SD Huesca explained

Clubname:Huesca
Upright:0.71
Fullname:Sociedad Deportiva Huesca, S.A.D.[1]
Nickname:Oscenses
Azulgranas
Los de la cruz de San Jorge
Short Name:HUE
Ground:Estadio El Alcoraz, Huesca,
Aragon, Spain
Capacity:9,100[2]
Owner:Fundación Alcoraz
Chairman:Manuel Torres
Chrtitle:President
Manager:Antonio Hidalgo
Mgrtitle:Head coach
Website:www.sdhuesca.es
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Current:2023–24 SD Huesca season

Sociedad Deportiva Huesca, S.A.D., is a Spanish football club based in Huesca, in the autonomous community of Aragon. Founded in 1910, the club competes in the Segunda División, having played in the Spanish top division for the first time in the club's history in the 2018–19 season, followed by another single season in 2020–21.[3] SD Huesca plays its home games at Estadio El Alcoraz, which seats 9,100 spectators.

History

The city of Huesca is one of the pioneers in the introduction of football in Aragon. In the beginning of the 20th century (in 1903), the city already had a society named "Foot-ball Oscense".[4]

Huesca Fútbol Club was founded in 1910 with Jorge Cajal as the first president.[5] On 10 April 1910 the first formal match was played in the city of Huesca between the teams of the Sertorius Club, formed by high school students, and El Ideal de Magisterio Oscense. The match was organized by Huesca Sport Club.

In 1913, Huesca Sport Club became Huesca Fútbol Club. At this time other teams also emerged, among them Atlético Osca and the Stadium, which later merged with Huesca FC. The Stadium wore blue and red colors of Barcelona and the team acquired those colors for their T-shirts.

16 years later it folded – after it had joined the Royal Spanish Football Federation in 1922 (its department in the Aragon autonomous community in Spain - the Aragonese Football Federation, founded in 1922). But in 1929 reappeared as CD Huesca, being renamed Unión Deportiva in 1943, but the club again disappeared in 1956 due to financial problems. The first president after official registration of the Huesca Fútbol Club was Santos Solana. Lorenzo Lera was the first associate of the club, which was enrolled in the Federation with the blaugrana colours as its founding members were FC Barcelona supporters.

One of the first games of written reference was a local derby against Bosco FC, a 3–5 loss. In the mid-1920s the club turned professional and, in 1926, a match against FC Barcelona was played at the Villa Isabel, in a 2–2 draw. Following the serious incidents that occurred on 23 October 1927 in the match against Real Zaragoza in the Regional Championship, with a field invasion by fans due to lousy arbitration and consequent sanctions of the Regional Federation for three months, the club was withdrawn from the championship and passed its players to other teams. In early 1930s emerged the Huesca Sports Club (Club Deportivo Huesca) which won the Regional Fans Championship (Campeonato Regional de Aficionados) in the 1930–31 season, reaching the final of the National Championship, where lost to Ciosvín in the Estadio Chamartín in Madrid. During the Civil War, football was still played in Huesca and in 1939 the Huesca Fútbol Club instantly reappeared. From the 1943–44 season and after being renamed to Unión Deportiva Huesca the club played for seven consecutive seasons in Tercera División. In 1950, Huesca first reached Segunda División.

On 29 March 1960 Sociedad Deportiva Huesca evolved, first playing in Segunda División B in 1977. The 1960–61 season Huesca played in Regional category and achieved promotion to Tercera División, where remained for 12 consecutive seasons.[6] Huesca were champions of their Tercera División group for two years running for the 1966-67 and 1967-68 seasons but were defeated in the playoff promotions each time.

In the 1972–73 season the club was relegated to Primera Regional, which is a regional level competition. But the next year it returned to Tercera División. The club headed Tercera División in the 1989–90 season and as a result was promoted to Segunda División B.

In the 2005–06 season, SD Huesca was relegated to Tercera División.[7] In 2006 the club finished second in the Copa Federación de España, losing to Puertollano; in that same season it narrowly avoided relegation to Tercera División, after a play-off against Castillo.

In the 2006–07 campaign the club reached the play-offs for promotion to the second level, having lost a two-legged final against Córdoba CF. In the following season, it returned to the "silver category". It happened on 15 September 2008 after the win over Écjija in the promotion play-off.

2008–09's second division was a regular one for Huesca led by coach Antonio Calderón, with the new league status being maintained with many rounds left. Huesca finished that season in the 11th position. Rubén Castro, loaned by Deportivo La Coruña, was one of the most important players during the campaign, scoring 14 times, ninth-best in the league. In its second season in the Segunda División, the team struggled to remain there. Huesca finished in 13th position, just 2 points away from being relegated.[8] The best scorer in the team that season was Juanjo Camacho, who scored 8 goals in the competition.[9] In the 2010–11 season Huesca retained its place in the Segunda División finishing in the 14th position.[10] The result was achieved by the good defensive performance. The goalkeeper Andrés Fernández was awarded with the Zamora Trophy for having the lowest "goals-to-games" ratio in the division.

