 13 that year by a local 12 year-old, Javier Fuster Almela, following a province-wide competition open to under-15s.[13]

Notable players

Due to being a lower-league club for most of their history, very few Villarreal players have played at international tournaments. In the 2006 FIFA World Cup, one Villarreal player was selected in Spain's squad, the Brazilian-born midfielder Marcos Senna. Mexican forward Guillermo Franco was selected for his country, who were elmiminated by Argentina, whose squad included his teammates Juan Pablo Sorín and Juan Román Riquelme.

For UEFA Euro 2008, Villarreal contributed three players to Spain's team, which won the tournament. Marcos Senna was joined by winger Santi Cazorla and full-back Joan Capdevila. The only other Villarreal player in the tournament was Nihat Kahveci, a striker for Turkey, who reached the semi-finals.

In the 2010 FIFA World Cup, another triumph for Spain, only Capdevila kept his squad place from two years previous. Central defender Diego Godín played for Uruguay, who finished forth. The striker Nilmar was in the Brazil squad which reached the quarter-finals. The tournament's Best Player and Best Goal awards were given to Diego Forlán, another Uruguayan, who played for Villarreal between 2004 and 2007 before joining Atlético Madrid, where he was employed at the time of the tournament.

Current squad

As of 31 January 2012

The numbers are established according to the official website:www.villarrealcf.es and www.lfp.es

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 Spain ESP César Sánchez
2 DF Argentina ARG Gonzalo Rodríguez (vice-captain)
3 DF Spain ESP Joan Oriol
4 DF Argentina ARG Mateo Musacchio
5 DF Spain ESP Carlos Marchena
6 DF Spain ESP Ángel López
7 FW Brazil BRA Nilmar
8 MF Netherlands NED Jonathan de Guzmán
9 FW Argentina ARG Marco Ruben
10 MF Spain ESP Cani
11 MF Paraguay PAR Hernán Pérez
12 DF Colombia COL Cristián Zapata
13 GK Spain ESP Diego López
14 DF Spain ESP Mario Gaspar
No. Pos. Nation Player
15 DF Spain ESP José Catalá
16 MF Argentina ARG Gonzalo Castellani
17 MF Spain ESP Javier Camuñas
18 MF Ghana GHA Wakaso Mubarak
19 MF Spain ESP Marcos Senna (captain)
20 MF Spain ESP Borja Valero
21 MF Spain ESP Bruno Soriano
22 FW Italy ITA Giuseppe Rossi
23 FW Argentina ARG Alejandro Martinuccio
24 GK Spain ESP Diego Mariño
38 DF France FRA Florian Lejeune
41 FW Spain ESP Joselu
DF Spain ESP Ivan Marcano

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
GK Spain ESP Juan Carlos (at Elche)
MF Ecuador ECU Jefferson Montero (at Real Betis)
FW Nigeria NGA Ikechukwu Uche (at Granada)

Foreign players

Former managers

See also

References

Template:UEFA Champions League