Club Always Ready

Club Always Ready, better known as Always Ready, is a Bolivian football club from La Paz which plays its home games in nearby El Alto. Due to the jerseys the team is also known as Banda Roja, or the red band.

Always Ready
Full nameClub Always Ready
Nickname(s) Albirrojo
El Millonario
FoundedApril 13, 1933 (1933-04-13)
GroundEstadio Municipal de El Alto
El Alto, Bolivia
Capacity25,000
ChairmanAndrés Costa
ManagerRodrigo Venegas
LeagueDivisión Profesional
2022 AperturaQuarter-finals
WebsiteClub website

History

Club Always Ready was founded on 13 April 1933. The team took part in the La Paz championship, which was held in 1950 under semi-professional conditions; it was organized by La Paz Football Association (LPFA). Despite not having any official status, the winner of the tournament was widely considered the de facto champion of Bolivia. Always Ready earned their first title in 1951. In the following two years, the team was runner-up.

From 1954 onwards, teams from Cochabamba and Oruro participated in the now-called Torneo Integrado, a much larger tournament than the La Paz championship; Always Ready found themselves withdrawing from the competition as it found it difficult to retain key players. Always Ready's resurgence was not until 1956. The team secured its second national title in 1957.

Always Ready was the first Bolivian team to do a tour outside Bolivia: from August to November 1961, the club toured Europe.[1]

In 1967, the club obtained second place in its national league; that allowed Always Ready to participate in South America's most prestigious club event: the Copa Libertadores. However, the results were disappointing as they went out in the first round without winning a single match. Nevertheless, Always Ready won that same year's city championship and finished 5th in the national standings.

In 1977 Always Ready was one of the founding members of the new national professional league, where it stayed until 1981, when they were relegated to the second division. They achieved promotion in 1987, but in 1991 they were relegated again and did not reach promotion until 2019, 28 years later.

In 2018, Always Ready returned to the top flight for the first time since 1991 by winning the Copa Simón Bolívar after beating Avilés Industrial 3–0 in the final.

In the 2019 Bolivian Primera División season, the club finished ninth in the Apertura, and fifth in the Clausura. These positions were good enough to finish seventh in the aggregate table and earn a spot in the 2020 Copa Sudamericana, their first continental competition in 32 years. They faced Millonarios in the first stage. The first leg in Bogotá ended in a 2–0 win for the Colombian team. In the second leg, which was played in La Paz, Always Ready won 1–0, being eliminated 2–1 on aggregate.

On New Years Eve 2020, Always Ready won the Torneo Apertura championship of the top-flight División Profesional after defeating Nacional Potosí 2–0 away from home in the last match of the season, their first top flight title in 63 years.[2][3]

With this title, the club earned a spot in the 2021 Copa Libertadores group stage. Their first match was on 20 April 2021, a 2–0 win against Brazilian powerhouse Internacional at home. Their second match was a 2–1 loss to Olimpia in Paraguay. In the match against Deportivo Táchira on Venezuelan soil, Always Ready suffered a 7–2 defeat. In their last match, they drew against Internacional in Porto Alegre, however this was not enough to prevent their elimination from the competition where they finished last in their group.

In the 2021 season, Always Ready had another good season, finishing as runner-up one point behind champions Independiente Petrolero, and earning qualification to the 2022 Copa Libertadores in the process, where they finished last in the group stage again.

Always Ready in CONMEBOL competitions

1968 – First Stage
2021 – Group Stage
2022 – Group Stage
2020 – First Stage

Honours

Current squad

As of 8 October 2022[4]

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 Colombia COL Carlos Mosquera
3 MF Bolivia BOL Alejandro Chumacero
4 DF Bolivia BOL Marc Enoumba
5 MF Bolivia BOL Sebastián Claure
6 MF Bolivia BOL Josué Mamani
7 FW Bolivia BOL Carmelo Algarañaz
8 FW Bolivia BOL Rodrigo Ramallo
9 FW Argentina ARG Marcos Riquelme
10 MF Paraguay PAR Gustavo Cristaldo
11 MF Bolivia BOL Samuel Galindo
12 GK Bolivia BOL Leonardo Claros
13 GK Colombia COL Carlos Mosquera
14 MF Bolivia BOL José Martínez
15 MF Bolivia BOL Enrique Taborga
No. Pos. Nation Player
17 FW Bolivia BOL Juan Carlos Arce
19 DF Bolivia BOL Enrique Flores
20 FW Bolivia BOL Roler Ferrufino
21 MF Colombia COL Alex Rambal
22 DF Bolivia BOL Denilson Valda
23 GK Bolivia BOL Jimmy Roca
24 FW Bolivia BOL Pablo Vaca
26 DF Bolivia BOL Nelson David Cabrera
27 MF Bolivia BOL Diego Medina
28 MF Argentina ARG Gonzalo Reynaldo Añazgo
29 DF Bolivia BOL Sergio Adrián
30 MF Bolivia BOL Edwin Riveria
31 FW Bolivia BOL Bryan Espinoza
33 DF Bolivia BOL Denilson Choque
99 MF Dominican Republic DOM Edarlyn Reyes
FW Ivory Coast CIV Wilfried Bony

References

  1. "Club Always Ready celebra hoy su 74 aniversario" (in Spanish). El Diario. 13 April 2007. Retrieved 5 January 2009.
  2. "Always Ready se coronó campeón del futbol boliviano después de 63 años". Depor (in Spanish). 2020-12-31. Retrieved 2023-10-13.
  3. "¡Tras 63 años, Always Ready campeón!". Los Tiempos (in Spanish). 2020-12-31. Retrieved 2023-10-13.
  4. "Club Always Ready - Roster". Global Sports Archive. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
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