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Club Atlético River Plate

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River Plate
Full nameClub Atlético River Plate
Nickname(s)Los Millonarios (The Millionaires)
La Banda (The Stripe)[1][2]
Short nameRiver
Founded25 May 1901; 123 years ago (1901-05-25)[note1 1]
GroundEstadio Más Monumental
Capacity86,000 [6][7]
ChairmanJorge Pablo Brito
ManagerEnzo Francescoli
CoachMartín Demichelis
LeaguePrimera División
20231st
Websitehttps://www.cariverplate.com.ar/
Current season

Club Atlético River Plate, commonly known as River Plate, is an Argentine professional sports club based in the Belgrano neighborhood of Buenos Aires. Founded in 1901, the club is named after the English name for the city's estuary, Río de la Plata. Although many sports are practised at the club, River Plate is best known for its professional football team, which has won Argentina's Primera División championship a record of 38 times, its latest title in 2023. Domestic achievements also include 14 national cups, with the 2021 Trofeo de Campeones as the most recent, making River Plate the country's most successful team in domestic competitions with a total of 52 top-division titles.[8][9]

At international level, River Plate has won 18 titles,[10][11] with 12 organised by CONMEBOL and other international bodies.[12] River Plate's official international achievements include four Copa Libertadores, one Intercontinental Cup, one Supercopa Sudamericana, one Copa Sudamericana, three Recopa Sudamericana, one Copa Interamericana and one Suruga Bank Championship.[13] Furthermore, the club has also won six tournaments organized by AFA and AUF together: five Copa Dr. Ricardo Aldao,[14] and one Tie Cup.[15] In addition, River Plate's reserve team won the U-20 Copa Libertadores in 2012. River Plate is the first and only team to simultaneously hold CONMEBOL's three current major international competitions,[16][17] after winning the 2014 Copa Sudamericana, 2015 Recopa Sudamericana and the 2015 Copa Libertadores.[18]

In a survey published by the Argentine Football Association in 2016, 6 out of 11 players in the all-time Argentina national team had played for River Plate.[19] The club placed ninth in the FIFA Club of the Century poll in December 2000,[20] and in 2010, the International Federation of Football History & Statistics also placed River Plate in ninth place in a list of the best teams in the world during the 1990s and 2000s, ranking as the top South American club.[21] Among other achievements, River Plate is at the top of the list in the All-time Argentine Primera División table, being the Argentine team with most games won, fewest losses, most points accumulated, most goals scored, fewest goals against and best goal difference since the first championship held in 1891, and is first in the Historical table of the Copa Libertadores, being the South American team with most games won.[22]

River has a fierce rivalry with Boca Juniors. Matches between them are known as Superclásico, and the two teams' rivalry is among the most heated in the sport, due to their local and global popularity. River's home stadium, Estadio Monumental is the largest in South America. Apart from football, the club hosts a large variety of sports such as athletics, basque pelota, bowls, chess, basketball, handball, cestoball, gymnastics, field hockey, karate, roller hockey, roller skating, swimming, taekwondo, tennis, volleyball, waterpolo, and eSports.[23][24]

History

River Plate team that promoted to Primera División in 1908

According with the club's official version, River Plate was founded on 25 May 1901, [note1 1] close to the La Boca neighborhood (later the home of fierce rivals Boca Juniors). The institution was formed after the merger of two clubs, "Santa Rosa" and "La Rosales", with Leopoldo Bard being elected as its first president. The name was chosen because of an incident during the construction of Buenos Aires Port: one of the members had seen how the workers of Dique nº 3 left their duties for a while to play a football match. The boxes they were working with just said "The River Plate" (the name the English gave to the Río de la Plata) and that inscription was taken to name the new club.

River Plate affiliated to the Argentine Football Association in 1905, debuting in the third division against Facultad de Medicina. On 13 December 1908, the team was promoted to first division after beating Racing Club 2–1. However, the match was declared null due to River supporters jumping onto the field to celebrate with the players, so a new match had to be played. River again won, this time 7–0, to achieve promotion.

