RC Celta de Vigo explained

Clubname:Celta Vigo
Upright:0.6
Fullname:Real Club Celta de Vigo, S.A.D.
Nickname:Los/Os Celestes (The Sky Blues)
O Celtiña
Founded: (as Club Celta)[1]
Ground:Balaídos
Capacity:24,870[2]
Owner:Grupo Corporativo Ges, S.L.
Chairman:Marián Mouriño
Chrtitle:President
Manager:Claudio Giráldez
Mgrtitle:Head coach
League:La Liga
Season:2023–24
Position:La Liga, 13th of 20
Pattern La1:_celta2425h
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Pattern Sh1:_celta2425h
Leftarm1:A5D9FF
Body1:A5D9FF
Rightarm1:A5D9FF
Shorts1:FFFFFF
Socks1:A5D9FF
Pattern La2:_celta2425a
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Current:2024–25 RC Celta de Vigo season
Website:https://rccelta.es
Short Name:Celta

Real Club Celta de Vigo (pronounced as /gl/;), commonly known as Celta Vigo, is a Spanish professional football club based in Vigo, Galicia, that competes in La Liga, the top tier of Spanish football. Nicknamed Os Celestes (The Sky Blues), the club was founded in August 1923 as Club Celta, following the merger of Real Vigo Sporting and Real Fortuna. The club's home stadium is Balaídos, which seats 24,870 spectators.

The club's name is derived from the Celts, a people who once lived in the region. Celta have a long-standing rivalry with fellow Galician club Deportivo La Coruña, with whom they contest the Galician derby.

Celta have never won the league title nor Copa del Rey, although they have reached the final three times in the latter. The club finished in their best-ever position of fourth in 2002–03, qualifying for the 2003–04 UEFA Champions League, where they were eliminated by Arsenal in the round of 16. In the 2016–17 UEFA Europa League, Celta reached the semi-finals for the first time, losing to Manchester United. In 2000, Celta were one of the co-winners of the UEFA Intertoto Cup.

History

Foundation

RC Celta de Vigo was formed as a result of the ambition of Vigo's teams to achieve more at national level, where the Basque sides had been their bête noire in the Spanish Championship. The idea was to merge both Vigo-based teams, Real Vigo Sporting and Real Club Fortuna de Vigo, to create a more powerful team at national level. The standard-bearer of this movement was Manuel de Castro, known as "Handicap", a sports writer for the Faro de Vigo who, from 1915, began to write in his articles about the need for a unitarian movement.[3] The slogan of his movement was "Todo por y para Vigo" ("All by and for Vigo"),[3] which eventually found support among the managers of both clubs. It was backed unanimously when De Castro himself presented the motion at the assembly of the Royal Spanish Football Federation in Madrid on 22 June 1923.[3]

On 12 July 1923, the merger was approved at the annual general meetings of Vigo and Fortuna, held at the Cine Odeón and Hotel Moderno, respectively.[3] At the last general meeting of Fortuna and Vigo, which approved the formation of the new club and was held on 10 August, the members decided on the name and colours of the team.[3] Among the various names proposed were Club Galicia, Real Atlético FC, Real Club Olímpico, Breogán and Real Club Celta. The latter two names were the most liked and in the end they decided on Club Celta, an ethnic race linked to Galicia.[3] The first president of Celta was Manuel Bárcena de Andrés, the Count of Torre Cedeira.[3] This assembly also decided on the squad, which totaled 64 players and included some important players from Fortuna and Vigo, and was managed by Francis Cuggy.[3] Their first match was a friendly against Portuguese side Boavista, which Celta won 8–2.[3]

In January 1927, Celta won the 'Copa del Rey Alfonso XIII' trophy after defeating the English sailors team 4–1.[4]

In 1947–48, Celta ranked fourth, the club's joint highest ever finish, and reached the Copa del Generalísimo final, where they lost 4–1 to Sevilla FC.[5] Local striker Pahiño, who took the Pichichi Trophy for 21 goals in 22 games that season, subsequently moved to Real Madrid.[6]

EuroCelta and subsequent decline

In the late 1990s and early 2000s, Celta were dubbed "EuroCelta" by the Spanish press as a result of their European performance. This included a 4–1 aggregate win against Liverpool in a run to the quarter-finals of the 1998–99 UEFA Cup.[7] In the next season's edition they again reached the last eight, with a 4–0 second leg win over Juventus and a 7–0 home win against Benfica (8–1 on aggregate).[8] Domestically, the team reached the 2001 Copa del Rey final, losing 3–1 to Real Zaragoza in Seville.[9]

Key players during the period included Alexander Mostovoi, Valery Karpin and Haim Revivo, though the squad also relied upon other international players as well, such as goalkeeper Pablo Cavallero; defender and future coach Eduardo Berizzo, midfielders Claude Makélélé and Mazinho; winger Gustavo López; and strikers Catanha and Lyuboslav Penev, amongst others.

