Cocodrilos de Matanzas | |
Location: | Matanzas, Matanzas Province |
Cap Logo: | Cocodrilos de Matanzas cap insignia.svg |
League: | Cuban National Series |
Ballpark: | Victoria de Girón Stadium, Palmar de Junco |
League Champ Type: | National Series titles |
League Champs: | 1 (2019–20) |
Series: | Elite League |
Series Champs: | 1 (2023–24) |
Colors: | Red, yellow and white |
Manager: | Armando Ferrer |
H Cap: | FA1100 |
H Pattern Cap: | _matanzas |
H Leftarm: | FA1100 |
H Body: | FFFFFF |
H Pattern B: | _baseball |
H Rightarm: | FA1100 |
H Pants: | FFFFFF |
H Socks: | FA1100 |
A Cap: | FA1100 |
A Pattern Cap: | _matanzas |
A Leftarm: | FFFF00 |
A Body: | FA1100 |
A Pattern B: | _baseball |
A Rightarm: | FFFF00 |
A Pants: | 969696 |
A Socks: | FA1100 |
Cocodrilos de Matanzas ('Matanzas Crocodiles') are a baseball team in the Cuban National Series. Based in Matanzas Province, the Cocodrilos were formed after the dissolution of Henequeneros and Citricultores, two teams from Matanzas. The Cocodrilos have struggled to enjoy the success of their predecessors.[1]
Long before the Yumurine players wore the Gothic M of Matanzas on their flannels in that year of 1967, the name of such an illustrious city had already adorned the official history of winter tournaments in the mythical campaign of 1878–79.
Like that modest combined at the beginning of the circuit in the nineteenth century, the Matanzas of the 60s and 70s, was not the most competitive. Never, stars of the mood of Wilfredo Sánchez, his brother Fernando, Rigoberto Rosique, Tomás Soto, Evelio Hernández, Edwin Walters, Alfredo García, Gaspar Pérez, Luis Fernández, Ernesto William Alfonso or the brothers Félix and Reinaldo Isasi, could they unify their forces in a single gang to defend the walls of the Athens of Cuba.
And while Matanzas stoically endured his permanence at the bottom of the pond until his total disappearance towards the mid-1970s, Henequeneros, the other squad of the land of crocodiles, adorned his souvenir closet with a trophy in the 1969 campaign -70.
In the early 1990s, the winter series competition system was reorganized for the eighth time. After 19 years of absence, a team reappeared with the name of Matanzas. Although, this second version of the squad in the amateur era was also not very prolific in terms of collective results.
Matanzas won the Cuban National Series championship pennant in 2020, defeating Camagüey in the finals, clinching 4-2 overall in 6 games out of seven.[2] [3]
Matanzas finished sixth in the National Series in 2023. Nevertheless, it qualified to the Cuban Elite League in the first year of its new format, promoting the top six teams from the National Series. Matanzas defeated Cazadores de Artemisa in six games to win its first the Elite League and its second championship after 2020.[4]
49 | 2009-10 | Industriales | Villa Clara | Habana | 14th | Wilfredo Menendez | |
50 | 2010-11 | Pinar del Rio | Ciego de Avila | Cienfuegos | 14th | Wilfredo Menendez | |
51 | 2011-12 | Ciego de Avila | Industriales | Matanzas | 3rd | Victor Mesa | |
52 | 2012-13 | Villa Clara | Matanzas | Santi Spiritus | 2nd | Victor Mesa | |
53 | 2013-14 | Pinar del Rio | Matanzas | Industriales | 2nd | Victor Mesa | |
54 | 2014-15 | Ciego de Avila | Isla de la Juventud | Matanzas | 3rd | Victor Mesa | |
55 | 2015-16 | Ciego de Avila | Pinar del Rio | Matanzas | 3rd | Victor Mesa | |
56 | 2016-17 | Granma | Ciego de Avila | Matanzas | 3rd | Victor Mesa | |
57 | 2017-18 | Granma | Las Tunas | Matanzas | 3rd | Victor Figueroa | |
58 | 2018-19 | Las Tunas | Villa Clara | Santi Spiritus | 16th | Victor Figueroa | |
59 | 2019-20 | Matanzas | Camagüey | 1st (Series Champion) | Armando Ferrer |