In 1914 River won its first domestic championship, the Copa de Competencia Jockey Club[25] and its first international title, the Copa de Competencia Chevallier Boutell. The nickname Los Millonarios came after the acquisition of winger Carlos Peucelle in 1931 for $10,000 and Bernabé Ferreyra for $35,000 (Large sum of money for the period) in 1932.

In the following years, River Plate consolidated its place as one of the most popular teams of Argentina, and the 20th century brought much success. The club's record of 28 official tournaments saw them dubbed El Campeón del Siglo (The Champions of the Century).[26]

Kit

Kit evolution

1901–1904 [27]
1904–09 [note 1]
1909–1932 [note 2]
1932–present [note 3]
Notes
  1. ^ There are different versions about the origin of the red band; some state that it was first worn during a carnival celebration while other say that River Plate adopted the band to distinguish themselves from a team of Villa Devoto that also had white jerseys.[27]
  2. ^ This jersey, worn as the home kit until 1932,[27][28] has remained (with few exceptions) as the away kit
  3. ^ In March 1932, president of the club, Antonio Liberti, reissued the red band jersey, after he came to the changing room and said to players: "Take care of it, boys, because this is the River Plate jersey".[29]

Kit suppliers and shirt sponsors

Adidas has been River Plate's uniform supplier since 1982, becoming one of the company's largest sponsorship deals in the world, only behind German club Bayern Munich.[30] The US$60 million partnership with the German sports company signed in 2015 (extending the deal to 2021) marked the most expensive kit agreement in the history of Argentine football.[31][32]

River Plate jerseys exhibited in a corner of the city of Buenos Aires in 1955
A 1985 Adidas jersey worn by Américo Gallego at the River Plate Museum
Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor
1910–19 Gath & Chaves none
1920–32 Saint Margaret
1979–80 Sportlandia
1980–81 Topper
1981–82 Olimpia
1982–85 Adidas
1985–89 Fate O
1989–91 Peugeot and Sevel
1991–92 Carta Credencial
1992–95 Sanyo
1996–02 Quilmes
2002–06 Budweiser
2006–08 Petrobras
2009–10 Petrobras (Main) and Pokerstars.net (Sleeves)
2010–12 Petrobras (Main) and Tramontina (Sleeves)
2012–13 BBVA (Main) and Tramontina (Sleeves)
2013–16 BBVA (Main) and Netshoes (Sleeves)
2016 BBVA (Main), Netshoes (Sleeves), and Staples (Shorts)
2016–18 BBVA (Main) and Huawei (Sleeves)
2018 Huawei (Sleeves), Axe (Shorts), and PES 2019 (Numbers)
2019–2020 Turkish Airlines (Main), AXION energy (Sleeves), Axe (Shorts), and PES2020 (Numbers)
2020–2021 Turkish Airlines (Main), AXION energy (Sleeves), Axe (Shorts), and eFootball PES 2021 (Numbers)
2021–2022 Turkish Airlines (Main), Codere (Sleeves), eFootball 2022 (Numbers) and Assist Card (back low shirt)
2022 Turkish Airlines (Main), Codere (Sleeves), eFootball 2022 (Numbers), Amazon Prime Video (back low shirt) and Socios.com (Shorts)
2022–2023 Codere (Main), Assist Card (Sleeves), eFootball 2023 (Numbers), Amazon Prime Video (back low shirt) and Socios.com (Shorts)
2023–present Codere (Main), Assist Card (Sleeves) and DirecTV (back low shirt)

Badge

(Left): The first badge of River Plate of 1918; (right): the "lion" emblem designed by cartoonist Caloi, used between 1984 and 1989

As in many football shirts and sports in general, the team's jersey has a badge on its front, as a symbol of the institution. When the River Plate jersey was created it did not have a badge, and its presence varied throughout the history, according to the designs of each era.[33] Currently it is embroidered on the jersey, with three colors (red, white and black). Its format resembles that of the jersey, as it has a red stripe that crosses it, along with the acronym of the club (CARP) in black, and the background is white, in a stylized design.