In 2002–03, under manager Miguel Ángel Lotina, Celta ranked fourth, their highest finish since 1948, and qualified for the 2003–04 UEFA Champions League. They reached the round of 16, where they were eliminated by Arsenal 5–2 on aggregate.[10] Domestically that year, the team came 19th and suffered relegation to the Segunda División.[11] Although the squad was heavily dismantled following the demotion, Celta earned an immediate return to the top flight after finishing second in 2004–05.[12]

In 2006–07, Celta finished 18th and were once again relegated to the Segunda División. The team subsequently fought against relegation to the third tier, and the risk of bankruptcy.[13] This trend was bucked in the 2010–11 season, when new striker David Rodríguez, winger Enrique de Lucas and manager Paco Herrera helped them finish sixth. They were eliminated in the first knockout round by Granada after a penalty shoot-out, the game having finished 1–1 in 90 minutes.[14]

Return to La Liga and Europe

On 3 June 2012, Celta returned to La Liga after a five-year absence.[15] In their first season after returning to the top flight, they avoided relegation to the Segunda División on the final day after beating RCD Espanyol 1–0 to ensure a 17th-place finish.[16]

Under "EuroCelta" veteran Eduardo Berizzo in 2015–16, Celta finished sixth for their best result in a decade and earned a spot in the 2016–17 UEFA Europa League.[17] In their return to European competitions, Celta reached the semi-finals of the 2016–17 UEFA Europa League, where they were eliminated by eventual champions Manchester United.[18]

Identity

Crest

Celta's original crest was rather simple, featuring a red shield with two stylised letter Cs (Club Celta) and the royal crown of Spain; in the year of its foundation, the club became one of a number of Spanish football clubs to be granted patronage by Alfonso XIII and thus the right to use the honorific real (Royal) in its name and the crown on its badge.[3] The following year the shield's colour was changed to the traditional sky blue colour. Like many other Galician clubs, such as Compostela and Racing Ferrol, the crest also features the red cross of Saint James which was added in 1928.[19] [20] [21] During the Spanish Second Republic (1931–1936), the honorific title and crown were removed from the club's name and crest; however, it was to return under the Spanish State.

Kit

Celta's home colours are sky blue and white. Originally, their home strip consisted of a red shirt, black shorts and blue socks. This was later changed at an unknown date to the current colours, representative of the Galician flag.[3]

Celta had the longest-running sponsorship deal in Spanish football, and one of the longest-running in the world, with the French automobile manufacturer Citroën from 1985 to 2016.[22] The company established its plant within walking distance from Balaídos in 1958, and had first sponsored the club's women's basketball team in 1980. In 2016, the sponsor was changed to that of Galician brewery, Estrella Galicia, which had advertised on the back of the shirts since 2011.[23] Their business deal with kit supplier, Umbro, was also one of the longest-running ones, from 1986 to 2010.[24]

YearsKit manufacturerSponsor
BrandCompany
1980–1982MeybaNone
1982–1986Adidas
1986–2010 UmbroCitroënCitroën Automóviles España, S.A.
2010–2013Li-Ning
2013–2016Adidas
2016–2024Estrella Galicia 0,0Hijos de Rivera, S.A.U
2024–presentHummel

Players

First-team squad

[25]

Reserve team

See main article: RC Celta Fortuna.

Out on loan

Records

Club

As of 16 August 2024[26]

Individual

As of 16 August 2024. All current players are in bold.

