O'Higgins F.C. explained

Clubname:O'Higgins
Fullname:O'Higgins Fútbol Club
Nickname:"El Capo de Provincia" (The Province's Boss)
"O'Hi O'Hi"
"La Celeste" (The Sky Blue)
Short Name:OHI
Founded: as
Club Deportivo O'Higgins
Ground:Estadio El Teniente
Rancagua, Chile
Capacity:14,087
Owner:SN Holding S.A. (96%)
Others (4%)
Chairman:Pablo Hoffmann
Manager:Víctor Fuentes
League:Campeonato Nacional
Season:2023
Position:Campeonato Nacional, 11th of 16
Website:http://www.ohigginsfc.cl/
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O'Higgins Fútbol Club (pronounced as /es/), also known as O'Higgins de Rancagua, is a Chilean professional football club based in Rancagua, that currently plays in the Campeonato Nacional. The club's home stadium is Estadio El Teniente, opened in 1945 and renovated for the 2015 Copa América, which was hosted by Chile.

Founded in 1955, the club was named in honour of the country's founding father and supreme director Bernardo O'Higgins, after the merger of the clubs O'Higgins Braden and América de Rancagua. O'Higgins has won two Primera B titles, and in 2013 they won their first top-flight championship against Universidad Católica, coached by Eduardo Berizzo; they later won the 2014 Supercopa de Chile on penalty kicks against Deportes Iquique.

History

Establishment

On 7 April 1955, after the merger of Rancagua's cross–town rival: O'Higgins Braden (that was born in 1954 from the merger between Braden F.C. and Instituto O'Higgins) and América de Rancagua, the club was founded thanks to Carlos Dittborn, the president of the Asociación Central de Football, who offered to put the name of the O'Higgins, which represents workers of Codelco in the city, under the name of Braden Copper; the name was also chosen in reference to the country's founding father and supreme director Bernardo O'Higgins, an important character of the Colonial Chile during the 1810s, who also identified with the city of Rancagua.[1]

The colours of the club were originally from the Instituto O'Higgins, which were red, blue, and white. However, the Football Federation of Chile prohibited using the colors of the national team, so the club directors decided that the uniform would be sky blue, based on Uruguay's uniform, earning then the nickname of La Celeste. The stadium was named Estadio Braden Copper Company after the name of the company from its opening until the 1962 FIFA World Cup, when the name was changed to its current name, Estadio El Teniente, based on the El Teniente mine.

On 21 April 1955, the Asociación Central de Football decided that the team will play in the Primera División for the next season, with the first president being Nicolás Abumohor and the first head coach being Francisco Hormazábal. Their first game in the Campeonato Nacional was a 2–0 loss to Unión Española on 8 May 1955. Their first win came on 22 May of that same year, a 3–2 home victory against Ferrobádminton. In their first league tournament, the club finished ninth in the table, which put them in the relegation play-offs, where they earned their permanence in the top tier.

First seasons, relegations, and comebacks

The first great season of the club was in the 1959 season, where the club finished in fourth place under the orders of Argentine coach José Salerno, only four points behind league champion Universidad de Chile and behind third-placed team Santiago Wanderers on goal difference, making this one of its most successful Primera División campaigns, with José Benito Ríos as the key player and top scorer of the tournament with 22 goals.

A few seasons later, the team was relegated to the Segunda División after a poor campaign in 1963. The next season, with the signings of the defender Federico Vairo and the attacking midfielder Mario Desiderio, both from the Argentine Primera División, the team returned to Primera División. In special, the performances of Vairo consecrated him as the best footballer in the club's history according to the supporters of Rancagua, who chose the Rosarian centre back with the honour in 1999. Since the promotion in 1964, the club had average seasons, finishing mid-table, despite suffering the departures of Federico Vairo and Mario Desiderio to the Colombian side Deportivo Cali in 1966.

In the 1973 season, under the orders of the coaches Luis Vera and Jorge Aretio, O'Higgins and Huachipato both finished in third place behind of Unión Española and Colo-Colo, its best result since the 1959 season. In the 1975 season, the club was relegated again, but returned for the 1977 season after finishing runner up of the 1976 Primera B. After a notable 1978 tournament, where the team finished third in the league with Luis Santibáñez as head coach, it achieved qualification to the following edition of the Copa Libertadores by winning the Liguilla Pre-Libertadores, in which they achieved their biggest win for an international contest against Deportivo Galicia, beating the Venezuelan side 6–0 at El Teniente, and also achieved its most important away win for an international tournament, winning 1–0 in Valencia to the same Galicia. In the following season the club reached the fifth place in the league with Santibáñez as head coach again, qualifying to the 1980 Copa Libertadores via the Libertadores Liguilla after a notable unbeaten run of five matches, and winning the Liguilla over powerhouse clubs Universidad de Chile, Cobreloa and Unión Española.

Continental appearances, Copa Chile finals

While managing indifferent league form in the early 1980s, the club had its first South American success in the form of the Copa Libertadores. In the 1980 edition, O'Higgins reached the semi-finals, being eliminated by finishing last in a group with Uruguay's Club Nacional and Paraguay's Club Olimpia. During the 1984 edition of the Libertadores, the club finished last in its group, which was made up of fellow Chileans Universidad Católica, and Bolivian clubs Bolivar and Blooming. In the league, the team had poor campaigns from 1981 to 1983, although the club defeated Colo-Colo 6–1 in the 1983 season, and reached their first Copa Chile final, where it lost to Universidad Catolica in a liguilla group.

After financial problems with Codelco, the company owner of the club, the club was relegated to the Primera B in the 1985 season, with the possibility of being relegated to the Tercera División for another controversy related to Codelco. The next season, the club won the regular season and qualified to the promotion playoffs, but failed to win the group that consisted of 6 teams. In the 1987 season, with the defenders Gabriel Mendoza and Atilio Marchioni as key players, the club returned to the Primera División, after an exciting final with Lota Schwager at Talca.

