Huachipato FC

Huachipato FC is a Chilean football club based in Talcahuano that currently plays in the Chilean Primera División. Huachipato was founded on 7 June 1947 by workers of the homonymous steel mill in Talcahuano, and it currently plays its home games at the Estadio Huachipato-CAP Acero, which it owns, making it one of the five Chilean professional football clubs to own their own ground.[1] Originally a multisports club, Huachipato became a football club in 2015.

Huachipato
Full nameHuachipato FC
Nickname(s)Los Acereros (Steelers)
Campeón del Sur
(Champion of the South)
Los de la usina (Steelmillers)
Siderúrgicos (Steelworkers)
Negriazules (Black and blues)
Founded7 June 1947 (1947-06-07)
GroundEstadio Huachipato-CAP Acero, Talcahuano
Capacity10,500
ChairmanVictoriano Cerda
ManagerGustavo Álvarez
LeaguePrimera División
2023CPD, 12th of 16
WebsiteClub website

Huachipato has twice become Chilean champions, and it is the first and to date, only team from Southern Chile to win the Chilean top flight title. Huachipato is known in Chile from its academy and youth talent production that makes up the bulk of their squad,[2] qualifying for the U-20 Copa Libertadores twice, both times as reigning youth Chilean champions.[3]

History

In 1947, CD Huachipato was officially notarized, and the first official recorded game was played. The original fans were the local company employees of the steel industry in Huachipato. It took a few years for the club to achieve its first successes, obtaining regional championships in 1956 and 1964.

In its early seasons, "the Steelers" (Acereros), as they are known, were quite satisfactory in the second division. The 1965 debut was against Municipal de Santiago with a 3–0 victory.

After 36 games the standings would show Huachipato second with 46 points, 3 points less than that of Ferrobádminton another second-division team that took the championship and thus passage (which is how it was granted in those years) to the First Division.

However, a year later (1966), the Steelers managed promotion to the first division, after winning the second division champions Chile with 49 points, they remained well above teams like Coquimbo (42 points) and San Antonio (39) who stayed with the second and third place respectively after thirty games.

With only two years in the professionalism of Talcahuano, Huachipato was installed in the top-flight professional football in Chile, La Primera División.

With a tie on a goal, as local and against Audax Italiano, the "Steelers" debuted in the first division. In the first season of the first division, Huachipato had an acceptable term in sixth place among 18 teams, although the tournament was on two wheels. The following years were quiet for steel, culminating their shares in the mid-high zone of the standings. However, a few years after this change, Huachipato won the 1974 First Division Football Championship, with this triumph they are the only Chilean Football team from the south of Chile to obtain the title.

1974 was a year that many Huachipato fans will never forget, after 34 matches played, Huachipato had to beat Aviación to become champions in their last match, and they did it, Moisés Silva scored the only goal that crowned Huchipato champions that year.

Since then the club has never won any other title, but it has always caused difficulties for the big teams when playing against Huachipato, especially in the Estadio Las Higueras, their former home ground.

From the end of the 1990s, Huachipato was characterized by a club trainer of players from lower divisions. Examples of these are important values steelmakers who emerged from the quarry as Roberto Cartes, Cristian Uribe, Rodrigo Rain, Cristián Reynero, Rodrigo Millar, Mario Salgado, Héctor Mancilla, Gonzalo Jara, Pedro Morales, Mauricio Arias, among others.

As for sporting achievements, reached the Semi-Finals in the Torneos Apertura in the years 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2006. In addition, since the end of the 1990s, the Huachipato classification achieved an international tournament and the Copa Sudamericana 2006 and their second championship in 38 years, after defeating Unión Española in the 2012 Chilean Clausura Tournament final.

Team Colours and Symbols

From its foundation in 1947 and until 1966, Huachipato wore a red shirt, blue pants and white socks uniform in the same vein as the Chile national football team. Upon Huachipato's first promotion to the top flight in 1967, the team switched to its current black and blue uniform, inspired by Inter Milan's colours.[4]

Huachipato's name is derived from the Mapudungun eponomyous term that coined the area where the team is located, with the term meaning "Bird-catching trap".[5]

Huachipato's badge was inspired by the Steelmark logo owned by the American Iron and Steel Institute, bearing a similarity to the NFL's Pittsburgh Steelers logo, given both teams steelmaking roots.[6]

