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Pontevedra CF


FieldValue
clubnamePontevedra
imagePontevedra CF.png
upright0.65
altlogo
fullnamePontevedra Club de Fútbol, S.A.D.
nicknamePontevedriña
Ponte
Os Granates
O Hai que Roelo
Atila rey de los hunos
founded
groundPasarón, Pontevedra,
Galicia, Spain
capacity10,500
chairmanLupe Murillo
chrtitlePresident
mgrtitleHead coach
managerRubén Domínguez
league
season
position
website
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pattern_sh1_adidaswhite
pattern_so1_3_stripes_white
leftarm1660000
body1660000
rightarm1660000
shorts100529F
socks1660000
pattern_la2pattern_b2=_adidas_condivo_16_white
pattern_sh2_adidaswhite
pattern_so2_3_stripes_white
leftarm2CDC9C9
body2CDC9C9
rightarm2CDC9C9
shorts2CDC9C9
socks200529F

Ponte Os Granates O Hai que Roelo Atila rey de los hunos Galicia, Spain Pontevedra Club de Fútbol, S.A.D. is a Spanish football team in Pontevedra, in the autonomous community of Galicia. Founded on 16 October 1941 it currently plays in , holding home matches at Estadio Municipal de Pasarón, with a capacity of 10,500 seats.

Having enjoyed its heyday in the 1960s, it even reached the First Division, leading it during November and December 1965.

History

Pontevedra Club de Fútbol was founded in 1941, following the merge of the two top teams in the city at the time: Eiriña CF and Alfonso XIII CF. The first president of the new club was Fernando Ponte Conde.

In the 1959–60 season, in the last few games of the season, Pontevedra defeated Burgos 3–1 in the Estadio Municipal de Pasarón. Pontevedra then beats an unknown team 2-0 and in the final game, beat León 1–0 in extra time leading them to promotion to the Segunda Division.

Pontevedra promoted to La Liga in 1963 but was relegated a year after, managing to play again in the top flight between 1965 and 1970. During this time the fans coined the motto Hai que roelo, in reference to the difficulties rival teams had when playing a strong side, who achieved a seventh place in 1966, adding an eighth two seasons later; midfielder Ignacio Martín-Esperanza and forwards Neme and Roldán were among the stars of this era, and years following the 1972–73 season saw the team more often than not struggling in lower categories, well into the 2000s.

Pontevedra returned to the Segunda División after 20 years on 27 June 2004, after winning their Segunda División B group and defeating Lorca Deportiva CF on the final day of the playoffs. The team struggled in their one year back in national professional football, finishing dead last but winning 4–1 at home in their final fixture against fellow relegated team UD Salamanca.

On 23 January 2007 Pontevedra was transformed into a Sociedad Anónima Deportiva (sporting Joint stock company), as required by Spanish law – this was a general measure introduced in order to revitalise the financial situation of professional football clubs. Yet, some risked disappearance as they could not face the cost involved in this transformation from "private" to "stock company". In the club's case this was made possible after then president, Nino Mirón, had purchased 52 per cent of the stock options; the club then added the letters "S.A.D." to its official name.

In 2010–11, Pontevedra had the stated aim of returning to the second tier, but following an economic crisis that saw them sell Brazilian star Igor de Souza, the team were relegated to the Tercera División for the first time in 27 years; relegation was sealed with a 5–1 home defeat to CD Guadalajara. Four years later, the team bounced back, winning their group before defeating Haro Deportivo 3–1 on aggregate in the play-off final.

Season to season

SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del ReySecond roundFourth roundFirst roundRound of 32
1942–433Serie A3rd
1943–4434th
1944–4536th
1945–4633rd
1946–4731st
1947–4831st
1948–4938th
1949–5039th
1950–5139th
1951–5235th
1952–53312th
1953–54312th
1954–5532nd
1955–5636th
1956–57315th
1957–584Serie A2nd
1958–5939th
1959–6031st
1960–6125th
1961–6229th

