Clubname: | Deportivo Alavés |
Upright: | 0.8 |
Fullname: | Deportivo Alavés, S.A.D. |
Nickname: | Babazorros El Glorioso (The glorious one) Los blanquiazules (The Blue and Whites) |
Founded: | as Sport Friend's Club |
Ground: | Mendizorroza |
Capacity: | 19,840[1] |
Owner: | Baskonia-Alavés Group |
Chrtitle: | President |
Chairman: | Alfonso Fernández de Trocóniz |
Mgrtitle: | Head coach |
Manager: | Luis García Plaza |
Website: | http://www.deportivoalaves.com |
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Current: | 2024–25 Deportivo Alavés season |
Deportivo Alavés, S.A.D. (pronounced as /es/; Sporting Alavés), usually known as Alavés, is a Spanish football club based in Vitoria-Gasteiz, Álava, in the autonomous community of the Basque Country. Founded on 1 July 1920 as Sport Friend's Club, Alavés play in La Liga, being promoted back from the Segunda División in the 2022–23 season after beating rivals Levante at the 120th minute in the promotion playoff final.
It is recognized as the third most successful team in the Basque Country following Athletic Club of Bilbao and Real Sociedad of San Sebastián. Its biggest success was in 2001 when, in the year of its debut in European competition, it reached the 2001 UEFA Cup Final, where it played against Liverpool. It was defeated 5–4 by golden goal. In 2017, the club reached the final of the Copa del Rey, losing out 3–1 to Barcelona.[2]
The team's home kit is blue and white-striped shirt, blue shorts and white socks. It holds home matches at the 19,840-seater Mendizorrotza Stadium and uses other facilities located in Ibaia dedicated to training.
Founded in 1920 the initial name of the club was Sport Friends, but on 23 January 1921 the name was changed to the current one, and this is considered the official foundation date.[3] Alavés was the first club to win promotion from the Segunda División to La Liga in 1929–30, a stint which would last three years. In its first season in Primera División Alavés finished 8th from 10 teams, just 1 point away from being relegated.[4]
In 1953–54 the club would reach the top league again for a two-year spell. With Roman Galarraga as a coach, the club reached long-awaited promotion to Segunda División in the 1973–74 season. In June 1983, after having avoided the relegation in the previous season, Alavés went down to Segunda División B, where remained until the 1985–86 campaign.[5] After years of seriously facing disappearance which lasted well into the 1990s (playing in the fourth tier during the late 1980s), Alavés finally achieved a promotion back into the Segunda División in 1994–95 after two consecutive years of winning their group in Segunda División B – created as the new third level in 1977 – but failing in the promotion play-offs.
After winning the Segunda División in 1997–98,[6] Alavés returned to the top level after a 42-year hiatus. Following their return season in which they escaped relegation by a single point, they achieved two wins against Barcelona in the following campaign and would qualify for the UEFA Cup for the first time upon finishing sixth (to date, their highest-ever placing, coming just 12 years after their lowest-ever: eighth in their group in the fourth level).
As well as concluding the domestic campaign in tenth position, in 2000–01 the Basque club reached the final of the UEFA Cup after beating Internazionale,[7] Rayo Vallecano and 1. FC Kaiserslautern, the latter in a crushing 9–2 aggregate victory.[8] The final ended in a 4–5 loss against Liverpool, Alavés losing to an "own-golden goal" after taking the match to extra time. The match also featured two red cards and two disallowed goals in extra time in addition to the nine goals which did count, and has been described by some observers as one of the greatest showpiece games in the competition's history.[9]
Alavés ended 2001–02 in seventh position and qualified for the UEFA Cup for a second time, although the European campaign of 2002–03 was far less successful than two years earlier, with an opening win over Ankaragücü followed by a defeat to another Turkish Süper Lig side, Beşiktaş. On 26 January 2003, the club celebrated their 100th win in La Liga after defeating Real Valladolid 3–1.
Although Alavés were relegated after 2002–03, they regained top flight status two years later.[8] In this time, Alavés was bought by Ukrainian–American businessman Dmitry Pietrman, and several clashes followed with the club's coaches, players[10] and fans alike.[11] The top-division return only lasted one season as the club went through three head coaches and finished in 18th position, one point from safety. Piterman departed in 2007, leaving the club deep in debt after his tenure. After two years of battling against relegation to the third level, Alavés eventually succumbed in 2008–09.
