Sport Boys

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Sport Boys
Full name Sport Boys Association
Nickname(s) Los Rosados, Los Porteños,
La Misilera, Los Olímpico de Berlín, La Academia Porteña, La Rosada, La Nube Rosada
Founded 27 July 1927 (1927-07-27)
Ground Estadio Miguel Grau, Callao
Ground Capacity 15,000
Chairman Peru Karla Bozzo
Manager Peru Jorge Espejo
League Peruvian Segunda Division
2013 Peruvian Segunda Division, 7th
Website Club home page

Sport Boys Association, commonly referred to as Sport Boys or simply Boys, is a Peruvian football club based in the port city of Callao. It was founded on Peru's independence day, July 28, 1927. Its classic and historic rival is the Atlético Chalaco against whom dispute the Clasico Porteño derby of Callao. It is considered the fourth most important club in the Peruvian football as they have won 6 national titles and have the largest number of international appearances after Universitario de Deportes, Sporting Cristal and Alianza Lima, teams of Lima.

History

The club was founded on July 28, 1927 by a group of young enthusiasts from El Callao who got together to fulfill the dream of important local football fan Gualberto Lizárraga to start a football club. The day before Peru's independence day, July 27, they held a meeting and at midnight, the group sang the National Anthem. Afterwards, they declared the club founded and named Lizárraga president and unanimously voted for the club name to be Sport Boys Association.

The team's original uniform was not pink but striped red and yellow.

Sport Boys was the first Peruvian football club to feature cheerleaders. Many of them, including Anelhí Arias, Shirley Cherres, and others that have become Peruvian celebrities.

Recent years

The last time Sport Boys became champions of the Primera División Peruana was 1984. Since then they have had a rollercoaster of ups and downs. Some of the ups have been being runner ups in the 1990 and 1991 First Division after having won the Segunda División Peruana to gain promotion. In 1999 the Sport Boys qualified for the Copa CONMEBOL, and in 2001 for the 2001 Copa Libertadores. Since then that team has had more downs than ups by avoiding relegation to the Segunda División Peruana by winning an end of season playoff match that went down to a penalty shootout against José Gálvez in the 2006 season. During 2008 their campaign was worse than the 2007 campaign leaving the Sport Boys in the bottom of the standings for most of the Apertura tournament. Financial issues were also haunting the club in 2008, so severe that they have not been able to pay their players from March 2008. Some players like midfielder Montenegro have had to do taxi work at night to be able to support their families. That year they were relegated to the Segunda División Peruana but on October 17, 2009, after a great season, Sport Boys went on to beat Cobresol 3-2 for the Segunda División Peruana finals to go back into the Primera Division Peruana, where it played for three seasons before been inundated with economical problems, and then finishing 15th during the 2012 season which relegated them back to the Peruvian Segunda Division

Kit evolution

1927
Old First kit, 2008-09 Away
1927 - Present
Home
1927-07, 2010-?
Away

Rivalries

Sport Boys has had a long standing rivalry with Atlético Chalaco, Alianza Lima, Sporting Cristal, Deportivo Municipal, and Universitario.

Stadium

Sport Boys plays its home games at the Estadio Miguel Grau. It has a capacity of about 15,000. Before this stadium was built, they had to use the 5,000 spectator capacity Telmo Carbajo, a stadium that was in bad condition and unfit to host football matches. It was the first stadium in Callao. Sport Boys were forced to play their games in the Estadio Nacional, where they would be far away from their fans.

