Aragua F.C.

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Aragua FC
Full nameAragua Fútbol Club
Nickname(s)Aurirrojos (Yellow and Red)
Chocolateros (Chocolatiers)
Founded20 August 2002 (21 years ago) (2002-08-20)
GroundEstadio Olímpico Hermanos Ghersi Páez
Maracay, Venezuela
Capacity16,000
ChairmanDouglas Ballesteros
ManagerJuvencio Betancourt
LeaguePrimera División Venezolana
2011–12Copa Movilnet, 9th

Aragua Fútbol Club (Spanish pronunciation: [aˈɾaɣwa ˈfuðβol kluβ]) is a Venezuelan football team based in the city of Maracay, in the state of Aragua. The club began its professional career playing in the Venezuelan Segunda División a year after the club was founded. Since 2005, Aragua plays in the Primera División Venezolana.

The club's colors are yellow and red, although they were blue and white in the club's beginnings. Home games are played at the Olímpico Hermanos Ghersi in Maracay, with a 16,000 spectator capacity.[1]

Aragua won the 2005–06 Venezuelan Segunda División and the 2007 Copa Venezuela.

History

Deportivo Galicia

Founded in Caracas, the club moved, in 2002, to Maracay, in the state of Aragua, when its name changed to Galicia de Aragua, playing their home games at the Giuseppe Antonelli stadium in Maracay. Coached by the Uruguayan national Carlos Maria Ravel, the team switched from their traditional blue and white colours to the state's yellow and red and changed their name to Galicia de Aragua.

At the end of the 2001–02 season, Galicia de Aragua was relegated to the Venezuelan Segunda Division. In January 2002 they became a separate entity Aragua F.C. when they moved to Estadio Olímpico Hermanos Ghersi Páez.

Aragua FC

For the 2002–03 season, Deportivo Galicia moves to the Estadio Olímpico Hermanos Ghersi and changes name to Aragua Fútbol Club. The team continues to play in the Venezuelan Segunda División until the 2004–05 season, when they achieve promotion to the Venezuelan Primera División.

Aragua FC make their debut in the Venezuelan Primera División with a goalless tie against Trujillanos on 5 August 2005, and remaining unbeaten during the first five games of the season. Rafael Mea Vitali scored Aragua's first goal in the top flight. Aragua FC end up finishing the 2005–06 season in 7th place.

At the start of the 2006–07 season, goalkeeper Renny Vega is called up by national team coach Richard Páez to represent the Venezuela National Football Team in a match against Colombia, making Vega the first player to receive an international call-up while playing for Aragua FC.

In 2008, led by manager Manolo Contreras, Aragua won the Copa Venezuela and automatically qualified to participate in the 2008 edition of the Copa Sudamericana, where they were eliminated in the first round by Guadalajara. At the end of the 2007–08 season, José Salomón Rondón was awarded as Youth of the Year, marking the first time that an Aragua FC player received the distinction.

Titles

2005
2007

Performance in CONMEBOL competitions

2008: First Round

Club Culture

Supporters

The Aragua FC fans are known as Los Vikingos (The Vikings), and they traditionally occupy the western stand of the stadium, known as La Popular (The Popular).[2] They are made up of several factions that represent different cities across the state: Artillería Aurirroja (Yellow and Red Artillery), Cagua Aurirroja, Caña de Azúcar, El Limón, Turmero Aurirrojo, Santa Rita, and Santa Rosa Aurirroja. As is the case with supporter groups of other Venezuelan teams, the factions only exist in theory, and in practice all the supporters act as a unified body.[3]

Rivalries

The club's main rival is Carabobo FC, from the neighboring state of Carabobo. The fixture is popularly known as El Clásico de la Autopista (The Highway Classic). Due to the proximity of both states' capitals, Aragua-Carabobo rivalries exist in virtually every professional sport practiced in Venezuela. In 18 encounters, Aragua has achieved 6 victories against Carabobo's 4.[4] The classic is currently "on hold" since Carabobo was relegated to the Venezuelan Segunda División after the 2011–12 season.[5]

Players

As of 28 June 2014.[6]