A subsequent black period in Segunda B lasted four years until Alavés was bought by José Antonio Querejeta[12] and were promoted again to the second division in 2013 as overall champions of the third tier, providing an opportunity to sort out its economic difficulties. Three years later, on 29 May 2016, Alavés was promoted to La Liga as second tier champions after beating Numancia 2–0 to overtake Leganés on the final day.
On 10 September 2016, Alavés got their first win of their return season in La Liga by defeating defending La Liga champions Barcelona 2–1 at the Camp Nou.[13] On 7 February 2017, Alavés qualified for the 2017 Copa del Rey Final after eliminating Celta de Vigo in the semi-finals of the competition. This was the first time in their history that the club had qualified for the final of the national cup, their previous best being the semi-finals in 1998 and 2004. Their opponents in the final would be Barcelona, and coincidentally the two clubs met in the league directly after their cup semi-finals; the Catalans inflicted a 6–0 defeat on Alavés in their own Mendizorrotza Stadium, exacting revenge for the result earlier in the season.[14] Barcelona also won the final, held at the Estadio Vicente Calderón with a 3–1 scoreline,[15] meaning there would be no return to European competition for Alavés. In the La Liga that season Alavés finished 9th with 14 wins, 13 draws and 11 losses.[16] In the 2021–22 season, Alaves were relegated following defeat on the penultimate matchday by Levante (who also went down) to end their six-year stay in La Liga, the longest top-flight run in the club's history.
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Season | Div | Pos. | Pld | W | D | L | GF | GA | Pld | Cup | Europe | Notes | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2013–14 | 2A | align=right | 18th | 42 | 13 | 12 | 17 | 57 | 57 | 51 | Third round | |||||||||||
2014–15 | 2A | align=right | 13th | 42 | 14 | 11 | 17 | 49 | 53 | 53 | Round of 32 | |||||||||||
2015–16 | 2A | align=right | 1st | 42 | 21 | 12 | 9 | 49 | 35 | 75 | Third round | bgcolor=lightgreen | Promoted | |||||||||
2016–17 | 1 | align=right | 9th | 38 | 14 | 13 | 11 | 41 | 43 | 55 | bgcolor=silver | Runners-up | ||||||||||
2017–18 | 1 | align=right | 14th | 38 | 15 | 2 | 21 | 40 | 50 | 47 | Quarter-finals | |||||||||||
2018–19 | 1 | align=right | 11th | 38 | 13 | 11 | 14 | 39 | 50 | 50 | Round of 32 | |||||||||||
2019–20 | 1 | align=right | 16th | 38 | 10 | 9 | 19 | 34 | 59 | 39 | First round | |||||||||||
2020–21 | 1 | align=right | 16th | 38 | 9 | 11 | 18 | 36 | 57 | 38 | Round of 32 | |||||||||||
2021–22 | 1 | align=right | 20th | 38 | 8 | 7 | 23 | 31 | 65 | 31 | Second round | bgcolor=pink | Relegated | |||||||||
2022–23 | 2A | align=right | 4th | align=right | 42 | align=right | 19 | align=right | 14 | align=right | 9 | align=right | 47 | align=right | 33 | align=right | 71 | Round of 16 | bgcolor=lightgreen | Promoted in Play-off | ||
2023–24 | 1 | align=right | align=right | align=right | align=right | align=right | align=right | align=right | align=right | Round of 16 |
Season | Competition | Round | Opponent | Home | Away | Aggregate | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2000-01 | UEFA Cup | First round | Gaziantepspor | align=center bgcolor="#FFFFDD" | 0–0 | align=center bgcolor="#ddffdd" | 3–4 | align=center bgcolor="#ddffdd" | 3–4 |
Second round | Lillestrøm SK | align=center bgcolor="#ddffdd" | 1–3 | align=center bgcolor="#FFFFDD" | 2–2 | align=center bgcolor="#ddffdd" | 3–5 | ||
Third round | Rosenborg | align=center bgcolor="#FFFFDD" | 1–1 | align=center bgcolor="#ddffdd" | 1–3 | align=center bgcolor="#ddffdd" | 4–2 | ||
Round of 16 | Inter Milan | align=center bgcolor="#FFFFDD" | 3–3 | align=center bgcolor="#ddffdd" | 0–2 | align=center bgcolor="#ddffdd" | 5–3 | ||
Quarter-finals | Rayo Vallecano | align=center bgcolor="#ddffdd" | 3–0 | align=center bgcolor="#ffdddd" | 2–1 | align=center bgcolor="#ddffdd" | 4–2 | ||
Semi-final | Kaiserslautern | align=center bgcolor="#ddffdd" | 5–1 | align=center bgcolor="#ddffdd" | 1–4 | align=center bgcolor="#ddffdd" | 9–2 | ||
Final | Liverpool | align=center bgcolor="#ffdddd" | 5–4 | ||||||
2002-03 | UEFA Cup | First round | Ankaragücü | align=center bgcolor="#ddffdd" | 1–2 | align=center bgcolor="#ddffdd" | 3–0 | align=center bgcolor="#ddffdd" | 1–5 |
Second round | Beşiktaş | align=center bgcolor="#FFFFDD" | 1–1 | align=center bgcolor="#ffdddd" | 1–0 | align=center bgcolor="#ffdddd" | 1–2 | ||
See main article: Deportivo Alavés B.
