Atlético Madrid (youth)

Atlético Madrid Juvenil
Full name Club Atlético de Madrid Juvenil
Nickname(s)
  • Los Colchoneros (The Mattress Makers)
  • Los Rojiblancos (The Red-and-Whites)
  • Los Indios (The Indians)
Ground Ciudad Deportiva Atlético de Madrid, Majadahonda,
Madrid, Spain
Capacity 4,000
President Enrique Cerezo
Coach Manolo Cano Martín
League División de Honor
2017–18 División de Honor, Gr. 5, 1st
Website Club website

Club Atlético de Madrid Juvenil are the under-19 team of Spanish professional football club Atlético Madrid. They play in the Group V of the División de Honor Juvenil de Fútbol where their main rivals are Real Madrid and Rayo Vallecano.

They also participate in the national Copa de Campeones Juvenil and the Copa del Rey Juvenil, qualification for which is dependent on final league group position, and have taken part in the continental UEFA Youth League.

Juvenil A

As of September 2018

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

No. Position Player
Spain GK Christian Gómez
Spain GK Alejandro Herrero
Spain GK José María Saldaña
Equatorial Guinea DF Federico Obama
Spain DF Adrián Luque
Spain DF Fernando Medrano
Spain DF Marco Moreno
Spain DF Manu Sánchez
Spain DF Ricard Sánchez
Brazil MF Gustavo Enrique
China MF Yinquan Kong
Spain MF Óscar Castro
Spain MF Adrián Ferreras
No. Position Player
Spain MF Alfredo Pedroza
Spain MF Nacho Quintana
Spain MF Rodrigo Riquelme
Uruguay MF Juan Manuel Sanabria
Equatorial Guinea FW Salomón Obama
Portugal FW Silvano Nater
Spain FW Sergio Camello
Spain FW Víctor Mollejo
Spain FW Alberto Salido
Spain FW Cédric Teguia
Spain FW Germán Valera
Switzerland FW Rubén del Campo

Season to season (Juvenil A)

Superliga / Liga de Honor sub-19

Seasons with two or more trophies shown in bold[1]

 : :Season: :LevelGroupPositionCopa del Rey JuvenilNotes
1986–87211stQuarter-final
1987–8815thQuarter-final
1988–8915thQuarter-final
1989–90110thN/A
1990–9114thRound of 16
1991–9218thQuarter-final
1992–93264thN/AAcademy disbanded, club represented by independent team[2][3]
1993–94253rdN/AAcademy disbanded, club represented by independent team
1994–95252ndN/A

División de Honor Juvenil

Seasons with two or more trophies shown in bold[1]

*Season*LevelGroupPositionCopa del Rey Juv.Copa de CampeonesEurope/notes
1995–961512thN/AN/AN/A
1996–97152ndRound of 16N/A
1997–98159thN/AN/A
1998–99158thN/AN/A
1999–00152ndSemi-finalN/A
2000–01151stRound of 16Runners-up
2001–0215 1st Quarter-finalWinners
2002–03151stRound of 163rd in group of 3
2003–04155thN/AN/A
2004–05151stRound of 163rd in group of 3
2005–06154thN/AN/A
2006–07153rdN/AN/A
2007–08153rdN/AN/A
2008–09151stRound of 16Quarter-final
2009–10152ndQuarter-finalN/A
2010–11159thN/AN/A
2011–12151stSemi-finalSemi-finalN/A
2012–13152ndSemi-finalQuarter-finalN/A
2013–141V2ndRound of 16N/A1st in group, Round of 16
2014–151V4thN/AN/A1st in group, Quarter-final
2015–161V1stWinners Quarter-final2nd in group, Play-off round
2016–171V2ndRunners-upQuarter-final2nd in group, Quarter-final
2017–181V1stWinnersWinners2nd in group, Quarter-final

Honours

National competitions

UEFA Youth League

Current squad

As of September 2017.[7]

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

No. Position Player
1 Brazil GK Alex Dos Santos
2 Spain MF Carlos Isaac
3 Spain MF Rodrigo Riquelme
4 Spain DF José Aliaga
5 Spain DF Francisco Montero
6 Spain MF Mikel Carro
7 Spain MF Antonio Moya
8 Equatorial Guinea FW Salomón Obama
9 Spain FW Giovanni Navarro
10 Spain MF Juan Cruz
11 Spain MF Ferni
12 Spain MF Álvaro Chumilla
13 Spain GK Alejandro Linares
14 Spain MF Andy Escudero
15 Spain MF Adrián Ferreras
16 Spain DF Fernando Medrano
17 Portugal FW Silvano Nater
18 Spain DF Aitor Puñal
19 Spain MF Óscar Clemente
20 Spain DF Igor Rojo
21 Spain FW Alberto Salido
No. Position Player
23 Spain MF Eduardo Viaña
24 Poland DF Javi Ajenjo
25 Spain GK Carlos Paredes
26 Spain FW Sergio Camello
27 Spain DF Gonzalo Camello
28 Spain MF Óscar Castro
29 Spain DF Adrián Exposito
30 Spain DF Adrián Martínez
31 Spain GK José Baeza
32 Spain FW Víctor Mollejo
33 Spain MF Iván Perogil
34 Spain DF Marco Moreno
35 Spain DF Álvaro Coronado
36 Spain MF Ignacio Navarro
38 Spain MF Álex Masogo
39 Uruguay FW Nicolás Schiappacasse
40 Spain FW Cedric Teguia
15 Spain FW Joaquín Muñoz
19 Spain MF Alberto Ramos

Juvenil B

As of September 2017

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

No. Position Player
Spain GK Christian Gómez
Spain GK Carlos Paredes
Spain GK José Baeza
Spain DF Gonzalo Camello
Spain DF Álvaro Coronado
Spain DF Marco Moreno
Spain DF Adrián Martínez
Spain DF Adrián Exposito
Spain MF Sergio Arratia
Spain MF Aitor Álvarez
Spain MF Óscar Jiménez
Spain MF Iván Perogil
Spain MF Adrián Granizo
Poland MF Javi Ajenjo
No. Position Player
Spain MF Ignacio Navarro
Spain MF Álex Masogo
Brazil MF Gustavo Enrique
Spain FW Nicolás García
Spain FW Víctor Mollejo
Spain FW Segio Pérez
Spain FW Victor Carpintero
Romania FW Alexandru Dumitru
Spain FW Cedric Teguia
Spain FW Sergio Camello

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Historical Spanish Juvenile Competition Results
  2. Lowe, Sid (3 November 2009). "Are 'madhouse' Atlético Madrid the worst run club in Europe?". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 26 December 2017.
  3. "Atletico Madrid let Raul slip through the net as they axed their youth system... now four academy products are driving their success". Daily Mail. 28 April 2016. Retrieved 26 December 2017.
  4. "Los dos juveniles del Atlético de Madrid, campeones de Liga".
  5. "El Atlético conquista la Copa de Campeones de División de Honor de Juveniles".
  6. "El Atlético juvenil es leyenda".
  7. "UEFA Youth League - Atlético Madrid - UEFA.com". uefa.com. UEFA. Retrieved 6 November 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.