First squad

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 Puerto Rico PUR Bill Gaudette
2 DF Venezuela VEN Francisco Fajardo
3 DF Venezuela VEN José Yégüez
5 MF Venezuela VEN Francisco La Mantía
6 DF Venezuela VEN Jaime Bustamante
7 MF Venezuela VEN Jesús Lugo
8 MF Venezuela VEN Mauricio Parra
9 FW Paraguay PAR Néstor Bareiro
10 MF Venezuela VEN Gustavo Rojas
11 FW Venezuela VEN Ronaldo Pérez
12 GK Venezuela VEN Jean Carlos Issa
13 MF Venezuela VEN Luis Felipe Chará
14 DF Venezuela VEN Loren Walcott
No. Pos. Nation Player
15 MF Venezuela VEN Jackson López
16 DF Venezuela VEN José Manríquez
17 FW Colombia COL Jarlín Quintero
18 MF Venezuela VEN Orlando Peraza
19 DF Venezuela VEN Rohel Briceño
20 MF Venezuela VEN Kenny Romero
22 GK Venezuela VEN Geancarlos Martínez
23 DF Venezuela VEN Jean Neto
24 MF Venezuela VEN Mauricio Montezuma
25 FW Venezuela VEN Sergio Ortíz
30 GK Venezuela VEN Brian Montes
78 FW Venezuela VEN Tarek El Aissami

U20 Squad

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 Venezuela VEN Miguel Piedra
-- GK Venezuela VEN Miguel Cedeño
-- GK Venezuela VEN Rafael Bolívar
-- GK Venezuela VEN Marfren Paracare
-- DF Venezuela VEN Jorge Rodríguez
-- DF Venezuela VEN Ricardo Blanco
-- DF Venezuela VEN Luis Peña
-- DF Venezuela VEN Whilkei Acuña
-- DF Venezuela VEN Julio Gords
-- DF Venezuela VEN Luis Matute
-- MF Venezuela VEN Miguel Bello
-- MF Venezuela VEN Carlos Carrasquel
No. Pos. Nation Player
-- MF Venezuela VEN Álvaro Castellanos
-- MF Venezuela VEN Fracisco Toledo
-- MF Venezuela VEN Luís Fernández
-- MF Venezuela VEN Carlos Ochoa
-- MF Venezuela VEN Mauricio Montezuma
-- MF Venezuela VEN Kevin Medina
-- MF Venezuela VEN José Pepe Stella
-- FW Venezuela VEN Carlos Borges
-- FW Venezuela VEN Francisco Zais
-- FW Venezuela VEN Ronny Martínez
-- FW Venezuela VEN Alessandro Maceta

U18 squad

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 Venezuela VEN Edgar García
-- GK Venezuela VEN Jhose Alvarado
-- DF Venezuela VEN John Hernández
-- DF Venezuela VEN José Manduca
-- DF Venezuela VEN Julio González
-- MF Venezuela VEN Armando Ron
-- MF Venezuela VEN Diego Ibarra
-- MF Venezuela VEN Jonás Cárdenas
-- MF Venezuela VEN José Castillo
-- MF Venezuela VEN José Labrador
-- MF Venezuela VEN Leonardo Corredor
No. Pos. Nation Player
-- MF Venezuela VEN Luis Correa
-- MF Venezuela VEN Paolo Giona
-- MF Venezuela VEN Gustavo Armada
-- MF Venezuela VEN Pedro Valdés
-- MF Venezuela VEN Manuel Goncalvez
-- MF Venezuela VEN José Mur
-- MF Venezuela VEN Williams Rodríguez
-- FW Venezuela VEN Bryhan Vera
-- FW Venezuela VEN Fernando Luna
-- FW Venezuela VEN Heinderberg Carrasquel
-- FW Venezuela VEN Orlando Nieves

Managers

  • Uruguay Carlos Maria Ravel (2002–04)
  • Venezuela Rafael Santana Fontes (2004–06)
  • Venezuela Rafael Santana Segovia (2006–07)
  • Colombia Eduardo Contreras (2007)
  • Venezuela Manolo Contreras (2008–10)
  • Argentina Ángel Raúl Cavalleri (2010–13)
  • UruguayVenezuela Carlos Maldonado (2013)
  • Argentina Ángel Raúl Cavalleri (2013–14)
  • Venezuela César Modesto González (2014)
  • Venezuela Manuel Plascencia (2014–)

References

  1. ^ Ceroacero.es. "Estadio Olímpico Hermanos Ghersi Páez". Retrieved 23 December 2010.
  2. ^ "Vikingos y Demonios dieron un espectáculo". LaVinotinto.com. 23 October 2011. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  3. ^ Moros, Ricardo (1 November 2010). "Un Corazón Aurirrojo Que Late Con Fuerza". AraguaFC.net. Prensa Aragua FC. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  4. ^ "H2H Comparison – Aragua vs. Carabobo – Teams – Soccerway". Soccerway. Global Sports Media. 27 April 2013. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  5. ^ Montes de Oca, Juan (15 April 2012). "Aragua FC defendió su casa y logró un punto valioso". AraguaFC.com. Prensa Aragua FC. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  6. ^ "Plantilla Primera División". araguafc.com.

External links