José Gálvez FBC explained

Clubname:José Gálvez FBC
Upright:0.8
Fullname:José Gálvez Foot Ball Club
Nickname:La Franja, Pesqueros
Ground:Estadio Manuel Rivera Sánchez, Chimbote, Peru
Capacity:25,000[1]
Chrtitle:President
Chairman: Romel Velásquez
Manager: Favio Campana
League:Copa Perú
Season:2019
Position:National Stage
Website:http://www.josegalvezfbc.com/
Pattern La1:_josegalvez20h
Pattern B1:_josegalvez20h
Pattern Ra1:_josegalvez20h
Pattern Sh1:_josegalvez20h
Leftarm1:FFFFFF
Body1:FFFFFF
Rightarm1:FFFFFF
Shorts1:001E4F
Socks1:FFFFFF
Pattern La2:_josegalvez19a
Pattern B2:_josegalvez19a
Pattern Ra2:_josegalvez19a
Pattern So2:_socks
Leftarm2:0D1131
Body2:0D1131
Rightarm2:0D1131
Shorts2:0D1131
Socks2:0D1131
Pattern So1:_josegalvez20h
Pattern Sh2:_josegalvez19a

José Gálvez FBC is a Peruvian football club based in Chimbote, Ancash. The club was founded in 1951 under the name Manuel Rivera after the famous Chimbote born footballer Manuel Rivera.[2] The club was forced to change its name because the FPF did not allow clubs to be named after living people. Then on 11 November 1963 the club decided the new name would be José Gálvez FBC.[2]

More recently the club played in the Peruvian Second Division and finished as champions in 2011. Thus they were promoted back to the Torneo Descentralizado in the 2012 season only to be relegated on the 2013 and become the Peruvian team with the most relegations from the Peruvian First Division.

History

The club was founded on 27 October 1951 as Club Deportivo Manuel Rivera in recognition of the famous Chimbote born footballer Manuel Rivera, who played for the Peru national team and at that time for Deportivo Municipal.[3] The club kept its original name for about the next eleven years, but then the Peruvian Football Federation decided against allowing clubs to be named after living people.[3] As a result, the club changed its name on 11 November 1963 to José Gálvez Foot Ball Club.[3] The club makes its season debut with its new name in 1964 in the First Division league of Chimbote.[3] The club's first victory was a 2–0 win over Strong Boys on 18 October 1964, with goals from Gonzalo Ponce and Chiang.[3]

In 1971 José Gálvez managed to finish in third place of the 1971 Copa Perú which that season allowed promotion to the top three teams in the Final group stage. Consequently, the club's first ever appearance in the Peruvian First Division was in the 1971 Torneo Descentralizado season.

The club was 1996 and 2005 Copa Perú champion, when it defeated Senati in the finals.

The club have played at the highest level of Peruvian football on eleven occasions, since its first participation in 1971 Torneo Descentralizado to the 2012 Torneo Descentralizado.

The club was 2011 Torneo Intermedio champion, by defeating Sport Ancash in the finals. The club is also the Peruvian supercup 2012 Copa Federación champion.

Rivalries

Jose Galvez FBC has had a long-standing rivalry with Sport Ancash.

Historical list of coaches

Honours

National

League

National cups

Regional

Friendly international

Friendly domestic

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: José Gálvez – Fichajes. Fichajes .com: Noticias y rumores sobre el mercado de fichajes de fútbol.
  2. Web site: Manuel Rivera: Entrecruzando franjas . 30 December 2011 . 11 February 2010 . es . https://web.archive.org/web/20120523223806/http://dechalaca.com/hemeroteca/lo-justo-tio/manuel-rivera-entrecruzando-franjas . 23 May 2012 . dechalaca.com . José Augusto Giuffra . dead .
  3. Web site: De Recuerdo: Jose Galvez FBC Reseña Historica . 30 December 2011 . 3 May 2010 . es . https://archive.today/20130126223159/http://www.josegalvezfbc.com/search/label/Historia . 26 January 2013 . JoseGalvezfbc.com . dead .