Getafe CF


























Getafe
Getafe logo
Full nameGetafe Club de Fútbol S.A.D.
Nickname(s)
Azulones (The Deep Blues), El Geta
Founded8 July 1983; 35 years ago (1983-07-08)
Ground
Coliseum Alfonso Pérez, Getafe, Spain
Capacity17,393
OwnerÁngel Torres Sánchez
ChairmanMario Medina
ManagerJosé Bordalás
LeagueLa Liga
2017–18La Liga, 8th
WebsiteClub website

















Home colours














Away colours














Third colours



Current season

Getafe Club de Fútbol (Spanish pronunciation: [xeˈtafe ˈkluβ ðe ˈfuðβol]), or simply Getafe, is a Spanish professional football club that plays in La Liga. The club is based in Getafe, a city in the Madrid metropolitan area. Getafe was founded in 1946 and refounded in 1983.


Getafe participated in the top level of Spanish football for 12 years between 2004 and 2016. The club's home stadium is Coliseum Alfonso Pérez which was founded in 1998 and can hold 17,393 spectators.


The club's main rivalries are against Leganés, based in close proximity to the city of Getafe, and a friendly rivalry against Real Madrid and Atlético Madrid.




Contents





  • 1 History

    • 1.1 Beginnings


    • 1.2 Second Division


    • 1.3 Present existence


    • 1.4 La Liga



  • 2 Stadium


  • 3 Supporters

    • 3.1 Zombies Calientes de Getafe



  • 4 Rivalries


  • 5 European cups history


  • 6 Season to season


  • 7 Achievements


  • 8 Current squad

    • 8.1 Reserve team


    • 8.2 Out on loan



  • 9 Staff and board


  • 10 Stadium information


  • 11 Kit information


  • 12 Presidents


  • 13 Players


  • 14 Famous coaches


  • 15 References


  • 16 See also


  • 17 External links




History



Beginnings


Getafe Football Club was founded in 1924, only playing in lower divisions from 1928 to 1932. After the Spanish Civil War, in 1945 five Getafe locals – Enrique Condes García, Aurelio Miranda Olavaria, Antonio Corridor Lozano, Manuel Serrano Vergara and Miguel Cubero Francés – while meeting at La Marquesina bar, decided to form a local team. Officially founded on 24 February 1946, the club was named Club Getafe Deportivo.[1]


The club originally played in the Campo del Regimiento de Artillería, which lacked goal posts. Shortly after, the club moved to San Isidro, housed in the current Municipal Sports Center of San Isidro. Here, Club Getafe was promoted to the third division following their victory against Villarrobledo in the 1956–57 season. Getafe was nearly promoted to the Segunda División in 1957–58, but was defeated by CD Almería.[2]


On 2 September 1970, the club inaugurated its own stadium after being promoted back to the Tercera División. Presided by chairman Francisco Vara, Las Margaritas won a 3–1 victory over Michelín. The team survived in the third level that season, and six years later gained their first promotion to the second division.[3]



Second Division



Club Getafe Deportivo


Club Getafe Deportivo played six seasons in the Segunda División, with little success. From 1976 to 1982, they placed below tenth level all six years.





Pedro León with Getafe in 2013


In 1978, the club advanced to play against Barcelona in the Copa del Rey round of 16. Playing at home in the first leg, Getafe drew with a star-studded Barcelona team 3–3, before traveling away for the second leg and being thrashed 8–0 at the Camp Nou.


At the conclusion of the 1981–82 season, players having not been paid, Getafe was automatically relegated and subsequently liquidated.


Meanwhile, on 1 September 1976, a new club was founded in the National Sports Council and the Regional Federation of Castille. The club was called Peña Madridista Getafe (the "Real Madrid supporter's club of Getafe"). This club played for four seasons in various divisions, until taking the name Club Deportivo Peña Getafe, and played under this name for a further two seasons. On 10 July 1982, they joined forces with the much older Club Getafe Promesas, and were registered again in the Regional Federation of Castille.[4]



Present existence


Based on the merger the previous year, the present Getafe Club de Fútbol was officially founded on 8 July 1983, after passing through the general partners assembly.[4]


Starting in the regional leagues in 1983–84, Getafe was promoted for four consecutive seasons until reaching the Segunda División B. The club started a new period with its promotion into Segunda in 1994–95, staying only two years.[5] Threatening absolute disappearance just a few years later in 1997, Getafe survived relegation into the fourth level Tercera División following a two-legged playoff victory over Huesca.


