Sport Áncash

Sport Áncash
Full name Club Sport Áncash
Nickname(s) La Amenaza Verde, Los Verdes, El Ancash
Founded 1967
Ground Estadio Rosas Pampa, Huaraz
Ground Capacity 18,000
Chairman Peru José Mallqui
Manager Italy Orlando Maltese
League Peruvian Segunda División
2015 eliminated in National Stage

Club Sport Áncash is a Peruvian football club, playing in the city of Huaraz. Sport Áncash was founded on April 22, 1967. The team plays its home games at Rosas Pampa stadium.

History

Beginnings

The club was founded in 1960 by a group of young men from Huaraz and Chacas in Ancash.[Books 1] The team was named Sport Áncash after the street where many of the players lived which disapeared after the 1970 Ancash earthquake. The club was re-established on April 22, 1967 as Club Deportivo Comunitario Laboral Sport Áncash by one of the local labor unions. The club played for many years in the liga distrital de Huaraz. For many years after the earthquake the club was owned by various state and union organizations until 2004 when the future congressman José Mallqui took over as club president.[Web 1]

Significant Copa Perú Campaigns

The club would reach some national recognizion when it reached the national stage of the 1976 Copa Perú. During the first years of the Copa Perú the six regional champions played a round robin tournament in Lima in which the team with the most points was promoted to the Peruvian Primera División. In 1976 Sport Áncash qualified to the final round robin. It reached the last game tied in points against Coronel Bolognesi. They would go on to loose 2–0 and with that loose its chances of reaching the Torneo Descentralizado.[Web 2] Sport Áncash would reach the regional stage in 1998 and 1999 but would not qualify to the national stage until 2000. During the 2000 Copa Perú, the club faced Atletico Grau. They would loose their away game 1–0 and win at home 0–3. Because only points and not goals were taken into consideration a play-off game was played on neutral ground in Lima where the club lost 3–1.

2004 Copa Perú Championship

In 2004 under the leadership of José Mallqui as president and Tito Chumpitaz as coach,[Web 3] Sport Áncash would win the Copa Perú and make it to the Peruvian Primera División for the first time. Sport Áncash and Jose Gálvez both classified to the regional stage that year as departamental champion and runner-up respectively. Even though they were both seeded into different groups they played eachother in the regional final which Sport Áncash won by 1–0. Both teams would also qualify to the national stage were they met again in the quarterfinals. Jose Gálvez won the first leg 4–1 and Sport Áncash the second 3–2. In a neutral play-off in Lima, Sport Áncash beat its departamental rival 1–0 to reach the semifinals. In the semifinals they defeat Sport Alfonso Ugarte with a global score of 3–2. In the finals they defeated one of the oldest teams in the country, Deportivo Municipal, who had qualified as the 2004 Peruvian Segunda División runner-up. Because the Peruvian Segunda División was only played by Lima clubs at the time the Peruvian Football Federation took its promotion berth and had the winner and runner-up automatically qualify to the Copa Perú national stage. The first leg was played in Huaraz and the second in the Estadio Nacional in Lima. Sport Áncash won by a global score of 4–1 and was promoted to the 2005 Torneo Descentralizado season.

Years in Peruvian top-flight

Sport Áncash started its first season in the first division with many of its players from the Copa Perú and with Rafael Castañeda as coach. Its first year it finished 6th in the aggregated table as the best team not qualified to an international tournament. 2006 was not a good year for the club which had to fight to avoid relegation for most of the year. They should have been relegated anyways because of inscription problem with its squad members were it not for a questionable amnisty granted by the Peruvian Football Federation.[Web 4] 2007 was the best year for the club. Sport Áncash finished 3rd during the Torneo Apertura and 6th during the Torneo Clausura only three points away from the tournament champion. Over all it finished 3rd in the league which qualified it for the first international tournament in its history, the 2008 Copa Sudamericana along side Universitario de Deportes. During 2008 the club finished 12th during the Torneo Apertura which saw the coach Jose Torres sacked. With the help of Antonio Alzamendi, Sport Áncash was able to fight for the Torneo Clausura and finish 3rd and 6th in the aggregated table only staying away from another international tournament by goal difference. In 2009 the club was not able to save itself from relegation by finishing 15th in the new 16 teams tournament only one point away from the 14th place occupied by Alianza Atletico. By this time the club owners started accumulating a massive debt which would later bring the club's down fall.

