Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

CD Tenerife

Spanish association football club


Spanish association football club

FieldValue
clubnameTenerife
imageCD Tenerife logo.png
fullnameClub Deportivo Tenerife, S.A.D.
nicknameTete
Chicharreros
Tinerfeños
Blanquiazules
founded
groundEstadio Heliodoro Rodríguez López
capacity22,824
chairmanFelipe Miñambres
chrtitlePresident
managerÁlvaro Cervera
mgrtitleHead coach
league
season
position
website
pattern_b1_tenerife2425h
pattern_sh1_tenerife2425h
pattern_so1_tenerife2425hl
leftarm1FFFFFF
body1FFFFFF
rightarm1FFFFFF
shorts10000bc
socks1FFFFFF
pattern_b2_tenerife2425a
pattern_sh2_tenerife2425a
pattern_so2_tenerife2425al
leftarm2141e35
body20b3662
rightarm2141e35
shorts2141e35
socks2141e35
pattern_la3_tenerife2425t
pattern_b3_tenerife2425t
pattern_ra3_tenerife2425t
pattern_sh3_tenerife2425t
pattern_so3_tenerife2425tl
leftarm3fb2468
body3fb2468
rightarm3fb2468
shorts3fb2468
socks3fb2468
current2024–25 CD Tenerife season

Chicharreros Tinerfeños Blanquiazules

Club Deportivo Tenerife, S.A.D. is a Spanish football club based in Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Tenerife, in the Canary Islands. Founded in 1922, the club plays in the , holding home matches at the Estadio Heliodoro Rodríguez López, with a 22,824-seat capacity. The traditional home colours are white shirts and blue shorts.

Tenerife has a history playing in the top flight of La Liga. They have been promoted to the top tier on four occasions, including a 10-year stint from 1989 to 1999. The club managed to finish as high as fifth in the league table on two occasions during that period, which qualified them for the first round of the UEFA Cup. They most recently played in La Liga in the 2009–10 season.

Being based in the Canary archipelago off the Atlantic coast of Africa, while playing its away games on the Spanish mainland, both the club and rival Las Palmas from Gran Canaria are two of the most geographically isolated professional clubs. Tenerife and Las Palmas contest the Canary Islands derby.

History

Club Deportivo Tenerife was founded in 1922. La Liga started in 1928, but the team played in regional divisions until it was promoted to the Segunda División in 1953. It first reached the top flight in 1961, being immediately relegated back and, in the following 27 years, played almost exclusively in the second level, also spending three years in Tercera División and six – five in a row – in Segunda División B, the newly created division three (in 1978).

In 1985 when Tenerife were relegated to the third division for a second time, Javier Pérez became president of the club. The side was promoted this year to the second level and, two years later, returned to the first, after winning the promotion playoff against Real Betis (4–1 on aggregate).

In 1991, Jorge Valdano took charge of the club as manager, and the Argentine would help deny former side Real Madrid of two consecutive league titles in the last round, to the benefit of Barcelona. In the first season, the Canary Islands outfit barely avoided relegation, but would finish in a best-ever fifth position in the following year, eventually reaching the round of 16 in the subsequent UEFA Cup, losing to Juventus 2–4 on aggregate.

German Jupp Heynckes became head coach of Tenerife in 1995, leading the club to another fifth-placed finish and the quarter-finals of the Copa del Rey. In the 1996–97 UEFA Cup, the islanders fared better, reaching the last-four after defeating Maccabi Tel Aviv, Lazio, Feyenoord and Brøndby (the winner coming late in extra time from an Antonio Mata free-kick), only bowing out to eventual winners Schalke 04.

Club Deportivo Tenerife league performance 1929–present.

Tenerife then went on a downward spiral which eventually led to relegation to the "silver category" in 1999, prompting various managerial changes within the club. In 2001, the club was again promoted, led by Rafael Benítez, who promptly left to take up the manager's job at Valencia; the promotion was achieved in the last match of the campaign thanks to a goal from Hugo Morales.

