9 de Octubre F.C.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
9 de Octubre
Full name9 de Octubre Fútbol Club
Nickname(s)Octubrinos (Octobrines)
El Equipo Patriota (The Patriot Team)
Super 9 (Super Nine)
La Máquina Celeste y Blanco (The Sky Blue and White Machine)
Octubristas (Octobrists)
FoundedAugust 25, 1912; 111 years ago (1912-08-25), as Club Sport 9 de Octubre
GroundEstadio Modelo Alberto Spencer
Guayaquil, Ecuador
Capacity40,000
ChairmanBolívar Malta
ManagerJuan Carlos León
LeagueSerie B
202216th (Relegated from Serie A)
WebsiteClub website

9 de Octubre Fútbol Club, simply referred to as Nueve (9) de Octubre, is a sports club based in Guayaquil, Ecuador. The club is best known for its football team.[1]

Founded in 1912, the club's name commemorates the date the city of Guayaquil declared their independence from Spain (October 9).

History[edit]

The club was founded on August 25, 1912 as a football club called Club Sport 9 de Octubre, although it was refounded on April 18, 1926 as a multi-sport club called 9 de Octubre.

During its amateur years, the football team won two Guayas tournaments in 1940 and 1946. The team turned professional in 1962, and participated in the national championship that same year. The following year, the club was runner-up in the professional Guayas tournament. In 1965, the team was national runner-up, which allowed them to participate in their first Copa Libertadores. They achieved back-to-back runners-up in 1983 and 1984, and is seen as the peak of the club's football success. Since then, the team has descended in the Ecuadorian football league system to the third level of football, the Segunda Categoría.

The team had a total of a 22 years being stuck in the Segunda Categoria but they made their return to the Ecuadorian Serie B after being 2nd placers in the Segunda Categoria Tournament

In 2020 they won the Serie B officially returning to Ecuador's top division after 25 years of absence and will compete in Liga Pro Serie A in 2021.

Honors[edit]

Domestic

Amateur

  • Campeonato Amateur del Fútbol de Guayaquil
    • Champions (2): 1940, 1946

Players[edit]

Current squad[edit]

  • As of 5 March 2022.

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 DF Ecuador ECU Kevin Becerra
4 DF Uruguay URU Darwin Torres
7 MF Uruguay URU Joaquin Verges
8 DF Ecuador ECU Márcos Cangá
9 FW Ecuador ECU Walberto Caicedo
10 MF Ecuador ECU Gabriel Cortez (On loan from Barcelona S.C.)
11 FW Ecuador ECU Carlos Garcés (On loan from Barcelona S.C.)
12 GK Paraguay PAR Ruben Escobar
14 MF Ecuador ECU Renny Jaramillo
15 MF Ecuador ECU Marco Mosquera
16 MF Ecuador ECU José Luis Cazares
17 MF Ecuador ECU Joan Cortez
18 MF Ecuador ECU Flavio Caicedo
19 DF Ecuador ECU Orlin Quiñónez
20 MF Ecuador ECU Jefferson Montero
21 DF Ecuador ECU Nixon Follaco
23 DF Ecuador ECU Kevin Peralta
No. Pos. Nation Player
24 DF Ecuador ECU Geovanny Nazareno
25 DF Ecuador ECU Manuel Lucas
26 MF Ecuador ECU John Medina
27 MF Ecuador ECU Jardel Cortez
30 GK Ecuador ECU Jorge Pinos
31 DF Ecuador ECU Glendys Mina
32 GK Ecuador ECU Lenín Usca
37 MF Ecuador ECU Alex Carrera
38 MF Ecuador ECU Éder Cetré
40 DF Ecuador ECU Wilmer Meneses
41 MF Ecuador ECU Kevin Arroyo
49 FW Ecuador ECU Joao Paredes
70 MF Panama PAN Ricardo Phillips
77 MF Uruguay URU Mauro Da Luz
MF Mexico MEX Érick Sámano
FW Panama PAN Newton Williams

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Ecuador - Club 9 de Octubre - Results, fixtures, squad, statistics, photos, videos and news - Soccerway". us.soccerway.com. Retrieved 2022-04-11.

External links[edit]