Puneet Varma (Editor)

Deportes Temuco

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Nickname(s)
  
Araucanos, Albiverdes

Manager
  
Luis Landeros

League
  
Chilean Primera División

Chairman
  
Marcelo Salas

Ground Capacity
  
18,100

Location
  
Temuco, Chile

Founded
  
1960


Full name
  
Club de Deportes Temuco S.A.D.P

Ground
  
Estadio Municipal Germán Becker

2015-16
  
1st (Champion) (Promoted)

Arena/Stadium
  
Estadio Municipal Germán Becker

Profiles

Deportes Temuco is a Chilean football club based in Temuco. It currently plays in the Primera A, holding home games at the new Estadio Municipal Germán Becker.

Contents

The club was founded on February 22, 1960, as Deportes Temuco and again on March 20, 1965, after a merger with Green Cross. Until 1984, the club was known as Green Cross – Temuco, and, in 2007, changed its name to Deportivo Temuco, only on that season.

In 2013, the club fused with Unión Temuco, but the name of Deportes Temuco was kept, along with the logo and traditional white and green colors, making it seem as Deportes Temuco absorbing Unión rather than a fusion. Thanks to the fusion though, Deportes Temuco left the Segunda División and returned to Primera B for season 2013–14, using Unión Temuco's place in that league.

On the season 2015-2016 the team won the championship Primera B. So in the current season it plays in Primera A, the highest Chilean league of soccer.

Deportes temuco 1 3 deportes iquique 2 fecha torneo apertura 2016 cdf


Titles

  • Primera B: 2
  • Copa Apertura Segunda División: 1
  • Current Squad

    Current squad of Deportes Temuco as of 3 January 2017 (edit)
    Sources: ANFP Official Site

    Manager: Luis Landeros

    In

    Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

    Out

    Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

    Managers

  • Luis Tirado (1960–63)
  • Francisco Hormazábal (1964)
  • Roque Mercury (1987), (1990)
  • Luis Santibáñez (1991)
  • Cayetano Ré (1992)
  • Jorge Garcés (1996)
  • Roque Mercury (1997)
  • Reinaldo Merlo (1998)
  • Carlos Durán (2000)
  • Roque Mercury (2001–02)
  • Juan Carlos Gangas (2006)
  • Eduardo Bonvallet (2007)
  • Nelson Soto (2008), (2009)
  • Fernando Astengo (2013)
  • Pablo Abraham (2014–15)
  • Luis Landeros (2015–)
  • References

    Deportes Temuco Wikipedia