Years later, the club hired Manuel Pellegrini as coach for the 1992 Copa Conmebol, in which they were eliminated by Argentine side Gimnasia de La Plata in the first round, in that occasion with players like Claudio Borghi, who won the 1986 FIFA World Cup with Argentina, the talented playmaker Jaime Riveros and the striker Gustavo De Luca, one of the most prolific goalscorers in Chilean football during the 1990s. In the 1992 season the club finished 6th in the league's aggregate table, giving them an opportunity to qualify for the 1993 Copa Libertadores via the Liguilla, but the club eventually failed to qualify for continental competitions after losing to U Catolica. Midway through the 1993 season, Pellegrini left to manage U de Chile.[2]

In the 1994 season, under the orders of Roberto Hernández, O'Higgins reached the Copa Chile finals, after beating Universidad de Chile 2–1 at the Estadio Nacional in the semi-finals. However, in the final against Colo-Colo, the club lost on penalties, whilst for the Primera División tournament, the Rancaguan side finished in the third place of the table, therefore missing out on achieving Copa Libertadores qualification. The next season, O'Higgins failed to qualify to the Libertadores Liguilla, ending only in the sixth position of the Primera División tournament.[3]

The Instability: 1996–2004

In the 1996 season, the club signed great players, such as midfielder Clarence Acuña, Argentine playmaker Gerardo Martino, and strikers Carlos Poblete and Ariel Cozzoni. However, the team got relegated to the Primera B, after finishing last in the table. In 1997, an Apertura and Clausura format was used, which made it difficult to achieve promotion since it wasn't utilised in the Clausura. Although O'Higgins had great campaigns that season, finishing in the top 4 of both tournaments, it failed to achieve promotion.[4]

Two years later, under the orders of René Serrano, the team achieved promotion to the First Division again.[5] In 1999, the Rancagua club finished in tenth place, in which Mario Núñez and Jaime González also became the most successful goalscorer pair in Chilean football with 57 goals between both strikers. In the 2001 season, with financial problems and a poor season, it returned to the Primera B, having gone through three managers: Guillermo Páez, Rubén Espinoza, and Luis Droguett. Luis Droguett almost saved the club from being relegated, including a victory against Colo-Colo, but ultimately it was not enough to stay in the top tier.[6] In 2002, under Luis Droguett's orders, the club had a decent season in the second tier but wasn't fighting for the promotion playoffs. For the 2003 season, Droguett was replaced by Eduardo Salas. The economic problems in the club were evident again, and for the most part the club used youth players. These problems resulted in the club's failure to be promoted again, although they were in the promotion spots (top 2 of table) until a 2–0 loss with Everton, which moved the club to a fourth-place finish. The 2004 season was very similar to the previous season; although the club had a very promising start, it failed to reach the Primera División again after being defeated 3–0 by Deportes Melipilla, under the orders of the Paraguayan head coach Sergio Nichiporuk, who had replaced Eduardo Salas in June.[7]

Despite the sports failure, the club was also experiencing hard financial problems, mainly because of Codelco but also because of irregularities in the board. However, in December 2004, it was reported that the ANFP's former president and entrepreneur Ricardo Abumohor would buy the team to fix the situation.

Abumohor takeover, Garcés and Sampaoli era

For the 2005 season, ex-goalkeeper Nelson Cossio became the club's new manager. However, the club started to distance itself from the promotion places after a run of six winless matches. After a draw to Deportes Copiapó in August, Cossio was sacked. Shortly after Cossio was sacked, the club was purchased by ANFP's former president, Ricardo Abumohor, who bought the team from Codelco, having the Primera B title as the principal objective for the return to the Primera División. He brought in manager Gerardo Silva as Cossio's replacement, and the club eventually achieved that long awaited objective, defeating Deportes Melipilla 4–3 on aggregate for the promotion with Hugo Brizuela and Mario Núñez as the key players of the success.[8]

The next season, the club signed Jorge Garcés as coach, qualifying for the playoffs of the Torneo Clausura, where they beat Coquimbo Unido in the quarter finals and were eliminated by Audax Italiano in the semi-finals with controversial decisions made by referee Rubén Selman. In the 2007 season, O'Higgins finished twelfth in the Apertura table and were eliminated by Colo-Colo during the playoffs for the Clausura. The first leg ended in a 5–0 precipitous loss at Rancagua; this result basically sealed the series for the whites with the second leg at Santiago, which finished 1–1, but 6–1 in Colo-Colo's favor on global.

In December 2007, after the departure of Jorge Garcés to Deportes Concepción, the club reached an agreement with Jorge Sampaoli of Sporting Cristal. Sampaoli had a successful season during the Apertura 2008, with talented players like Jean Beausejour and Carlos Carmona, finishing third in the league table but being eliminated in the playoff quarter-finals by Universidad de Chile. In the Clausura, it had a similar season, and the team was eliminated by Palestino in the quarter-finals. In 2009, Sampaoli was fired after a game with Universidad de Concepción, due to failing to qualify for the Clausura play-offs because of a 15th-placed league finish, and having suffered a 6–1 defeat with Unión Española for the Apertura play-off quarter-finals at Estadio Santa Laura.

The board signed Roberto Hernández again as coach for the 2010 season. Hernandez brought the team into the top 5 places into the table during the first half of the season, but after the FIFA World Cup break he started to have poor results, so he was fired and Marco Antonio Figueroa arrived as a replacement. The most important achievements of Figueroa's period was beating Universidad de Chile 1–0 at the Estadio Nacional and Colo-Colo 2–1; however the team finished in a mediocre 10th place and Figueroa left the club for Mexican club Veracruz.

The club's board signed up Ivo Basay to face the 2011 season, where the club finished fifth in the Apertura league table and qualified to the play-offs, with Fernando De la Fuente and Enzo Gutiérrez as key players. In the play-offs stage, O'Higgins beat Palestino, reaching the semi-finals against Universidad de Chile, in which they were defeated 8–1 on aggregate. Basay was sacked in the 2011 Clausura, with poor results and the 7–1 loss against U de Chile in the Apertura semi-finals being the deciding factors.

Eduardo Berizzo era: First league and supercopa title

In December 2011, the club's board signed manager Eduardo Berizzo for the 2012 season. The year started of abrupt form with Fernando De la Fuente's departure after a strong discussion with new head coach Berizzo and his assistant, Roberto Bonano. It was then confirmed that the player would be loaned to Deportes La Serena, which meant that O'Higgins were losing of this form one of the best defensive midfielders in Chilean football to face the Torneo de Apertura, given that De la Fuente had a great 2011 season.[9]

However, the club's board surprised the public with the signings of Argentine attacking midfielder Ramón Fernández, who had previously been tempted by the country's powerhouse clubs: Colo-Colo and Universidad de Chile,[10] the Paraguayan footballer Rodrigo Rojas, who played for River Plate, and finally defender Julio Barroso, who played for Boca Juniors and was champion of the 2005 U-20 World Cup with Argentina.

