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Brujas F.C.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Brujas
Full nameBrujas Fútbol Club
Nickname(s)Hechiceros
Founded2004
Dissolved2011
GroundEstadio Jorge "Cuty" Monge
Desamparados, Costa Rica
Capacity5,500

Brujas F.C. was a Costa Rican football club, based in Desamparados, Costa Rica.

The name Brujas translates to Witches. The team's home town used to be Escazú, known around the country as "La ciudad de las Brujas" or "The Witches' Town", but the franchise later transferred to Desamparados. The team was dissolved in July 2011.

History

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A.D. Guanacasteca

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The club was founded in 2004 as Brujas de Escazú when they took over the Asociación Deportiva Guanacasteca (A.D. Guanacasteca or ADG)[1] licence to play in the Primera División de Costa Rica. Guanacasteca, known as Los Pamperos, were founded on 3 March 1973[2] as Nicoya F.C.[3] but were renamed when they made their debut in the second division in 1974; they were once more renamed Sociedad Deportiva Guanacasteca in 2001.[4] Guanacasteca were crowned Second Division champions 4 times, in 1975, 1985, 1995 and 2002.[2]
In 2005, ADG was reestablished after buying Ciudad Colón's second division franchise.

Brujas de Escazú

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The newly founded team was subsequently moved from Nicoya, where they played at the Estadio Chorotega, in Guanacaste to Escazú[5] in an attempt to get more support from fans. Club president Percy Chamberlain kept Uruguayan manager Hernán Fernando Sosa, who had taken Guanacasteca to 4th place in the previous season, at the helm but he was eventually dismissed in September 2004[6] and replaced by compatriot Carlos Blanco on an interim basis and later Manuel Keosseián.[7] By June 2005, the team had signed one of the best coaches from the 2004 tournament, Colombian coach Carlos Restrepo[8] and they played in the National Stadium of Costa Rica. In September 2005, Chamberlain was replaced as president of the club by former Saprissa president Mínor Vargas[9] and Restrepo was released from his managerial duties in May 2007[10] and club president Mínor Vargas replaced him with Mauricio Wright,[11] who was a member of Costa Rica's 2002 World Cup national team.

Brujas F.C.

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In summer 2007, the club moved again to play at the Estadio Jorge "Cuty" Monge in Desamparados[12] and were renamed Brujas F.C. In December 2009 Brujas won the Invierno 2009 championship after beating Puntarenas in the final, which was the first to be decided on penalties in 38 years.[13]

Wright was replaced by Luis Torres in May 2010[14] and in November 2010 club president Vargas resigned after it was claimed his company Grupo Ícono not only owned Brujas but also the then recently from the premier division expelled Barrio México.[9] Vargas was arrested in the United States for alleged fraud with the PCI company in January 2011[15] and was found guilty to seven counts of fraud and three counts of money laundering in April 2012[16] and sentenced to 60 years in prison in October 2012.[17]

In April 2011 the club's franchise was transferred to Orión, who continued to play at the Cuty Monge stadium,[18] and acquired by Spaniard Juan Luis Hernández Fuertes.[4] Hernández was later acquitted of charges pressed by the Vargas family over bad checks.[19]

The club's supporters were known for using the now infamous phrase, Menores de lo que pensábamos (Smaller than we thought) as their official motto.

Honours

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Domestic

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Championship Invierno 2009

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List of players and coaching staff who won the Costa Rica First Division National Soccer Championship on December 28, 2009.

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 Costa Rica CRC Luis Diego Sequeira
2 DF Costa Rica CRC Roy Smith
3 DF Costa Rica CRC Luis Pena
5 MF Costa Rica CRC Osman López
7 MF Costa Rica CRC Paolo Jiménez
8 MF Costa Rica CRC Danny Fonseca
9 MF Costa Rica CRC Pablo Brenes
10 MF Costa Rica CRC Yosimar Arias
11 MF Costa Rica CRC Allan Alemán
12 GK Costa Rica CRC Dany Carvajal
13 MF Costa Rica CRC Maykol Ortiz
14 MF Costa Rica CRC Rodolfo Rodríguez
16 DF Costa Rica CRC Jameson Scott
18 MF Costa Rica CRC Andrés Barquero
20 FW Argentina ARG Lucas Gómez
21 DF Costa Rica CRC Keilor Soto
23 DF Costa Rica CRC Tray Bennette (Captain)
25 FW Costa Rica CRC Daniel Jiménez
No. Pos. Nation Player
27 DF Costa Rica CRC Héiner Mora
29 DF Costa Rica CRC Esteban Maitland
30 GK Costa Rica CRC Warner Hernández
32 MF Costa Rica CRC Randy Cubero
DF Costa Rica CRC Berny Peña
DF Costa Rica CRC James Scott
DF Costa Rica CRC Derrick Johnson
DF Costa Rica CRC Jason Scott
DF Costa Rica CRC Ariel Soto
DF Costa Rica CRC Brandón Poltronieri
DF Costa Rica CRC Sergei James
MF Costa Rica CRC Marlon Arias
MF Costa Rica CRC Daniel Varela
GK Costa Rica CRC Norberto Bonilla
FW Costa Rica CRC Bryan Vega
FW Costa Rica CRC Cristhiam Lagos
FW Costa Rica CRC Sergio Hernández
FW Costa Rica CRC Mynor Escoe
FW Costa Rica CRC Olman Vargas

