Club Atlético Nueva Chicago
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Full name | Club Atlético Nueva Chicago | ||
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Nickname(s) | Torito, Verdinegro | ||
Founded | 1 July 1911 | ||
Ground | Estadio Nueva Chicago Mataderos, Buenos Aires |
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Capacity | 28,500 | ||
Chairman | Sergio Ramos | ||
Manager | Rene Kloker | ||
League | Primera División | ||
2015 | 26° (relegated) | ||
Website | Club home page | ||
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Nueva Chicago is an Argentine sports club based in Mataderos, a neighborhood in the west side of Buenos Aires, formerly called "Nueva Chicago". Club's nickname, El Torito (The Little Bull) is an allusion to 1930s legendary boxer Justo Suárez, known as El Torito de Mataderos (The Little Bull of Mataderos).
The club is mostly known for its football team, that currently plays in the Primera B Nacional, the first division of the Argentine football league system. Other sports practised at the club are basketball, boxing, field hockey, futsal, handball, roller skating and volleyball.
History
On July 1, 1911, a group of young people from 15 to 30 years old, met in a public park, more specifically on the wooden bridge located in the corner of Tellier and Francisco Bilbao Streets, to form a football team. The name chosen was "Los Unidos de Nueva Chicago",[1] naming Pedro San Martín as President, along with Felipe Maglio as Vice-President. The club's activities started on an empty lot located behind a slaughterhouse.
There were many proposals to define the team colors. Some wished to adopt the colors from Alumni, red and white; others suggested to use Racing Club colors, light blue and white. During their discussion, a truck loaded with bundles which had green and black colors went pass the Campana (today Crovara) Avenue. Those colors were immediately adopted as club colors.
The club executives worked intensively in getting a field where to play. Alejandro Morh, a Mercado de Hacienda manager, donated the land where the first field was established. But it lasted a short time due to the flood waters that cross under the field. Nueva Chicago was given a land on Tellier and Francisco Bilbao Avenues. The team played there from 1912 to 1920.
The third field was located on Piedrabuena and Campana (currently Eva Perón) avenues. That was the field where Chicago played its first games in Primera División and opened in June 1920 when the team defeated Huracán by 2–0. In this field, Nueva Chicago would also win the Copa de Competencia Jockey Club in 1933, its first title in Primera División. When football became professional in Argentina, the Football Association did not authorise to play official matches there, so Nueva Chicago had to play in other stadiums. Three years later the land were expropriated to build a hospital.
The first time Chicago promoted to Primera División was in 1930, when winning the Primera B title after disputing a championship playoff with All Boys and Temperley.[2] Chicago debuted in the Asociación Amateurs Argentina de Football (the amateur rival league of the professional Liga Argentina de Football) in 1931, playing there until 1935 when the LAF merged with the professional league, being all its teams relegated to second division. In 1932 Chicago played a relegation playoff with Sportivo Buenos Aires and Sportivo Palermo (which would be finally relegated to second division due to points average).[3] One year later the team made a great campaign, finishing 2nd after champion Sportivo Dock Sud with only 3 losses over 19 matches played.[4]
In 1933 Nueva Chicago won its first official title, the last edition of the Copa Competencia Jockey Club, a traditional national cup established 1907. The team made a great campaign, arriving to the final unbeaten with 3 matches won (to Estudiantes (BA), Sportivo Barracas and Sp. Buenos Aires) and 2 draws. Nueva Chicago won the title defeating Banfield by 1–0 at the final, played at Almagro stadium. The line-up was: Scali; Palacio, Diani; Mercado, Vivanco, Fernández; Berlanga, Noguera, Vargas, Gagliano, Sanabria.[5][6][7]
In 1937 Nueva Chicago was relegated to the second division after Banfield defeated Excursionistas. Then president of the club Amadeo Cozza made an agreement with Sportivo Buenos Aires so the team hosted their home games at that stadium, then located in Almagro, Buenos Aires. By 1939 Nueva Chicago played its home games at All Boys stadium. That same year the club made the arrangements to get a new field where to build a stadium. The Municipality of Buenos Aires donated the club a land where a dump had operated. A group of club members and neighborhoods collaborated to level the playing field until it was in conditions to host games. The stadium was inaugurated on October 27, 1940 vs. Sportivo Buenos Aires, which was defeated by 2–0. The team celebrated not only the victory but its second local title, the Primera C championship. Nueva Chicago has been playing at that stadium since then.
In 1966 Nueva Chicago was near to promote to Primera División but the team lost the final match to Deportivo Español, remaining in the second division. Nueva Chicago would not play in the top division of Argentine football until 1981, when it won its second Primera B title. The team played 22 matches, with 14 draws and 6 losses. Chicago also scored 66 goals and conceded 40. In Primera División, the team's highlight was an outstanding win against Boca Juniors by 5–0, on November 2, 1983.[8][9] Despite this historic fact, the team was relegated at the end of the season.
