Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Santos Laguna

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Ground Capacity
  
29,237

Chairman
  
Alejandro Irarragorri

Manager
  
José Manuel de la Torre

Founded
  
1983

Owner
  
Orlegi Deportes

Arena/Stadium
  
Estadio Corona

Location
  
Torreón, Mexico

League
  
Liga MX

Santos Laguna httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenaaaSan

Full name
  
Club Santos Laguna S.A. de C.V.

Nickname(s)
  
Los Guerreros (The Warriors) Los Laguneros (The Lakers) Los Verdiblancos (The Green-and-Whites)

Ground
  
Estadio Corona Torreón, Coahuila, Mexico

Founder
  
Mexican Social Security Institute

Profiles

Himno del club santos laguna s a de c v


Club Santos Laguna S.A. de C.V. ([ˈsantos laˈɣuna]), commonly known as Santos Laguna or Santos, is a Mexican professional football club. Representing the urban area of La Comarca Lagunera, made up of Torreón, Gómez Palacio and Lerdo Municipalities, Santos Laguna plays in the Liga MX. The club was founded in 1988, and reached Mexico's top division after buying the Ángeles de Puebla club. Santos Laguna debuted in Mexico's top division in the 1988–89 tournament. They have won a number of tournaments: Invierno 1996, Verano 2001 and Clausura 2008, 2012 and 2015. The club reached the finals in the 1993–94 season, Verano 2000, Bicentenario 2010, Apertura 2010 and Apertura 2011. Santos Laguna won the Apertura 2014 Copa MX.

Contents

It is the third football club formed in the Laguna region, after the unsuccessful Laguna Football Club and Football Club Torreon (which formed the Black Lions of the University Deportivo Guadalajara and Neza, respectively). In 2008, the club celebrated its 20th anniversary.

In a February 17, 2013 poll by Consulta Mitofsky, it was the fifth-most-popular team in Mexico. Among IFFHS clubs, Santos Laguna is 58th in the world rankings.

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Formation and early years

Santos Laguna was founded in 1983 by the Mexican Social Security Institute (IMSS) of the state of Durango as Santos IMSS. Since the late 1970s, the IMSS had sponsored a national football tournament with teams from across the country. Jose Diaz Couder, IMSS head of social services in Gómez Palacio, was invited to participate in the tournaments despite the fact that he did not have a team. He appealed to the players he knew to form a team, based on Asturias F.C..

In 1987 Tuberos de Veracruz, part of the Segunda División de México, was purchased by IMSS and moved to Santa Cruz, Tlaxcala. The first Santos Laguna team spent less than a year in Tlaxcala before moving to Gómez Palacio. A lack of facilities spurred efforts to obtain Moctezuma Stadium (Estadio Corona) in Torreon, owned by John Abusaid, and the Saints made their first home in the former Estadio Corona. On September 4, 1988 Los Guerreros played their first game as Santos Laguna, winning 2–0.

Segunda Division A

When the IMSS sold its professional sports clubs, Salvador Necochea Sagi bought Santos Laguna. In their first year in the Second Division A, the Warriors avoided relegation with three wins, two draws and one loss. William (the Clash) Galindo, Carlos González, Julio Cesar Armendáriz, Tomas Moreno and Fernando de la Rosa were notable players.

In 1989 Los Guerreros earned their nickname when, after a poor start, they finished 10th. Their fan base grew, and the club's owners bought the first Estadio Corona. The club underwent changes the following year, replacing its logo with the current one and playing in green and white stripes. Of the 18 founding members of the Second Division B, two won promotion to the first division: the Autonomous University of Tamaulipas and Santos Laguna.

Promotion to Primera Division

In 1988 Santos Laguna purchased the Puebla Angels, giving them Cristian Saavedra, Wilson Graniolatti, Martin Zuniga and Miguel Herrera and a record of three wins, four draws and one loss. Lucas Ochoa scored the club's first First Division goal and the Warriors, led by Carlos Ortiz, avoided relegation with Herrera's two goals paving the way for a 3–1 defeat of Atletico in Potosino.

In 1991, Grupo Modelo became majority owner of the club and Ramon Ramirez made his First Division debut with a goal against Club Deportivo Guadalajara. Late the following year, club president Armando Navarro Gascón and his wife were killed in an automobile accident.