Relegation followed at the end of the 2012–13 season, but the club returned to the Segunda División in 2015 after a first-place finish and eventually a two-leg play-off victory over Huracán Valencia.

After the 2016–17 season, Huesca qualified for the promotion play-offs to La Liga for the first time ever, but was eliminated in the semifinals by Getafe. The azulgranas managed to play 2:2 at home, but then lost 0:3 in the away game.[11] In the 2017–18 season, Huesca was promoted to La Liga for the first time in their history after winning 2–0 against Lugo on 21 May 2018 at the Anxo Carro stadium.[12] On 4 May 2019, Huesca was relegated back to the Segunda División after only one season in La Liga.[13] [14]

Huesca won promotion back to La Liga on 17 July 2020, after a 3–0 win over Numancia and secured the league title on the last matchday.[15] On 22 May 2021, despite winning two of their last five fixtures of the 2020–21 season, the club was relegated back to the second tier once more after drawing 0–0 on the last matchday against Valencia,[16] the same team who had beaten them 6–2 to cause their relegation two years earlier.[14] A month later, the club had its first Spanish international, goalkeeper Álvaro Fernández, who stepped in along with his under-21 teammates after the senior squad became unavailable due to a COVID-19 case.[17]

Season to season

SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del Rey
1960–6141ª Reg.1st
1961–62311th
1962–6332nd
1963–6434th
1964–6532nd
1965–6633rd
1966–6731st
1967–6831st
1968–6939th
1969–7035thFirst round
1970–71313thSecond round
1971–72312thThird round
1972–73313thFirst round
1973–744Reg. Pref.1st
1974–75316thThird round
1975–7632ndFirst round
1976–7738thSecond round
1977–7832ª B12thSecond round
1978–7932ª B13thSecond round
1979–8032ª B14thFirst round
SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del Rey
1980–8132ª B17th
1981–8232ª B16th
1982–8332ª B12th
1983–8432ª B19thFirst round
1984–8541st
1985–8642ndFirst round
1986–8747thFirst round
1987–8847th
1988–8944th
1989–9041st
1990–9132ª B13thFourth round
1991–9232ª B18thThird round
1992–9341stSecond round
1993–9441st
1994–9542nd
1995–9632ª B15thFirst round
1996–9732ª B16th
1997–98417th
1998–9945th
1999–200042nd
SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del Rey
2000–0144th
2001–0232ª B19th
2002–0342nd
2003–0444th
2004–0532ª B10th
2005–0632ª B16th
2006–0732ª B2nd
2007–0832ª B2ndSecond round
2008–09211thSecond round
2009–10213thThird round
2010–11214thThird round
2011–12213thThird round
2012–13221stThird round
2013–1432ª B7thSecond round
2014–1532ª B1stRound of 32
2015–16212thRound of 32
2016–1726thRound of 32
2017–1822ndSecond round
2018–19119thRound of 32
2019–2021stSecond round
SeasonTierDivisionPlaceCopa del Rey
2020–21118thSecond round
2021–22213thSecond round
2022–23215thFirst round
2023–24217thRound of 32
2024–252
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Stadium

During the 1971–72 season Huesca decided to build a new football stadium, Estadio El Alcoraz, the team's third in its history, located in the hills of San Jorge with a capacity of 9,100 seats. The 1974 Amateur Cup of Spain final took place there.

Training facilities

Current squad

.[18]

Reserve team

See main article: SD Huesca B.

Out on loan

Club officials

Board of directors

OfficeName
PresidentAgustín Lasaosa
SecretaryPedro Ibaibarriaga
DirectorsJosé Abarca
Sergio Alfonso
Carmelo Bosque
Sergio Gracia
José Antonio Martín
Agustín Pueyo
Manuel Torres
General directorJose Luis Ortas
Documentation secretaryMaite Franco
Projects and resources departmentLuis Sanclemente
Sporting directorEmilio Vega
Academy directorRamón Tejada
Women's team directorAzucena Garanto
Medical directorJuan Carlos Galindo
Infrastructure and production directorLuis Sanclemente
Financial directorCarlos Laguna
Marketing and commercial directorDaniel Oliván
Operations and services directorAgustín Pueyo
Communication directorJara Echeverría
Digital development directorAzucena Garant