Nueva Chicago remained in lower divisions until 1991 when the team promoted to Primera B Nacional defeating Gimnasia y Esgrima de Concepción del Uruguay at playoffs via penalty shoot-out (association football). In 2001 the squad promoted to Primera División for the second time in club's history after defeating Instituto de Córdoba 3–2 in the Estadio Chateau Carreras with an attendance of 12,000 fans that celebrated the goal scored by Oscar Gómez in the last minute of the match, after running 50 metres with the ball.[10]
Nueva Chicago played in the top division of Argentine football until 2004 when it was relegated. The third promotion to Primera División was in 2006. At the end of the 2007 season and due to the poor campaign, Nueva Chicago had to play the "Promoción" (a relegation playoff consisting in two matches to determine which team would be remain in Primera) vs. Tigre. The first game was won by Tigre by 1–0. Next match was played on June 25, 2007. When Tigre was leading Nueva Chicago by 2–1 (and therefore sending it to Primera B Nacional) hundreds of Chicago's hooligans jumped into the field without being stopped by the police (although there were 200 police officers in the stadium), taking off the uniforms to players and then attacking Tigre's supporters which were peacefully celebrating their return to Primera División. The violent acts continued outside the stadium, where the hooligans of both teams clashed and a fan of Tigre, Marcelo Cejas, was hit by a brick and killed.[11][12]
A month after the violent struggling, the Court of Discipline of the Argentine Football Association punished Nueva Chicago with the loss of 20 points for the 2007–08 Primera B Nacional tournament (although 18 points were finally deducted). Moreover, the Government of Argentina closed Chicago stadium for 20 fixtures, therefore the team could not play at its venue during all 2007–08 season and had to use other stadiums, mainly the Argentinos Juniors and Ferro Carril Oeste facilities.
Nueva Chicago totalized 52 points that finally were 34 (when the deduction of 18 points was applied), which forced the team to play the Promoción again, facing Los Andes. The team from Lomas de Zamora won both matches (1–0 and 2–0), relegating Nueva Chicago to Primera B Metropolitana, the third division of Argentine football.
In 2012 the club promoted to Primera B Nacional after a 1–1 draw to Chacarita Juniors at the relegation playoff final (the first game had been won by Nueva Chicago).[13] although the team would be relegated next season, five fixtures before the end of the tournament. Nueva Chicago finished in the last position and was sent to Primera B Nacional along with Deportivo Merlo.[14]
On May 2014, Nueva Chicago won its sixth official title to date, the 2013–14 Primera B Metropolitana after defeating Colegiales therefore returning to the Primera B Nacional.[15][16]
Players
Current Squad
Current squad of Club Atlético Nueva Chicago as of March 1, 2015 (
Sources: Argentine Soccer
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Manager: Omar Labruna
Honours
- Copa de Competencia Jockey Club (1): 1933
- Primera B (3): 1930, 1981, 2013–14
- Primera C (1): 1940
References
- ↑ "Iniciación de Nueva Chicago" – Pueblo de Chicago website
- ↑ Argentina 2nd. level 1930 – RSSSF
- ↑ Argentina 1932 amateur – RSSSF
- ↑ Argentina 1933 amateur – RSSSF
- ↑ Argentina – Copa de Competencia "Jockey Club" – 1933 at RSSSF
- ↑ 38 Campeones del Fútbol Argentino, by Diego Estévez, Editorial Continente – ISBN 9789507543692
- ↑ "Un barrio repleto de historia..." at Olé, 12 Aug 2013
- ↑ "La noche en que Chicago le hizo 5 goles a Boca", Clarín, 13 Apr 2002
- ↑ Nueva Chicago 5 – Boca Juniors 0 at Historia de Boca.com
- ↑ "Chicago festejó en grande el ascenso", Clarín newspaper, 2001-06-10
- ↑ "Otra vez el fútbol en segundo plano", ESPN Deportes, 2007-06-25
- ↑ "¿Quién asesinó a Marcelo Cejas?" Clarín, 2007-09-27
- ↑ "Nueva Chicago ascendió a Primera B tras empatar con Chacarita en la Promoción" at Cadena3.com, 1 Jul 2012
- ↑ Argentina 2012–13 at RSSSF.com
- ↑ "Nueva Chicago es campeón y vuelve al Nacional B", Cancha Llena, 14 May 2014
- ↑ "Nueva Chicago se consagró campeón y ascendió a la B Nacional" at AFA website
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nueva Chicago. |