Meanwhile, Getafe's current stadium, the Coliseum Alfonso Pérez, was inaugurated on 1 January 1998.[6]


Returning to the second division for 1999–2000, Getafe lasted another two seasons. However, one year later, they would return following an amazing promotion in 2001–02 during which one of their players, Sebastián "Sebas" Gómez, was murdered, and controversy regarding unpaid payments of players following a debt of €3 million.[7]


Consolidating their position after one year, Getafe had a fantastic season in Segunda. At the top of the table for most of the year, the side travelled to the Canary Islands on the final matchday needing a win to assure a historic promotion to La Liga, the top-flight. Amazingly, they defeated Tenerife 5–3 with five goals from Sergio Pachón,[8] thus becoming along with Real Madrid, Atlético Madrid and Rayo Vallecano the fourth team from the Community of Madrid – and the first of them from outside of the capital – to ever play in La Liga.[9] With this promotion, Getafe had ascended the whole Spanish football pyramid, achieving this feat in only 20 years.



La Liga




Getafe Club de Fútbol vs. FC Barcelona.


The club started 2004–05 poorly, lying at the bottom of the table. Home wins over Espanyol, Athletic Bilbao, Valencia and Real Madrid,[10] followed by a sole away win of the season over Athletic Bilbao,[11] saw Getafe climb to finish 13th, being the only promoted side to avoid relegation. At the end of the season, the club lost head coach Quique Sánchez Flores and several players to rival clubs.[12] In Getafe's next season, the club briefly topped the table[13] before slipping to finish ninth.[14] During the 2006 FIFA World Cup, Argentine-born Mariano Pernía became Getafe's first ever Spanish international,[15] before moving to Atlético Madrid.[16]


In 2006–07, Getafe again finished ninth in the league,[17] conceding only 33 goals in 38 matches and goalkeeper Roberto Abbondanzieri was awarded the Zamora Trophy, having recorded 12 clean sheets. The highlight of the club's season was reaching the 2006–07 Copa del Rey final, a competition in which Getafe had never reached the quarter-finals before. The run included a two-legged semi-final against Barcelona in which Getafe lost the first leg 5–2 at the Camp Nou[18] before producing a 4–0 rout in the second leg at the Coliseum Alfonso Pérez.[19] Getafe lost their first ever major final 1–0 to Sevilla at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium.[20] Through this, the club qualified for the following season's UEFA Cup qualification, as Sevilla had already qualified for the UEFA Champions League through their league position.


The following season, coach Bernd Schuster left after two seasons to become head coach at Real Madrid,[21] and Getafe appointed Michael Laudrup as his replacement.[22] Under Laudrup, Getafe again finished the league mid-table. In the UEFA Cup, the team managed to progress to the quarter-finals after finishing top of Group G, only losing once,[23] setting up a tie against four-time European Cup winners Bayern Munich. Getafe drew the away leg 1–1,[24] thanks to an injury time equaliser from Cosmin Contra. In the second leg, Rubén de la Red was sent off after six minutes. Contra put Getafe ahead just before half-time, but in the 89th minute, Franck Ribéry equalized to send the match into extra time. Two quick goals from Javier Casquero and substitute Braulio gave Getafe a 3–1 lead, but Bayern pulled a goal back from Luca Toni, before Toni again scored seconds before the end of extra time, giving Bayern an away goals win.[25] Getafe also had successful run in the Copa del Rey, reaching the final for a second year running. In the final, at the Vicente Calderón Stadium, Getafe were beaten 3–1 by Valencia.[26]


In the 2015–16 season, Getafe were relegated to second division after spending 12 years in first campaign. However, in 2016–17, the club immediately returned to La Liga after defeating Huesca and Tenerife to gain promotion via the play-offs.