Berizzo's first season and first final

On 27 January 2012, Berizzo achieved his first competitive victory with the club in a league match against Antofagasta with a goal from new signing Ramón Fernández,[11] [12] narrowly losing the next match at the capital Santiago with Colo-Colo 1–0.[13] On 25 February, the team achieved its most important victory against Universidad de Chile at home, a 3–0 victory with goals from Enzo Gutiérrez, Guillermo Suárez and Ramon Fernández, in where Luis Marín saved a penalty to keep a clean sheet, earning of this form the first place in the league table,[14] which was lost when Universidad Católica defeated the team 2–1 on 11 March.[15] Despite this loss, the team achieved four consecutive wins, with Julio Barroso and Rodrigo Rojas as the key players, a run that finished when Huachipato defeated the club 2–1 on 15 April.[16] Despite the defeat at the city of Talcahuano, the team bounced back and beat Palestino 5–0 at home in the next match.[17] The following week, a 1–0 away victory over Santiago Wanderers in Valparaíso gave the club qualification to the 2012 Copa Sudamericana, where they were eliminated by Cerro Porteño in the first stage 7–3 on aggregate.[18]

The team qualified for the play-offs after a successful Apertura tournament, where the club finished second in the table, only under U. de Chile.[19] The club had to begin the play-offs by facing Unión La Calera in the quarter-finals.[20] In the first match at La Calera on 24 May, the team won 1–0 with a free kick scored by Ramón Fernández, who did not celebrate the goal as he was planning to leave the club at the conclusion of the season.[21] In Rancagua for the second match, the club clinched a 3–2 victory, thanks to Enzo Gutiérrez, who scored an incredible bicycle kick that defeated keeper Lucas Giovini.[22] In the semi-finals, the club faced Unión Española at Santiago in the first leg, where the club was defeated 1–0 at the Estadio Santa Laura,[23] but won the second match 2–1 with goals of Luis Pedro Figueroa and Rodrigo Rojas, earning a spot in the finals for the first time in its history on the away goals rule, after the 2–2 aggregate score.[24]

In the first leg of the finals against Universidad de Chile, O'Higgins beat "La U" at home 2–1 with goals of Rojas and the Argentine full back Alejandro López in a match known as La tarde de los paraguas felices because the rainy and cloudy day of the match in Rancagua.[25] In the second leg on 2 July, played at the Estadio Nacional, the scoreline was 1–1 which put O'Higgins up 3–2 on aggregate, and was about to win their first league title by becoming Torneo de Apertura champions, until the 92nd minute, because with Guillermo Marino's goal the series was equalized at 3–3 and the match went to penalties. "La U" won the penalty shootout 2–0 thanks to their keeper Jhonny Herrera, who saved three penalties.[26] However, the match was full of controversy, because the referee Enrique Osses conceded a non–existent penalty to Marino, that was scored by Aránguiz, and unfairly red-carded centre back Julio Barroso, after Universidad de Chile defender José Rojas had initially taunted Barroso.[27]

Tomé Tragedy

In the Torneo Transición 2013, Berizzo brought in many reinforcements such as Osmán Huerta, Mariano Uglessich, Braulio Leal, Gonzalo Barriga and Pablo Calandria among others. In this tournament the club also played the last official match at Estadio El Teniente, after it was awarded for renovations ahead of the 2015 Copa America, rotating between Estadio Santa Laura, Estadio La Granja and Estadio Monumental David Arellano during the rest of the tournament.

After the away victory against Huachipato at Estadio CAP in the third matchday of the league, an unfortunate tragedy happened. On 9 February 2013 at around midnight in Tomé, a bus carrying O'Higgins fans crashed and 16 fans died.[28] [29] Instead of going back to Rancagua, the fans decided to make a stop in Dichato for a festival. Out of 37 fans in the bus, 16 died and 21 were injured. As a result of the tragic accident, a three-day mourning was declared in Tomé and Rancagua, and fans made a farewell to the deceased at the Estadio El Teniente.[30]

O'Higgins eventually finished fourth after an acceptable campaign, where it was beaten by Unión Española, Universidad Católica and Cobreloa. However, the club had to finish third to qualify for the Copa Sudamericana, and therefore missed out.

Another fight for the title

For the 2013–14 Torneo Apertura, O'Higgins is reinforced with players like Fernando Gutiérrez, Francisco Pizarro and Pedro Pablo Hernández. The club started playing this tournament against Deportes Iquique, and win with a goal that was eventually scored by the tournament's top scorer, Pablo Calandria. In the next match the club defeats Deportes Antofagasta 2–1 with goals from Pizarro and Gonzalo Barriga. On the next match day, the club tied with Audax Italiano but after that they team went on a significant winning streak, which began by beating Cobresal in El Salvador, and then Cobreloa, Universidad de Concepción, Universidad Católica, Unión Española and a victory over Unión La Calera in the final minutes, with the club only losing two games against Palestino and Colo-Colo.

The match versus Rangers de Talca

See main article: Rangers v O'Higgins (2013).

On 7 December 2013, the last match day of the championship, the club has to visit Rangers de Talca, where the team starts losing with a Mauricio Gómez goal, but the team did not give up and turned the game around in their favor with a penalty from Pablo Calandria and a goal from Julio Barroso. In the second half, it seemed like the title was slipping from their hands, because Rodolfo González and Esteban Ciaccheri scored at the Estadio Fiscal de Talca, to put the score at 3–2 in favor of Rangers.

Berizzo makes changes and substitutes Francisco Pizarro and Osmán Huerta into the match, and Huerta, with his first touch of the game, overcomes goalkeeper Nicolás Peric and ties the game at 3–3 with 10 minutes left, but in the 90' Calandria was brought down in the penalty box and referee Patricio Polic awarded a penalty for O'Higgins, along with red-carding Rangers goalkeeper Peric. Since Rangers had already used up all of their available substitutions, midfielder Hugo Diaz had to be the goalkeeper. At the same time, Universidad Católica was winning against La Calera in Quillota, so if O'Higgins tied or lost then Universidad Catolica would be the champion. In the last minute of the match, Calandria scored his penalty, unleashing the wild celebrations of 4,500 fans, with the club having completed an epic comeback to win the match 4–3, after Universidad Católica overcame La Calera 2–0.[31]

The final

See main article: 2013–14 Súper Final Apertura.

After a hard-fought championship title fight against Universidad Católica, both finish the tournament with the same number of points. This meant there had to be a tiebreaking game, after an amendment to championship rules, since before the modification the champion was whoever had a better goal difference if both teams had the same number of points. This was the case for the 2013 tournament, in which Unión Española and Universidad Católica had equal points until the last matchday, but the league championship was given to Union Española because it had a better goal difference.

On 10 December 2013, in front of a sold-out Estadio Nacional de Chile, O'Higgins clinched a victory against the Crusaders, with Pablo Hernández scoring the only goal of the match, who ultimately entered club history and in the hearts of the fans as the person to give the club its first Primera División league title.[32]

Supercopa Champion and back to Copa Libertadores

See main article: 2014 Supercopa de Chile.