When Hugo Santilli became chairman in 1984, he soon called to a competition where a new emblem would be chosen. The main objective of this new image was to eradicate the nickname Gallinas (Chicken) that River's rivals (Boca Juniors fans mainly) used to mock them. Artists from Argentina took part in that competition. The club finally chose a logo designed by the artist Caloi. This emblem showed the figure of a lion (wearing a River jersey) rising from the Monumental stadium. The lion logo was immediately added to the uniforms (on the field and training clothes) having River Plate won the Copa Libertadores de América and European/South American Cup using the lion logo. In 1989, when Santilli left the club so the lion went with him and has not been reestablished since.[34]

In February 2022, River Plate launched its new corporate image, which included an update to the logo and a typography designed exclusively for the club. The corporate image was created and developed by "Grupo Berro", a branding and design studio that had been working on the corporate image for over two years.[35][36][37]

Rivalry

River Plate and Boca Juniors are the two largest football clubs in Argentina, with more than half the country's football fans supporting the clubs. Due to the rivalry between them, the Boca Juniors vs River Plate Superclásico local derby match was listed by the BBC as one of the most famous derbies in the world.[38] It was also acclaimed in 2004 as the number one of the Fifty sporting things you must do before you die by The Observer newspaper.[39]

Club nicknames

La Máquina in 1941. Fltr: Muñoz, Moreno, Pedernera, Labruna, Loustau

The "River Plate" name was chosen in 1901, when the team was still located at the La Boca neighbourhood, next to the Río de la Plata ("River Plate" in some English sources). Proposed names as "Club Atlético Forward", "Juventud Boquense" or "La Rosales" had been rejected. Pedro Martínez saw the name "The River Plate" written at ship containers, and proposed it as a name, which was finally accepted as the official name.[40]

River fans and the press are fond of the nickname Los Millonarios (The Millionaires). This name derives from the 1930s after some expensive transfers of players from other clubs, including Carlos Peucelle from Sportivo Buenos Aires in 1931 and Bernabé Ferreyra from Tigre in 1932.[41]

Due to the red band in their shirt, it is also common to refer to River as El Equipo de la Banda (the team with the band) or simply La Banda (which means "the stripe", but can also mean "the band" -both as in "gang" and "musical group"). River Plate's forwards between 1941 and 1946 were given the nickname La Máquina (The Machine), due to their synchronization and movements on the field.[42]

There was also a River Plate team that was known as La Maquinita (The Little Machine, as tribute to its predecessor) in the 1950s. Managed by José María Minella, the team earned the nickname after winning five championships in six years (1952–57).[43] Some notable players were Alfredo Di Stéfano, Santiago Vernazza, Walter Gómez, Enrique Omar Sívori, among others. Some members of the original Máquina of the 1940s such as Labruna and Loustau, were also part of the team.[44]

Stadiums

The stadium built by River Plate in La Boca. The club played its home games there from 1915 to 1923.

The Estadio Antonio Liberti (nicknamed El Monumental) placed in Belgrano neighborhood of Buenos Aires is River Plate's stadium. With a capacity of 86,000, it was inaugurated on 25 May 1938. The Argentina national football team usually plays its home games at the stadium.

Since its establishment in 1901, River Plate stadiums has been:[45]

  • Dársena Sur (1901–05, 1907–15): Placed on the corner of Wenceslao Villafañe and Caboto streets of La Boca. The club returned in 1907 from Sarandí.
  • Sarandí (1906–07): The club moved to that district in Greater Buenos Aires, near to railway station.
  • La Boca (1915–23): River built a stadium on the corner of Pinzón and Gaboto streets in La Boca.
  • Alvear y Tagle (1923–37): in the Recoleta district of Buenos Aires. The lands where the stadium was built had been owned by Juan Manuel de Rosas.
  • Antonio V. Liberti (Monumental) (1938–present): Built on the same lands where the Bajo Belgrano Horse racing track had existed years ago.
Panoramic view of the Monumental Stadium in 2013.