Current squad

As of 1 April 2012[1]

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

No. Position Player
1 Peru GK Fischer Guevara
2 Peru DF Jorge Huamán (captain)
3 Peru DF Santiago Salazar
4 Peru DF Joao Pereira
5 Peru MF Luiggi Muchotrigo
6 Peru MF Bryan Salazar
7 Peru FW Carlos Orejuela
8 Peru MF Manuel Tejada
9 Peru FW Roberto Silva
10 Peru MF Robert Ardiles
11 Peru MF César Ruiz
13 Peru DF Ederson Mogollón
14 Peru MF Juan Nakaya
15 Peru MF Mario Gómez (vice-captain)
16 Peru MF Antonio Lizarbe
No. Position Player
18 Peru DF Jesús Arismendi
19 Peru FW Víctor Rossel
20 Peru DF Hansell Riojas
22 Peru DF Juan Arce
23 Peru DF Jair Iglesias
26 Peru DF José Honores
27 Peru DF Joseph Muñoz
28 Peru FW Luis Ricardo Caldas
29 Peru FW Fernando García
30 Mexico MF Marco Parra
Peru DF Wlhadimir Araujo
Peru DF Héctor Santos
Peru MF Jean Franco Rodríguez
Mexico FW Jonathan Jáuregui
Peru FW Alberto Vela
  • The Limit of foreign players a Peruvian club can have is six, of which only four can play simultaneously. The roster also should include Peruvian footballers born from 1990 onwards, forcing the accumulation of a minimum of 2000 minutes of action during the Primera División Peruana 2010.[2]

Technical staff

Position Name
Manager Peru Jorge Espejo
Assistant Manager Peru Eusebio Salazar
Goalkeeping Coach Peru Julio Colina
Fitness and Conditioning Coach Peru Félix Gutiérrez Garay
Assistant Fitness and Conditioning Coach Peru Yuri Salazar
Team Doctor Peru Edgar Huarcaya Saavedra
Physiotherapist Peru Dany Fiestas Muñoz
Equipment Manager Peru Carlos Moya Cervantes
Assistant Equipment Manager Peru Jimmy Valdivia
Field Manager Peru Juan Carlos Quispe

Notable players

Managers

  • Peru Víctor Alcalde (1930's)
  • Peru Raúl Chappell (1940–42)
  • Chile Abelardo Robles (1943–44)
  • Peru Enrique Aróstegui (1945–46)
  • Peru Telmo Carbajo
  • Peru Miguel Rostaing
  • Peru José Arana (1948)
  • Peru Alfonso Huapaya (1950–52)
  • Peru Jorge Alcalde (1953)
  • Greece Dan Georgiadis (1957–58)
  • Peru Marcos Calderón (1958–62)
  • Brazil José Gomes Nogueira (1964)
  • Peru José Chiarella (1966)
  • Peru Roberto Drago (1966)
  • Peru César Brush (1967)
  • Peru Diego Agurto (1968)
  • Peru José Chiarella (1969)
  • Peru Juan Honores (1970)
  • Brazil Zózimo (1971)
  • Argentina Uruguay Juan Hohberg (1972)
  • Brazil Djalma Santos (1973)
  • Peru Walter Milera (1973)
  • Peru Moisés Barack (1974)
  • Peru Diego Agurto (1974)
  • Brazil Zózimo (1975–76)
  • Paraguay César Cubilla (1977)
  • Peru José Chiarella (1978)
  • Peru Luis Roth (1979)

Honours

National

  • Peruvian Primera División: 6
Winners (6): 1935, 1937, 1942, 1951, 1958, 1984
Runner-up (9): 1938, 1950, 1952, 1959, 1960, 1966, 1976, 1990, 1991
  • Torneo Apertura: 0
Runner-up (2): 1998, 2000
  • Torneo Regional: 1
Winners (1): 1990-I
Runner-up (1): 1991-I
  • Peruvian Segunda División: 2
Winners (2): 1989, 2009

Performance in CONMEBOL competitions

1967: First Round
1977: Quarter-Finals
1985: Quarter-Finals
1991: First Round
1992: First Round
2001: First Round
1999: Quarter-Finals

References

  1. "Mercado de Pases 2012: Sport Boys". dechalaca.com. Retrieved 1 April 2012. 
  2. Adfp.org.pe (ed.). "Bases Torneo Descentralizado 2010 - Article 55 º. Skilled players, owners and foreigners" (in Spanish). Retrieved February 8, 2010. 

External links

Official websites
Non-official websites
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