Talleres de Córdoba

Talleres (Córdoba)
Full name Club Atlético Talleres
Nickname(s) La T (The T), Albiazul (Blue and white), Matador (Killer)
Founded 12 October 1913 (1913-10-12)
Ground Estadio Mario Alberto Kempes,
Córdoba, Córdoba Province
Ground Capacity 57,000
Owner more than 35.000 partners
Chairman Andrés Fassi
Manager Frank Darío Kudelka
League Primera División
2016 1° (Champion)
Website Club home page

Club Atlético Talleres is an Argentine sports club from the city of Córdoba. The institution is mostly known for its football team, which currently plays in the Primera División de Argentina. Talleres' main rival is Belgrano de Córdoba.

In field hockey, the club is affiliated to amateur Córdoba Field Hockey Federation,[1] where its teams compete.

History

The club was founded in 1913 as Club Atletico Talleres de Córdoba by workers of the Córdoba Central Railway, with support from the company. In 1914 Talleres joined the Córdoba local league.

In 1969 the team played for the first time in the Argentine Primera División in the Nacional Championship. During the 1970s, the heyday of the Córdoba local league in the national scene, they participated several times in the Nacional championship, on 1976 Luis Ludueña was the championship top scorer with 12 goals, in the 1977 Nacional Championship Talleres finished in second place, losing to Independiente the finals on the away goals rule, and on 1978 José Reinaldi scored 18 goals and was the championship top scorer. Talleres contributed three players to the Argentine squad that won the 1978 FIFA World Cup, with Talleres' captain Luis Galván as a starter in the final as a center back. Miguel Oviedo and Jose Daniel Valencia were substitutes. The '78 WC team featured several other prominent players that got their start in the golden era of the Córdoba local league, such as Mario Kempes and Osvaldo Ardiles, both at Instituto Atletico Central Cordoba in the early-1970s.

Starting in 1980, Talleres became a regular of the Metropolitano championship and finished in third place.

Talleres played in the Argentine Primera División until the 1993 Torneo Clausura when Talleres was relegated to the Primera B Nacional. Talleres was promoted to Argentine Primera División after the 1993–94 championship, but was again related after a poor performance in 1994–95 season. The following season, the club finished first during the Clausura tournament of the Second Division but lost the Championship to Huracán de Corrientes.

In 1998, during a game (later remembered by fans as "The Final of the Millennium," Talleres won its first Argentine title, the 1997/98 Primera B Nacional championship on penalty kick shootout against all-time rival Belgrano de Córdoba, earning them a promotion to the First Division. Next year the club won its first and only international title, the 1999 Copa Conmebol (the precurssor of the current Copa Sudamericana)[2][3][4][5][6][7][8] against CSA from Brazil.

The following season, Talleres' good performance in first division qualified the team to play the 2001 Copa Mercosur and the 2002 Copa Libertadores, being the first and only team from Córdoba to qualify for those continental tournaments. Talleres reached the round of 16 in the Mercosur, only to lose against Gremio. In Copa Libertadores, Talleres had a poor performance, being eliminated in the first stage.

Despite finishing in third place during the Torneo Clausura tournament of the 2003–04 season and qualifying for the Copa Libertadores again, Talleres was relegated, due to poor results in the previous 2 seasons, after losing to Argentinos Juniors in the promotion/relegation play-off. By Argentine rules, the team lost its Libertadores bid because of this.

In 2008–09 Talleres was dismissed again, this time to the Torneo Argentino A via the point average system despite finishing in 12th place of 20 teams in Primera B Nacional.

On November 15, 2010, the IFFHS produced a report on the top 200 teams in the American continent from 2001 to that date. Talleres was #130, the highest position for a Córdoba Province team in the ranking.

In May, 2013, Talleres was promoted to Primera B Nacional after defeating San Jorge by 1–0.[9] Later, Talleres returned to the third division but it was promoted in 2015, and, in 2016, after 12 years Talleres earned the promotion to First Division.

Current squad

Current squad of Club Atlético Talleres as of October 16, 2016 (edit)
Sources: Official website and Argentine Soccer

No. Position Player
1  ARG GK Mauricio Caranta
2  ARG DF Carlos Quintana
3  ARG DF Javier Gandolfi
4  ARG MF Ivo Chaves
5  PAR MF Rodrigo Burgos
6  URU DF Guillermo Cotugno
7  ARG FW Victorio Ramis
8  ARG MF Leonardo Gil
9  ARG FW Gonzalo Klusener
10  MEX MF Daniel Ludueña
11  ARG MF Aldo Araujo
12  ARG GK Ignacio Chicco
13  ARG DF Juan Cruz Komar
14  ARG DF Lucas Kruspzky
15  ARG MF Fernando Godoy
16  CHI FW Carlos Muñoz
No. Position Player
17  ARG FW Juan Edgardo Ramírez
18  ARG FW Eial Strahman
19  ARG MF Fernando Juárez
20  ARG DF Wilfredo Olivera
21  ARG MF Pablo Guiñazú
22  ARG GK Guido Herrera
23  MEX FW Matías Vuoso
24  ARG DF Tomás Oneto
25  ARG DF Leonardo Godoy
26  ARG DF Ian Escobar
27  ARG FW Jonathan Menéndez
28  ARG DF Fernando Alarcón
30  NGA FW Okiki Afolabi
31  ARG MF Nicolás Giménez
33  ARG MF Emanuel Reynoso
34  ARG FW Sebastián Palacios

Manager: Frank Kudelka

Honours

National

International

Regional

References

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