Estudiantes de Mérida F.C.

Estudiantes de Mérida Fútbol Club (usually called Estudiantes de Mérida, or simply Estudiantes) is a professional football club of the Venezuelan league, based in Mérida, Venezuela. It has performed well in both national and international competitions, like Copa Libertadores, and has won titles in several regional and national competitions.

Estudiantes de Mérida
Full nameEstudiantes de Mérida Fútbol Club
Nickname(s)Rojiblancos
Los Académicos
FoundedApril 4, 1971 (1971-04-04)
GroundEstadio Metropolitano de Mérida
Mérida, Venezuela
Capacity42,200
ChairmanRaúl Carreño
ManagerFranklin Lucena
LeaguePrimera División Venezolana
2023Primera División, 9th of 15
WebsiteClub website

History

Everything start when Mérida conquest both Junior Championships made in this city during the years of 1969 and 1970. This caught the fever to aspire to have a professional football team in the tourist city Venezuela quintessential student. The deceased Don José Arano (Basque birth) and Luis Ghersi Govea, performed the first legal contacts with Major League Soccer and the Venezuelan Football Federation (FVF). Once the appropriate steps in the city of Caracas, contact Guillermo Soto Rosa, who in turn communicates with other friends, also engineers, Ramon Chiarelli and Gabriel Angarita, who show interest in the nascent idea and spread of the emotive idea in Mérida: Luis Jimenez Ron, Amadis Canizales, Daniel D 'Jesus Trejo, Eli Joseph Camacho and Fausto Ghiraldini, among others.

By then, join institutional and public efforts, the then president of the University of Los Andes, Pedro Rincón Gutiérrez and Dr. Briceno Ferrigni, then Governor of the state of Mérida, who together perform all the steps of rigor to the entities coordinating professional soccer in Venezuela. At the same time, running the works related to the improvement and expansion of the football stadium facilities most of Mérida, Guillermo Soto Rosa Stadium, located in a popular area of the city between the Santa Juana, Pie del Llano, santa Monica, Cuatricentenario and Campo de Oro. The first team's headquarters, is a modest apartment, where on April 4, 1971, meet 58 people in order to form the first Board by then stay composed by Luis A. Ron Jimenez, Amadis Canizales, Jorge Pereyra, Don José Arano, Uzcátegui Spirit, Carmelo Colella and Elio Scanu.

Membership with Antonio J. La Hoz as coach. the uniform would be a striped shirt red and white, blue pants, white socks with horizontal stripes, design inspired by the colors of the Colegio San José de Mérida, as the majority of the promoters of the team had former students of that campus. Was defined as a second uniform shirt with green and white stripes, white shorts and white socks.

The name of the institution is as Football Club Estudiantes de Mérida and the day May 17, 1971, the official request is made to the Major League Soccer for the registration of the Club. The official team presentation is made on September 4, 1971, at a popular hotel in the city. Until the 12th of October of the same year at 11:00 am, appears in the programmed Guillermo Soto Rosa Stadium, the red-white currency captained by number 10 Luis Mendoza. Students counted as a godfather for release sports, Deportivo Portugues from the capital of the country, who fell 2 goals to 1, with goals scored by Uruguayan Chiazzaro José and Brazilian César Márquez.

For 1999 occupies the 5th place as the best team in South America and ranked 43 in the world. He has won two league titles (1980 and 1985), two Copa Venezuela (1971 and 1975), has been sub-national champion five times and has participated in several Copa Libertadores and Copa Conmebol, Copa Merconorte.

Later, on May 14, 2006 the team, after losing 4-2 against Deportivo Italmaracaibo, went to Second Division, after 35 years of being in the First Division. His return to the first division occurs in the month of May 2007, thanks to the expansion of First Division clubs 10-18.

Titles

Amateur Era (0):
Professional Era (2): 1980, 1985
1971, 1975

Performance in CONMEBOL competitions

1977: First Round
1978: First Round
1981: First Round
1982: First Round
1987: First Round
1999: Quarter-Finals
2003: Preliminary Round
2018: First stage
 :
1999: Quarter-Finals
2000: First Round

Colors

The club's colors are red, white and blue.

Stadium

The club plays their home matches at Estadio Metropolitano de Mérida, which seats 42,200 people and was inaugurated on December 7, 2005. The club previously played their home matches at Estadio Guillermo Soto Rosa, which seats 14,000 and was inaugurated on September 5, 1969.

Current first team players

As of 23 October 2020

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 Venezuela VEN Alejandro Araque
2 DF Venezuela VEN Omar Labrador
3 DF Venezuela VEN Daniel Linárez
4 DF Venezuela VEN Henry Plazas
5 DF Venezuela VEN Galileo Del Castillo
6 DF Venezuela VEN Germán Contreras
7 MF Venezuela VEN Christian Flores
8 MF Venezuela VEN Yorwin Lobo
9 FW Mexico MEX Luz Rodríguez
10 MF Venezuela VEN Jesús Meza
12 GK Venezuela VEN Aldair Peña
13 DF Venezuela VEN José Luis Marrufo
14 MF Venezuela VEN Ayrton Páez
15 MF Venezuela VEN Cristhian Rivas
16 FW Nicaragua NCA Jaime Moreno
17 FW Venezuela VEN Armando Araque
18 MF Venezuela VEN Diego Guillén
No. Pos. Nation Player
20 DF Venezuela VEN José Manríquez
21 FW Colombia COL Wilson Mena
22 GK Argentina ARG Matías Draghi
23 DF Venezuela VEN Edison Penilla
24 DF Venezuela VEN Ronaldo Rivas
25 DF Venezuela VEN Sebastián Uzcátegui
26 MF Venezuela VEN Johandry Hidalgo
27 FW Venezuela VEN José Rivas
29 FW Venezuela VEN Edson Rivas
32 FW Venezuela VEN Ever Urrutia
33 MF Venezuela VEN Gregory Materán
34 FW Venezuela VEN Wilson Barrios
40 GK Venezuela VEN David Contreras
MF Venezuela VEN Adrián Valero
FW Venezuela VEN Edward Morillo
DF Uruguay URU Álvaro Pereira

Presidents

Managers

  • Venezuela Rafael Dudamel (Oct 15, 2010–Dec 15, 2013)
  • Venezuela Manuel Plascencia (July 16, 2013–Jan 28, 2014)
  • Venezuela Francisco "El Pacho" Moreno (201?–)

References

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