Stadium






Coliseum Alfonso Pérez


Getafe play at the Coliseum Alfonso Pérez, located in Getafe. Its pitch dimensions are 105x70 metres. The stadium was inaugurated on 1 January 1998, named after the Spanish international (and of Real Madrid fame) Alfonso Pérez. Though he never played for or against Getafe, or even in the stadium, he is perhaps the most famous footballer to come out of the area and was at the height of his career during the mid-1990s.[6]


Before playing in the Coliseum, Getafe played their home matches at the nearby Estadio de las Margaritas, part of the greater Sports City of Las Margaritas. The Coliseum was subsequently built as a natural extension to the much smaller facilities at Las Margaritas. Since its foundation, the stadium has had numerous renovations, and now seats 14,400 people and several thousand more standing. As such, the exact capacity is variable and ambiguous. Getafe generally fill the stadium for local matches against Real and Atlético Madrid, as well as against Barcelona, most famously in the 2006–07 Cup semi-final. For the first time in their history, Getafe pre-sold out the whole of the Coliseum before their second leg match against Bayern Munich in the UEFA Cup quarter-final.[27]


Getafe club president Ángel Torres expressed interest in upgrading the Coliseum to a much greater 20,000 seat arena, in conjunction with Madrid's bid for the 2012 Olympic Games.[28] The failure of this bid and poor crowd averages put this redevelopment in doubt.


Getafe use the nearby Sports City when training. These facilities include several training pitches with both grass and artificial turf, full medical rooms and recuperation facilities.



Supporters


Commonly called Marea Azul, or Azulones, Getafe supporters have steadily grown to their team. The team has 18 peñas ("supporter clubs") and 12,000 socios ("associates"). Former Real Madrid player Francisco Pavón is a well-known Getafe socio, while Fernando Alonso and Rafael Nadal have attended matches at the Coliseum in the past.


Getafe supporters have grown far beyond the area and are now known to have fans in Australia, Sweden, Finland, Argentina, Scotland, Denmark, the United States and Mexico. In 2007, a peña was founded in Venezuela to extend the worldwide club reach.


Getafe also created controversy in 2007 when their season ticket campaign included biblical references of Abraham, Moses and Jesus sacrificing themselves for the team. The club responded by withdrawing the first scene involving Abraham.


Upon important or famous victories, Getafe fans celebrate at the Cibelina statue in the town centre. Prior to the 2007 Cup final, Torres implored the fans to "tear down the Cibelina" upon victory, promising to pay for a new design. During that final, thousands of supporters rushed to get tickets and packed into the Santiago Bernabéu, yet were vastly outnumbered by Sevillistas. However, those who failed to get tickets – most of which went to season ticket holders for the 2007–08 campaign – were able to watch the match on a big screen in Getafe's central square.


Getafe has also a small group of Ultras supporters, called Comandos Azules ("blue commandos").



Zombies Calientes de Getafe


In 2011, Getafe released a tongue-in-cheek advertising campaign, pretending to decry the club's relatively small fanbase and encouraging male supporters to donate sperm in order to breed more fans.[29] To inspire those donations, the club produced a short pornographic film called "Zombies Calientes de Getafe" (Horny Zombies of Getafe), "shot in the style of a 1970s porn film", and delivered it to sperm donation clinics in Madrid.[30]



Rivalries


Historically, due to their close geographical position, Getafe has always held a strong rivalry with Leganés. They played out numerous encounters in the lower division before the two teams fortunes began to contrast as Getafe gained ascendency and Leganés began to deteriorate.


In the first division, the side has held some tremendous matches in the last few years with Real Madrid, with the ledger being most recently squared at three wins each. Real Madrid's greater stature, budget and squad has never stopped Getafe from often playing their best football against their "bigger brother".


In addition to this, Getafe has developed somewhat of a rivalry with Barcelona, which culminated in their famous 4–0 victory over their more fancied opponents during the 2006–07 Copa del Rey semi-final. Also, Valencia has succumbed numerous times to el Geta, often quite heavily, as was the case during the 2006–07 Copa del Rey, which ensured Getafe's first ever appearance in the Copa's quarter-finals with a 2–4 win at Valencia's Mestalla Stadium. However, this result was turned around in the 2008 Copa del Rey final, as Valencia would deny Getafe their first ever trophy with a 3–1 victory. This rivalry is propped up healthily by the regular transfer of Getafe players (and head coach Quique Sánchez Flores) to Valencia.



