Recreativo de Huelva explained

Clubname:Recreativo de Huelva
Fullname:Real Club Recreativo de Huelva, S.A.D.
Nickname:Recre
Decano (Dean)
Abuelo (Grandfather)
Los blanquiazules (The Blue and Whites)
Founded: as Huelva Recreation Club
Ground:Nuevo Colombino
Capacity:21,670
Chairman:Jesús Vázquez
Chrtitle:President
Manager:Abel Gómez
Mgrtitle:Head coach
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Website:https://recreativohuelva.com

Real Club Recreativo de Huelva, S.A.D. (pronounced as /es/) is a Spanish football club based in Huelva, Andalucia, Spain. Founded on 23 December 1889, they are the oldest football club in Spain, and currently play in, holding home games at Estadio Nuevo Colombino, which has a 21,670 seating-capacity.

Team colours are white shirts with blue vertical stripes and white shorts.

History

Foundation/Early years

Two Scots, Alexander Mackay and Robert Russell Ross, overseas workers at the Rio Tinto mines, founded Huelva Recreation Club to provide their employees with physical recreation. Then they were invited by Sevilla F.C. to play their first football match. Very little is officially reported, being one of the most notable games of the time a knock-out stage in 1896 against Locomotoras Albacete Balón-Pie, precursor of the latter Albacete Balompié, in a national cup championship.[1]

During the 1910s, the club won three non-official Andalusian regional cups, and became the first Spanish side to defeat a Portuguese team, winning against Sporting Clube de Portugal. In 1940, it first reached Segunda División, only lasting however one year and not returning until 1957. Since 1965, the team also began hosting the Trofeo Colombino.

Later years

In 1977–78, led by, amongst others, former Real Madrid youth graduate Hipólito Rincón, Recreativo first gained promotion to the top flight. After just one season, it returned to level two, staying there until 1990, the year of a Segunda División B relegation.

In 1999–2000, Recreativo were due to be relegated to the third division, but were redeemed when Atlético Madrid descended into the second and thus their reserves were ejected.[2] With a new stadium and the appointment of Luis Alcaraz as manager, and the club returned to the top flight for the first time in 23 years on 19 May 2002 with a 2–1 home win over fellow Andalusians Xerez CD.[3] After this one season at the top, the team was immediately relegated back. However, in the same campaign, it reached the final of the Copa del Rey for the first time, being defeated by Mallorca 0–3 in Elche.[3]

In 2005–06, after beating Numancia on 4 June 2006, Marcelino García Toral's Recreativo mathematically secured promotion with two matches left to be played. Ahead of the new season, the club bought players including France youth international striker Florent Sinama Pongolle from Liverpool,[4] and young winger Santi Cazorla from Villarreal CF, with a budget of only €15 million.[5] The club finished eighth in the table, at 54 points, a best-ever, and made headlines with a 3–0 win against Real Madrid at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium.[5] The club's leading goalscorer was Sinama Pongolle with 12 goals to his name, while García Toral left at its conclusion for Racing de Santander.[6] Recre narrowly avoided relegation the following season, and in 2008–09, one win in its last 15 matches led to it coming in last place and returning to Segunda after three years. Overspending in aim of returning to the top flight led to debts.[3] At the end of the 2014–15 season, the team fell into Segunda B for the first time in 18 years.[2] A year later, the club was nearing extinction due to financial problems.[7] In May 2021, due to restructuring of the Spanish football league system, the club was relegated two tiers to the fifth level for the first time in its history.[8] Journalist Damián Ortiz of the Diario de Huelva called the entire squad "bastards without honour" and "a black mark on the history of Recreativo de Huelva".[9] In April 2022, Recre achieved promoted back to fourth division. In June 2023, Recre achieved second consecutive promoted to third division after beating Cacereño in last playoff.

Season-by-season record

SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del Rey
1939–4026th
1940–4132nd
1941–4231st
1942–4332nd
1943–4436th
1944–4536th
1945–4636th
1946–4731st
1947–4832nd
1948–4934th
1949–5034th
1950–5131st
1951–5236th
1952–5338th
1953–54310th
1954–5535th
1955–5637th
1956–5731st
1957–58215th
1958–5931st
SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del Rey
1959–60213th
1960–6131st
1961–6225th
1962–6325th
1963–64211th
1964–6529th
1965–66211th
1966–67211th
1967–68213th
1968–6931st
1969–7034th
1970–7133rd
1971–72313th
1972–7338th
1973–7431st
1974–75214th
1975–76210th
1976–7729th
1977–7822nd
1978–79118th
SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del Rey
1979–80212th
1980–81216th
1981–82214th
1982–83210th
1983–84212th
1984–85210th
1985–8629th
1986–8723rd
1987–88215th
1988–8925th
1989–90219th
1990–9132ª B2nd
1991–9232ª B6th
1992–9332ª B8th
1993–9432ª B3rd
1994–9532ª B14th
1995–9632ª B8th
1996–9732ª B4th
1997–9832ª B2nd
1998–99212th
SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del Rey
1999–2000221st
2000–0126th
2001–0223rdRound of 32
2002–03118thRunners-up
2003–0426thSecond round
2004–0525thRound of 16
2005–0621stSecond round
2006–0718thRound of 32
2007–08116thRound of 16
2008–09120thRound of 32
2009–1029thRound of 16
2010–11212thSecond round
2011–12217thSecond round
2012–13213thSecond round
2013–1428thRound of 32
2014–15220thThird round
2015–1632ª B13thFirst round
2016–1732ª B12th
2017–1832ª B15th
2018–1932ª B1st
SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del Rey
2019–2032ª B13thRound of 32
2020–2132ª B8th /
2021–2253ª RFEF1st
2022–2342ª Fed.2ndFirst round
2023–2431ª Fed.6thFirst round
2024–2531ª Fed.
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Current squad

.[10]

Youth players

See main article: Recreativo de Huelva B.

Honours

Runners-up: 2003, Semi-finals: 1906, 1918

2005–06

International players

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Galdón Rodríguez, Ángel . Ottoleaks 1894: Albacete's Dawn on Foot-Ball . Azur . 2023 . 9788419585752 . Almería . en.
  2. News: El Decano se vuelve a estrellar en El Sadar como hace 15 años . "The Dean" crashes again in El Sadar just like 15 years ago. 2 August 2018 . Marca . 1 June 2015 . es.
  3. News: Stevens . Tom . 'It’s a real matter of faith:' Life as a Recreativo Huelva supporter . 2 August 2018 . The Guardian . 23 February 2016.
  4. News: Recreativo land Sinama-Pongolle . 2 August 2018 . BBC Sport . 4 May 2007.
  5. News: Lowe . Sid . Recreativo rip up the form book, and Real with it . 2 August 2018 . The Guardian . 21 December 2006.
  6. News: Marcelino, nuevo entrenador del Racing de Santander . Marcelino, new Racing de Santander manager. 2 August 2018 . Cadena SER . 26 June 2007 . es.
  7. News: Farni . Azi . Recreativo de Huelva: Spain's oldest club on the brink of extinction . 2 August 2018 . BBC Sport . 23 March 2016.
  8. News: Núñez . Manuel S. . El Recreativo de Huelva desciende sin jugar. Recreativo go down without playing. 9 May 2021 . Huelva Información . 9 May 2021 . es.
  9. News: Ortiz . Damián . ¡Bajad, bastardos sin honor! (1-2). Go down, you bstards without honour!. 13 May 2021 . Diario de Huelva . 9 May 2021 . es.
  10. Web site: Plantilla . Template . Recreativo de Huelva . 5 October 2018.