After winning the final of the 2013 Torneo Apertura, the club returns to the Copa Libertadores after almost three decades, (their last participation was in 1984), participating in Group 3 with Cerro Porteño, Deportivo Cali and Lanús. The first game was played against Lanús on 13 February 2014 at Estadio Ciudad de Lanús, where the match ends 0–0. In the second match, O'Higgins faced Deportivo Cali at Estadio Monumental in Santiago, where Yerson Opazo put the ball past Colombian goalkeeper Faryd Mondragón, becoming the first player to score for the club in a Copa Libertadores match in 30 years, with the match ending 1–0 in favor of the celestes. In the third match the club played at the Estadio Monumental again, this time against Cerro Porteño, where the Rancaguan club began winning 2–0 with one of the goals being scored by Eduardo Alejandro López from a nice free-kick. However, after midfielder Braulio Leal was sent off, the momentum decreased and the Paraguayan club tied the game 2–2.

In the next meeting the club played Cerro Porteño again but this time at Estadio General Pablo Rojas, where the club are defeated 2–1. In the fifth match the club traveled to Colombia to face Deportivo Cali at Estadio Olímpico Pascual Guerrero, where Yerson Opazo scored one of the best goals in the tournament from about 30 meters, but Deportivo Cali's Néstor Camacho tied the game at 1–1, and it finished with that score.

In the last group stage match against Lanus, O'Higgins returned to Estadio El Teniente after its renovation for the 2015 Copa América. O'Higgins had the chance to make the next round, but Calandria's penalty was saved by Agustín Marchesín, and the game ended 0–0, which meant the celestes were eliminated from the cup. O'Higgins finished with 7 points and in third place of its group.

In the Clausura 2014, O'Higgins ended in third place with 30 points, and in the Accumulated Table as second with 69 points, (surpassing Colo-Colo, Clausura champions) which qualified it to play the Supercopa de Chile to see who would be the Superchampion. The game was played at the Estadio San Carlos de Apoquindo against 2013–14 Copa Chile champion Deportes Iquique. Iquique started winning the match with a goal from Rodrigo Ezequiel Díaz, and O'Higgins leveled the score five minutes before the end of the first half with a goal from Luis Pedro Figueroa. The match ended 1–1 after 120 minutes and went into penalties. O'Higgins won 3–2 after Rodrigo Brito of Deportes Iquique missed his penalty, unleashing the joy of over 6,000 celeste fans who came to the Santiago Metropolitan Region, and becoming the second Superchampion of Chilean football.

Sava and Sánchez: After Berizzo era

After becoming Chile's super champion, Eduardo Berizzo leaves the institution and joins Celta de Vigo in Spain, thus ending the most successful seasons in the club's history. For the Apertura 2014 the new light blue coach is Facundo Sava, players like Luis Valenzuela arrive after his time at Deportes Antofagasta, Hans Martínez who came without regularity from Almería, the Uruguayan Octavio Rivero, who came to replace the scorer Pablo Calandria who was not registered in the tournament due to a meniscus injury, and the trans-Andean Jorge Carranza, Damián Lizio and Fernando Elizari in that championship began with a 2-1 victory over Unión La Calera, then on the following date they lost against the University of Chile in Rancagua . From then on the club falls into an irregularity within the tournament, the only highlight is the defeat against Colo-Colo at the Estadio Monumental by 3-2 with great participation by Octavio Rivero who scored 2 goals, who at the end of the tournament is the scorer of the team with 10 goals. Due to the great tournament he is bought by the Vancouver Whitecaps for 3 million USD. At the end of the championship the light blue team finished in eighth position, with this Facundo Sava was dismissed from the team.

In the 2015 Clausura, after the dismissal of Facundo Sava, Vitamina Sánchez took over the team, Hugo Droguett, who came from South Korea, and Sebastián Pinto, who returned to the institution after passing in 2011, joined the squad. In the championship they finished in ninth position, qualifying by exclusion to the 2015 Pre-Sudamericana Liguilla because clubs such as Universidad de Concepción, Universidad de Chile, Huachipato were already classified for the international tournament. In the league O'Higgins faces the Universidad Católica, in the first leg of the first round they face each other at the El Teniente, equaling 2 goals, which were converted by Pablo Calandria, for the crusaders David Llanos and José Luis Muñoz. In the second leg, Universidad Católica wins 3-1, the discount went to Sebastián Pinto. Once again Pablo Calandria is the team's top scorer with 8 goals.

The second part of the year in the 2015 Apertura, the team is reinforced with; Esteban González from Huachipato and a historic one like Yerson Opazo leaves for the plant institution, Pedro Muñoz from the Universidad de Concepción, Emilio Zelaya from Arsenal de Sarandí and the returns of Gonzalo Barriga who came from a loan at Santiago Wanderers, and Ramón Fernández, Hans Martínez was fired from the club, Sebastián Pinto goes to Eskişehirspor, César Fuentes is bought by Universidad Católica and Alejandro López leaves for Cobresal. In the tournament the club does not achieve regularity, losing more games as a visitor, finishing undefeated at the El Teniente, however Pablo Sánchez's team fails to compete in the tournament or qualify for the postseason for a place in an international tournament. finishing in seventh position with a performance of 51%, thus ending the Vitamina era in O'Higgins. Pablo Calandria is the team's top scorer with 9 goals and reaches 51 goals for the club and ranks among the historical scorers.

In 2016 the club again carried out a campaign fighting for the title until the last date, after the interim Cristián Arán took over as main coach, losing the chance to become champion after a defeat on the last date of the 2016 Clausura championship against the Universidad de Concepción 1-2 at home at the El Teniente, leaving the title to Universidad Católica, which wins its match against Deportes Iquique.

After Arán's departure in 2017, the club failed to have a good campaign under the guidance of Gabriel Milito, finishing in 14th position in the Transition Tournament. Despite this, the club was only in 5th annual position in the relegation table, due to its previous campaign. After Milito's resignation, Larriera takes over the team, achieving poor results, which costs him his job midway through the season. The team takes a boost in the final stretch of 2018 season led by Marco Antonio Figueroa, finishing eighth, but out of international competitions, also marking the retirement of sky-blue scorer Pablo Calandria, who scored at his last game a penalty against Audax Italiano. [33]

Currently situation: 20's of Ups and Downs

In 2019 he again had a regular campaign, finishing the year in eighth place, with Maximiliano Salas being his top scorer with 6 goals. The year 2020 marked by the COVID-19 pandemic forced the Campeonato Nacional to stop for a time. After the resumption of the tournament, the team fought relegation until the arrival of Dalcio Giovagnoli, with whom the team managed to escape reaching 10th position, winning their match on the last day against Colo-Colo in the last minute with a penalty goal from Tomás Alarcón, who was sell to Cádiz at the end of the season, which cost the white team to compete in the promotion league due to relegation. The following seasons have been marked by the team's irregularity and also by the failure to qualify for international tournaments, marking in 2021 the departure of Giovagnoli and the fleeting entry of Miguel Ramírez during the second semester. The year 2022 was directed solely by the Argentine strategist Mariano Soso, and despite the fact that he returns to amend an acceptable campaign, he does not qualify for the Copa Sudamericana, which ends up costing him his position as strategist of the sky-blue team.