Support

Two images of River Plate supporters: (left): celebrating in the streets in 1945; (right): welcoming the team in the 2015 Recopa Sudamericana

In 2016 a research from a European sport marketing agency about the football teams with more members in the world, River Plate was in sixth position, with 123,665 members, the highest in the Americas. The ranking was led by Barcelona of Spain and Benfica of Portugal.[46][47] In another ranking made in 2018 by the Bundesliga about the football clubs with more members, River Plate also appear in the sixth position, but this time with 146,000 members, surpassing clubs like FC Barcelona, Real Madrid CF and Manchester United F.C. among other football world powers.[48][49] In one of the latest rankings in early 2023, River placed in fourth place in the world with 281,217 members, which is second in Argentina and also second in South America.[50]

On 8 October 2012, "The world's longest football flag" was unveiled in a caravan in which approximately 15,000 supporters took part. It was made entirely by fans who carried the 7,830 meters flag along the streets of Buenos Aires.[51][52] The away jersey of the 2012–13 season was the most sold throughout the world during the month of September 2012, an achievement that had not reached any Argentine team.[53][54] In 2015, the club participated in the FIFA Club World Cup and played against Sanfrecce Hiroshima at the Nagai Stadium in Osaka on 16 December, and on 20 December in the final against FC Barcelona at the International Stadium Yokohama. The number of River Plate supporters who traveled to Japan during that period were between 15,000 and 20,000,[55][56] a record in the competition.[57]

River Plate has official subsidiaries in provinces such as Santa Fe, Tucumán, Córdoba, Entre Ríos, Mendoza, Tierra del Fuego, Catamarca, among others, and in Spain, Mexico, Australia, the United States, Paraguay and Canada.[58] There are also unofficial fan clubs in all Latin American countries, and also in Spain, Italy, England, Israel, Australia, Germany, the United States and New Zealand.[59]

Players

Current squad

As of 1 August 2023[60]

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 Argentina ARG Franco Armani (vice-captain)
2 DF Uruguay URU Sebastián Boselli
3 DF Argentina ARG Ramiro Funes Mori
4 DF Argentina ARG Jonatan Maidana (third-captain)
5 MF Argentina ARG Bruno Zuculini
6 DF Paraguay PAR David Martínez
7 FW Argentina ARG Matías Suárez
8 MF Argentina ARG Agustín Palavecino
9 FW Colombia COL Miguel Borja
10 MF Argentina ARG Manuel Lanzini
11 MF Uruguay URU Nicolás de la Cruz
13 DF Argentina ARG Enzo Díaz
14 DF Argentina ARG Leandro González Pírez (on loan from Inter Miami)
15 DF Argentina ARG Marcelo Herrera
16 FW Argentina ARG Facundo Colidio
No. Pos. Nation Player
17 DF Chile CHI Paulo Díaz
18 MF Argentina ARG Pity Martínez
19 FW Argentina ARG Claudio Echeverri
20 DF Argentina ARG Milton Casco
21 MF Argentina ARG Esequiel Barco
22 MF Argentina ARG Matías Kranevitter
23 DF Argentina ARG Emanuel Mammana
24 MF Argentina ARG Enzo Pérez (captain)
25 FW Venezuela VEN Salomón Rondón
26 MF Argentina ARG Ignacio Fernández
29 MF Argentina ARG Rodrigo Aliendro
31 MF Argentina ARG Santiago Simón
33 GK Argentina ARG Ezequiel Centurión
36 FW Argentina ARG Pablo Solari
37 GK Argentina ARG Lucas Lavagnino