President Alberto Canedo and Chilean coach Pedro García arrived in 1993. Grupo Modelo made a strong investment in reinforcements, Antonio "El Turco" Apud, Daniel Guzmán, Olaf Heredia, Diego Silva, Héctor Adomaitis and Richard Zambrano who joined players coming from Second Division such as José Guadalupe Rubio and Pedro Muñoz. The 1993–94 season saw the team for the first time qualify for the playoffs in the First Division and managed to reach the final coinciding with their tenth anniversary of founding, though lost in overtime in the second leg of the final against Club Deportivo Estudiantes Tecos who were coached by Victor Manuel Vucetich.

In 1994, key player Ramón Ramírez left for Guadalajara but Santos qualified for the playoffs a second time. Los Guerreros participated in the 1995 CONCACAF Champions Cup, and were eliminated in the first round by Deportivo FAS of El Salvador. Argentine Mauro Camoranesi played 13 games with Santos, scoring one goal before returning to Uruguay. Other notable players that season and the following one were Gabriel Caballero, Francisco Gabriel de Anda and Miguel España.

Chilean Cristian Montecinos reached the third league during the 1996 regular season, and Santos Laguna won their first First División title. In the Verano 1997 tournament, Santos Laguna was eliminated by Guadalajara 5–0 in the Estadio Jalisco. Santos Laguna played poorly in the Invierno 1997 tournament, winning three games out of 17 and tied for last in the standings with Pumas UNAM and UAG Tecos. In 1998 the club reached one of the two qualifying finals for the Copa Libertadores, which was played on September 9 in Los Angeles.

2000s

In the summer 2000 season, Santos Laguna was strengthened by the arrivals of Rodrigo Ruiz and Luis Romero. During the regular season, the Warriors lost only two games and finished second in the overall standings behind Toluca.

In the 2001 summer season, the club won their second league championship. During the winter 2001 season Santos Laguna, with eight losses, failed to qualify for the play-offs and finished eighth overall. In summer 2002, the Warriors were fourth in the overall standings but were eliminated 1–0 in the semi-finals by Necaxa at the Estadio Corona. Santos Laguna qualified for the CONCACAF Champions Cup that year for the second time. The Warriors defeated Tauro FC of Panama by aggregate score of 5–3; in the next round, at home, Santos Laguna lost 3–2 overall to the U.S. champion Kansas City Wizards. At the end of the summer tournament, Fernando Quirarte and his coaching staff stepped down; Quirarte was replaced by Sergio Bueno, who was soon sacked in favor of Luis Fernando Tena. Finishing eighth overall, Santos Laguna defeated defending champion and leader Global America 5–4 at Azteca Stadium. The Warriors qualified for the group stage of the Merconorte Cup, defeating the Kansas City Wizards and Barcelona of Guayaquil twice each and Sporting Cristal once; their only loss was to Sporting Cristal, 2–1.

For the 2003 Apertura tournament (the club's 20th anniversary) reinforcements arrived in the form of Vicente Matias Vuoso and Sixto Peralta, Argentines who had played for Manchester City and Inter Milan. In the match at Estadio Corona against Monterrey, 10 goals were scored. The Warriors qualified for the play-offs, but were eliminated in the quarter-finals, Luis Fernando Tena's contract was not renewed, and he was replaced by Eduardo De la Torre.

The Warriors began 2004 well, qualifying for the Copa Libertadores by defeating Atlas Guadalajara 4–3, but were injured, inconsistent and tired in the Clausura. The club, put up for sale, was in a precarious financial position but played two tournaments and finished 14th overall. In the Copa Libertadores, despite unpaid wages, Santos Laguna ended the group stage undefeated. In the second round, the Warriors were eliminated by River Plate after a struggle.

During Apertura 2004 the club was abandoned by the Ministry of Finance, who withdrew financial support and returned it to former owner Grupo Modelo with instructions not to invest more money in the franchise until current owner Carlos Ahumada Kurtz solved his legal problems. The club payroll was restructured, players were cut and Santos Laguna did not qualify for the play-offs.

In the 2005 Clausura, the Warriors' Vicente Matias Vuoso won the scoring championship with 15 points and Rodrigo Ruiz set a Mexican record for scoring passes with 12 assists. Santos Laguna was plagued by injuries during the Apertura tournament. The Clausura 2006 tournament was disastrous for the club.

