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Hércules CF

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Hércules
Club crest
Full nameHércules de Alicante Club de Fútbol, S.A.D.[1]
Nickname(s)Los Herculanos (The Herculeans)
Los Griegos (The Greeks)
Los Blanquiazules (The White and Blues)
Founded1922
GroundJosé Rico Pérez, Alicante,
Valencia, Spain
Capacity29,500
ChairmanCarlos Parodi García-Pertusa
ManagerCarlos Luque
League2ª B – Group 3
2015–162ª B – Group 3, 3rd
Current season

Hércules de Alicante Club de Fútbol, S.A.D. (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈerkules]) is a Spanish football team based in Alicante, in the autonomous community of Valencian Community. Founded in 1922, it currently plays in Segunda División B and plays its home games at the 30,000-capacity Estadio José Rico Pérez.

History

After first appearing in La Liga in the 1935–36 season, Hércules would play sporadically in the category for the next 40 years, playing mainly in the second division but going as low as the third. From 1961 to 1969, neighbours Alicante acted as its feeder club.

Hércules FC frist squad in the 1920's
Hércules CF squad in 1936.

After a ten-year spell in the top flight, encompassing 12 seasons in the 1970s and '80s, the club only returned again in the 1996–97 campaign. Though eventually relegated, it managed two remarkable comeback wins over Barcelona, which ultimately handed the Liga title to Real Madrid.

In 2004–05, after five years in the third level, Hércules finished second, being subsequently promoted to the "silver category". After posting three consecutive solid seasons, the club narrowly missed out on a return to the top division in 2009, finishing fourth, three points behind last-promotee Tenerife.

The 2009–10 campaign saw Hércules promoted back into the top flight after 13 years in dramatic fashion: losing 0–1 at half-time at Rayo Vallecano, the team fought back to win 2–1 in the penultimate game of the season and leap frog Real Betis into third place. In the last round, a 2–0 away win against relegation-threatened Real Unión guaranteed promotion, with the 4–0 win of Betis over Levante eventually counting for nothing (all three teams – Levante, Hércules and Betis – ended equal on points).

Early into the 2010–11 season, one year, three months and 19 days after Barcelona's last home defeat in the league, Hércules recorded a shock 2–0 win at the Camp Nou thanks to a brace from Nelson Valdez[2]Barça had won their last 11 home matches, scored at least three times in each of their last six league fixtures and were protecting a 17-game unbeaten streak. Amazingly, however, this was the Alicante outfit's third successive win over the Catalans, having won both meetings in their previous top flight campaign 14 years before;[3] after a solid first round of 19 games the team slumped in the table, eventually ranking in 19th position for an immediate relegation back.

In the 2013–14 campaign, they were relegated to the Segunda División B after finishing in last place in the Segunda División.

In the 2016-17 season, the team returned to stand out, this time, by Copa del Rey where they came to face FC Barcelona. The first match was held in Estadio José Rico Pérez (Hércules' home) where the Catalans sent the reserve team, sparing their starters for a duel against Real Madrid CF. The match ended on the 1-1 score. In the second match at the Camp Nou (Barcelona's home), Hércules recalled a 2-0 victory over Barca in the same stadium in the 2010-11 La Liga. However, trying to repeat this feat was just a dream, the team was crushed in a humiliating way by 7-0.

Season to season

Hércules celebrate in Alicante, after returning to La Liga in 2010
Season Division Place Copa del Rey
1929/30 5th
1931/32 1st
1932/33 1st
1933/34 4th
1934/35 1st
1935/36 6th
1939/40 6th
1940/41 9th
1941/42 13th
1942/43 4th
1943/44 10th
1944/45 2nd
1945/46 14th
1946/47 4th
1947/48 6th
1948/49 4th
1949/50 10th
1950/51 4th
1951/52 4th
1952/53 2nd
1953/54 2nd
1954/55 6th
1955/56 16th
1956/57 2nd
1957/58 5th
1958/59 13th
1959/60 1st
1960/61 3rd
1961/62 7th
1962/63 8th
1963/64 2nd
Season Division Place Copa del Rey
1964/65 4th
1965/66 1st
1966/67 15th
1967/68 15th
1968/69 1st
1969/70 1st
1970/71 11th
1971/72 14th
1972/73 9th
1973/74 2nd
1974/75 5th
1975/76 6th
1976/77 13th
1977/78 15th
1978/79 12th
1979/80 15th
1980/81 13th
1981/82 17th
1982/83 8th
1983/84 3rd
1984/85 15th
1985/86 17th
1986/87 5th
1987/88 18th
1988/89 2ªB 8th
1989/90 2ªB 13th
1990/91 2ªB 5th
1991/92 2ªB 5th Third Round
1992/93 2ªB 4th Third Round
1993/94 7th Fourth Round
1994/95 9th
Season Division Place Copa del Rey
1995/96 1st Round of 16
1996/97 21st Third Round
1997/98 11th Second Round
1998/99 21st
1999/00 2ªB 4th
2000/01 2ªB 11th Preliminary round
2001/02 2ªB 3rd
2002/03 2ªB 11th Second Round
2003/04 2ªB 9th
2004/05 2ªB 2nd
2005/06 17th First Round
2006/07 16th Round of 32
2007/08 6th Round of 32
2008/09 4th Round of 16
2009/10 2nd Round of 16
2010/11 19th Round of 32
2011/12 5th Second Round
2012/13 17th Second Round
2013/14 22nd Third round
2014/15 2ªB 4th First round
2015/16 2ªB 3rd First round
2016/17 2ªB Round of 32

Current squad

First starting lineup of the season 2010–11, its last in La Liga, against Athletic Bilbao.

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

As of 2 April 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 Spain ESP Chema
GK Spain ESP Iván Buigues
DF Spain ESP Albert Dalmau
DF Spain ESP Fernando Román
DF Spain ESP Lolo
DF Spain ESP Pedro Inglés
DF Spain ESP Paco Peña (captain)
DF Spain ESP Pol Bueso
MF Spain ESP Checa
MF Spain ESP Chechu Flores
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Spain ESP José Gaspar
MF Spain ESP Javi Flores
MF Spain ESP Juanma Espinosa
MF Spain ESP José Luis Miñano
MF Spain ESP Miguel Ángel Nieto
MF Cameroon CMR Franck Omgba
FW Spain ESP Jesús Berrocal
FW Spain ESP David Mainz
FW Spain ESP Juan Delgado
FW Spain ESP Álvaro Salinas

Notable players

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
17 FW France FRA David Trezeguet
18 FW Paraguay PAR Nelson Valdez
GK Poland POL Jan Tomaszewski
FW Spain ESP Franja Madrid

Former coaches

Rayo Vallecano vs. Hércules

Relationships with other teams

  • Greece Iraklis – Since 2003, fans of both teams formed a friendship through the Internet, because "Iraklis" is a Greek name for "Hercules", the Roman name for Heracles, the Greek god of strength. There is even a Hércules supporters club that bears the name Iraklis, in honor of their friendship.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Hércules de Alicante CF – Datos del club" (in Spanish). Hércules CF. Archived from the original on 29 May 2013. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  2. ^ "Valdez brace sinks champions". ESPN Soccernet. 11 September 2010. Retrieved 29 September 2010.
  3. ^ Remarkable runs and a seismic shock; FIFA.com, 15 September 2010
  4. ^ El Hércules proyecta su imagen en otros tres equipos europeos. Noticia de 2005 de La Verdad.