European cups history































































Season
Competition
Round
Opponent
Home
Away
Aggregate

2007–08

UEFA Cup

1R

Netherlands Twente
1–0
2–3 (aet)

3–3 (a)

Group G

England Tottenham Hotspur
N/A
2–1

1st

Israel Hapoel Tel Aviv
1–2
N/A

Denmark Aalborg BK
N/A
2–1

Belgium Anderlecht
2–1
N/A

R32

Greece AEK Athens
3–0
1–1

4–1

R16

Portugal Benfica
1–0
2–1

3–1

QF

Germany Bayern Munich
3–3 (aet)
1–1

4–4 (a)

2010–11

UEFA Europa League

PO

Cyprus APOEL
1–0
1–1 (aet)

2–1

Group H

Denmark Odense
2–1
1–1

3rd

Switzerland Young Boys
1–0
0–2

Germany VfB Stuttgart
0–3
0–1


Season to season















































































































Season
Tier
Division
Place

Copa del Rey
1983–84
7
2ª Regional
1st

1984–85
6
1ª Regional
1st

1985–86
5
Preferente
1st

1986–87
4


6th


1987–88
3

2ªB
3rd

Fourth round

1988–89
3

2ªB
6th

First round

1989–90
3

2ªB
2nd


1990–91
3

2ªB
4th

Fourth round

1991–92
3

2ªB
6th

Fifth round

1992–93
3

2ªB
4th

Third round

1993–94
3

2ªB
2nd

Fourth round

1994–95
2


18th

Third round

1995–96
2


19th

Second round

1996–97
3

2ªB
16th

First round

1997–98
3

2ªB
7th


1998–99
3

2ªB
1st


1999–00
2


19th

First round

2000–01
2


21st

Round of 64

2001–02
3

2ªB
5th

Round of 64

2002–03
2


11th

Round of 32






















































































Season
Tier
Division
Place

Copa del Rey

2003–04
2


2nd

Round of 64

2004–05
1


13th

Round of 16

2005–06
1


9th

Round of 16

2006–07
1


9th

Runner-up

2007–08
1


14th

Runner-up

2008–09
1


17th

Round of 32

2009–10
1


6th

Semi-finalist

2010–11
1


16th

Round of 16

2011–12
1


11th

Round of 32

2012–13
1


10th

Round of 16

2013–14
1


13th

Round of 16

2014–15
1


15th

Quarter-finals

2015–16
1


19th

Round of 32

2016–17
2


3rd

Second round

2017–18
1


8th

Round of 32

2018–19
1






  • 14 seasons in La Liga


  • 7 seasons in Segunda División


  • 11 seasons in Segunda División B


  • 1 seasons in Tercera División


  • 3 seasons in Categorías Regionales


Achievements


  • Copa del Rey

Runners-up (2): 2006–07, 2007–08
  • Segunda División B – Group 1

Winners: 1998–99


Current squad



As of 1 September 2018[31]

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


























































No.

Position
Player
1

Argentina

GK

Leandro Chichizola
2

Togo

DF

Djené Dakonam
3

Portugal

DF

Vitorino Antunes
4

Spain

DF

Bruno (vice-captain)
5

Spain

MF

Markel Bergara
6

Uruguay

DF

Leandro Cabrera
7

Spain

FW

Jaime Mata
8

Spain

MF

Francisco Portillo
9

Spain

FW

Ángel
10

Japan

MF

Gaku Shibasaki
11

Senegal

FW

Amath Ndiaye
13

Spain

GK

David Soria


















































No.

Position
Player
14

Spain

FW

Sergi Guardiola (on loan from Córdoba)
15

Uruguay

MF

Sebastián Cristóforo (on loan from Fiorentina)
17

Spain

MF

Robert Ibáñez
18

Uruguay

MF

Mauro Arambarri
19

Spain

FW

Jorge Molina (captain)
20

Serbia

MF

Nemanja Maksimović
21

Spain

DF

Ignasi Miquel
22

Uruguay

DF

Damián Suárez
23

Spain

MF

Iván Alejo
24

Guadeloupe

DF

Dimitri Foulquier (on loan from Watford)
25

Spain

GK

Rubén Yáñez


Reserve team



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











No.

Position
Player
27

Spain

FW

Hugo Duro


Out on loan


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






















No.

Position
Player


Serbia

GK

Filip Manojlović (at Panionios until 30 June 2019)


Uruguay

DF

Mathías Olivera (at Albacete until 30 June 2019)


Spain

MF

Álvaro Jiménez (at Sporting de Gijón until 30 June 2019)


















No.

