C.A. Progreso

Progreso
Full name Club Atlético Progreso
Nickname(s) Gauchos del Pantanoso
Gauchos, Los de La Teja
Founded 30 April 1917
Ground Parque Abraham Paladino
Montevideo, Uruguay
Ground Capacity 8,000
Chairman Gabriel Franco
Manager Gabriel Añón
League Uruguayan Segunda División
2014–15 13th

Club Atlético Progreso, also known simply as Progreso, is a football club based in Montevideo, Uruguay. Progreso currently plays in the nation's Segunda División. The team's red and yellow striped kit emulates the Catalan flag. Progreso's Parque Abraham Paladino stadium is capable of holding 8,000 spectators.

History

The club was founded on April 30, 1917. In 1989, Progreso won the Uruguayan Primera División, the only championship in the history of the Uruguayan league to use a single round-robin format (13 games). This format was due to a calendar conflict with some national and international cups that year. Progreso's president at that time was Dr. Tabaré Vázquez, who was later the president of Uruguay from 2005 to 2010.

Progreso's first team kit in 1917 was white with black stripes. The kit expressed the team's affinity with the anarchist movement. The colors were later changed to red and yellow, the colors of Catalonia, which was known for its identification with the Spanish Revolution.

Titles

Professional Era (1): 1989
1985
1942, 1979, 2006
1938, 1939, 1956, 1963, 1975, 1978

Performance in CONMEBOL competitions

1987: First Round
1990: Second Round

Current squad

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 Uruguay GK Jorge Rodríguez
2 Uruguay DF Danilo Suárez
3 Uruguay DF Carlos Canobbio
4 Uruguay DF Alex Silva
5 Uruguay MF Walter Fernández
6 Uruguay DF Diego Valerio
7 Uruguay MF Rodrigo Guarteche
8 Uruguay MF Fabián Canobbio
9 Uruguay FW Sebastián Gaitán
10 Uruguay MF Maximiliano Lombardi
11 Uruguay MF Federico Millacet
12 Mexico GK Guillermo Iriarte
13 Uruguay DF Pedro Taborda
No. Position Player
14 Brazil MF João Facco
15 Uruguay MF Javier Martínez
16 Uruguay MF Marcelo Tapia
17 Uruguay MF Gastón Nicolatti
18 Uruguay FW Fabián Morais
19 Uruguay FW Federico Aguilera
20 Uruguay FW Atilio Alvez
-- Uruguay MF Lucas Fernández
-- Uruguay MF Rafael Tabárez
-- Uruguay MF Nelson Echeñique
-- Uruguay MF Rodrigo Guarteche
-- Uruguay MF Guillermo Applet
-- Uruguay FW Gustavo Alles

Managers

References

    External links

    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.