Data and Honours

Club Data

Honours

South American cups history

Season Competition Round Country Club Home Away Aggregate
1975 Copa Libertadores Group 2 Chile Unión Española 0–0 2–7 2nd Place
Bolivia The Strongest 4–2 0–1
Bolivia Jorge Wilstermann 4–0 0–0
2006 Copa Sudamericana First Round Chile Colo-Colo 1–2 2–1 3–3 3-5p
2013 Copa Libertadores Group 8 Brazil Fluminense 1–3 1–1 3rd Place
Brazil Grêmio 1–1 2–1
Venezuela Caracas 1–2 4–0
2014 Copa Sudamericana First Round Bolivia San José 3–1 3–2 6–3
Second Round Ecuador Universidad Católica 2–0 0–1 2–1
Round of 16 Brazil São Paulo 2–3 0–1 2–4
2015 Copa Sudamericana First Round Paraguay Olimpia 0–2 0–2 0–4
2020 Copa Sudamericana First Round Colombia Pasto 1–0 1–0 2–0
Second Round Uruguay Fénix 1–1 1–3 2–4
2021 Copa Sudamericana
First Round Chile Antofagasta 3–0 1–0 4–0
Group A Argentina San Lorenzo 0–3 1–0 2nd Place
Argentina Rosario Central 1–1 0–5
Paraguay 12 de Octubre 0-0 2-1

Club Records

Other sports

Up until 2015, Huachipato was a multisports club, maintaining basketball, karate, taekwondo, artistic roller skating, roller hockey, tennis, table tennis, volleyball, and futsal branches.

Supporters and Rivalries

Huachipato's supporters, nicknamed the Acereros, largely come from its home city of Talcahuano, with groups of fans coming from cities belonging to the Greater Concepción conurbation. A smaller group of fans reside in Santiago, often attending away games.

Huachipato's main rivals are Naval, who are also based in Talcahuano and with whom Huachipato contest the Clásico Chorero , and Deportes Concepción, from the neighbouring city and regional capital, with whom Huachipato contest the Clasico del Gran Concepción.[7]

Huachipato and O'Higgins F.C. have a longstanding mutual friendship, originating from the Tomé tragedy of 2013, where 16 travelling O'Higgins fans tragically lost their lives in a road accident in Tomé, while returning from Estadio CAP after a 2-0 O'Higgins victory.[8] In every fixture played between both teams since, both clubs organize a memorial ceremony previous to each match. Huachipato installed a permanent commemorative plaque at Estadio CAP in 2018, in remembrance of the tragedy,[9] and since 2022, both clubs symbolically contest the Copa 16 (Trophy of the 16), in honour of the departed fans.[10]

Players

Current squad

Current squad of Huachipato as of 19 August 2023 (edit)
Sources: ANFP Official Web Site

No. Position Player
2  CHI DF Antonio Castillo
4  CHI DF Benjamín Gazzolo
5  CHI DF Nicolás Ramírez
6  CHI MF Claudio Sepúlveda
8  URU MF Gonzalo Montes
10  VEN FW Brayan Palmezano
11  ARG FW Pablo Magnín
12  CHI GK Martín Parra
13  ARG DF Renzo Malanca
14  CHI MF Carlo Villanueva
15  CHI FW Maximiliano Rodríguez
16  CHI MF Carlos Lobos
17  CHI DF Nicolás Baeza
No. Position Player
18  CHI DF Joaquín Gutiérrez
19  CHI FW Jorge Oyarzún
20  CHI MF Jimmy Martínez
21  ARG FW Julián Brea
22  CHI FW Juan Ignacio Figueroa
23  PAR FW Cris Martínez
24  CHI DF Guillermo Guaiquil
25  CHI GK Gabriel Castellón
26  CHI DF Bastián Roco
29  CHI MF Claudio Torres
30  CHI MF Martín Velázquez
31  CHI DF Maximiliano Gutiérrez
34  CHI MF Felipe Loyola

Manager: Gustavo Álvarez

Youth Academy

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 Chile CHI Ignacio Mella
DF Chile CHI Diego Vázquez
DF Chile CHI Lucas Velásquez
DF Chile CHI Dilan Varas
DF Chile CHI Raúl Muñoz
DF Chile CHI Martín Velásquez
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Chile CHI Benjamín Martínez
MF Chile CHI Benjamín Ampuero
MF Chile CHI Matías Saavedra
MF Chile CHI Ignacio Morales
MF Chile CHI Franco Astudillo
FW Chile CHI Alexis Mancilla

In

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
12 GK Chile CHI Martín Parra (back from Universidad de Chile)
35 DF Chile CHI Felipe Loyola (loan from Fernández Vial)
DF Chile CHI Yahir Salazar (loan from Universidad de Chile)
MF Chile CHI José Molina (back from Concepción)
MF Chile CHI César Valenzuela (back from Everton)
No. Pos. Nation Player
14 MF Chile CHI Carlo Villanueva (from Colo-Colo)
FW Chile CHI César Huanca (back from Coquimbo Unido)
FW Argentina ARG Mateo Acosta (from Brown de Adrogué)
21 FW Argentina ARG Julián Brea (from Sarmiento)
11 FW Argentina ARG Pablo Magnín (from Melgar)