Most appearances
Rank Player Matches Years
1 533
2 Iago Aspas 494 2008–2013, 2015–present
3 449 2009–2023
4 392 1982–1994
5 369 1981–1993
6 351 1979–1996
7 349 1969–1980
8 328 1970–1980
9 295 1999–2007
10 290 1996–2004
Most goals scored
Rank Player Goals Years
1 Iago Aspas 205 , 2015–present
2 113 1945–1956
113 1991–1999
4 102 1932–1943
5 93 1981–1990
6 92 1965–1970
7 91 1943–1948
8 76 1923–1935
9 75 1940–1949
10 72 1953–1958
72 1996–2004

Internationals playing at Celta

The following past and present Celta players have been capped at full international level while playing for the club.[31]

Management

Ownership

Real Club Celta de Vigo, S.A.D. is a sociedad anónima deportiva, a public limited sports company, owned by the Spanish-Mexican businessman Carlos Mouriño, who has been the majority shareholder since May 2006 when he acquired Horacio Gómez's 39.84% shareholding in the club. He currently owns 67.9% of the club through the holding company Grupo Corporativo Ges, S.L.[32]

In October 2016, the club was the subject of a potential €100 million takeover by the Chinese CITS Group.[33]

Board of directors

PositionName
PresidentMarián Mouriño
Vice presidentsRicardo Barros
Pedro Posada
Board of directorsMaría José Táboas
Primitivo Ferro
Carmen Avendaño
José Fernando Rodilla
Managing directorAntonio Chaves
Financial directorMaría José Herbón
'Fundación Celta' directorGermán Arteta
Academy directorCarlos Hugo García
Business development directorCarlos Cao
Commercial directorCarlos Salvador
Marketing directorMaruxa Magdalena
Security directorJulio Vargas

List of presidents

DatesName
1923–27Manuel de Barcena y Andrés
1927–28Ramón Fernández Mato
1928–29Manuel Prieto González
1929–32Alfredo Escobar
1932–33Luis de Vicente Sasiáin
1933–34Indalecio Vázquez
1934–35Cesáreo González
1935–39Rodrigo de la Rasilla
1939–40Pedro Braña Merino
DatesName
1940–41Manuel Núñez González
1941–42Fernando de Miguel Rodríguez
1942–48Luis Iglesias Fernández
1948–50Avelino Ponte Caride
1950–52Faustino Álvarez Álvarez
1952–56Manuel Prieto Pérez
1956–58Antonio Herrero Montero
1958–59Antonio Alfageme
1959–61Celso Lorenzo Vila
DatesName
1961–63Carlos Barreras Barret
1963–64Antonio Crusat Pardiñas
1964–65Manuel Rodríguez Gómez
1965–69Daniel Alonso González
1969–70Ramón de Castro
1970–73Rodrigo Alonso Fariña
1973–77Antonio Vázquez Gómez
1977–80Jaime Arbones Alonso
1980Rodrigo Arbones Alonso
DatesName
1980Elías Posada
1980–82Elías Alonso Riego
1982–90José Luis Rivadulla García
1990–91José Luis Alejo Álvarez
1991Eloy de Francisco
1991–95José Luis Núñez Gallego
1995–06Horacio Gómez Araújo
2006–2023Carlos Mouriño
2023–Marián Mouriño[34]

List of head coaches

List of Celta de Vigo head coaches since 1923.[35] [36]

Honours

National titles

European titles

Regional titles

  • Galician Championship[43]
    • Winners (6): 1923–24, 1924–25, 1925–26, 1929–30, 1931–32, 1933–34
  • Asturian-Galician Championship (Galician Group)
    • Winners: 1934–35[44]
  • Regional Government of Galicia Cup
  • Copa Galicia

Friendly and unofficial tournaments

  • Trofeo Cidade de Vigo[47]
    • Winners (21): 1972, 1973, 1975, 1976, 1980, 1984, 1986, 1988, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2012
  • Trofeo Memorial Quinocho[48]
    • Winners (21): 1995, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2022, 2023
  • Trofeo Luis Otero[49]
    • Winners (13): 1965, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1976, 1982, 1984, 1985, 1990, 1997, 2007, 2010, 2014
  • Trofeo Emma Cuervo[50]
    • Winners (9): 1954, 1961, 1968, 1975, 1977, 1979, 1981, 1997, 2010
  • TIM Trophy
  • Teresa Herrera Trophy
  • Trofeo Xacobeo
  • Trofeo Federación Galega
  • Copa Comunidad Gallega