Pepe Mel became the new trainer but the first division season never took off, as Tenerife were beaten heavily at home by Barcelona 0–6, which cost the manager his job. Javier Clemente, formerly with the Spain national team, took the reins, but could not help prevent the eventual immediate relegation.

Tenerife suffered from serious economic problems in the following years, owing more than €40 million. President Pérez was replaced with Víctor Perez de Ascanio, who resigned due to bad management, leaving his position to Miguel Concepción, who negotiated with local politicians and businessmen, also creating a construction company as a subsidiary of the side.

On 13 June 2009, Tenerife secured a top flight return after a seven-year absence after a 1–0 win at Girona. In the following season, even though the team held on until the last round, another relegation befell, after the 0–1 loss at third-placed Valencia.

2010–11 brought with it three coaching changes, as Tenerife eventually suffered another relegation, returning to the third division after 24 years. On 2 June 2013, the club, led by Álvaro Cervera, returned to the second level after winning the promotion play-off against Hospitalet (3–2 on aggregate).

Tenerife almost achieved promotion to La Liga in 2016-17 and 2021-22 season, but was defeated by both Getafe and Girona at final play-off promotion in their respective season. Tenerife eventually suffered relegation to third division in 2024-25 season, following a 12-years stay in second division.

Seasons

Season to season

SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del Rey
1928–2941ª Reg.2nd
1929–3041ª Reg.2nd
1930–3141ª Reg.2nd
1931–3241ª Reg.1st
1932–3341ª Reg.1st
1933–3441ª Reg.1st
1934–3541ª Reg.1st
1935–3641ª Reg.2nd
1940–4141ª Reg.1st
1941–4241ª Reg.3rd
1942–4341ª Reg.2nd
1943–4441ª Reg.3rd
1944–4541ª Reg.4th
1945–4641ª Reg.1st
1946–4741ª Reg.3rd
1947–4841ª Reg.5th
1948–4941ª Reg.4th
1949–5041ª Reg.1st
1950–5141ª Reg.2nd
1951–5241ª Reg.1st

  • 13 seasons in La Liga
  • 48 seasons in Segunda División
  • 1 season in Primera Federación
  • 8 seasons in Segunda División B
  • 3 seasons in Tercera División

European cup history

SeasonCompetitionRoundCountryClubHomeAwayAggregate
1993–94UEFA CupLast 64FranceAuxerre2–21–03–2
Last 32GreeceOlympiacos2–13–45–5
Last 16ItalyJuventus2–10–32–4
1996–97UEFA CupLast 64IsraelMaccabi Tel Aviv3–21–14–3
Last 32ItalyLazio5–30–15–4
Last 16NetherlandsFeyenoord0–04–24–2
QuarterfinalsDenmarkBrøndby0–12–02–1
SemifinalsGermanySchalke 041–00–21–2

Honours

Domestic

Continental

  • UEFA Cup / UEFA Europa League

Friendly

  • Joan Gamper Trophy
    • Winners (1): 1993

Current squad

Reserve team

Main article: CD Tenerife B

Out on loan

Current technical staff

International players

Notable coaches

Fans

Fans of Tenerife are called Chicharreros because in early days, the inhabitants of a small fishing village called Santa Cruz (later the capital of Tenerife) consumed "chicharros" (Atlantic horse mackerel) as a main part of their diet.

Other inhabitants of Tenerife and the Canary Islands used the moniker as a pejorative name, but finally the inhabitants of Santa Cruz accepted it affectionately.

References

References

  1. "Instalaciones". CD Tenerife.
  2. (5 April 2011). "David Amaral es el nuevo entrenador del Tenerife". [[Diario AS]].
  3. "Jugadores CD Tenerife 24-25". Club Deportivo Tenerife.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about CD Tenerife — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report