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SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del ReySecond roundFirst roundSecond roundFirst roundSecond roundFirst roundThird roundSecond roundSecond roundSecond roundFirst round
1982–8341st
1983–8441st
1984–8532ª B7th
1985–8632ª B9th
1986–8732ª B6th
1987–8832ª B5th
1988–8932ª B6th
1989–9032ª B10th
1990–9132ª B14th
1991–9232ª B9th
1992–9332ª B13th
1993–9432ª B5th
1994–9532ª B4th
1995–9632ª B12th
1996–9732ª B9th
1997–9832ª B10th
1998–9932ª B12th
1999–200032ª B7th
2000–0132ª B14th
2001–0232ª B4th
SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del ReyPreliminary roundRound of 64Round of 32Second roundFirst roundRound of 32First roundFirst roundFirst roundFirst roundFirst roundSecond round
2002–0332ª B4th
2003–0432ª B1st
2004–05222nd
2005–0632ª B2nd
2006–0732ª B1st
2007–0832ª B2nd
2008–0932ª B12th
2009–1032ª B4th
2010–1132ª B18th
2011–1244th
2012–1345th
2013–1444th
2014–1541st
2015–1632ª B9th
2016–1732ª B4th
2017–1832ª B14th
2018–1932ª B6th
2019–2032ª B9th
2020–2132ª B7th / 3rd
2021–2242ª RFEF1st

|}

SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del ReyRound of 32Round of 16Second round
2022–2331ª Fed.19th
2023–2442ª Fed.2nd
2024–2542ª Fed.1st
2025–2631ª Fed.

|}

  • 6 seasons in La Liga
  • 9 seasons in Segunda División
  • 2 seasons in Primera Federación
  • 36 seasons in Segunda División B
  • 3 seasons in Segunda Federación/Segunda División RFEF
  • 26 seasons in Tercera División
  • 2 seasons in Categorías Regionales

Current squad

Reserve team

Main article: Pontevedra CF B

Honours/achievements

  • Segunda División: 1962–63, 1964–65
  • Segunda División B: 2003–04, 2006–07
  • Segunda Federación: 2021-22, 2024–25
  • Tercera División: 1946–47, 1947–48, 1959–60, 1975–76, 1981–82, 1982–83, 1983–84, 2014–15
  • Copa Federación de España: 2007, 2018
  • Best results in La Liga: 7th in 1965–66, 8th in 1967–68

Colours and crest

The traditional colours of Pontevedra are burgundy shirt, blue shorts and burgundy socks. However, during certain periods white shorts and blue socks were also used, and even a blue and burgundy ribboned shirt for a short period of time.

The current colours are the traditional, with the crest of the club on the left upper part of the shirt. The name of the sponsor (if any) is normally placed in the centre of the shirt.

The crest is a fusion between the coat of arms of the city of Pontevedra and a football, displaying the name of the city/club and the letters "CF". The club has an official mascot called Roélio, a walking bone dressed in the club colours who is a direct reference to the club's motto.

Stadium

Pontevedra plays at the Estadio Municipal de Pasarón. With a 105x68 meters playing field, it was built in 1956 and was partially refitted for the 1982 FIFA World Cup celebrated in Spain; it did not hold any actual games in the tournament, but it benefitted from the general funds allocated to the refurbishment of football stadiums.

The stadium used to have a capacity for 16,500, including standing spectators. However, UEFA regulations dictated that all attendants must be seated and, therefore, the stadium went under re-construction. – regardless, Pasarón was also in need of a general refurbishment, overdue since 1982. The works were completed for the 2010–11 season, with the new capacity being of 10,500 spectators.

Pasarón is located in the north side of the city (north to Lérez River), at Rúa de Luis Otero s/n, 36005. The stadium is owned by the local city council, the Concello de Pontevedra.

Famous players

References

References

  1. Lomholt, Isabelle. (2013-12-09). "Estadio Pasaron, Pontevedra Building, Spain".
  2. The closest English idiom for ''Hai que roelo'' would possibly be "you have to bite the bullet". That is to say, "you have to bite the bullet if you want to defeat Pontevedra". A literal translation would be "one has to gnaw it".
  3. (6 April 2020). "E o gañador é... Pontevedra-Lorca do ano 2004, o ascenso a Segunda División". Pontevedra Viva.
  4. (13 June 2015). "El último trago del Pontevedra profesional". Faro de Vigo.
  5. ''Ley del Deporte 10/1990'', 15 October 1990
  6. ''Real Decreto 1251/1999''; Sociedades Anónimas Deportivas, 16 July 1999
  7. (8 May 2011). "El Pontevedra desciende a Tercera 27 años después". Marca.
  8. (27 June 2015). "En directo: Pontevedra 3- Haro 0, el ascenso a Segunda División B". La Voz de Galicia.
  9. "Pontevedra CF » Squad 2025/2026". WorldFootball.
  10. "Estadio".
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.

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