Defensor Sporting Explained

Clubname:Defensor Sporting
Fullname:Defensor Sporting Club
Nickname:El Violeta
La Viola
El Tuerto
El Defe
La Farola
La Cometa
Ground:Estadio Luis Franzini,
Montevideo, Uruguay
Capacity:16,000
Chairman:Alberto Ward
Manager:Martín Varini
Mgrtitle:Coach
League:Primera División
Season:2023
Position:Primera División, 4th of 16
Website:https://www.defensorsporting.com.uy/
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Defensor Sporting Club is a sports club based in Montevideo, Uruguay. Founded in 1913, Defensor has several sports sections, with football and basketball being the most important and the ones in which the club has achieved significant achievements in Uruguay and internationally.

It is the third most highest winning club in Uruguay, with 24 official titles, only surpassed by Peñarol and Club Nacional de Football. The club's best performance at the international stage was in 2014, when they reached the semi-finals of the Copa Libertadores, eventually losing to Club Nacional 2–1 on aggregate. They have won the Uruguayan Championship four times: in 1976, 1987, 1991, and 2007-08. Their 1976 title win was especially notable in Uruguay's football history as it ended 44 years of dominance by Nacional and Peñarol.

History

Founded on March 15, 1913, as Club Atlético Defensor, the name of the club was changed in 1989 to Defensor Sporting Club after a merger with Sporting Club Uruguay. They played in the first professional league season in Uruguay, the 1932 Uruguayan Primera División

Defensor has won many qualifying tournaments (Pre-Liguilla) to the Copa Libertadores and has represented Uruguay on numerous occasions internationally. Regarded as one of the teams that creates and develops many players in Uruguay that become successful players worldwide, It is the first club of numerous players like Jorge "Polilla" da Silva, Sergio "Manteca" Martínez, Sebastián Abreu, Andrés Fleurquin, Marcelo Tejera, Darío Silva, Gonzalo Vargas, Diego "Ruso" Pérez, Nicolás Olivera, Martín Cáceres, Maxi Pereira, Álvaro González, and Tabaré Viúdez.

Legendary coach Prof. José Ricardo de León brought Defensor to the national championship in 1976 and originated a football (fútbol) school of thought, consistently criticized as ultra defensive, that is still present nowadays in several teams and coaches.

In September 2007, the club was considered the World's Club Team of the Month by the IFFHS.[1]

Defensor Sporting's most famous supporter is singer/composer Jaime Roos.

Stadium

See main article: Estadio Luis Franzini.

Defensor plays its home games at its own stadium called Estadio Luis Franzini which has a capacity for 18,000 spectators. The stadium was opened on 31 December 1963, and is located in Parque Rodó, Montevideo.

Rivalries

Defensor Sporting has had a rivalry with Danubio in recent years, because of the two clubs being the next biggest clubs in Uruguay after the historical two: Peñarol and Nacional. Matches between them are called the "Clásico de los medianos" (Spanish for Classic of the Mediums).

Honours

Senior titles

Typewidth=250pxCompetitionTitlesWinning years
National
(League)
scope=colPrimera División41976, 1987, 1991, 2008
Half-year / Short
tournament

(League)
scope=colTorneo Apertura4
scope=colTorneo Clausura4
National
(Cups)
scope=colCopa AUF Uruguay2
scope=colLiguilla Pre-Libertadores8
scope=colCampeonato Nacional General Artigas1
scope=colTorneo Cuadrangular1

Other titles

Titles won in lower divisions:

Typewidth=250pxCompetitionTitlesWinning years
National
(League)
scope=colSegunda División21950, 1965
scope=colSegunda División (1903-1914)1
scope=colDivisional Tercera Extra1

Performance in CONMEBOL competitions

17 appearances

1977

Group Stage

1980

Group Stage

1982

Group Stage

1990

Round of 16

1992

Round of 16

1994

Round of 16

1996

Round of 16

2001

Group Stage

2006

First Round

2007

Quarter-finals

2009

Quarter-finals

2012

Group Stage

2013

First Stage

2014

Semi-finals

2018

Group Stage

2019

Third Qualifying Stage

2024

First Qualifying Stage

1 appearance

2012

Runner-up

8 appearances

2005

Second Round

2007

Quarter-finals

2008

Round of 16

2010

Round of 16

2015

Quarter-finals

2017

First Stage

2018

Second Stage

2023

First Stage

2 appearances

1995

First Round

1997

First Round

Notable former players

Notable coaches

References

  1. Web site: 20 December 2007. The World's club Team of the Month. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20071221203631/http://www.iffhs.de/?3d4d443d0b803e8b447cce02285fdcdc3bfcdc0aec28d6edbc05. 21 December 2007. 17 November 2020. IFFHS.