CD Málaga explained

CD Málaga should not be confused with Málaga Club de Fútbol.

Clubname:Málaga
Upright:0.7
Fullname:Club Deportivo Málaga
Nickname:Malaguistas
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Albicelestes
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Founded:1904 (as Málaga Football Club)[1]
Dissolved:1992
Capacity:28,963
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Leftarm1:70B0FF
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Club Deportivo Málaga was a Spanish football club based in Málaga, in the autonomous community of Andalusia. It played twenty seasons in La Liga, before being dissolved in 1992.

History

Origins

The first football club in Málaga was established in 1904, with the formation of the Málaga Foot-Ball Club.[2] It was nothing more than a society intended to promote football, a new sport in the city, carried from the United Kingdom. Its first rivals were small teams formed by crews of foreign ships arriving in the local harbor. In 1907, further attempts of popularizing football were performed by Málaga FC.

1912 saw the arrival of a rival club, FC Malagueño, and the establishment of a great rivalry with Málaga FC, which had merged with other minor clubs like Málaga Racing. In 1927, Málaga FC became the Real Málaga FC after they were granted royal patronage by Alfonso XIII.[3]

During the 1929–30 season both Real Málaga FC and FC Malagueño clubs became founding members of the Tercera División. In late 1930, Real Málaga FC, were reformed as the Málaga Sport Club.

Club merging in 1933

In 1933 Málaga SC and FC Malagueño merged to become Club Deportivo Malacitano,[4] although it wasn't a real merging at all, but a name change of FC Malagueño, which had economic wealth and a better squad than Málaga SC. By this operation, the CD Malacitano was able to heir the squad of FC Malagueño, having their contracts cancelled in the other way.

In 1934 this new club made its debut in the Segunda División when the division was expanded from ten teams to twenty four. After various seasons in the Segunda División, with the competition interrupted because of the Spanish Civil War.

In 1941 the club changed their name to the Club Deportivo Málaga when the new La Rosaleda stadium was inaugurated.[5]

First promotion to La Liga in 1949, first topflight years

In 1949, Málaga was promoted for the first time to La Liga after several seasons in the Segunda División and a couple in the third level.

With chairman Miguel Navarro Nogueroles and coach Luís Urquiri, the club managed to get promoted in the last play of the 1948–49 season, in second position after Real Sociedad, and thanks to positive goal difference with Granada CF. Notable striker Pedro Bazán, who had previously scored nine goals in a sole match against the Hércules CF on January 4, 1949, in the Segunda División.[6] He was the top goal scorer with 266 total goals and also one of the most important players of the team.

In this first run in La Liga, Málaga stayed for two consecutive seasons, with notable former player Ricardo Zamora as coach of the team, and until the first relegation of the club at the end of 1950–51 season, lacking just one point to maintain status.

In the subsequent seasons, Málaga achieved two new promotions to La Liga in 1951–52 and 1953–54, being relegated after just one year in both.[7] The 1952–53 season was notable because of a resounding 6–0 thrashing of the Real Madrid at La Rosaleda, the major result up to date for Málaga against that club.[8]

The golden years in the early 1970s

After several new fleeting first level promotions in the 1960s, which turned out in immediate relegations, Málaga were promoted once again in 1969–70 under the command of chairman Antonio Rodríguez López and coach Jenő Kálmár, to start a five-year top flight stay. However, president in charge Antonio Rodríguez López was brutally murdered by the Mafia in the year 1971,[9] and was replaced by Rafael Serrano Carvajal for the next season.[10]

With notable players like Miguel Ramos Vargas "Migueli", Sebastian Viberti, Juan Antonio Deusto and José Díaz Macías, the club achieved two seven league places in 1971–72[11] and 1973–74[12] (best results of the club up to date), a Ricardo Zamora Trophy[13] in 1971–72 season performed by goalkeeper Deusto, and a 1972–73 run of the club in the Spanish Cup, where they were dumped out in the semifinals by Athletic Bilbao. They also notably scored a victory at Camp Nou for the first time after winning against FC Barcelona at the end of the 1971–72 season. The club also established in 1973 an official anthem, Málaga La Bombonera, and from that moment the song is still the official anthem of the club.

After a polemic exit by Viberti at the end of 1973–74 season, the so-called golden years ended with a new relegation to the second level in 1974–75.

Dissolution

In 1992, CD Málaga dissolved after financial difficulties.[6]

