Montevideo Wanderers F.C.
Full name | Montevideo Wanderers Fútbol Club | |||
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Nickname(s) | Bohemios, Vagabundos | |||
Founded | 15 August 1902 | |||
Ground | Estadio Viera, Montevideo | |||
Capacity | 11,000 | |||
Chairman | Fernando Nopitsch | |||
Coach | Gastón Machado | |||
League | Primera División | |||
2014–15 | 11th | |||
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Montevideo Wanderers Fútbol Club, usually known simply as Wanderers is a Uruguayan football club based in Montevideo. The club are currently members of the Primera División and play at the Estadio Viera. As well as football, the club also has teams playing basketball, volleyball, athletics, futsal, pool and pelota.
History
Montevideo Wanderers was officially established in 1902 by a group of students and several young players of the Albion, led by the Sardeson brothers. The brothers had travelled from Montevideo to England to see their parents during the 1890s. At the time, Wolverhampton Wanderers won the FA Cup. The new club were named after the Wolves team, and because they had no home ground.
They joined the Primera División in 1903, winning it in 1906 and 1909. In 1908 they won the Copa de Honor and the Copa de Honor Cousenier. They won the Copa de Honor for a second time in 1910, before going on to win the Copa Cusenier again in 1912.
In 1923 the club also began entering a team in the league created by the breakaway Uruguayan Football Association. They won the league in its first season. During this period they also won the Copa Río de la Plata in 1924, defeating Independiente.
In the 1930s, club made several successful tours to Brazil, Argentina, Peru and Chile, and played against some European teams, like Chelsea. In 1931 the club won the last amateur Uruguayan league, whilst In 1937 they won the Torneo de Honor.
By the end of the 1940s the club was suffering from financial problems, and to avoid bankruptcy several of their best players – including Obdulio Varela and José María Medina – were sold. In 1961 they were relegated to the second tier. Although they returned to the Primera División, they were relegated again in 1966. In 1969 the club left Montevideo and moved to Las Piedras.
They returned to both the Primera División and Montevideo in 1974, qualifying for the Copa Libertadores in their first season back in the top division.
The club suffered further financial problems in the 1990s, and were relegated at the end of the 1998 season. They returned to the Primera División again in 2001.
Rivalries
Montevideo Wanderers has had a long-standing rivalry with Defensor Sporting, and more recently with River Plate. In the early days of the amateur era, the direct rival was Rampla Juniors. During their time in the second division, Wanderers's main rival was Fénix.
Stadium
The club had more than four home grounds during its first 30 years, including Liverpool's current stadium, Estadio Belvedere. Additionally, the club has suffered from several periods of homelessness, though none during the play-off season. Its current home stadium is Estadio Viera located in the Prado neighbourhood of Montevideo.
Team colours
The club originally wore brown shirts with a sky blue horizontal band, the former kit of Uruguay Athletic, where Sardeson brothers started playing football. These shirts were sent as a gift by the board of that club. Between 1900 and 1902 the club played in blue and white stripes, white shorts and black socks. In 1902 Wanderers changed to their current black and white stripes as a homage to the Argentine club Estudiantes de Buenos Aires in recognition of their friendship. For some time, in the 1960s, Wanderers used white socks and shorts.
The first away shirts were white with a black horizontal stripe. After 1940 Wanderers used red or green shirts until 1980, when a black jersey with a white horizontal stripe appeared. In 1994, Wanderers used a white shirt with small black squares. In 1995, Wanderers changed their away kit, adopting a red and blue halves shirt in homage the Albion uniform. In 2000 they switched to black shirts with white sleeves, returning to red shirts in 2001.
Uniform evolution
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Honours
Domestic
- Primera División: (4)
- 1906, 1909, 1923,[1] 1931
- Copa Competencia: (5)
- 1906, 1908, 1911, 1917, 1918
- Copa de Honor: (2)
- 1908, 1910
- Torneo Competencia: (2)
- 1987, 1990
- Torneo de Honor: (1)
- 1937
- Copa Montevideo: (1)
- 1981
- Liguilla Pre-Libertadores de América: (2)
- 1987, 2001
- Segunda División: (4)
- 1952, 1962, 1972, 2000
International
- 1908
- Tie Cup: (3)
- 1911, 1917, 1918
Current squad
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Managers
- Óscar Tabárez (Jan 1, 1985 – Dec 31, 1985)
- Gregorio Pérez (Jan 1, 1987 – Dec 31, 1987)
- Daniel Carreño (July 1, 1999 – June 30, 2001)
- Santiago Ostolaza (Jan 1, 2002 – May 20, 2002)
- Daniel Carreño (Jan 1, 2005 – Dec 31, 2006)
- Diego Aguirre (Jan 1, 2007 – June 11, 2007)
- Jorge Miguel Goncalves (July 1, 2007 – April 15, 2008)
- Salvador Capitano (Jan 1, 2009 – Dec 31, 2009)
- José Alberto Rossi (Dec 16, 2009 – March 15, 2010)
- Daniel Carreño (March 3, 2010 – Dec 31, 2011)
- Alfredo Arias (Dec 12, 2011–15)
- Gastón Machado (201?–)
References
- ↑ From 1922 to 1925 the Uruguayan Football was divided in two organisations: Uruguayan Football Association (AUF), recognised by FIFA, and the dissident Uruguayan Football Federation (FUF), of which Wanderers was one of the founders and competed in the three tournaments organised by that federation in 1923, 1924 and 1925 (not finished). Those championships are not recognised by the AUF.)