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 Argentina ARG Augusto Batalla (at San Lorenzo until 31 December 2023)
GK Argentina ARG Leonardo Díaz (at Las Vegas Lights until 31 December 2023)
GK Argentina ARG Franco Petroli (at Estudiantes RC until 31 December 2023)
DF Argentina ARG Manuel Guillén (at Godoy Cruz until 31 December 2024)
DF Argentina ARG Tomás Lecanda (at Argentinos Juniors until 31 December 2024)
DF Argentina ARG Elías López (at Arsenal de Sarandí until 31 December 2023)
DF Argentina ARG Franco Paredes (at Racing Montevideo until 31 December 2023)
DF Paraguay PAR Robert Rojas (at Tigre until 31 July 2024)
DF Argentina ARG Alex Vigo (at Red Star Belgrade until 31 December 2023)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Argentina ARG Franco Alfonso (at Huracán until 31 December 2024)
MF Argentina ARG Felipe Peña Biafore (at Lanús until 31 December 2024)
MF Argentina ARG Esteban Fernández (at Newell's Old Boys until 31 December 2024)
MF Argentina ARG Cristian Ferreira (at Newell's Old Boys 31 December 2023)
MF Italy ITA Nicolás Fonseca (at Montevideo Wanderers until 31 December 2023)
MF Argentina ARG Tomás Galván (at Colón until 31 December 2023)
MF Argentina ARG José Paradela (at Tigre until 31 July 2024)
MF Argentina ARG Tomás Castro Ponce (at Atlético Tucumán until 31 December 2024)
FW Colombia COL Flabián Londoño (at Arsenal de Sarandí until 31 December 2023)

Top goalscorers

Ángel Labruna, River Plate all-time top goalscorer
Rank. Player Position Tenure Goals Matches
1 Argentina Ángel Labruna FW 1939–59 317 515
2 Argentina Oscar Más FW 1964–73, 1974–77 217 382
3 Argentina Bernabé Ferreyra FW 1932–39 200 185
4 Argentina José Manuel Moreno FW 1935–44, 1946–48 184 320
5 Argentina Norberto Alonso MF 1970–76, 1977–81, 1984–86 158 374
6 Argentina Adolfo Pedernera FW 1935–46 143 278
7 Uruguay Enzo Francescoli FW 1984–86, 1994–98 137 217
8 Argentina Carlos Peucelle FW 1931–41 118 307
9 Argentina Daniel Onega FW 1966–71, 1973 117 207
10 Argentina Fernando Cavenaghi FW 2001–04, 2011–12, 2014–15 112 212

Most appearances

Amadeo Carrizo holds the most appearances record for River Plate
Rank. Player Position Tenure Matches
1 Argentina Amadeo Carrizo GK 1945–68 520
2 Argentina Ángel Labruna FW 1939–59 515
3 Argentina Reinaldo Merlo MF 1969–84 500
4 Argentina Juan José López MF 1970–81 466
5 Argentina Norberto Yácono DF 1938–53 393
6 Argentina Oscar Más FW 1964–73, 1974–77 382
7 Argentina Norberto Alonso MF 1970–76, 1977–81, 1983–87 374
8 Argentina Félix Loustau FW 1942–57 367
9 Argentina Ubaldo Fillol GK 1974–83 361
10 Argentina Leonardo Ponzio MF 2007–2008; 2012-2021 358

Youth academy

From its creation in 1901 to the present, the lower divisions of River Plate have protagonized splendid moments in their categories. The River Plate Academy is recognized on a continental and world level for the amount of talents that have emerged throughout it. River produced many of the best players in the history of football, including most of the institution's top idols. Its main objective is to supply players with great future to the first team and educate academically, ethically and athletically its members.[61]
Legends of football not only had the privilege of playing in the first division of the club Millonario, but also wore the red and white jersey since the youth categories. The lower divisions of River Plate, also known as "El Semillero"[62] has always been the most fruitful of Argentina, the most important and also the one with the greatest success.[63] Historically it is considered as the best soccer training school of the Americas and one of the best in the world.[64][65]

Ballon d'Or winners

Two players from the River Plate academy won the Ballon d'Or. Note: flags indicate national team they played for so the Ballon was awarded to European players only:

River Plate players ranked among the 50 best footballers in South America in the 20th century

(according to a ranking made by IFFHS); Note: the ranking only includes River Plate players emerged from the youth academy:[66]