First Segunda Division Era

For the 2010 season the club finished 2nd in its first year in the Peruvian Segunda División behind Cobresol. José Mallqui was joined by Reynaldo Huayaney in an effort to control the massive amount of debt that the club carried over from its bad year in the Torneo Descentralizado. During the 2011 and 2012 seasons the club had two great years tainted by debt which saw it loose 12 points and 4 points respectively at the end of the tournament which brought it down from 2nd to 4th place during both tournaments. In 2013, Sport Áncash was not able to finish the season and the team folded.

Resurgence

In September 2013 the club collapse because of acumulation of debt and was re-launched by Mallqui under the name Sport Áncash Fútbol Club as a way to scape its many acreditors. This team started playing at the second division level in the Liga Distrital de Huaraz. By 2014 the club was once again in the local first division league completing a mediocre campaign. In 2015, Sport Áncash F.C. reached the national stage once again and was defeated in the quarterfinals by Cristal Tumbes. Because of the its good performance it was invited to participate once more in the Peruvian Segunda División after a long financial examination during the 2016 season.

International tournaments

In 2008, in their first international participation, they faced Ñublense of Chile for the Copa Sudamericana. They lost in their visit 1–0 in Concepción and then they won 4–0 in Huancayo. In the second stage they faced Palmeiras of Brazil, being eliminated after drawing 0–0 in Lima and a lost 1–0 in São Paulo.

Rivalries

Sport Áncash has had a long-standing rivalry with José Gálvez. The two clubs have had the distinction of being the only clubs to face each other in the top five levels of the Peruvian football league system and the now defunct domestic cup league, Copa del Inca.[Web 5] Sport Áncash has recently gained a rivalry against Sport Rosario who are also from Huaraz.

Historic Badges

Honours

National

Runner-up (1): 2011
Runner-up (1): 2010
Winners (1): 2004

Regional

Winners (2): 2000, 2004
Runner-up (2): 1998, 1999
Winners (9): 1976, 1981, 1987, 1992, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2004, 2015

Performance in CONMEBOL competitions

2008: Round of 16

Sport Áncash in South America

Season Competition Round Country Club Home Leg Away Leg Aggregate
2008 Copa Sudamericana First Stage Chile Ñublense 4–0 1–0 4–1
Round of 16 Brazil Palmeiras 0–0 1–0 0–1

Current squad 2016

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

No. Position Player
1 Peru GK Marco Rojas
2 Peru DF Ricardo Ramos
3 Peru DF Víctor Cartagena (Captain)
4 Peru DF Giovani Narvarte
7 Peru MF Einer Vásquez
12 Peru GK Alesandro Stein
13 Peru DF Emilio Gutiérrez
14 Peru MF Jean Zalón
No. Position Player
18 Brazil FW Ronaille Calheira
19 Peru MF Jherly Falcón
22 Peru DF David Maguiña
23 Peru FW Sandro Rengifo
24 Peru MF Edgar Blas
25 Peru DF Arcadio Vargas
28 Colombia FW Fabián González
30 Peru MF Clinton Bejarano

See also

References

  1. Noriega Barrón, Misael (2016). Remembranzas Chacasinas (in Spanish). Peru. pp. 75–76.
  1. "HISTORIA DE UN CAMPEON". Facebook (in Spanish). Retrieved 19 November 2016.
  2. Ramirez, Aldo. "Machos Históricos: Te quiero verde en el Callejón". DeChalaca.com (in Spanish). DeChalaca.com.
  3. Mercado, Jose Miguel. "Tito Chumpitaz en Sport Áncash: De vuelta a la cordillera". Dechalaca.com. Dechalaca.com. Retrieved 19 November 2016.
  4. "FPF amnistio a Sport Ancash". Deporte Futbol. blogspot.com. Retrieved 19 November 2016.
  5. Behr, Raul. "De triple categoría". Dechalaca.com (in Spanish). Dechalaca.com. Retrieved 19 November 2016.

External links

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