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C.A. Progreso

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Progreso
Full nameClub Atlético Progreso
Nickname(s)Gauchos del Pantanoso
Gauchos
Los de La Teja
Founded30 April 1917; 108 years ago (1917-04-30)
GroundParque Abraham Paladino
Montevideo, Uruguay
Capacity8,000
ChairmanFabián Canobbio
ManagerMaxi Viera
LeaguePrimera División
2019Primera División, 4th

Club Atlético Progreso, also known simply as Progreso, is a professional football club based in Montevideo, Uruguay that currently plays in the Uruguayan Primera División.

The team's red and yellow striped kit emulates the Catalan flag, which was where the founders of the club were from. Progreso's Estadio Abraham Paladino is capable of holding 8,000 spectators.

History

The club was founded on 30 April 1917.[1] The club's first match was played on 26 May 1918, with Progreso beating Club Maroñas 2–0. Progreso won its first title with the Divisional Intermedia (Second Division at that time) in 1938. It went on to win it the next year as well, along with two more championships in 1956 and 1963. The club has three Segunda División championships: in 1945, 1979, and 2005–06. In 1975 and 1978, Progreso won the Tercera División (Segunda División Amateur).

Progreso's first continental participation was in the 1987 Copa Libertadores, where they finished third in a group consisting of fellow Uruguayan club Nacional, and Peruvian clubs San Agustin and Alianza Lima. They participated again in the 1990 edition, since they had won the league the previous year. In that edition, Progreso won their group, which consisted of Defensor Sporting, Pepeganga Margarita, and Mineros de Guayana. They qualified to the Second Round, where they were eliminated by Barcelona of Ecuador.

In 1989, Progreso won the Primera División, the only championship in the history of the Uruguayan league to use a single round-robin format (13 games). This format was due to a calendar conflict with some national and international cups that year. Progreso's president at that time was Dr. Tabaré Vázquez, who later became the president of Uruguay.

Progreso's first team kit in 1917 was white with black stripes. The kit expressed the team's affinity with the anarchist movement. The colors were later changed to red and yellow, the colors of Catalonia, which was known for its identification with the Spanish Revolution.[2]

Performance in CONMEBOL competitions

1987: Group Stage
1990: Second Round
2020: First Stage

Continental record

Season Competition Round Opponent Score Result Aggregate
1990 Copa Libertadores Group stage Uruguay Defensor Sporting
1–1
0–0
1st
Venezuela Mineros
1–1
1–3
Venezuela Pepeganga Margarita
2–0
1–0
Second round Ecuador Barcelona
2–2
2–0
2–4
2020 Copa Libertadores First stage Ecuador Barcelona
0–2
1–3
1–5

Current squad

As of 23 November 2020

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Uruguay URU Nicola Pérez
2 DF Uruguay URU Javier Méndez
3 DF Uruguay URU Carlos Canobbio
4 DF Uruguay URU Federico Platero
5 DF Uruguay URU Lucas Ferreira
6 DF Argentina ARG Rodrigo Díaz
7 FW Uruguay URU Facundo Peraza
8 FW Uruguay URU Santiago Gáspari (on loan from Rampla Juniors)
9 FW Uruguay URU Federico Laens
10 MF Uruguay URU Joaquín Gottesman
11 MF Uruguay URU Maicol Rodríguez
13 MF Uruguay URU Mathías Riquero
14 FW Uruguay URU Alexander Rosso
15 DF Uruguay URU Martín Marta
16 DF Uruguay URU Rodrigo Mieres
No. Pos. Nation Player
17 DF Uruguay URU Anthony Sosa
18 MF Uruguay URU Nahuel Roldán
19 FW Uruguay URU Alex Maximiliano Silva
20 MF Uruguay URU Gonzalo Andrada
21 MF Uruguay URU Fabricio Fernández
22 DF Uruguay URU Esteban González
23 DF Uruguay URU Alex Silva Quiroga
25 DF Uruguay URU Mauricio Loffreda
26 MF Chile CHI Gonzalo Jara
27 MF Uruguay URU Rodrigo Viega
28 DF Uruguay URU Danilo Asconeguy
29 FW Uruguay URU Rodrigo Vidal
30 MF Uruguay URU Joel Lew
31 MF Uruguay URU Leandro Aguilera
33 GK Uruguay URU Nahuel Suárez

Out on loan

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

No. Pos. Nation Player

Managers

This is an incomplete list of Progreso Managers.[3]

Titles

1989
  • Torneo Competencia: 1
1985
1945, 1979, 2005–06
1938, 1939, 1956, 1963
1975, 1978

References

  1. ^ "Uruguay: Infoclubes 4". el-area.com. Retrieved 12 July 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ "Fútbol uruguayo, origen e historia de sus equipos: Progreso". OBDULIO SON LOS PADRES (in European Spanish). 1 June 2020. Retrieved 12 July 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ "Progreso - Manager history". worldfootball.net. Retrieved 12 July 2021.