Facilities

Estadio El Teniente

See main article: Estadio El Teniente.

Stadium Name:Estadio El Teniente
Nickname:El Mundialista de Rancagua (The World Cup Stadium of Rancagua)
Templo de las Ilusiones (Temple of Illusions)
Opened:1947
2014 (renovated)
Seating Capacity:14,087
Surface:Natural grass
Dimensions:105mx68mm (344feetx223feetm)

The club's home ground is Estadio El Teniente, built in September 1945 and located in Rancagua, being named Braden Copper Company Stadium, because that company was the stadium's owner. The first professional game was during the 1955 Primera División tournament, in a match that O'Higgins won 3–2 to Ferrobádminton.[34]

In 1960, after the 9.5 earthquake of Valdivia that destroyed the original venues of the 1962 FIFA World Cup, the Chilean delegation designed the city of Rancagua as a venue, after the refusal of Valparaíso and Antofagasta. The first international match was between Argentina and Bulgaria, where with a goal of Héctor Facundo, the South Americans defeated the Europeans on 30 May.[35] El Teniente was the home stadium of all Group D matches, and one quarter-final game between West Germany and Yugoslavia.

The Government of Chile acquired the 51% of shares to United States' Braden Copper Company in 1967, as part of the copper nationalization, that culminated four years later, becoming property of Codelco Chile, being re–named with the current name of Parque El Teniente, in reference to mine ubicated in locality of Machalí.

A new stadium with capacity for 14,087 persons was confirmed by the club's owner Ricardo Abumohor in 2013, and the old stadium was demolished in 2014.[36]

The new stadium was inaugurated on 8 April 2014. In the inaugural match, O'Higgins played against Lanús for the week 6 of the 2014 Copa Libertadores. The final result was 0–0, marking the elimination of the club from the competition, because it needed a victory to advance to the next round.[37] In 2015, it hosted two group stage matches of the 2015 Copa América.

Monasterio Celeste

See main article: Monasterio Celeste.

The training facilities of the club are called the Monasterio Celeste, located on the outskirts of Rancagua, exactly in Requínoa. It replaces the old complex La Gamboína, which until 2014 was the training ground of the club.

The complex consists of seven pitches of natural grass, a mini-stadium of artificial grass, and a hotel with the facilities for the team.

The complex was finished in 2014, but O'Higgins trained there for the first time on 4 January 2013.[38] It was a national team host complex for the 2015 Copa América.

Players

Since the club's establishment in April 1955, more than one thousand of the players on the team have been Chilean. Aníbal González is the historic top−scorer of the club with 117 goals in all competitions. Mario Desiderio is considered the best player in the club's history.[39]

All-time top-ten goalscorers of the club [40] [41]

Juvenal Vargas

Aníbal González

Mario Núñez

Pablo Calandria

Miguel Ángel Neira

Leónidas Burgos

Gustavo De Luca

Juvenal Soto

Luis Pino

Mario Desiderio
1201198279797874636047

1. Only includes Campeonato Nacional, Copa Chile and international competitions. Bold indicates player is still active.

Foreign players like Federico Vairo have also been important players in the history of club. During the mid–1960s, Vairo was a former River Plate player, earning three consecutive Primera División titles, alongside players like the keeper Amadeo Carrizo, the midfielder Omar Sívori, among others.

Another important player of the club is Pablo Hernández, also Argentine, who was part of the historic squad led by Eduardo Berizzo that won the 2013–14 Torneo de Apertura. He is also important because he scored the goal in the Super Final match against Universidad Catolica, which gave the league title to the club. He was one of the most important players of the team, alongside the goalkeepers Paulo Garcés and Roberto González, the defenders Julio Barroso, Mariano Uglessich and Yerson Opazo, the midfielders Luis Pedro Figueroa, César Fuentes, Braulio Leal, Gonzalo Barriga and the striker and top goalscorer Pablo Calandria, among others.

The team has had several Argentine footballers in majority, but also players of Paraguay, Uruguay, Brazil, Colombia and Venezuela have been in minority.

In 2006, under the orders of the manager Jorge Garcés, Giancarlo Maldonado, Venezuela national team striker, was signed, becoming the first footballer of that nationality to play in the club, and Aílton da Silva, seasons later, was the first player of Brazilian nationality in 2008 to arrive at the club.

Juan Rodrigo Rojas, now playing in Cerro Porteño, and Octavio Rivero, who was signed by Vancouver Whitecaps of Major League Soccer for a US$1.5M fee, were the last players of Paraguayan and Uruguayan nationality, respectively. The last Colombian player was Marco Pérez.

First-team squad

Chilean teams are limited by the ANFP to have on their roster a maximum of six foreign players.[42] ANFP rules also say the number of shirts can't exceed the number of registered players. As of the 2023 season, all Chilean teams must have included in the line-up, at least one Chilean players born on or after January 1, 2002, plus that youth players plays at least 1890 minutes.[43]

[44]

Players with multiple citizenship

There are players who currently have Chilean nationality on the squad through naturalization or nationalization, who do not occupy places as foreigners in the first team squad.

Team of The Century

In 1999, the fans of the club voted to choose the team of the 20th Century. Among the players which are in the starting line-up are the Argentine defender Federico Vairo, Miguel Ángel Neira, Mario Núñez, Mario Desiderio and the top goal-scorer of the history of the club, Aníbal González. The manager chosen was Luis Santibáñez, which reached two of the four participations in the Copa Libertadores, and led the club to its furthest position in the competition, the semi-finals, in 1980.[45]

Pos. Country Player
GKCarlos Bustos
GKErnesto Díaz
GKConstantino Zazzali
DFGabriel Mendoza
DFFederico Vairo
DFEduardo Herrera
DFRené Valenzuela
DFRené Serrano
DFCésar Valdivia
DFSantiago Gatica
DFMauro Meléndez
DFJoel Molina
Pos. Country Player
MFRoberto Rodríguez
MFMiguel Ángel Neira
MFLeónidas Burgos
MFFrancisco Cuevas
MFJoel Retamal
FWAlejandro Trujillo
FWMario Desiderio
FWMario Núñez
FWAníbal González
FWGustavo De Luca
FWRoque Alfaro
CoachLuis Santibáñez

Recent results

Season stats

SeasonRankTop scorer(s) in leagueGoals
Campeonato Nacional 202311th309813373935Matías Marín6QF
Campeonato Nacional 20228th3011118313144Facundo Barceló72R
Campeonato Nacional 202113th3291112314138Marcelo Larrondo82R
Campeonato Nacional 202010th3412913403945Facundo Castro7
Campeonato Nacional 20198th2410410343534Maximiliano Salas6R16
Campeonato Nacional 20188th3012513414141Nicolás Mazzola82R

Managers

The first coach of the club was Francisco Hormazábal, who was signed for the 1955 Primera División tournament. In 1957, the board hired European Carlos Snopec as manager, who was the first international coach of the club.[46] From 1958 to 1960 Argentine José Salerno was the manager of the club. The club went through three managers in 1961, and four managers in 1972.