History

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In a long-awaited match for the Costa Rican soccer fans, because after the 1964 campaign in which the Carmen FC team defeated Club Sport Uruguay de Coronado, there have been no finals without one of the 3 biggest in this league, Liga Deportiva Alajuelense, Club Sport Herediano and Deportivo Saprissa. The match began at 7:05 p.m. with an excited Buenos Aires team that went happily to the front but to no avail, because the first actions of real danger occurred until approximately 25 minutes later, and until 37 minutes when Luis Lara beat the defense but the ball crashed into the vertical. In the second half the "shark" team got tired of wasting goals and the "sorcerers" went all out on the attack but there were no goals, the first leg final was very lackluster especially because Brujas FC was not the overwhelming team that it was before the Municipal Pérez Zeledon and Liberia Mía, everything is defined on Monday, December 28, 2009, at 2:00 p.m.

The return leg was played at the Jorge Hernán "Cuty" Monge Stadium in a hotly contested game that welcomed 5,500 people seated even in the yellow zones and perhaps a little more fans, and at least 150 more than They stayed outside the stadium. The game was played too much in the first few minutes, so much so that Puntarenas FC took the lead in the 13th minute through Luis Lara, in a first half that did not leave much to talk about.

In the second half at minute 46' Daniel "naughty" Jiménez tied the game in a dressing room goal and would leave it that way until the end. The team from Desamparadeño won on penalties 5–4 with the failure of Josimar Arias for Brujas FC and Mario Viquez together with Bryan Zamora for Puntarenas FC. With this Brujas FC earned their first star on their shield, in other words their first national title.

Historical list of coaches

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  • Uruguay Hernán Fernando Sosa (2004)
  • Uruguay Carlos Blanco (September 2004)
  • Uruguay Manuel Keosseián (September 2004 – March 2005)
  • Colombia Carlos Restrepo (June 2005 – May 2007)
  • Costa Rica Mauricio Wright (May 2007 – May 2010)
  • Costa Rica José Luis Torres Mora (May 2010 – April 2011)

References

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  1. ^ Alejandro Fonseca Hidalgo (12 January 2010). "Otro nombre y mismas deudas" (in Spanish). diarioextra.com. Archived from the original on 28 August 2010. Retrieved 13 September 2011.
  2. ^ a b ADG" se reorganiza – Nación (in Spanish)
  3. ^ Liberia le celebra a su equipo Archived 2015-02-21 at the Wayback Machine – UNAFUT (in Spanish)
  4. ^ a b Juan Luis Hernández toma control de Brujas Archived 2015-02-18 at the Wayback Machine – Nación (in Spanish)
  5. ^ Brujas es un hervidero Trasladarse de Nicoya a Escazú aumentó penurias a jugadores Archived 2015-04-02 at the Wayback Machine – Nación (in Spanish)
  6. ^ Sosa fuera de Brujas – Nación (in Spanish)
  7. ^ Banquillos movidos Sosa sustituyó a De Toro en Puntarenas y Keosseián dirigirá al Brujas – Al Día (in Spanish)
  8. ^ Negociación relámpago en Escazú Restrepo salió de Pérez y ahora es técnico del Brujas – Nación (in Spanish)
  9. ^ a b Vargas dice que se retira de su función de dirigente – Nación (in Spanish)
  10. ^ Restrepo quedó fuera de Brujas – Nación (in Spanish)
  11. ^ Brujas confirma a Mauricio Wright en el banquillo – Nación (in Spanish)
  12. ^ Brujas a Desamparados Archived 2015-04-02 at the Wayback Machine – Nación (in Spanish)
  13. ^ Brujas es el Campeón Nacional de Invierno – Nación (in Spanish)
  14. ^ Brujas abre Concacaf en casa – Nación (in Spanish)
  15. ^ Minor Vargas fue arrestado en EE. UU. por supuesto fraude – Nación (in Spanish)
  16. ^ Minor Vargas declarado culpable de fraude – Nación (in Spanish)
  17. ^ 60 años de cárcel para Minor Vargas – Nación (in Spanish)
  18. ^ Franquicia del Brujas FC será cedida por 5 años Archived 2015-02-18 at the Wayback Machine – Nación (in Spanish)
  19. ^ Absuelven a Juan Luis Hernández de acusación de Minor Vargas Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine – Al Día (in Spanish)