Out

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 Chile CHI Yerko Urra (to Temuco)
DF Chile CHI Osvaldo González (to Universidad de Concepción)
DF Chile CHI Yahir Salazar (back to Universidad de Chile)
DF Chile CHI Juan Córdova (to Ñublense)
MF Chile CHI Álvaro Garrido (to Cabrero)
MF Bolivia BOL John García (to The Strongest)
MF Chile CHI José Molina (to Linares)
MF Argentina ARG Marcelo Cañete (back to Universidad de Chile)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Chile CHI Javier Altamirano (to Estudiantes)
FW Argentina ARG Juan Sánchez Sotelo (to La Serena)
FW Argentina ARG Luciano Nequecaur (to Venados)
FW Chile CHI Nicolás Silva (to Rodelindo Román)
FW Ecuador ECU Denilson Ovando (to Gualaceo)
FW Argentina ARG Mateo Acosta (to San Martín Tucumán)
FW Chile CHI César Huanca (to Coquimbo Unido)

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 Chile CHI José Tomás Martínez (loan to General Velásquez)
DF Chile CHI Dylan Aravena (loan to Fernández Vial)
MF Chile CHI Walter Estrada (loan to Fernández Vial)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Chile CHI Diego Bravo (loan to Fernández Vial)
MF Chile CHI César Valenzuela (loan to San Felipe)
FW Argentina ARG Walter Mazzantti (loan to Huracán)

Managers

In Italics, the caretaker managers of Huachipato. In bold, the managers who won a title with Huachipato.

References

  1. "Se viene el quinto equipo con estadio propio en el fútbol profesional chileno" [Soon, the fifth Chilean club with its own ground in professional football] (in Spanish). Santiago: Encancha. 4 March 2023. Retrieved 22 August 2023. In Chilean professional football, only 4 teams own their own ground, Colo Colo (Estadio Monumental), Universidad Católica (San Carlos de Apoquindo), Unión Española (Santa Laura) y Huachipato (CAP de Talcahuano).
  2. ""Línea de sucesión": el plan que fortalece a Huachipato" [" Succession line", the plan that strengthens Huachipato]. chile.as.com (in Spanish). Diario AS. 28 February 2023. Retrieved 20 August 2023.
  3. "Huachipato y O'Higgins, dos ejemplos a imitar" [Huachipato and O'Higgins, examples to be followed]. elagora.net (in Spanish). El Agora. 15 June 2023. Retrieved 20 August 2023.
  4. "El origen de los colores de los clubes de Primera División" [The origins of the colours of Chilean top flight football clubs]. asifuch.cl (in Spanish). Asifuch. 7 September 2020. Retrieved 20 August 2023.
  5. "El origen de los nombres de los clubes chilenos" [The origins of Chilean football names]. economiaynegocios.cl (in Spanish). La Tercera. 10 December 2016. Retrieved 20 August 2023.
  6. "Las 11 cosas que no puedes dejar de conocer sobre el nuevo campeón del fútbol chileno" [11 Things to know about the new Chilean football champions]. latercera.com (in Spanish). La Tercera. 10 December 2012. Retrieved 20 August 2023.
  7. ""Chorero", "Huaso", "Universitario" y más: Los partidos clásicos del fútbol chileno que tienen nombre "oficial"" ["Chorero", "Universitario", "Huaso" and more: Chilean football's derby matches with an "official" name]. encancha.cl (in Spanish). Encancha. 12 October 2022. Retrieved 20 August 2023.
  8. "La emotiva trastienda del duelo entre Huachipato y O'Higgins" [The emotional backstory of the fixture between Huachipato and O'Higgins]. eltipografo.cl (in Spanish). El Tipografo. 4 March 2014. Retrieved 20 August 2023.
  9. "Tremendo gesto: Huachipato rindió homenaje con una placa en el CAP a los 16 hinchas fallecidos de O'Higgins" [Inmmense gesture, Huachipato honours 16 departed O'Higgins supports with plaque at Estadio CAP]. biobiochile.cl (in Spanish). Publimetro. 27 October 2018. Retrieved 20 August 2023.
  10. "Amistad de O'Higgins y Huachipato suma un nuevo capítulo: honrarán a los 16 hinchas fallecidos en Tomé" [Friendship between O'Higgins and Huachipato adds a new chapter, honouring the 16 departed fans]. biobiochile.cl (in Spanish). Radio Bío-Bío. 2 February 2023. Retrieved 20 August 2023.

Further reading

  • Gatica Wierman, Héctor (2019). Almanaque del Fútbol Chileno. Clubes. Santiago: Hueders.
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