In 1978–79, the club achieved an historic season with Luis Santibáñez as coach, who qualified O'Higgins to the 1980 Copa Libertadores' semi-finals, where the team lost to Club Nacional of Uruguay.[47] In the early 1990s, the club's board signed Manuel Pellegrini to face the 1992 Copa Conmebol, where the club was eliminated early by Gimnasia y Esgrima de La Plata[48] Then, with a prior spell of Nelson Acosta, who potentiated players like Jaime Riveros, the club achieved the finals of the Copa Chile in 1994, being runner–up under Roberto Hernández as coach.[49] In 2005, Nelson Cossio became coach with the objective of reaching the first division again, which he achieved. Oscar Meneses coached the team during the Apertura tournament in their return to the first division, but was sacked due to poor performances.

In 2006, Jorge Garcés became coach of the club to play the Torneo Clausura, who abandoned the institution the following season, after a 5–0 loss with Colo-Colo.[50] In December 2007, Ricardo Abumohor, the club's owner, reported that he hired Argentine manager Jorge Sampaoli for the new tournament,[51] where he had decent seasons with players like Jean Beausejour and Carlos Carmona as key players.[51]

After a regular tournament in the 2010 season, Ivo Basay was signed for the 2011 Apertura.[52] Basay was replaced by José Cantillana for the 2011 Clausura.[53]

In January 2012, the club's board signed Eduardo Berizzo and his assistant coach, former River Plate's goalkeeper in the 1980s, Roberto Bonano.[54] Under Berizzo's administration, the team reached the Apertura final, where the team finished runner-ups after losing 2–0 in penalties to Universidad de Chile.[55] However, this result gave the club qualification to the 2012 Copa Sudamericana, which is important due to the fact that O'Higgins hadn't played a continental competition since 1992. Berizzo also lead the team to their first league title in the 2013–14 Apertura, and to the Supercup win in 2014.

Current technical staff

Position Name
Caretaker manager Juan Manuel Azconzábal
Assistant coach Ariel Zapata
Assistant coach Diego Reveco
Doctor Felipe Rojas
Doctor Daniel Ahumada
Delegate Carlos Fierro
Video analist Eduardo Morales
Manager Pablo Calandria
Nutricionist Isabel Morales
Position Name
Physio Cristofer Fuenzalida
Physio Daniel Donoso
Security chief Mario Muñoz
Goalkeeping coach Rolando Urzúa
Fitness coach Mike Zepeda
Fitness coach José Peña
Equipment manager Andrés Rojas
Equipment manager Williams Acuña

Chronology of managers

This list includes the managers and the interim managers since the foundation of the club until today. Only 23 managers in the history of the club are or were foreigners.

Management

The club has had 17 presidents throughout history. The first president of the institution was Francisco Rajcevich, who held the post between January and December 1955, while Patricio Mekis had the longest time period in charge of the institution (between January 1958 and January 1965) and is currently honorary president of the club.

Formerly in the corporation presidents elected the same 12 directors-leaders who take the time to divide the charges. In turn, the elected president must be accepted by a majority of members. This president was in principle intended to be the leader for two years, but after a year, when half-directory is renewed, 8 leaders who continue plus 8 new or re-elected decide whether the current president remains in charge or another is chosen.

In 2005, the club had three different presidents due to internal problems and economic problems facing the club. After this, Ricardo Abumohor purchases the club and takes the role of president.

Current management staff

Position Name
Owner Ricardo Abumohor
President Pablo Hoffmann
Director Roberto Abumohor
Director Rodrigo Abumohor
Director Cristian Abumohor
Director Martín Abumohor
Commercial Manager Juan Cristóbal Ibieta
Manager Pablo Calandria

Chronology of presidents

Club badge and colours

The current badge of the club is a phoenix over a pentagon with the colours white, yellow, and green. The colors remember the club colors of Instituto O'Higgins, América de Rancagua and O'Higgins Braden respectively. Several Rancaguan people affirm that the phoenix represents the Chilean historic city, in where the founding father and hero of the country, Bernardo O'Higgins, led his army to win the Battle of Rancagua against Spain, highlighting that the club's name is in honour of him.

The club's current home kit colours are sky blue and white in honor to the 1950 FIFA World Cup Uruguay national team title-winner, whilst the traditional away colours are yellow in honour of América, but in recent years the away kits have been white and black. In the 2010 Campeonato Petrobras, O'Higgins wore the former kit of O'Higgins Braden as away colours.

An unusual fact was that in the 2012 Torneo de Apertura first leg final at home against Universidad de Chile, the team played with the away kit colours in Rancagua, the city where the team is based.

The current home kit of the club consists of a sky blue shirt, black shorts and socks. The kit is manufactured by Joma, and the main sponsor is LatamWin.[56]

Current sponsors

All-time kits

Kit manufacturers and sponsors

PeriodKit manufacturerShirt main partner
1977NoneTurbus
1978–1986Codelco
1987Penalty
1988–1991Le Coq Sportif
1991–1994Adidas
1995–1998Cerveza Cristal
1999Uhlsport
2000–2001Kelme
2002–2003JCQ
2004Uhlsport
2005Training
PeriodKit manufacturerShirt main partner
2006LottoCerveza Cristal
2007–2008Productos Fernández
2009Mitre
2010Agrosuper
2011Own Brand
2012Diadora
2013 (jan.-jun.)None
2013 (jul.-dec.)TBF Global Sports
2014VTR
2015– 2017New Balance
2018Adidas
2019–2021Sun Monticello
2022Latamwin
2023–Joma

Club culture

Supporter groups

Tomé Tragedy

See main article: Tomé Tragedy. On February 9, 2013, after the match between the club and Huachipato, a group of fans traveled in a bus to Tomé, where in the Cuesta Caracol fell into a ravine, causing the death of 16 fans. As a sign of solidarity, a minute of silence was carried out in the different leagues of the ANFP for matches played in the following days, and in Rancagua and Tomé a day of mourning was planned.

