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Urraca CF

Coordinates: 43°25′29″N 4°51′22″W / 43.424769°N 4.856043°W / 43.424769; -4.856043
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Urraca
Full nameUrraca Club de Fútbol
Nickname(s)Urracas (The Magpies)
Founded1979
GroundCampo de La Corredoria, Posada de Llanes,
Asturias, Spain
Capacity1,700
ChairmanEugenia Menéndez García
ManagerPablo Detori[1]
LeagueTercera Federación – Group 2
2023–24Tercera Federación – Group 2, 8th of 18
Websitehttp://urracacf.es

Urraca Club de Fútbol is a Spanish football club based in Posada de Llanes, Llanes in the autonomous community of Asturias. Urraca plays in Tercera Federación – Group 2, holding its home games at Estadio La Corredoria, opened in January 2012 with a game Under-17 teams of Spain and Italy. Spaniards won the game by 5–1.[2] It has a capacity for 1,700 people but only 198 seats, all of them in the main tribune.[3]

History

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The first Club Deportivo Urraca was founded on 18 August 1949 and dissolved in the 1950s.

The club was refounded as Urraca Club de Fútbol in 1979 and it finished as last qualified in their first season. After spending its entire history at regional divisions, Urraca was promoted to Tercera División – Group 2 in May 2012.[4]

Urraca remained in Tercera División for five consecutive seasons. In 2019, the club returned to the fourth tier after winning the Regional Preferente, thus qualifying for the first time to the Copa del Rey thanks to the new competition format implemented since the 2019–20 season.[5]

Season to season

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Season Level Division Place Copa del Rey
1979–80 7 2ª Reg. 14th
1980–81 7 2ª Reg. 10th
1981–82 7 2ª Reg. 10th
1982–83 7 2ª Reg. 6th
1983–84 7 2ª Reg. 1st
1984–85 6 1ª Reg. 16th
1985–86 7 2ª Reg. 3rd
1986–87 6 1ª Reg. 13th
1987–88 6 1ª Reg. 18th
1988–89 7 2ª Reg. 4th
1989–90 7 2ª Reg. 5th
1990–91 7 2ª Reg. 3rd
1991–92 6 1ª Reg. 10th
1992–93 6 1ª Reg. 16th
1993–94 6 1ª Reg. 6th
1994–95 6 1ª Reg. 9th
1995–96 6 1ª Reg. 19th
1996–97 7 2ª Reg. 12th
1997–98 7 2ª Reg. 1st
1998–99 6 1ª Reg. 8th
Season Level Division Place Copa del Rey
1999–2000 6 1ª Reg. 18th
2000–01 7 2ª Reg. 12th
2001–02 7 2ª Reg. 4th
2002–03 7 2ª Reg. 6th
2003–04 7 2ª Reg. 2nd
2004–05 7 2ª Reg. 4th
2005–06 6 1ª Reg. 1st
2006–07 5 Reg. Pref. 5th
2007–08 5 Reg. Pref. 11th
2008–09 5 Reg. Pref. 15th
2009–10 5 Reg. Pref. 15th
2010–11 5 Reg. Pref. 11th
2011–12 5 Reg. Pref. 4th
2012–13 4 13th
2013–14 4 14th
2014–15 4 9th
2015–16 4 17th
2016–17 4 20th
2017–18 5 Reg. Pref. 11th
2018–19 5 Reg. Pref. 1st
Season Level Division Place Copa del Rey
2019–20 4 7th Preliminary
2020–21 4 6th / 5th
2021–22 5 3ª RFEF 14th
2022–23 6 1ª RFFPA 1st
2023–24 5 3ª Fed. 8th
2024–25 5 3ª Fed.

Women's team

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In December 2014, Urraca CF decided to create a women's team to compete in the Regional league of Asturias.[6] In its first season, the team finished in the 11th position out of 14.

Season Division Place Copa de la Reina
2015–16 Regional 11th
2016–17 Regional 10th
2017–18 Regional 5th
2018–19 Regional 11th
2019–20 Regional 6th

References

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  1. ^ "Pablo Detori - Urraca C.F. :: Fútbol de Asturias ::". www.lapreferente.com. Retrieved 2020-10-16.
  2. ^ España vence a Italia en un gran partido (5-1) Royal Spanish Football Federation website. 25 January 2012
  3. ^ "The latest news from Urraca CF: squad, results, table". www.besoccer.com. Retrieved 2020-10-16.
  4. ^ "Sufriendo pero de Tercera" (in Spanish). Urraca CF. 28 May 2012.
  5. ^ "El Urraca se proclama campeón de Preferente y jugará la Copa" (in Spanish). Fútbol Asturiano. 19 May 2019.
  6. ^ "El Urraca trabaja para contar con un equipo femenino" (in Spanish). La Nueva España. 11 December 2014. Retrieved 6 June 2016.
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43°25′29″N 4°51′22″W / 43.424769°N 4.856043°W / 43.424769; -4.856043