San Martín de San Juan

San Martín (San Juan)
Full name Club Atlético San Martín
Nickname(s) Verdinegro, Santo
Founded 27 September 1907 (1907-09-27)
Ground Estadio Ingeniero Hilario Sánchez, San Juan, Argentina
Ground Capacity 25,286
Chairman Pablo Slavutzky
Manager Pablo Lavallen
League Primera División
2015 17th
Website Club home page

Club Atlético San Martín, mostly known as San Martín de San Juan, is an Argentine football club from the city of San Juan. The team currently plays in the Primera División, the first division of the Argentine football league system.

History

San Martín has only played two seasons in the Argentine top flight. Its first appearance was in the 1970 Nacional championship, finishing bottom of the group after winning only four of 20 games. The squad gained the promotion to the first division for the third time during the 2010–11 season, after beating Gimnasia y Esgrima (LP) 1–0 and later 1–1 on aggregate in the play-off for the second automatic promotion place. The team was relegated during the 2013 Torneo Final.

Current squad

Current squad of San Martín de San Juan as of February 20, 2016 (edit)
Sources: Argentine Soccer

No. Position Player
1  ARG GK Luis Ardente
2  ARG DF Francisco Mattia
4  ARG DF Javier Capelli
5  ARG MF Marcos Gelabert
6  ARG DF Matías Escudero
7  ARG MF Daniel González
8  ARG MF Matías Fissore
9  ARG FW Javier Toledo
10  ARG MF Lucas Salas
11  ARG FW Leandro Barrera
12  ARG GK Leonardo Corti
14  ARG DF Daniel Franco
15  ARG DF Franco Lazzaroni
16  ARG DF Maximiliano Lugo
No. Position Player
19  ARG MF Juan Daniel Galeano
20  CHI MF Emilio Hernández
21  ARG GK Federico Urraburo
22  ARG FW Joaquín Molina
23  ARG MF Emiliano Agüero
24  ARG MF Emmanuel Martínez
25  ARG DF Pablo Aguilar
26  ARG DF Matías Sarulyte
27  ARG MF Gustavo Villarruel
28  COL DF Mauricio Casierra
29  VEN MF Michael Covea
31  ARG FW Emanuel Dening
32  ARG MF Ezequiel Montagna
35  ARG MF Nicolás Pelaitay

Manager: Pablo Lavallén

Managers

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to San Martín de San Juan.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, April 15, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.