The Apertura 2007 was one of the team's best seasons. With the arrival of the Ecuadorian Christian Benitez, Santos Laguna lost only one match and was visited by Pele. For the Clausura 2008, the club scored 36 goals in the regular season. On June 1, 2008 Santos Laguna won their third Clausura championship, defeating Cruz Azul. The club began Apertura 2008 at Azteca Stadium against America.

Clausura 2009 was disastrous for the Warriors; coach Daniel Guzman was dismissed and replaced by Sergio Bueno, and the club's fortunes improved somewhat. In the CONCACAF Champions League quarter-finals against the Montreal Impact in Montreal's Olympic Stadium before a crowd of 55,571, the Impact surprised and won 2–0. Apertura 2009 opened the Nuevo Estadio Corona; Bueno was dismissed and replaced by Ruben Omar Romano.

2010s

In 2010 Santos fell just short of the title, losing 4–3 to Toluca. For the Apertura Christian Benitez returned to the club, contributing to their rise to the top of the table and scoring 14 goals. The Saints lost 3–0 to Monterrey, their second consecutive final loss. In the Clausura Ruben Omar Romano, unpopular with fans, was dismissed on February 20, 2011. Two days later, Diego Cocca debuted as coach in a 2–0 loss to Cruz Azul. Cocca lost his first six games before a 3–0 Week 12 victory over Cruz Azul, and the team did not qualify for the play-offs.

Cocca began Apertura 2011 with the support of the board and players, he was dismissed on September 3 and Eduardo Rergis became the interim coach. On September 12 Benjamin Galindo was appointed as new coach, with Hector Lopez his assistant. Under Galindo, Santos won five consecutive games and reached fourth place.

In the 2011–12 CONCACAF Champions League, Santos defeated the Seattle Sounders FC in the quarter-finals and Toronto FC in the semi-finals. In the final, the club lost to Rayados of Monterrey. In the 2012 Clausura, Santos Laguna finished in first place for the second time in its history. In the quarter-finals, the club won 6–4 on aggregate. The first game of the semi-finals, against the UANL Tigres at the Estadio Universitario, ended in a 1–1 draw and Santos won the second game to advance to the final. After playing Monterrey to a 1–1 draw at Estadio Tecnologico, Santos Laguna won the second game 2–1 with goals by Daniel Ludueña and Oribe Peralta for the club's fourth title.

The Apertura 2012 featured Edgar Gerardo Lugo and rising defensive stars Monarcas Morelia and Oswaldo Alanis. However, Santos did not qualify for the play-offs and was unable to repeat its championship. At the end of the season, Benjamín Galindo sacked his two assistants before he himself was dismissed.

In the Clausura 2013, Portuguese manager Pedro Caixinha was hired based on a recommendation by former Real Madrid coach Jose Mourinho. Daniel Ludueña and Christian Suarez were transferred to the Pachuca Soccer Club in exchange for Mauro Cejas, Nestor Calderon and promising Colombian Andres Renteria. Santos Laguna finished sixth during the regular season. They defeated Atlas 3–1 on aggregate in the quarter-finals and lost to Cruz Azul 0–3 and 2–1 in the semi-finals. In the 2012–13 CONCACAF Champions League, Santos again reached the final against Club de Fútbol Monterrey. The first game was a scoreless tie, and Monterrey won the second game 4–2.

For the Apertura 2013, Santos sold Ivan Estrada to Pachuca and transferred Herculez Gomez, Gerardo Lugo and Aaron Galindo. After the June purchase of Grupo Modelo by Belgian-Brazilian company AB InBev, on August 8 Grupo Modelo announced the sale of Santos Laguna to new company Orlegi Sports (led by Alejandro Irarragorri and other Mexican businessmen). The new owners said that they would continue their sponsorship. On October 26, after defeating Atlante 3–1 and ten years after their first (and only) appearance, the Saints secured a berth in Copa Libertadores 2014.

In Clausura 2015, Santos rebounded from a six-match losing streak to qualify for the play-offs. The club defeated top-ranked Tigres UANL 2–1 on aggregate to reach the semi-finals. They faced another favorite, Chivas del Guadalajara, whom they defeated 3–0 on aggregate. In the finals they faced Gallos Blancos del Querétaro in their first Liga MX final. Santos defeated Querétaro in the first leg of the finals at Territorio Santos Modelo with a record-breaking score of 5–0; Javier "Chuletita" Orozco scored four of the goals. In the second leg, at Corregidora Stadium, Gallos won 3–0 but Santos won their fifth championship 5–3 on aggregate.