Rivalries

O'Higgins doesn't have a defined classic rival, but they do have a minor rivalry with CSD Enfoque because both clubs are from Rancagua. Since Enfoque's establishment, the club plays the Rancagua derby since 2011, the top–scorer of that derby is the Argentine striker Guillermo Suárez. The last official game between both clubs occurred during a 2–2 Copa Chile away draw, with goals scored by Boris Sagredo and Suárez. In the first leg match played at El Teniente, O'Higgins comfortably won 3–0 with goals from Guillermo Suárez, Tomás Lizana, and Enzo Gutiérrez.[57] In 2013, the clubs played a friendly game, where O'Higgins won 3–1.

However, the club does have a regional rivalry with Curicó Unido and Rangers de Talca.

Club details

All-time statistics

This table includes only results pertaining to the Campeonato Nacional and the Primera B, separated by year of the realization of the tournament, as well as the different rounds that had tournaments.[58]

Campeonato NacionalPrimera BChampionsElimination on Play-offsPromotedRelegated

Results

Overview

Last updated: Campeonato Nacional 2023 and Copa Chile 2022

Club
60 71 1898682 525691 2701 2757 –562176
1010 347 164 106 87 577 442 +155533
4040 334 13494 110 573 510+63402
Total 98 109 2418 933 686819 3665 3488 +216 2924

1. 1955–63, 1965–75, 1977–85, 1988–96, 1999–01, 2006–

2. 1964, 1976, 1986–87, 1997–98, 2002–05

3. Did not participate in the years 1986, 1987, 1998

International record

In his history, the club has qualified for eight international tournaments, including four times in Copa Libertadores, thrice in Copa Sudamericana and once in the Copa Conmebol.

Overview

Last updated: 31 December 2018.

Competition
Copa Libertadores4 28 5 10 13 27 33 –5
Copa Sudamericana3 6 1 3 2 4 9 –5
Copa Conmebol1 2 0 1 1 0 2 –2
Total 8 36 6 14 16 31 44 –13

Matches

SeasonCompetitionRoundCountryClubHomeAwayAggregate
1979Copa LibertadoresGroup 4Palestino1–10–12nd place (eliminated)
Portuguesa1–11–1
Deportivo Galicia6–01–0
1980Copa LibertadoresGroup 5Cerro Porteño0–00–11st place (qualified)
Colo-Colo1–11–3
Sol de América2–04–1
Semi-finalNacional0–10–23rd place (eliminated)
Olimpia0–10–2
1984Copa LibertadoresGroup 2Universidad Católica0–20–24th place (eliminated)
Blooming3–42–3
Bolívar0–01–5
1992Copa ConmebolFirst roundGimnasia y Esgrima0–00–20-2
2012Copa SudamericanaFirst roundCerro Porteño3–30–43-7
2014Copa LibertadoresGroup 3Lanús0–00–03rd place (eliminated)
Deportivo Cali1–01–1
Cerro Porteño2–21–2
2016Copa SudamericanaFirst roundMontevideo Wanderers0–00–00–0 (4–5 p.)
2017Copa SudamericanaFirst roundFuerza Amarilla1–00–21–2

Affiliated clubs

Honours

Domestic Competitions

O'Higgins Braden

Segunda División

América de Rancagua

Segunda División

Reserves and Youth leagues

See main article: O'Higgins F.C. Fútbol Joven.

O'Higgins had a reserve team called O'Higgins F.C. Fútbol Joven that competes in the Fútbol Joven de Chile.