José Manuel Moreno and Alfredo Di Stéfano, ranked among the 50 best South American players of the XX century at the IFFHS website
Rank. Player Votes Pos.
3
Argentina Alfredo Di Stéfano 161 FW
5
Argentina José Manuel Moreno 82 FW
12
Argentina Adolfo Pedernera 24 FW
16
Argentina Omar Sívori 19 FW
26
Argentina Ángel Labruna 12 FW
35
Argentina Daniel Passarella 8 DF

Notable players who emerged from the River Plate Academy

FIFA World Cup winners

Fltr: Norberto Alonso, Ubaldo Fillol, Leopoldo Luque, and Daniel Passarella, and Nery Pumpido, some River Plate players that were World Cup winners with Argentina

Notable managers

Marcelo Gallardo is the most successful River Plate manager in club's history with 14 titles won

Marcelo Gallardo is the club's most successful manager of all-time, with thirteen titles. Gallardo (appointed in 2014) is the current manager and under his direction, River Plate has won most of its international championships. Domestic titles won include three Copa Argentina (2015–16, 2016–17 and 2018–19) and two Supercopa Argentina (2017, 2019). He has been specially successful in the international scene, having won two Copa Libertadores (2015, 2018), one Copa Sudamericana (2014), three Recopa Sudamericana (2015, 2016, 2019), and one Suruga Bank Championship (2015). Several of these championship wins included memorable victories against archrivals Boca Juniors.

Ramón Díaz had three tenures on River Plate (1995–2000, 2001–02, and 2012–14), being the club's most successful manager in the domestic scene, having achieved six Primera División titles (1996–97 Torneo Apertura, 1996–97 Torneo Clausura, 1997–98 Torneo Apertura, 1999–2000 Torneo Apertura, 2001–02 Torneo Clausura, 2013–14 Torneo Final) and one Copa Campeonato (2014)[68]; internationally, he won the Copa Libertadores (1996) and one Supercopa Libertadores (1997).

José María Minella was another notable manager with eight titles won with River Plate, seven Primera División championships (1945, 1947, 1952, 1953, 1955, 1956, 1957) and one Copa Dr. Ricardo Aldao (1947).

Ángel Labruna had an outstanding career not only as player (he is club's all-time topscorer with 293 goals in 515 matches played), but as coach for the club, having won six Primera División championships (1975 Torneo Metropolitano, 1975 Torneo Nacional, 1977 Torneo Metropolitano, 1979 Torneo Nacional, 1979 Torneo Metropolitano, and 1980 Torneo Metropolitano).

Héctor Veira won the Copa Libertadores de América with River Plate, in 1986. That same year the team won the European/South American Cup played in Tokyo. Under his coaching the club also won the 1985–86 Argentine championship, totalizing three titles with River Plate.

Honours

Senior titles

Keys
  •   Record
  • (s) Shared record
Type Competition Titles Winning years
National
(League)
Primera División 38 1920 AAm, 1932 LAF, 1936 (Copa Campeonato), 1936 (Copa de Oro)[note 1] 1937, 1941, 1942, 1945, 1947, 1952, 1953, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1975 Metropolitano, 1975 Nacional, 1977 Metropolitano, 1979 Metropolitano, 1979 Nacional, 1980 Metropolitano, 1981 Nacional, 1985–86, 1989–90, 1991 Apertura, 1993 Apertura, 1994 Apertura, 1996 Apertura, 1997 Clausura, 1997 Apertura, 1999 Apertura, 2000 Clausura, 2002 Clausura, 2003 Clausura, 2004 Clausura, 2008 Clausura, 2014 Final, 2021, 2023
National
(Cups)
Copa Argentina 3
Supercopa Argentina 2(s)
Trofeo de Campeones (LPF) 1(s)
Copa Campeonato 1(s)
Copa Jockey Club[74] 1
Copa de Competencia (LAF)[75] 1(s)
Copa Ibarguren[74] 4
Copa Adrián C. Escobar[74] 1
International Intercontinental Cup [note 3] 1
Copa Libertadores [note 4] 4
Copa Interamericana [note 5] 1
Supercopa Libertadores [note 4] 1
Copa Sudamericana [note 4] 1
Recopa Sudamericana [note 4] 3
Suruga Bank Championship [note 6] 1
Tie Cup [note 7] 1
Copa Aldao [note 7] 5

