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Almeria

Spain

Union Deportiva Almeria, S.A.D. (Spanish pronunciation"[u'njon] depor'tib alme'ri.a) is a Spanish football club located in Almeria located in the autonomy community known as Andalusia. The club was established on July 26, 1989, it was known under the name Almeria Club de Futbol until 2001 the year it was changed to Union Deportiva Almeria. The club is currently within the Spanish Primera Division after winning the Segunda Division title in 2022 and play their home games in the 15,274 seat capacity Estadio de Los Juegos Mediterraneos.

1. History

First football team in Almeria was established around 1909, el Almeria Foot-Ball Club. Since then, a variety of Almeria football clubs have appeared and vanished. One of the clubs is AD Almeria, a team that was a part of La Liga between 1979-81, then vanished in 1982 and was perhaps UD Almeria's precursor.

A team named Almeria Club de Futebol was founded, however in 2001 it was renamed Union Deportiva Almeria. On January 19, 2001, Mayor of Almeria Santiago Martinez Cabrejas made it clear in the city council the club UD Almeria was created following the merger of two teams from the city - Polideportivo Almeria and Almeria CF. However, UD Almeria was not official until June 28, 2001 the day that Almeria CF approved at the General Meeting of Shareholders the change of name. After one season of play as a second division team it was moved into the third division and fourth divisions.

After a few seasons at the second division, Almeria side was first moved to the top league after finishing second during the season 2006/07. After impressive performances such like the away victory against Deportivo de La Coruna 3-0 in the opening La Liga match, the team finished 8th position in the 2007-08 season. In charge of the team was the coach Unai Emery, while striker Alvaro Negredo was the top scorer in the team by scoring thirteen goals.

After Emery was transferred to Valencia CF, Gonzalo Arconada took over, but was fired on the 21st day of December 2008 after an uncharacteristic string of results but never reaching the top three. Mexican Hugo Sanchez took the role, and performed little better, with the final position in mid-table.

In the 2010-11 season, Almeria reached the semifinals of the Copa del Rey for the first time in history. However, in the league Almeria was eliminated after a four-year stint in the top division and in November 2010 the coach Juan Manuel Lillo was fired following a loss of 0-8 at home to FC Barcelona (precisely the team that defeated Andalusians Andalusians in the last four of the domestic cup by the same margin however, on the aggregate) His replacement Jose Luis Oltra met the same fate in April 2011. Oltra was later replaced with Roberto Olabe.

After two seasons at the second division, Almeria returned to the principal class in Spanish football on the 22nd of June 2013, following a 2-0 win over Girona FC in the play-offs. After the departure of the manager Javi Gracia from the club, the team hired their former manager and player from the reserve team at the time, Francisco Javier Rodriguez Vilchez.  The team did manage to make it through in 2013-14 and finish 16th.

Francisco was dismissed in December 2014 after just two points of 24 and was replaced later with Juan Ignacio Martinez. "JIM" was also ineffective until April of 2015 and, even under the new coach Sergi Barjuan the team was dropped when they finished 19th.

For the season 2018-19, Almeria was able to escape the hard-fought battle for permanence in the Segunda Division until the last matches , just like the previous 3 seasons. This time , they were closer to the play-offs for promotion towards La Liga, and finished 10th of the 22 teams who were involved.

2 August 2019 Turki Al-Sheikh was appointed the club's owner taking over from Alfonso Garcia Gabarron. He named Mohamed El Assy as general director. He also appointed Dario Drudi as sports director, who succeeded Miguel Angel Corona, and manager Oscar Fernandez was replaced by Pedro Emanuel. On the 5th of November, 2019, it was announced that Guti was replacing Emanuel. On June 26, 2020 Guti was dismissed and was replaced with Mario Silva, who was himself replaced by Jose Gomes on 27 July.

The club was officially established in August of 2021. UD Almeria (Mohamed El Assy) and the Ayuntamiento de Almeria (Ramon Fernandez-Pacheco Monterreal) reached an agreement on the leisure of operating of the municipally-owned Estadio of the Juegos Mediterraneos for a period of 25 years. The club was promoted to first division in June of 2022. got promotion to the first division getting a first place finish in the table, and a 2nd position on the final game in the league after a period of seven years in the second division.

2. Season to season

Season Level Division Place Copa del Rey
1989–90 5 Reg.Pref 1st  
1990–91 5 Reg.Pref 3rd  
1991–92 5 Reg.Pref 2nd  
1992–93 4      
1993–94 3 2ª B 11th Fourth round
1994–95 3 2ª B 2nd Second round
1995–96 2 16th Second round
1996–97 2 17th Second round
1997–98 3 2ª B 7th First round
1998–99 3 2ª B 18th  
1999–2000 4 4th  
2000–01 3 2ª B 11th  
2001–02 3 2ª B 3rd  
2002–03 2 18th Round of 32
2003–04 2 13th Round of 32
2004–05 2 16th Second round
2005–06 2 6th First round
2006–07 2 2nd Third round
2007–08 1 8th Round of 32
2008–09 1 11th Round of 16
2009–10 1 13th Round of 32
2010–11 1 20th Semi-finals
2011–12 2 7th Round of 32
2012–13 2 3rd Round of 32
2013–14 1 17th Round of 16
2014–15 1 19th Round of 16
2015–16 2 18th Round of 32
2016–17 2 15th Second round
2017–18 2 18th Second round
2018–19 2 10th Round of 32
2019–20 2 4th First round
2020–21 2 4th Quarter-finals
2021–22 2 1st Round of 32
2022-23 1    