Position
Player


Spain

MF

José Carlos Lazo (at Lugo until 30 June 2019)


Republic of the Congo

MF

Merveil Ndockyt (at Mallorca until 30 June 2019)


Spain

FW

Chuli (at Extremadura until 30 June 2019)


Staff and board



  • Manager: José Bordalás


  • Assistant Manager: Javier Casquero


  • Goalkeeper Coach: Emilio López


  • Fitness Coach: Oscar García Hermo


  • President: Ángel Torres Sánchez


  • Vice President: Agustín Clemente Alonso


  • Club Captain: Jordan Leckey


Stadium information



  • Name – Coliseum Alfonso Pérez


  • City – Getafe


  • Capacity – 18,000


  • Inauguration – 1998


  • Pitch size – 105 x 68 m


  • Other Facilities: – Ciudad Deportiva


Kit information


Getafe wear their traditional blue strip. Small strips of white and red also tend to be incorporated in their kit. Generally, their away strip is red, however this has changed in recent years. Their shirt manufacturer is Joma.


Previous sponsors


  • Opción (Centro de Ocio) (2004–05)

  • PSG (2005–06)

  • Grupo Galco (2006–09)


  • Burger King (2009–2012)

  • Confremar (2012–2014)

  • Tecnocasa (2014– )


Presidents



  • Antonio de Miguel (1983–92)


  • Francisco Flores (1992–00)


  • Felipe González (2000–01)


  • Domingo Rebosio (2001)


  • Ángel Torres (2002– )


Players




Famous coaches










References




  1. ^ En 1945 se comenzaba a crear un histórico, Getafe history (in Spanish)


  2. ^ Los primeros encuentros en el Campo del Regimiento de Artillería, Getafe history (in Spanish)


  3. ^ En Tercera en Las Margaritas, Getafe history (in Spanish)


  4. ^ ab El actual Getafe CF, Getafe history (in Spanish)


  5. ^ Vuelve a resurgir a lo más alto, Getafe history (in Spanish)


  6. ^ ab El estadio del Getafe CF, Getafe stadium (in Spanish)


  7. ^ Un policía mata a tiros a Sebas, central del Getafe, El Mundo, August 27, 2001 (in Spanish)


  8. ^ 2003/04 Spanish Second Division match reports


  9. ^ Spain – Regional Analysis


  10. ^ ESPNsoccernet Match Report


  11. ^ ESPNsoccernet Match Report


  12. ^ 2005/06 Spanish Primera Transfers


  13. ^ 2005/06 Spanish Primera Standings, Matchday 8 (in Spanish)


  14. ^ 2005/06 Spanish Primera Final Table


  15. ^ Spain send for Pernia, Sky Sports, May 30, 2006


  16. ^ Pernia completes Atletico transfer, CNN, June 30, 2006


  17. ^ 2006/07 Spanish Primera Final Table


  18. ^ ESPNsoccernet Match Report


  19. ^ ESPNsoccernet Match Report


  20. ^ ESPNsoccernet Match Report


  21. ^ Schuster confirmed as new Real coach, The Guardian, July 9, 2007


  22. ^ Getafe appoint Laudrup as Schuster's replacement, Reuters, July 9, 2007


  23. ^ UEFA Cup Group G


  24. ^ ESPNsoccernet Match Report


  25. ^ Heartbreak for Getafe as Bayern fight back Archived July 18, 2011, at the Wayback Machine., FourFourTwo, April 10, 2008


  26. ^ Valencia win Copa del Rey, FIFA.com, April 16, 2008


  27. ^ El Coliseum se llenará por primera vez, El Mundo, April 8, 2008


  28. ^ "Con este campo el Getafe estaría entre los grandes", As, November 3, 2006


  29. ^ Burgen, Stephen (August 19, 2011). "Getafe fans urged to become sperm donors and breed more supporters". theguardian.com. The Guardian. Retrieved February 8, 2018..mw-parser-output cite.citationfont-style:inherit.mw-parser-output qquotes:"""""""'""'".mw-parser-output code.cs1-codecolor:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registrationcolor:#555.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration spanborder-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-errordisplay:none;font-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-errorfont-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-formatfont-size:95%.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-leftpadding-left:0.2em.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-rightpadding-right:0.2em


  30. ^ Nudd, Tim (August 31, 2011). "Ad of the Day: Getafe (NSFW)". adweek.com. Adweek. Retrieved February 8, 2018.


  31. ^ "Primer equipo" [First team] (in Spanish). Getafe CF. Retrieved 31 January 2014.



See also


  • Getafe CF B

  • Getafe Deportivo


External links


Official websites

  • Official website (in Spanish)


  • Getafe at La Liga (in Spanish) (in English)


  • Futbolme team profile (in Spanish)

  • BDFutbol team profile


  • Peñas federation (in Spanish)











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