Other titles

Titles won in lower divisions:

Youth titles

Friendly titles

Notes
  1. ^ The 1936 season was divided into two single round-robin tournaments, "Copa Campeonato" (won by River Plate) and "Copa de Honor" (won by San Lorenzo). At the end of the season, both teams played the "Copa de Oro", a single match won by River. In its Memoria y Balance (Annual Report) published by the AFA that year, River Plate is mentioned as "1936 Champion" while San Lorenzo is only mentioned as "Copa de honor winning team".[69] In its 100th anniversary book published in 1993, the AFA listed River Plate as the only 1936 champion.[70] In 2013, the AFA included three 1936 championships on its website, mentioning River Plate as Copa de Oro and Copa Campeonato winner and San Lorenzo as Copa de Honor winner, therefore both clubs added one league title to their honours.[71][72] Moreover, some historians consider Copa de Oro a national cup instead of a league championship, stating that it was only contested to qualify an Argentine representative to play the Copa Aldao against the Uruguayan champion.[73]
  2. ^ Title shared ex aequo with Liga Cultural de Santiago del Estero.[77]
  3. ^ Organised by UEFA and CONMEBOL together
  4. ^ a b c d CONMEBOL competition
  5. ^ Organised by CONMEBOL and CONCACAF
  6. ^ Organised by JFA and CONMEBOL
  7. ^ a b Organised by AFA and AUF together
  8. ^ As the senior squad was competing in Primera División, River Plate played with a reserve team.[79]
  9. ^ Official u20 title organised by Conmebol.
  10. ^ Unofficial trophy contested between Copa Sudamericana and UEFA Europa League winners.[80]

Other sports

Basketball

Alberto López won the 1950 World Cup with Argentina

The basketball team currently plays in the Torneo Federal de Básquetbol. In 1950, the first FIBA World Championship was played in Buenos Aires and Argentina claimed the gold medal with 3 River Plate players: Alberto López, Leopoldo Contarbio and Vito Liva. The club won a Campeonato Argentino title in 1983, and finished in the 2nd place in the Campeonato Sudamericano de Clubes Campeones de Básquetbol in 1984.

The last edition of the Campeonato Argentino was held in that year, and River Plate was defeated in the finals, then playing at its successor competition, Liga Nacional de Básquetbol, between 1985–93 and 2004–06. The team reached the finals in 1988, and for the 1989 and 1990 seasons, Héctor Campana became the top scorer of the LNB, playing for River Plate. The team also achieved 2nd place in 2004 and 2005 editions of Copa Argentina. Since 2014, after eight years of absence in professional basketball, River Plate returned to national tournaments playing the CABB Federal Basketball Tournament.[94]

Field hockey

River Plate field hockey team playing Club Ciudad in 2011

The women's field hockey team is affiliated to the Buenos Aires Hockey Association (AHBA)[95] and currently playing in Torneo Metropolitano A, the top division of regional hockey in Argentina.

In 2016, the squad (nicknamed Las Vikingas) won its first Metropolitano championship after beating Ciudad de Buenos Aires by 3–2 at the final.[96]

In 2017, Las Vikingas won their third consecutive Hockey National League after defeating Club Italiano by 2–0 at the final, thus becoming one of the two clubs with most titles at the national tournament.[97]

Two players from River Plate, Lucina von der Heyde and Bianca Donati, who were Junior World Champions in Chile 2016, made their debut in a world cup in London 2018. Von der Heyde was named the FIH Rising Star of the Year.[98]

Futsal

The futsal team plays in the Argentine División de Honor. The team won three championships in 1991, 2002 and 2003, and two Copa Argentina de Futsal in 2016 and 2017.[99] The team also achieved a third place in the Copa Libertadores de Futsal in 2013.[100]

