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UD Salamanca


FieldValue
clubnameSalamanca
imageFile:UD Salamanca logo.svg
upright0.7
fullnameUnión Deportiva Salamanca, S.A.D.
nicknameCharros
Unionistas
founded
dissolved
groundEstadio Helmántico
capacity17,341
leagueUnregistered
season2012–13
position2ª B – Group 1, 8th
pattern_b1_thinblackstripes
pattern_so1_blacktop
leftarm1FFFFFF
body1FFFFFF
rightarm1FFFFFF
shorts1000000
socks1FFFFFF
pattern_b2_thinwhitestripes
pattern_so2_whitetop
leftarm2000000
body2000000
rightarm2000000
shorts2FFFFFF
socks2000000
pattern_la3_whiteborder
pattern_b3_whitecollar
pattern_ra3_whiteborder
leftarm3ff0000
body3ff0000
rightarm3ff0000
shorts3ff0000
socks3ff0000

Unionistas Unión Deportiva Salamanca, S.A.D. () was a historical Spanish football team based in Salamanca, in the autonomous community of Castile and León.

Founded on 9 February 1923 and nicknamed Los Charros, the club played in white shirts and black shorts, holding home games at Estadio Helmántico, which seated 17,341 spectators.

History

Initially formed by Irish students, Salamanca first played in early Spanish championships in 1907, before an official league was founded later on. On 16 March 1923, at the tables of Café Novelty, situated in the Plaza Mayor, Dionisio Ridruejo set the club's early official foundations and, from 1939 and during the following three decades, it fluctuated between the third and the second levels of the Spanish football league.

In the 1974–75 season, Salamanca made its La Liga debuts, overachieving for a final 7th position (out of 18 teams), which eventually would be its best classification ever. The team lasted in the topflight until 1981, mainly coached by José Luis García Traid, then returned the following year for a further two seasons, being further relegated to Segunda División B – the new third division created in 1977 – in 1984–85, and spending three years in that category before promoting back.

In 1994–95's second division, after finishing fourth in the league, Salamanca lost the first leg of the promotion/relegation playoffs against Albacete Balompié, 0–2 at home, but won 5–0 away, returning to the main level after eleven years. The club was managed by 29-year-old Juan Manuel Lillo, also in charge for the following season, as the Castile and León club ranked 22nd and last in the top level.

From 1999 onwards (with two more visits to the first division, with 15th and 20th-place finishes respectively), Salamanca stabilized in the second level, save for the 2005–06 season spent in the third division, with the club winning the regular season and promoting in the playoffs. Veteran Quique Martín was arguably the most important player of the club in the decade, whilst Argentine Jorge D'Alessandro, who held the record for most games in the top division in the club's history, worked with the team as a manager in a further two spells (three in total).

2010–11 brought a club record ten consecutive defeats between December 2010/February 2011, and two coaching changes, as Salamanca returned to the third division after five years. On 18 June 2013, 90 years after its foundation, the club was liquidated due to the accumulation of unpaid debts.

Club background

  • Unión Deportiva Salamanca - (1923–2013)
  • Salamanca Athletic Club - (2013–2016) did not play in any matches
  • Salamanca Club de Fútbol UDS - (2013-)
  • Unionistas de Salamanca Club de Fútbol - (2013-)

Season to season

SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del ReyGroup stageFirst roundFirst roundFirst roundFirst roundFirst roundSecond roundFifth roundFirst roundFirst round
1935–363Regional
1939–4025th
1940–4127th
1941–4222nd
1942–4328th
1943–4433rd
1944–4531st
1945–46213th
1946–4732nd
1947–4831st
1948–4932nd
1949–5024th
1950–5122nd
1951–5227th
1952–53213th
1953–54215th
1954–5532nd
1955–5631st
1956–5731st
1957–5833rd

|}

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  • 12 seasons in La Liga
  • 34 seasons in Segunda División
  • 9 seasons in Segunda División B
  • 19 seasons in Tercera División

Last squad

Numbers taken from the official website: www.udsalamanca.es and www.lfp.es

Honours / Achievements

Players

*See *

References

References

  1. "El Café y su historia". Café Novelty.
  2. "Nuevas equipaciones 09–10". UD Salamanca.
  3. (13 February 2011). "El Nàstic sale del descenso y mete al Salamanca". [[Marca (newspaper).
  4. (29 May 2011). "El Salamanca certifica su descenso en pleno festival culé". Marca.
  5. (18 June 2013). "UD Salamanca goes bust". [[Diario AS]].
Info: Wikipedia Source

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