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Reus Deportiu

Reus Deportiu

FieldValue
clubnameReus Deportiu
imageReus Deportiu logo.jpg
imagesize150px
fullnameReus Deportiu
founded1909
groundPavelló del Reus Deportiu,
Reus, Catalonia, Spain
capacity2,500
chairmanMonica Balsells
leagueM: OK Liga
W: OK Liga Femenina
season2016–17 (M)
2016–17 (W)
position2nd
3rd (promoted)
pattern_la1_red_stripespattern_b1=_redstripespattern_ra1=_red_stripes
leftarm1000000body1=000000rightarm1=000000shorts1=000000socks1=000000

Reus, Catalonia, Spain W: OK Liga Femenina 2016–17 (W) 3rd (promoted) Reus Deportiu is a Catalan sports club best known for its professional roller hockey team based in Reus, Catalonia, Spain.

History

CD Reus was founded on 23 November 1909 after the dissolution of Reus Sport Club. On 29 September 1917, the club merged with Club Velocipedista and SC Olímpia becoming the multi-sports club Reus Deportiu. In 1951, Reus Deportiu was restructured into two independent entities: CF Reus Deportiu, entirely dedicated to football, and Reus Deportiu, for the rest of the sections. Apart from the roller hockey team, which plays in the OK Liga, it also has athletics, basketball, chess, rhythmic gymnastics, hiking, karate, artistic roller skating, rugby, table tennis and tennis sections.

Reus enjoyed its golden era between 1967 and 1973, winning six European Cups in a row, four Spanish Leagues and four national Cups. One decade later, it won the 1983 national Cup and Supercup and the 1984 Cup Winners' Cup.

The club had to wait nearly two decades for its next trophies, the CERS Cup in 2003 and 2004. In subsequent years Reus won its sixth national cup in 2006, the World Championship in 2008 and its seventh European League in 2009 plus the consequent Continental Cup and Intercontinental Cup.

In 2011, Reus Deportiu achieved its eighth OK Liga in 2011, 38 years after their last title of the national League. On 14 May 2017, Reus conquered its eighth European League, exactly 50 years after the first one in the history of the club.

Women's team

In addition to these achievements, Reus Deportiu created a women's section in 2007 that would get a vacant berth in the women's OK Liga in 2011, but would resign to continue in the first division two years later, due to the financial problems of the club.

Six years later, the club came back after finishing in the third position of the Nacional Catalana and the resigns of HC Borbolla and CP Coslada to promote.

Season to season

Women's team

SeasonTierDivisionPos.Copa de la Reina
2009–102Nacional12th
2010–112Nacional4th
2011–121OK Liga6thSemifinalist
2012–131OK Liga5thSemifinalist
2013–142Nacional3rd
2014–152Nacional11th
2015–162Nacional10th
2016–172Nacional3rd
2017–181OK Liga13th
2018–191OK Liga12th

|}

Trophies

2009 Intercontinental Cup winners
  • Campeonato de España: 2
    • 1947, 1952.
  • Liga Nacional: 3
    • 1965–66, 1966–67, 1968–69.
  • OK Liga: 5
    • 1969–70, 1970–71, 1971–72, 1972–73, 2010–11.
  • Copa del Rey: 6
    • 1966, 1970, 1971, 1973, 1983, 2006.
  • Supercopa de España: 2
    • 2006, 2019.
  • European Cup/Champions League: 8
    • 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 2009, 2017.
  • CERS Cup : 2
    • 2003, 2004.
  • Cup Winners Cup : 1
  • Continental Cup/European Super Cup: 1
  • World Club Championship: 1
  • Intercontinental Cup: 1
  • Catalan Championships: 1
  • Little World Cup: 1

Presidents

  • Joan Solé Anguera 1909–1913
  • Josep Balsells Bofarull 1913–1916
  • Pere Barrufet Puig 1916–1917
  • Salvador Bonet Marsillach 1917–1918
  • Joaquim Gibert Gras 1918–1919
  • Joan Martorell Alegret 1919–1920
  • Josep Valls Fonts 1920–1922
  • Joan Domenech Mas 1922–1924
  • Josep Llop Martorell 1926–1928
  • Antoni Martí Bages 1929–1933
  • Agustí Esteve Fabregat 1933–1934
  • Joan Busquets Crusat 1934–1942
  • Josep Castellà Baró 1942–1943
  • Antoni Sabater Esteve 1943–1948
  • Francesc Llevat Rosell 1948–1952
  • Baldomer Pamies Jové 1953–1957
  • Antoni Sabater Roca 1957–1959
  • Josep Maria Massó Coll 1959–1966
  • Francesc Llevat Rosell 1966–1970
  • Joan Domenech Mas 1970–1971
  • Valero Camps Simó 1971–1973
  • Andreu Olest Cabrito 1973–1977
  • Joan Basora Musté 1977–1986
  • Pere Vinaixa Ollé 1987–1995
  • Joan Sabater Escudé 1995–2011
  • Mònica Balsells Pere 2011–present

References

References

  1. "Història del CF Reus Deportiu". CF Reus Deportiu.
  2. (26 May 2011). "El Tecnol Reus gana la Liga OK 38 años después". As.com.
  3. (14 May 2017). "4-1. El Reus Deportiu logra su octava Copa de Europa". Mundo Deportivo.
  4. (29 July 2011). "El Reus Deportiu ocupará la plaza del Claret en la OK Liga femenina}}{{dead link". Hockey Asturias.
  5. (12 June 2013). "El Reus Deportiu renuncia a la OK Liga femenina". Hockey Global.
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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