Seasons

SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del Rey
1923–241stQuarter-finals
1924–251stSemi-finals
1925–261stSemi-finals
1926–272ndQuarter-finals
1927–282ndQuarter-finals
1928–2929thRound of 32
1930–3131stRound of 32
1931–3229thSemi-finals
1932–3327thRound of 32
1933–3424thRound of 16
1934–3521stRound of 16
1935–3621stRound of 16
1939–40110thRound of 16
1940–41110thSemi-finals
1941–4215thFirst round
1942–4315thRound of 16
1943–44114thRound of 16
1944–4523rdFirst round
1945–46110thRound of 16
1946–4719thQuarter-finals
SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del Rey
1947–4814thRunners-up
1948–49111thRound of 16
1949–5017thRound of 16
1950–5118thFirst round
1951–5219thFirst round
1952–53113th
1953–54110thRound of 16
1954–55111thRound of 16
1955–56110thRound of 16
1956–57113thQuarter-finals
1957–5817thRound of 16
1958–59116thRound of 16
1959–6022ndFirst round
1960–6122ndRound of 32
1961–6226thRound of 32
1962–6326thFirst round
1963–6429thRound of 16
1964–6525thRound of 32
1965–6622ndRound of 32
1966–6723rdFirst round
SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del Rey
1967–6823rdSemi-finals
1968–6922nd
1969–70110thRound of 16
1970–7116thRound of 16
1971–72110thQuarter-finals
1972–73115thRound of 16
1973–74112thRound of 32
1974–75117thRound of 16
1975–7622ndRound of 16
1976–77117thQuarter-finals
1977–7823rdThird round
1978–79116thRound of 16
1979–80217thRound of 16
1980–8132ª B1stThird round
1981–8221stThird round
1982–83117thRound of 16
1983–8426thFirst round
1984–8523rdThird round
1985–86118thQuarter-finals
1986–8721stThird round
SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del Rey
1987–8817thRound of 16
1988–8918thQuarter-finals
1989–90119thRound of 16
1990–91214thFifth round
1991–9221stThird round
1992–93111thThird round
1993–94115thRunners-up
1994–95113thFourth round
1995–96111thRound of 16
1996–97116thSemi-finals
1997–9816thRound of 16
1998–9915thRound of 16
1999–0017thRound of 16
2000–0116thRunners-up
2001–0215thRound of 32
2002–0314thRound of 32
2003–04119thQuarter-finals
2004–0522ndRound of 64
2005–0616thRound of 16
2006–07118thRound of 32
SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del Rey
2007–08216thSecond round
2008–09217thRound of 32
2009–10212thQuarter-finals
2010–1126thSecond round
2011–1222ndRound of 32
2012–13117thRound of 16
2013–1419thRound of 32
2014–1518thRound of 16
2015–1616thSemi-finals
2016–17113thSemi-finals
2017–18113thRound of 16
2018–19117thRound of 32
2019–20117thRound of 32
2020–2118thSecond round
2021–22111thRound of 32
2022–23113thRound of 32
2023–24113thQuarter-finals
2024–251
----

European competitions

Celta score listed first.

SeasonCompetitionRoundOpponentHomeAwayAggregate
1971–72UEFA CupFirst round Aberdeen0–20–10–3
1998–99UEFA CupFirst round Argeș Pitești7–01–08–0
Second round Aston Villa0–13–13–2
Third round Liverpool3–11–04–1
Quarter-finals Marseille1–20–01–2
1999–2000UEFA CupFirst round Lausanne4–02–36–3
Second round Aris2–22–04–2
Third round Benfica7–01–18–1
Fourth round Juventus0–14–04–1
Quarter-finals Lens0–01–21–2
2000UEFA Intertoto CupThird round Pelister3–02–15–1
Semi–finals Aston Villa1–02–13–1
Finals Zenit Saint Petersburg2–12–24–3
2000–01UEFA CupFirst round Rijeka0–01–01–0
Second round Red Star Belgrade0–13–03–1
Third round Shakhtar Donetsk0–01–01–0
Fourth round VfB Stuttgart0–02–12–1
Quarter-finals Barcelona3–21–24–4 (a)
2001–02UEFA CupFirst round Sigma Olomouc4–03–47–4
Second round Slovan Liberec3–10–33–4
2002–03UEFA CupFirst round Odense2–00–12–1
Second round Viking3–01–14–1
Third round Celtic2–10–12–2 (a)
2003–04UEFA Champions LeagueThird qualifying round Slavia Prague3–00–23–2
Group H Ajax3–20–12nd
Club Brugge1–11–1
Milan0–02–1
Round of 16 Arsenal2–30–22–5
2006–07UEFA CupFirst round Standard Liège1–03–04–0
Group H Eintracht Frankfurt1–12nd
Newcastle United1–2
Fenerbahçe1–0
Palermo1–1
Round of 32 Spartak Moscow1–12–13–2
Round of 16 Werder Bremen0–10–20–3
2016–17UEFA Europa LeagueGroup G Ajax2–22–32nd
Standard Liège1–11–1
Panathinaikos2–02–0
Round of 32 Shakhtar Donetsk0–12–0 2–1
Round of 16 Krasnodar2–12–04–1
Quarter-finals Genk3–21–14–3
Semi-finals Manchester United0–11–11–2