Coaches

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: SOCIEDAD DEPORTIVA HUESCA . SD Huesca . 8 January 2019 . es . 9 January 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190109110706/https://www.sdhuesca.es/el-club/sociedad-deportiva-huesca . live .
  2. Web site: Así es el nuevo Alcoraz: un estadio 'inglés' para una ciudad de Primera. Heraldo de Aragón. 13 September 2018. 15 September 2018. That is the new Alcoraz: an 'English' stadium for a city of La Liga. es. 14 September 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180914115935/https://www.heraldo.es/noticias/deportes/futbol/2018/09/13/alcoraz-nuevo-campo-huesca-estadio-primera-division-1266535-1101028.html. live.
  3. Web site: DE 2ªB AL SUEÑO DE 1ª EN CUATRO TEMPORADAS SD Huesca. DE 2ªB AL SUEÑO DE 1ª EN CUATRO TEMPORADAS SD Huesca. es. 2019-10-10. 10 October 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20191010121544/https://www.sdhuesca.es/el-club/historia/de-2b-al-sueno-de-1-en-cuatro-temporadas. live.
  4. Web site: EL HUESCA Y SUS DIFERENTES DENOMINACIONES SD Huesca. EL HUESCA Y SUS DIFERENTES DENOMINACIONES SD Huesca. es. 2019-10-07. 5 October 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20191005180647/https://www.sdhuesca.es/el-club/historia/el-huesca-y-sus-diferentes-denominaciones. live.
  5. 1910 nace el fútbol en Huesca
  6. 45 AÑOS DE SD HUESCA EN 3ª Y 2ª DIVISIÓN B
  7. Web site: CASTILLO, BENIDORM, CÓRDOBA Y ÉCIJA PARA LLEGAR A 2ª SD Huesca. CASTILLO, BENIDORM, CÓRDOBA Y ÉCIJA PARA LLEGAR A 2ª SD Huesca. es. 2019-10-07. 6 October 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20191006170545/https://www.sdhuesca.es/el-club/historia/castillo-benidorm-cordoba-y-ecija-para-llegar-a-2. live.
  8. Web site: 2009-2010 Segunda Stats. FBref.com. 2019-10-10. 8 October 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20191008075013/https://fbref.com/en/comps/17/423/2009-2010-Segunda-Stats. live.
  9. Web site: 2009-2010 Huesca Estadísticas. FBref.com. es. 2019-11-05. 5 November 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20191105205459/https://fbref.com/es/squads/c6c493e6/2009-2010/Huesca. live.
  10. Web site: 2010-2011 Segunda Stats. 7 October 2019. 7 October 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20191007110842/https://fbref.com/en/comps/17/489/2010-2011-Segunda-Stats. live.
  11. Web site: Playoff ascenso (vuelta), Getafe-Huesca: Los azulones más cerca de Primera. 2017-06-17. Eurosport. 2019-12-26.
  12. Web site: El Huesca es de Primera. Diario AS. 21 May 2018. 9 October 2018. Huesca are in the Primera. es. 1 July 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180701140328/https://as.com/futbol/2018/05/21/segunda/1526936825_404166.html?autoplay=1. live.
  13. Web site: Rayo Vallecano relegated to the Segunda Division. Football Espana. 7 May 2019. 7 May 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190507143821/https://www.football-espana.net/78089/rayo-vallecano-relegated-segunda-division. dead.
  14. News: Huesca relegated after being thrashed 6-2 by Valencia. Reuters UK. 5 May 2019. 7 May 2019. 7 May 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190507144352/https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-soccer-spain-hue-val-report/huesca-relegated-after-being-thrashed-6-2-by-valencia-idUKKCN1SB0RD/. live.
  15. News: Millar . Colin . Huesca promoted back to La Liga . 18 July 2020 . Football España . 17 July 2020 . 18 July 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200718231502/https://www.football-espana.net/2020/07/17/huesca-promoted-back-to-la-liga . live .
  16. News: La SD Huesca no pasa del empate con el Valencia y regresa a Segunda División. SD Huesca does not go beyond the draw with Valencia and returns to the Second Division. Heraldo de Aragón. es. 5 May 2019. 17 June 2021. 24 June 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210624195954/https://www.heraldo.es/noticias/deportes/futbol/sd-huesca/2021/05/22/huesca-valencia-partido-cronica-resultado-directo-primera-division-1493862.html. live.
  17. Web site: Álvaro Fernández hace historia para la SD Huesca. Álvaro Fernández makes history for SD Huesca. SD Huesca. es. 8 June 2021. 17 June 2021. 22 June 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210622222539/https://www.sdhuesca.es/noticia/alvaro-fernandez-hace-historia-para-la-sd-huesca. live.
  18. Web site: Primer equipo. Pantilla. SD Huesca. es. 24 October 2018. 20 June 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220620070139/https://www.sdhuesca.es/primer-equipo/plantilla/huesca. live.