Handball

River is one of the founding clubs of the Federación Metropolitana de Balonmano (Fe.Me.Bal.) and it is also the institution that won more championships in local history.[101]

All these titles have been obtained in the metropolitan and national levels, either in Metropolitan, Aperturas, Clausuras, Super 4 or Nacionales Tournaments, or the Federal League. The men's team won 32 domestic titles and the gold medal in the South American Men's Club Handball Championship in 1984.[102] The team also achieved 2 Bronze medals in the same competition and 4 Bronze medals in the Pan American Men's Club Handball Championship. The women's team won 9 national titles, and the silver medal in the South American Women's Club Handball Championship in 1984 and the bronze medal in 1987.[103]

The more prominent players in the club's history are Guillermo Till, Claudio Straffe, Freddy Ambrosini, Gabriel Canzoniero and Juan Ojea.

Swimming

José Meolans competed for River Plate and represented Argentina in four Olympic Games

The current swimming team has its origins in 2003, after many years in which the Club Atlético River Plate had no representatives in the national championships of this discipline.

The draft to form the best team in the country was led by Professor Rodolfo Sacco and had the best results that had never been achieved in the institution. The team began to form from a contractual relationship with the swimmer José Meolans,[104] one of the Argentine swimmers with most titles won.[105]

Many high-level swimmers, trained in other institutions began to approach to be part of what would be the best team in the country for the coming years.[106]

Other swimmers from River Plate who represented Argentina in the Olympics include Meolans himself, Georgina Bardach, Eduardo Germán Otero, Walter Arciprete, Agustín Fiorilli, María del Pilar Pereyra, Juan Pereyra, Damián Blaum, Javiera Salcedo, Pablo Martín Abal, Cecilia Biagioli.

Tennis

Tennis is a sport practiced in River Plate since 1923.[107] Currently, River Plate counts with 10 clay courts and one hard court. As in other disciplines, the Club stands out for its large number of teams participating in the official tournaments organized by the Asociación Argentina de Tenis, as well as having important activities and competitions for the development of this sport in the country.[108]

Gabriela Sabatini, who is considered the best Argentine women's tennis player in history and an icon in national women's sport, began practicing at River at age 6, under the direction of Professor Daniel Fidalgo, with whom she trained for seven years. When she was 12 years old, she participated in the Mundialito Infantil de Caracas, winning the competition, and ratifying once again the talent she had already shown during her participation in metropolitan and national children's tournaments.[109]

Volleyball

Women's volleyball at River Plate

River Plate Women's division reached the national title four times, being one of the top champions of the league and the first to be champion three consecutive times (2005 to 2007).[110]

The men's volleyball team won the Liga Argentina de Voleibol in the 1998–99 season with the Brazilians Jefferson, Marcos Dreyer, and the nationals Marcelo Román, Diego Gutiérrez and Luis Gálvez[111] and the Súper 4 in 2003.[112] The team also won 8 Metropolitan Leagues between 1956 and 2011.

Women's Football

María Pía Gomez scoring a goal for the women's team in 2011

The River Plate women's football team plays in the Campeonato de Fútbol Femenino and have won the championship 11 times of which five were in succession from 1993 to 1997. The team achieved the third place in the 2017 Copa Libertadores Femenina.

Other

In addition to the mentioned sports, River Plate's sections include artistic gymnastics, artistic roller skating, athletics, basque pelota, boxing, bowls, chess, karate, rhythmic gymnastics, roller hockey, taekwondo, table tennis and waterpolo.

Notes

  1. ^ a b This was set as the official date of foundation by the club itselft, stating that River Plate was established after the merger of clubs La Rosales and Santa Rosa. Nevertheless, other sources say that the real date of foundation is 15 May 1904 as River Plate would have assumed the date of foundation of predecessor club La Rosales as their own birth. This version is supported by historians whom found evidence of recorded matches played by both, La Rosales and Santa Rosa, after 1901. Moreover, La Nación newspaper published an article on 22 May 1904 about the "recent foundation" of River Plate.[3][4][5]

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