Further reading

  • Book: González Villar, Celso. Albores do fútbol Vigues . gl .
  • Book: Cros, Jaime. El Celta y la Liga . 1973 . APANDA de Artes Gráficas, S.A. . es . Murcia. 84-605-5851-7.
  • Book: Cros, Jaime. Celta 74 . 1974 . es .
  • Book: Álvarez, Eugenio. A historia do Celta (1992–2004) . 2004 . es . Vigo. 272.
  • Book: Ball, Phil . Morbo: The Story of Spanish Football . 2001 . . Kings Lynn, England . 0-9540134-6-8 . 165–181 . Raining Champions . https://archive.org/details/morbostoryofspan0000ball/page/165 .

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Club history. RC Celta de Vigo. 15 February 2023.
  2. Web site: Instalaciones . RC Celta de Vigo . 1 June 2024 . es.
  3. Web site: "Todo por y para Vigo" . Faro de Vigo . 18 March 2023 . es . 23 August 2013.
  4. Web site: El Mundo Deportivo, 24 January 1927 . . 28 April 2024 . es.
  5. Web site: Spain, Final Tables 1939–1949 . . 18 March 2023.
  6. News: Fallece Pahíño [''sic''], histórico goleador del fútbol español]. Pahiño, historic goalscorer of Spanish football, dies. 9 March 2020 . Marca . 12 June 2012 . es.
  7. News: Kelly . Andy . Steven Gerrard Liverpool farewell: full Reds debut was only time 'I was pleased to be substituted' . 9 March 2020 . Liverpool Echo . 6 May 2015.
  8. News: Pereira . Antonio Pedro . Celta 7–0 Benfica foi há 20 anos. Da volta triunfal à goleada sem volta. Celta 7–0 Benfica was 20 years ago. From triumphant return to thrashing with no return . 9 March 2020 . Diário de Notícias . 25 November 2019 . pt.
  9. News: El Zaragoza vence al Celta y levanta su quinta Copa del Rey . Zaragoza beat Celta and lift their fifth Copa del Rey. 9 March 2020 . El País . 1 July 2001 . es.
  10. News: Arsenal 2-0 Celta Vigo . 9 March 2020 . BBC Sport . 10 March 2004.
  11. News: Relegated Celta expect exodus . 9 March 2020 . UEFA . 25 May 2004.
  12. News: Spanish duo celebrate promotion . 9 March 2020 . UEFA . 18 June 2005.
  13. News: El Celta pide que las instituciones le saquen de la quiebra económica. Celta asks that the instuitutions save it from bankruptcy . 9 March 2020 . La Voz de Galicia . 9 November 2007 . es.
  14. News: A trip down memory lane for Granada and Celta . 9 March 2020 . La Liga . 28 January 2014.
  15. Web site: Celta back in La Liga after five-year absence. Reuters. 18 February 2023. 3 June 2012.
  16. News: Lowe . Sid . Celta Vigo defy odds as four becomes relegated three in La Liga finale . 9 March 2020 . The Guardian . 3 June 2013.
  17. News: Berizzo feliz con el nivel del Celta: "Hicimos una temporada brillante". Berizzo happy with Celta's level: "We had a brilliant season". 9 March 2020 . Prensa Fútbol . 14 May 2016 . es.
  18. News: Jurejko . Jonathan . Manchester United 1 - 1 Celta Vigo . 9 March 2020 . BBC Sport . 11 May 2017.
  19. Web site: Historia del R.C. Celta de Vigo. Fame Celeste.
  20. Web site: Orígenes y escudo del Celta de Vigo. Sexto Anillo. 22 August 2016 .
  21. Web site: Celta de Vigo. Heráldica Futbolística. 17 February 2009 .
  22. Web site: 2016-05-31. Citroën abandona la camiseta del Celta. Citroën abandons Celta's shirt. 2021-02-11. Faro de Vigo. es.
  23. News: Adiós a un patrocinador histórico: Tras 31 años con Citroën. Goodbye to a historic sponsor: After 31 years with Citroën. 10 March 2017. Sport. 1 June 2016. es.
  24. News: El Celta y Umbro concluyen un cuarto de siglo de relación comercial. Celta and Umbro conclude a quarter of a century of business partnership. 10 March 2017. Faro de Vigo. 1 July 2010. es.