1993–94 Runners-up

In the first leg, the team defeated Tecos UAG 1–0 at Corona Stadium; in the second leg, they lost 2–0 at 3 de Marzo Stadium.

Squad

  • Adrián Marmolejo
  • Ramón Ramírez
  • Hector Adomaitis
  • Diego Silva
  • Antonio Apud
  • Daniel Guzmán
  • Richard Zambrano
  • Felipe de Jesús Amezcua
  • Jose Antonio Alcantara
  • Jesús Gómez
  • Ricardo Wagner de Souza
  • Invierno 1996 champions

    In Invierno 1996 Santos Laguna won its first title, defeating Necaxa 4–3 on aggregate (first leg 0–1 and second leg 4–2). The winning goal was controversial, with Jared Borgetti allegedly offside.

    Squad

  • José Miguel
  • Francisco Gabriel de Anda
  • Pedro Muñoz
  • José Guadalupe Rubio
  • Ricardo Wagner de Souza
  • Nicolás Ramírez
  • Miguel España
  • Benjamín Galindo
  • Héctor Adomaitis
  • Jared Borgetti
  • Gabriel Caballero
  • Francisco Del Rio
  • Verano 2001 champions

    In Verano 2001, Santos Laguna won its second title 4–3 on aggregate (first leg 1–2, second leg 3–1) against Pachuca.

    Squad

  • Adrián Martínez
  • Héctor Altamirano
  • Héctor López
  • Miguel Ángel Carreón
  • Mariano Trujillo
  • Carlos Cariño
  • Luis Romero
  • Johan Rodríguez
  • Rodrigo Ruiz
  • Joaquín Reyes Chávez
  • Jared Borgetti 56
  • Guto
  • Róbson Luíz
  • Luis Fernando Soto
  • Ignacio Vázquez
  • Enrique Vizcarra
  • Clausura 2008 champions

    In Clausura 2008 Santos became champion by defeating Monterrey in Monterrey with a last-minute goal in the semi-finals and Cruz Azul by an aggregate score of 3–2.

    Squad

  • Oswaldo Sánchez
  • Iván Estrada
  • Rafael Figueroa
  • Fernando Ortiz
  • Edgar Castillo
  • Osmar Mares
  • Juan Pablo Santiago
  • Johnny García
  • Jorge Barrera
  • Juan Pablo Rodríguez
  • Fernando Arce
  • Francisco Torres
  • Walter Jiménez
  • Daniel Ludueña
  • Christian Benítez
  • Vicente Matías Vuoso
  • Oribe Peralta
  • Agustín Herrera
  • Clausura 2012 champions

    In Clausura 2012 Santos won their fourth championship, defeating Tigres in the semi-finals with two last-minute goals, and defeating Monterrey in the finals with an aggregate score of 3–2.

    Squad

  • Oswaldo Sánchez
  • Iván Estrada
  • Felipe Baloy
  • Aarón Galindo
  • Osmar Mares
  • Marc Crosas
  • Rodolfo Salinas
  • Carlos Darwin Quintero
  • Christian Benitez
  • Juan Pablo Rodríguez
  • Daniel Ludueña
  • Oribe Peralta
  • César Ibáñez
  • Rafael Figueroa
  • Cándido Ramírez
  • Sponsors

    Santos Laguna has always worn green, with white or black accessories. Their uniform originated after the acquisition of Angeles de Puebla and their sponsorship by the Mexican Social Security Institute during the 1983–84 season.

    The first home uniform was white with green sleeves and a green vertical stripe, green shorts and socks; the away uniform was white, in tribute to Club Torreon. In 1986, they adopted a home uniform of green-and-white horizontal stripes, green shorts and white socks and a white-and-green away uniform. In 2000, Santos Laguna signed a sponsorship agreement with Soriana.

    Corona Stadium

    Corona Stadium, in Torreón, Coahuila, was one of the smallest football stadiums in Mexico with a capacity of 20,100. Known as Montezuma Stadium, it opened on July 2, 1970 for a friendly match between the now-defunct CF Torreón and Guadalajara. The stadium was demolished on November 2, 2009.

    New Corona Stadium

    Santos Laguna plays at the $100 million Estadio Corona, with a capacity of 30,050. Construction began on February 22, 2008, and on November 11, 2009 the stadium opened for a friendly match between Santos Laguna and Santos FC from the Brazilian Série A. The sellout crowd included Mexican president Felipe Calderón and Brazilian legend Pelé. Santos Laguna won, 2–1.

