C.S. Uruguay de Coronado
Full name | Club Sport Uruguay de Coronado | |||
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Nickname(s) | Los Josefinos El Cuadro Lechero | |||
Founded | 3 January 1936 | |||
Ground | Estadio Municipal El Labrador, Coronado, Costa Rica | |||
Capacity | 2,500 | |||
Chairman | Freddy Campos | |||
Manager | Marco Antonio Herrera | |||
League | Liga de Ascenso | |||
Apertura 2023 | 3° - Group B | |||
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C.S. Uruguay de Coronado is a Costa Rican football club that competes in the Costa Rican Segunda División.
History
[edit]Founded 3 January 1936, they were named after the first FIFA World Cup champions, Uruguay. They changed their first club colors, red and black like Alajuelense, to the yellow and black of Uruguayan giants Peñarol and made their Primera División debut in 1950.[1] In 1961, they became runner-up to champions El Carmen,[2] when the big clubs left the Federación Costarricense de Fútbol and founded their own ASOFUTBOL league and the title was contested between three clubs only: Carmen, Uruguay de Coronado and Gimnástica Española. However, the ASOFUTBOL teams returned to the league and only Uruguay retained their place in the top tier.
In 1963, they surprisingly won the league with players like "Caballo" Otárola, "Camarón" Padilla, Luis Chacón, Carlos Luis "Piche" García and Rodrigo "Riguín" Sandoval.[3]
They played in the Primera División from 1988 until relegation in 1992. Uruguay returned to the top flight in summer 2012.[4]
Stadium
[edit]Club Sport Uruguay plays its home games at the El Labrador Municipal Stadium, which bears that name in honor of San Isidro Labrador, Patron Saint of the Cantón of Vázquez de Coronado.
The stadium is located about 250 meters south of the Church of San Isidro de Coronado (central district of the canton). It has a capacity for 2,500 seated people (approximately); its grass is synthetic with a striped design (it was the first with this design in Costa Rica) and has great drainage capacity.
It is municipal property and is under the administration of Club Sport Uruguay since 12/01/2014, thanks to an agreement signed between both parties.
On September 21, 2008, the team said goodbye to the stadium's natural grass, to make way for a high-quality synthetic grass. An eight-lane athletics track was also installed around the pitch and a gymnasium for club and public use. It is currently receiving other works in its infrastructure and has plenty of space around where it is planned to place more bleachers to increase its capacity.
Honours
[edit]National
[edit]- 1963
- 1949, 1960, 1967–68, 1986–87, Clausura 2011
- 1940
Current squad
[edit]As of June 7, 2023
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Championship 1963
[edit]List of players and coaching staff who won the Costa Rica First Division National Soccer Championship on November 3, 1963.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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References
[edit]- ^ Uruguay Archived 2014-08-08 at the Wayback Machine – UNAFUT (in Spanish)
- ^ Costa Rica 1961 – RSSSF
- ^ Que Santos no sea un nuevo Brujas – Al Día (in Spanish)
- ^ Uruguay gana el ascenso a Primera División – Nación (in Spanish)