  25. Web site: Primer equipo – Jugadores. First team – Players. es. RC Celta de Vigo. 18 July 2024.
  26. Web site: Celta de Vigo – Players. bdfutbol.com. 17 January 2020.
  27. Web site: Iago Aspas, Iago Aspas Juncal – Footballer . bdfutbol.com . 21 November 2020.
  28. Web site: Manolo, Manuel Rodríguez Alfonso – Footballer . bdfutbol.com . 7 March 2023.
  29. Web site: Fútbol – Primera División de España – La Liga 1997/1998 – Resultados detallados. los-deportes.info. 7 May 2020.
  30. Web site: Fútbol – Primera División de España – La Liga 2015/2016 – Resultados detallados. los-deportes.info. 7 May 2020.
  31. Web site: Strack-Zimmermann . Benjamin . General Information for Celta Vigo . national-football-teams.com . 7 March 2023 . en.
  32. Web site: 2020-11-24. El Grupo GES aumenta hasta el 67,9 % su pastel en el accionariado del club. 2021-02-11. La Voz de Galicia. es.
  33. Web site: 15 October 2016. Mouriño cuadruplicará su inversión en el Celta si vende sus acciones a CITS. Mouriño will quadruple his investment in Celta if he sells his shares to CITS. Mundo Deportivo. Spanish.
  34. Web site: Marián Mouriño muestra su "confianza plena en Benítez hasta final de temporada" . La Voz de Galicia . 14 December 2023 . es . 14 December 2023. Marián Mouriño shows her "full confidence in Benítez until the end of the season".
  35. Web site: Managers Celta de Vigo . bdfutbol.com . 7 March 2023.
  36. Web site: Celta Vigo – Manager history . worldfootball.net . 7 March 2023 . en.
  37. Web site: Millar . Colin . Celta Vigo have chosen title-winning Argentine as new boss . Football Espana . 10 November 2020 . en . 9 November 2020.
  38. Web site: Celta Vigo announce arrival of new coach Eduardo Coudet until 2022 . Marca. 13 November 2020 . en . 12 November 2020.
  39. Web site: Carvalhal leaves Celta Vigo by mutual consent . The Athletic . 11 June 2023 . en . 10 June 2023.
  40. Web site: Rafa Benitez: Celta Vigo name former Liverpool, Newcastle and Chelsea boss as manager . BBC Sport . 23 June 2023 . 23 June 2023.
  41. Web site: Millar . Colin . Rafa Benitez sacked as Celta Vigo manager . The Athletic . 12 March 2024 . en . 12 March 2024.
  42. Web site: Giraldez named new Celta Vigo coach after Benitez sacking . Xinhua . 12 March 2024 . 12 March 2024.
  43. Web site: Spain – List of Champions of Galicia . RSSSF. 15 August 2019.
  44. Web site: Hemeroteca Digital. Biblioteca Nacional de España . hemerotecadigital.bne.es . 15 August 2019.
  45. Web site: El Celta alza la Copa Xunta . . 15 August 2019 . es . 4 January 2007.
  46. Web site: El Celta revalida ante el Deportivo su título de campeón de la Copa Galicia . Atlántico . 15 August 2019 . es . 21 May 2008.
  47. Web site: Trofeo Ciudad de Vigo . . 15 August 2019.
  48. Web site: Memorial Quinocho . . 25 June 2023.
  49. Web site: :: Troféo Luis Otero :: Pontevedra – Espanha . Campeões do Futebol . 12 February 2022 . pt.
  50. Web site: Trofeo Emma Cuervo . . 15 August 2019.
  51. Web site: Trofeo Tim al Celta Vigo, Sassuolo rimonta Milan . ANSA.it . 15 August 2019 . it . 11 August 2016.
  52. Web site: Trofeo Teresa Herrera . . 15 August 2019.
  53. Web site: Trofeo Xacobeo 1999 . . 15 August 2019.
  54. Web site: El Celta se lleva con merecimiento el Trofeo Federación Galega ante el Deportivo . RC Celta . 15 August 2019 . es-ES . 13 August 2019.
  55. Web site: Faraldo . Manuel L. . El Celta de Vigo se coronó campeón de la Copa Comunidad Gallega disputada en Montevideo . España Exterior . 15 August 2019 . es . 22 July 2016.