Season to season

SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del Rey
1929–3032nd
1930–3132nd
1931–3233rd
1932–3331st
SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del Rey
1933–3433rd
1934–3525th5th Round
1935–3625th3rd Round
1939–4023rd1st Round
1940–4125th3rd Round
SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del Rey
1941–4224thRound of 32
1942–4325thRound of 32
1943–4431st
1944–4532nd
1945–4631st
1946–4729thRound of 16
1947–4824th6th Round
1948–4922nd5th Round
1949–50112thRound of 16
1950–51113th
1951–5221stQuarterfinals
1952–53115th
1953–5423rd
1954–55116th
1955–56211th
1956–5725th
1957–58214th
1958–59215th1st Round
1959–6031st
1960–61212th1st Round
SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del Rey
1961–6222ndRound of 16
1962–63116thQuarterfinals
1963–6429thRound of 32
1964–6522nd1st Round
1965–66113thRound of 16
1966–6721stRound of 32
1967–68110thRound of 16
1968–69114thQuarterfinals
1969–7022ndRound of 32
1970–7119thQuarterfinals
1971–7217th5th Round
1972–73110thSemifinals
1973–7417th5th Round
1974–75116thRound of 16
1975–7623rdRound of 16
1976–77118th3rd Round
1977–78213th3rd Round
1978–7922nd4th Round
1979–80118th4th Round
1980–8126th2nd Round
SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del Rey
1981–8223rdRound of 16
1982–83110th4th Round
1983–8419th4th Round
1984–85116th3rd Round
1985–86211th4th Round
1986–8726th3rd Round
1987–8821st4th Round
1988–89116thRound of 32
1989–90117thRound of 16
1990–9124th5th Round
1991–92218th5th Round
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Honours

Domestic

1951–52, 1966–67, 1987–88

1943–44, 1945–46, 1959–60

Friendly

Trofeo Costa del Sol

Between 1961 and 1983, Málaga organised its own summer tournament, the Trofeo Costa del Sol. The hosts won it on three occasions, successively defeating Real Madrid, Red Star Belgrade and Derby County. In 2003, the competition was revived by Club Deportivo's successor, Málaga CF.[14]

In 1976, CD Málaga won a similar summer trophy, the Trofeo Ciudad de La Línea, played in La Línea de la Concepción, near Gibraltar. The triumph arrived after penalty shootout defeats of FC Dinamo Tbilisi and Valencia CF, after 0–0 draws.[15]

Selected former players

Famous coaches

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.malagacf.com/en/club/organisation Malaga CF
  2. Web site: Historia del Fútbol en Málaga - Los primeros clubs. Urdiales. Antonio Fernando. futbol.antoniourdiales.es. 25 November 2017. 1 December 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20171201033032/http://futbol.antoniourdiales.es/malaga3.htm. live.
  3. Web site: Historia del Fútbol en Málaga - El Málaga F.C.. Urdiales. Antonio Fernando. futbol.antoniourdiales.es. 25 November 2017. 3 December 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20171203032332/http://futbol.antoniourdiales.es/malaga4.htm. live.
  4. Web site: Historia del Fútbol en Málaga - El C.D. Malacitano. Urdiales. Antonio Fernando. futbol.antoniourdiales.es. 2017-11-25. 2017-12-01. https://web.archive.org/web/20171201042151/http://futbol.antoniourdiales.es/malaga6.htm. live.
  5. Web site: La Rosaleda viaja en el tiempo a 1941. Málaga - Web Oficial. es. 2017-11-25.
  6. Web site: Historia Málaga - Web Oficial. Historia Málaga - Web Oficial. es. 2019-10-12. 2020-03-29. https://web.archive.org/web/20200329064632/https://www.malagacf.com/club/historia. live.
  7. Web site: Historia del Fútbol en Málaga - El C.D. Málaga II. Urdiales. Antonio Fernando Urdiales. futbol.antoniourdiales.es. 2017-11-25.
  8. News: La goleada del Málaga al Real Madrid. Prados Roa. Luis. abc. es-ES.
  9. News: Asesinato del presidente del Málaga (1971). Relaño. Alfredo. 2016-07-31. AS.com. es.
  10. Web site: Historial Años 70s (Atlético Malagueño). AREFEpedia. 2022-04-03. 2016-03-22. https://web.archive.org/web/20160322181800/http://arefepedia.wikifoundry-mobile.com/page/Historial+A%F1os+70s+%28Atl%E9tico+Malague%F1o%29. dead.
  11. Web site: Historia del Fútbol en Málaga - C.D. Málaga - 1972. Urdiales. Antonio Fernando. futbol.antoniourdiales.es. 2022-04-03. 2016-05-08. https://web.archive.org/web/20160508185757/http://futbol.antoniourdiales.es/estadistica1970.htm#1972. live.
  12. Web site: Historia del Fútbol en Málaga - C.D. Málaga - 1974. Urdiales. Antonio Fernando. futbol.antoniourdiales.es. 2022-04-03. 2016-05-08. https://web.archive.org/web/20160508185757/http://futbol.antoniourdiales.es/estadistica1970.htm#1974. live.
  13. News: Fallece Deusto, único 'Zamora' del CD Málaga. Puga. Manuel. La opinion de Málaga. 2022-04-03. 2019-12-09. https://web.archive.org/web/20191209204545/http://preoma.renr.es/malagacf/2011/07/23/fallece-deusto-unico-zamora-cd-malaga/438797.html. dead.
  14. https://www.rsssf.org/tablesc/costadelsol.html Trofeo Costa del Sol (Málaga-Spain) 1961-2008
  15. https://www.rsssf.org/tablesc/ciudad-lalinea.html Trofeo Ciudad de La Línea (La Línea de la Concepción, Cádiz - Spain)) 1970-2008