    Insignia

    When Santos Laguna was founded in 1983, its crest was white with green stripes and letters (similar to that of Santos FC). In 1991, when Grupo Modelo bought the club, the crest became similar to the current one. It has five stars, representing the club's five Primera Division de Mexico championships.

    Songs

    In 1991, when the club was in danger of relegation to the second division, Santos adopted their first team song: "Es hora de ganar", by Ricardo Serna. In April 1994, Serna wrote "Santos Campeon". Two years later, Chilean composer Martin Ibarreche Wilt Labarca was commissioned to write "Verdiblanco el corazon". In 1997 Serna wrote "Hymn to the Fans", and in May 2001 the club introduced "Venceremos". Yahir of La Academia sang a song celebrating the club's 25th anniversary.

    Partnerships

    On December 9, 2010, Santos formed a partnership with Scottish champions Celtic. Like Celtic, Santos wear a green-and-white hooped kit and the clubs regularly mention each other on Twitter and Facebook. On January 10, 2013, Santos formed a partnership with Atlético Nacional.

    Rivalries

    Santos has a rivalry with Monterrey, with whom they played finals in the First Division of Mexico and two finals in the CONCACAF Champions League. To a lesser extent it also rivals Tigres UANL.

    Domestic

  • Mexican Primera División/Liga MX championships: Invierno 1996, Verano 2001, Clausura 2008, Clausura 2012, Clausura 2015
  • Runners-up (5): 1993–94, Verano 2000, Bicentenario 2010, Apertura 2010, Apertura 2011
  • Copa MX: Apertura 2014
  • Campeón de Campeones: 2015
  • InterLiga: 2004
  • International

  • CONCACAF Champions League runners-up: 2011–12, 2012–13
  • Friendlies

  • Copa Torreón: 1985
  • Torneo Fútbol Tres: 1994
  • Copa Corona: 2000
  • Copa Gobernador Cero Marginación (2): 2006, 2008
  • Trofeo Centenario de Torreón: 2007
  • Copa Independencia: 2007
  • Copa Xango: 2008
  • Trofeo IPN 75 Aniversario: 2011
  • Copa Centenario Real Club España: 2012
  • Trofeo Bandera Nacional: 2013
  • Trofeo IMSS 70 aniversario: 2013
  • Trofeo UANL 80 aniversario: 2013
  • Awards

  • FMF Champion Team Golden Football: Clausura 2008,Clausura 2012
  • FMF First-Place Team Golden Football: Apertura 2007, Clausura 2012
  • Fair-Play FMF Golden Football: Clausura 2005,
  • Brand of the Year: 2012
  • First team

    As of 7 January 2017

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

    For recent transfers, see List of Mexican football transfers winter 2016–2017.

    On loan

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

    Reserve team

    Santos Laguna Premier is the reserve team in the Segunda División, the third level of the Mexican league system.

    Top scorers

    Primera División
  • Gabriel Caballero (Verano 1997; 13)
  • Jared Borgetti (Invierno 2000; 19)
  • Jared Borgetti (Verano 2001; 22)
  • Vicente Matías Vuoso (Clausura 2005; 16)
  • Vicente Matías Vuoso (Apertura 2005; 11)
  • Christian Benítez (Apertura 2010; 14)
  • Copa Mexico
  • Richard Zambrano (1994–95 Copa Mexico; 3)
  • Andrés Rentería (Apertura 2014 Copa MX; 6)
  • International
  • Oribe Peralta (2011–12 CONCACAF Champions League; 7)
  • Carlos Quintero (2012–13 CONCACAF Champions League; 6)
  • All-time records

  • Updated April 30, 2016.
  • Staff

  • Manager: José Manuel de la Torre
  • Assistants: Benjamín Galindo, Álvaro de la Torre, Miguel Ángel Vargas
  • Physical manager: Guillermo Hernández, Juan Manuel Rodríguez
  • Goalkeeper manager: Nicolás Navarro, Oswaldo Sánchez
  • Modernization director: Albert Espigares
  • Physiotherapist: Pablo Barrionuevo
  • Medical staff: José Antonio Mujica, Fernando Rangel, Odín Vite Asensio
  • References

    Santos Laguna Wikipedia