The team wore kits from the Danish brand Hummel for several seasons.[18] [19] [20] In the 2017-2018 season, they started wearing new kits from Kelme. They had an agreement with Kelme until 2022.[21] That same year, the team signed a new agreement with the German company Puma for four seasons.[22]
For the launch of the new brand, they choose to bring back the traditional vertical stripes and keep the original black pants.
Deportivo Alavés has changed its crest several times since it was founded in 1921.[23] [24] [25] The first crest looked very similar to the official coat of arms of the Álava province. However, instead of a sword-wielding arm, the team's crest featured a blue and white pennant. At the top of the crest was a medallion with the initials "DA".
In 1922, the crest was simplified to just a pennant. The pennant was white with a blue center stripe and had the team initials "DA" in a square at the top left corner. This design stayed until 1950, but the initials changed when the team was renamed Club Deportivo Alavés. In 1950, the team redesigned its crest to look more like the traditional Álava symbol. They brought back the castle and lion, and also added a sword. The "C.D.A." pennant was moved behind the castle, and the whole design was placed within a circle with a crown on top.[26] [27]
1929–30
1938–39
The following players have been selected by their country in the World Cup Finals, while playing for Alavés.
Position | Name |
---|---|
Head coach | Luis García Plaza |
Assistant coach | Pedro Rostoll |
Goalkeeping coach | Javier Barbero |
Fitness coach | Nenad Njaradi Félix Vicente |
Analyst | Raúl Gallego Jon Zubillaga |
Physiotherapist | Eneko Candal Danel Etxeberria Raul Gutierrez Javier Pérez Elorrieta |
Rehab fitness coach | Mario Pérez Iñigo Simón |
Director of Medical Services | Alberto Fernández |
Doctor | Markel Aitor Arregui |
Psychologist | Emilio Ibañez |
Delegate | Lluís Codina |
Equipment manager | David Yébenes |
See main article: Deportivo Alavés B. The club's primary reserve team is Deportivo Alavés B, founded in 1960 and currently playing at the amateur Tercera División level of the senior Spanish system. When that team gained promotion to Segunda División B in 2000, a further reserve side Deportivo Alavés C was formed, later partnering with local team Club San Ignacio, but the C-team was discontinued in 2005 due to the poor financial situation at the club. San Ignacio and most other teams in the vicinity of Vitoria-Gasteiz continue to operate as partner clubs of Alavés.[31] [32] [33] [34]
In 2007, Alavés operated a team in the USL First Division in the United States called the California Victory. The team played at Kezar Stadium in San Francisco, California, and wore the Alavés colors. However, Alavés, under new ownership, pulled its support for the club later that year, after which the Victory folded.
In May 2017, Alavés signed a ten-year partnership deal with NK Rudeš, freshly promoted Croatian First Football League club, with Rudeš acting as a feeder club to Alavés.[35] In June 2018, Deportivo Alavés and NK Rudeš ended its partnership agreement.[36]
In April 2018, Alavés signed an agreement with French club FC Sochaux-Montbéliard;[37] however the partnership lasted only a few months, ending abruptly in December of the same year.[38]
In June 2018 Alavés took a controlling interest in another Croatian top-tier club, NK Istra 1961, a few weeks after ending their agreement with Rudeš.[39]