3. Current squad

As of 19 July 2022

No. Pos. Nation Player
3 DF Spain ESP Iván Martos
4 MF Spain ESP Íñigo Eguaras
5 MF Argentina ARG Lucas Robertone
6 MF Spain ESP César de la Hoz (captain)
7 FW Spain ESP Juan Villar
8 MF Spain ESP Francisco Portillo
9 FW Nigeria NGA Umar Sadiq
10 MF Spain ESP Curro Sánchez
11 FW Portugal POR Dyego Sousa
12 DF Spain ESP Juanjo Nieto
13 GK Spain ESP Fernando (vice-captain)
15 DF Spain ESP Sergio Akieme
16 MF Spain ESP José Carlos Lazo
17 MF Spain ESP Alejandro Pozo
19 DF Brazil BRA Rodrigo Ely
No. Pos. Nation Player
20 DF Spain ESP Álex Centelles
21 DF Spain ESP Chumi
22 DF Serbia SRB SrÄ‘an Babić
26 MF Spain ESP Arnau Puigmal
30 MF Portugal POR Samú Costa
31 FW England ENG Arvin Appiah
32 MF Belgium BEL Largie Ramazani
33 GK Spain ESP Diego Fuoli
DF Spain ESP Arnau Solà
DF France FRA Houboulang Mendes
DF Brazil BRA Kaiky
MF Portugal POR Gui Guedes
MF Slovakia SVK Martin Šviderský
FW Serbia SRB Marko Milovanović

 

3.1. Reserve team

 

No. Pos. Nation Player
29 DF Spain ESP David Cuenca
34 FW Spain ESP Carlos Rojas
35 DF Spain ESP Aitor Puñal
36 MF Spain ESP Mamadou Sylla
37 FW Spain ESP Carlos Gilbert

3.2. Other players under contract

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK Serbia SRB Dragan Rosić
DF Serbia SRB Nikola Maraš
FW Spain ESP Jordi Escobar

3.3. Out on loan

No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Spain ESP Dani Albiar (at Cartagena B until 30 June 2023)
MF Spain ESP Javi Robles (at Fuenla until 30 June 2023)
FW Uruguay URU Cristian Olivera (at Boston River until 30 June 2023)
FW Uruguay URU Juan Manuel Gutiérrez (at Nacional until 30 June 2023)

4. Technical staff

Position Staff
Head coach Spain Rubi
Assistant coach Spain Jaume Torras
Fitness coach Spain Víctor Fortes
Fitness coach Spain Xabi Gil
Goalkeeping coach Spain Ricardo Molina
Goalkeeping coach Spain Diego Tuero
Analyst Spain Manel González

5. Notable players

Note: This list includes players who have played for at-least 100 league matches and/or who have earned international status.

  • Algeria Sofiane Feghouli
  • Argentina Hernán Bernardello
  • Argentina Pablo Piatti
  • Argentina Óscar Ustari
  • Argentina Diego Valeri
  • Brazil Diego Alves
  • Brazil Paulo Jamelli
  • Brazil Felipe Melo
  • Brazil Michel Macedo
  • Burkina Faso Jonathan Zongo
  • Cameroon Modeste M'bami
  • Chile Hans Martínez
  • Chile Lorenzo Reyes
  • Colombia Fabián Vargas
  • Republic of the Congo Thievy Bifouma
  • Croatia Mate Bilić
  • Denmark Michael Jakobsen
  • Equatorial Guinea Sena
  • Hungary Ferenc Horváth
  • Israel Tomer Hemed
  • Netherlands Sander Westerveld
  • Nigeria Ramon Azeez
  • Nigeria Kalu Uche
  • Paraguay Diego Barreto
  • Paraguay Peque Benítez
  • Peru Santiago Acasiete
  • Peru Miguel Rebosio
  • Portugal Hélder Barbosa
  • Portugal Nélson Marcos
  • Romania Constantin Gâlcă
  • Serbia and Montenegro Veljko Paunović
  • Spain Bruno 
  • Spain Álvaro Cervera
  • Spain Juan Cervián
  • Spain Corona
  • Spain Albert Crusat
  • Spain Esteban
  • Spain Esteban Navarro
  • Spain Francisco
  • Spain Carlos García
  • Spain Julio
  • Spain López Rekarte
  • Spain Luna
  • Spain Mané
  • Spain Álvaro Negredo
  • Spain José Ortiz
  • Spain Juanma Ortiz
  • Spain Juan Portillo
  • Spain Raúl Sánchez
  • Spain Fernando Soriano
  • Spain Ángel Trujillo
  • Spain Verza
  • Spain Aleix Vidal
  • Eritrea Henok Goitom
  • Thailand Teerasil Dangda
  • Venezuela Julio Álvarez
  • Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Ivica Barbarić

6. Uniform

Period Kit Manufacturer Sponsors
2001–07 Cejudo Obrascampo
2007–08 UDA
2008–10 None1
2010–12 Rasán Urcisol
2012–19 Nike
2019–20 Adidas Arabian Centres
2020–22 Puma
2022– Castore TBA

7. Honours

  • Segunda División: 2021–22

8. See also

  • UD Almería B – Almería's B team
  • AD Almería
  • List of managers
  • List of statistics