External links

Official websites

News sites

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 10 December 2013. La historia de un club cada vez más grande. El Tipógrafo. es-cl. 12 May 2023. https://web.archive.org/web/20230512112801/https://eltipografo.cl/2013/12/la-historia-de-un-club-cada-vez-mas-grande. live.
  2. Web site: Historia - Pellegrini Se Va. 2022-02-25. O'Higgins FC.
  3. Web site: Historia - Magnifica Copa Chile. 2022-02-25. O'Higgins. 16 January 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220116220118/https://ohigginsfc.cl/historia.php?id=6. live.
  4. Web site: Historia - A La Serie B por Cuarta Vez. 2022-02-26. O'Higgins FC. 16 January 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220116220118/https://ohigginsfc.cl/historia.php?id=6. live.
  5. Web site: Historia - El Retorno a la Serie de Honor. 2022-02-26. O'Higgins FC.
  6. Web site: Historia - Una Nueva Caida. 25 February 2022. O'Higgins FC. es. 16 January 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220116221030/https://ohigginsfc.cl/historia.php?id=1#39. live.
  7. Web site: Historia - Otro aÑo en la B. 2022-01-11. O'Higgins. es. 13 January 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220113093007/https://www.ohigginsfc.cl/historia.php?id=1. live.
  8. Web site: Historia - Una Noche Feliz: Retorno a Primera. 2022-01-11. O'Higgins FC. 13 January 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220113093007/https://www.ohigginsfc.cl/historia.php?id=1. live.
  9. Web site: Fernando De La Fuente: "La obligación es sumar" . Granate.inet.cl . Deportes La Serena blog . 9 February 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131206114536/http://granate.inet.cl/php/modules.php?name=News&file=print&sid=3921 . 6 December 2013 . dead .
  10. Web site: Ramón Fernández llegó a acuerdo para convertirse en refuerzo de O´Higgins . . 30 December 2011 . 5 July 2012 . 6 December 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131206073200/http://www.cooperativa.cl/prontus_nots/site/artic/20111230/pags/20111230164814.html . live .
  11. Web site: O'Higgins vence a Antofagasta en el primer duelo del torneo . . 27 January 2012 . 5 July 2012 . 29 January 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120129222706/http://deportes.terra.cl/futbol/apertura/2012/ohiggins-vence-a-antofagasta-en-el-primer-duelo-del-torneo,bb490df9f7125310VgnVCM20000099f154d0RCRD.html . live .
  12. Web site: El conjunto dirigido por Eduardo Berizzo logró sus primeras tres unidades al vencer a Antofagasta por 1–0 con un golazo de Ramón Fernández a los 42' en el inicio del torneo nacional . . 27 January 2012 . 5 July 2012 . 7 July 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120707110351/http://www.latercera.com/noticia/deportes/2012/01/656-427261-9-ohiggins-consiguio-su-primer-triunfo-en-el-arranque-del-apertura.shtml . dead .
  13. Web site: Ivo Basay y victoria de Colo Colo ante O'Higgins: "Era fundamental ganar" . . 5 February 2012 . 5 July 2012 . 6 February 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120206103519/http://latercera.com/noticia/deportes/2012/02/656-428891-9-ivo-basay-y-victoria-de-colo-colo-ante-ohiggins-era-fundamental-ganar.shtml . dead .
  14. Web site: Universidad de Chile cae sin apelación 3–0 ante O'Higgins . . 25 February 2012 .
  15. Web site: Universidad Católica derrotó al sorprendente O'Higgins de Eduardo Berizzo . https://web.archive.org/web/20120313001928/http://elgrafico.grupopublimetro.cl/universidad-catolica-derroto-al-sorprendente-ohiggins-de-eduardo-berizzo . dead . 13 March 2012 . . 11 March 2012 .
  16. Web site: 15 April 2012. Huachipato logra valioso triunfo en casa ante O'Higgins. La Tercera. 6 July 2012. 1 August 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120801132155/http://www.latercera.com/noticia/deportes/2012/04/656-454418-9-huachipato-logra-valioso-triunfo-en-casa-ante-ohiggins.shtml. dead.
  17. Web site: O'Higgins aplastó a Palestino, recuperó la senda del triunfo y sigue soñando con la Sudamericana . . 21 April 2012 . 6 July 2012 . 28 April 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120428112255/http://www.emol.com/noticias/deportes/2012/04/21/536805/ohiggins-aplasto-a-palestino-recupero-la-senda-del-triunfo-y-sigue-sonando-con-la-sudamericana.html . live .
  18. Web site: O´Higgins venció como visita a Wanderers y clasificó a la Copa Sudamericana . . 28 April 2012 . 6 July 2012 . 2 May 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120502020038/http://www.cooperativa.cl/o-higgins-vencio-como-visita-a-wanderers-y-clasifico-a-la-copa-sudamericana/prontus_nots/2012-04-28/223113.html . live .
  19. Web site: U. de Chile fue el mejor de la fase regular del Torneo de Apertura . . 21 May 2012 . 14 July 2012 . 16 October 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131016073438/http://www.cooperativa.cl/resumen-u-de-chile-fue-el-mejor-en-la-fase-regular-del-torneo-de-apertura/prontus_nots/2012-05-20/202941.html . live .
  20. Web site: Así quedaron las parejas de los playoffs del Torneo de Apertura . Redgol.cl . 20 May 2012 . 14 July 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130826133146/http://redgol.cl/2012/5/asi-quedaron-las-parejas-de-los-playoffs-d/ . 26 August 2013 . dead . dmy-all .
  21. Web site: Fútbol: O'Higgins derrotó 1–0 a Calera y tiene gran ventaja para la revancha . . 24 May 2012 . 14 July 2012 . 2 April 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150402143646/http://deportes.terra.cl/otros-deportes/futbol-ohiggins-derroto-1-0-a-calera-y-tiene-gran-ventaja-para-la-revancha,c2c881a988187310VgnVCM10000098cceb0aRCRD.html . live .
  22. Web site: O'Higgins venció por 3 a 2 a Unión La Calera en Rancagua y se instaló en semifinales del Apertura . Biobiochile.cl . 27 May 2012 . dead . https://archive.today/20130116111936/http://deportes.biobiochile.cl/notas/2012/05/27/ohiggins-sale-a-firmar-el-paso-a-la-semifinal-ante-union-la-calera.shtml . 16 January 2013 . dmy-all .
  23. Web site: Unión Española doblegó a O´Higgins y dio el primer golpe en las semifinales . . 16 June 2012 .
  24. Web site: O'Higgins vence a Unión Española por 2–1 y avanza a la final . . 23 June 2012 . 14 July 2012 . 28 July 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120728013348/http://deportes.terra.cl/futbol/apertura/2012/ohiggins-vence-a-union-espanola-por-2-1-y-avanza-a-la-final,0f31518737b18310VgnVCM20000099cceb0aRCRD.html . live .
  25. Web site: O'Higgins se impuso 2–1 a la "U" en la primera final del Torneo de Apertura . The Clinic.cl . 28 June 2012 . 14 July 2012 . 2 April 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150402135345/http://www.theclinic.cl/2012/06/28/ohiggins-se-impuso-2-1-a-la-u-en-la-primera-final-del-torneo-de-apertura/ . live .
  26. Web site: U. de Chile tricampeón tras batir por penales a O'Higgins en un infartante partido . El mostrador.cl . 2 July 2012 .
  27. Web site: Las cinco polémicas del arbitraje de Enrique Osses . . 2 July 2012 .
  28. Web site: 9 February 2013. Chile mourns for lost O'Higgins supporters. 2021-09-08. Marca.com. 8 September 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210908042521/https://www.marca.com/2013/02/09/en/football/international_football/1360442797.html. live.
  29. Web site: 9 February 2013. 16 football fans killed in Chile bus crash. 2021-09-08. pri.org. en. 8 September 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210908042531/https://www.pri.org/stories/2013-02-09/16-football-fans-killed-chile-bus-crash. live.
  30. Web site: 2013-02-09. Gravísimo accidente con hinchas de O'Higgins. 2021-09-08. ESPNdeportes.com. es. 8 September 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210908042522/https://espndeportes.espn.com/noticias/nota?s=chi&id=1721278&type=story. live.
  31. News: 2013-12-08. O'Higgins send Chilean title race to playoff. en. Reuters. 11 January 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220111164547/https://www.reuters.com/article/uk-soccer-chile-championship-idUKBRE9B703X20131208. live.
  32. Web site: 10 December 2013. O'HIGGINS VENCIÓ A U. CATÓLICA Y CELEBRA EL PRIMER TÍTULO DE SU HISTORIA. 2021-08-29. ANFP. es. 14 September 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210914054134/https://www.anfp.cl/noticia/19673/ohiggins-vencio-a-u-catolica-y-celebra-el-primer-titulo-de-su-historia. live.
  33. Web site: Archived copy . 16 March 2024 . 16 March 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240316235356/https://www.biobiochile.cl/noticias/deportes/futbol/futbol-nacional/2018/11/29/ohiggins-goleo-a-audax-en-el-adios-de-calandria-u-espanola-suena-con-clasificar-a-la-sudamericana.shtml . live .
  34. Web site: 31 July 2005. Chile 1955. RSSSF.
  35. Web site: Argentina vs. Bulgaria – Copa Mundial de la FIFA Chile 1962 . https://web.archive.org/web/20071021043826/http://es.fifa.com/worldcup/archive/edition=21/results/matches/match=1447/report.html . dead . 21 October 2007 . . 17 June 2007 .
  36. Web site: Proyecto de remodelación de estadio El Teniente contempla capacidad para 16 mil personas . El Tipógrafo.cl . 6 May 2011 . 13 July 2012 . 27 October 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20141027180301/http://eltipografo.cl/2011/05/proyecto-de-remodelacion-de-estadio-el-teniente-contempla-capacidad-para-16-mil-personas/ . live .
  37. Web site: "Chau" Libertadores 2014… « Capo de Provincia. dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140413154933/http://www.capodeprovincia.cl/2014/04/el-capo-de-america-se-despide-de-la.html . 13 April 2014 .
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  58. [:es:Anexo:Estadísticas del Club Deportivo O'Higgins]
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