CF Peralada-Girona B

Peralada-Girona B
Full name Club de Fútbol Peralada
Founded 1915
Ground Municipal, Peralada,
Catalonia, Spain
Capacity 1,500
Chairman Josep Isern
Manager Chicho Pelach
League 2ª B – Group 3
2017–18 2ª B – Group 3, 9th

Club de Futbol Peralada-Girona B is a Spanish football team based in Peralada, in Province of Girona of the autonomous community of Catalonia. Founded in 1915, it plays in Segunda División B – Group 3, holding home matches at Municipal de Peralada with a capacity of 1,500 seats.

The club has acted as a reserve team of Girona FC since 2016.

History

Peralada was founded in 1915 as a local community team, assembled simply to play friendly matches against other village teams in the area. The club eventually took the name Club Deportiu Peralada (Sports Club Peralada) in 1936, under the leadership of their first President, Martí Roca. At the time, their shirt was blue and they played games in a field owned by one Miquel Pujol, a site which has now been partially converted into a cafe.[1]

During the upheaval of the Spanish Civil War the club took the decision to cease operations, only resuming sporting activities in 1950. The following year, the team moved to the Camp de Cal Músic, on land rented from the municipal government.[1]

In 1981, the city council purchased the land which was to become their present stadium. Lack of funds prevented the site from being fully completed until 1992, however, when the Suqué-Mateu family - owners of Peralada Castle - turned the club's financial situation around with a generous sponsorship. The increased budget available and improved facilities were rewarded over the following several seasons, as CF Peralada steadily climbed to a level in the Catalan regional league system higher than it had ever previously reached in its history. By 2002/03, the club for the first time ascended from the Catalan regional divisions to enter the Tercera División, the lowest of the fully nation-wide leagues in Spain. Two seasons after this promotion, the club reached the semi-finals of the Copa Catalunya for the first time, where they were knocked out by no less than FC Barcelona.

Peralada's drive up the league pyramid ended as they levelled off their ascent by spending five seasons in the Tercera División before they were relegated back to the first tier of Catalan regional football in 2007. It would take a further seven seasons before the club was able to return to the Tercera, which they did in 2014.

Association with Girona FC

Paralleling Peralada's rise through the leagues a decade earlier, nearby side Girona FC had themselves risen from the Tercera División (the fourth tier of Spanish football) from the middle of the first decade of the new century to reach the Segunda División (the second tier), unsuccessfully contesting the play-offs for promotion to the summit of the league system, La Liga, three times in four seasons by 2016. Having set their sights on football at the highest level, it had become clear to Girona's management that the gap in footballing standards between their first team and their reserve team - a former village side only purchased in 2012 and sat three tiers below Girona FC itself - was too large for practical development of young players by transfer between the two teams. As a result, they began a search for a nearby team playing at a level in between the two, to act as an intermediary reserve side. Quickly identifying Peralada as a candidate for an affiliation relationship, the two clubs came to an understanding whereby they would affiliate for a fixed term of five years starting from 2016.

In 2017, Peralada played for the first time the play-offs to Segunda División B, but was eliminated in the last round by Rápido de Bouzas. However, on 7 July 2017, the club confirmed that it would promote to Segunda División B by paying the €133,000 the Royal Spanish Football Federation established for paying the debts of CF Gavà and CD Boiro players.[2][3]

On 23 July 2017, the club's members voted in favour of renaming the club to CF Peralada-Girona B in recognition of the extension of the club's affiliation with Girona FC after their promotion to Segunda División B.[4]

Season to season

  • As a separated club
Season Tier Division Place Copa del Rey
1928-1970 Regional
1970/71 6 2ª Reg. 12th
1971/72 6 2ª Reg. 12th
1972/73 6 2ª Reg. 7th
1973/74 6 2ª Reg. 16th
1974/75 6 2ª Reg. 14th
1975/76 6 2ª Reg. 14th
1976/77 6 2ª Reg. 15th
1977/78 7 2ª Reg. 15th
1978/79 7 2ª Reg. 16th
1979/80 7 2ª Reg. 18th
1980/81 8 3ª Reg.
1981/82 8 3ª Reg.
1982/83 7 2ª Reg. 11th
1983/84 7 2ª Reg. 6th
1984/85 6 1ª Reg. 10th
1985/86 6 1ª Reg. 18th
1986/87 7 2ª Reg. 15th
1987/88 7 2ª Reg. 10th
1988/89 7 2ª Reg. 15th
Season Tier Division Place Copa del Rey
1989/90 7 2ª Reg. 12th
1990/91 7 2ª Reg. 7th
1991/92 8 2ª Reg. 16th
1992/93 8 2ª Reg. 11th
1993/94 8 2ª Reg. 3rd
1994/95 8 2ª Reg. 1st
1995/96 7 1ª Reg. 10th
1996/97 7 1ª Reg. 1st
1997/98 5 1ª Cat. 13th
1998/99 5 1ª Cat. 11th
1999/00 5 1ª Cat. 8th
2000/01 5 1ª Cat. 8th
2001/02 5 1ª Cat. 3rd
2002/03 4 12th
2003/04 4 17th
2004/05 4 5th
2005/06 4 8th
2006/07 4 19th
2007/08 5 1ª Cat. 13th
2008/09 5 1ª Cat. 13th
Season Tier Division Place Copa del Rey
2009/10 5 1ª Cat. 15th
2010/11 5 1ª Cat. 5th
2011/12 5 1ª Cat. 13th
2012/13 5 1ª Cat. 7th
2013/14 5 1ª Cat. 1st
2014/15 4 12th
2015/16 4 14th
Season Tier Division Place
2016/17 4 2nd
2017/18 3 2ªB 9th
2018/19 3 2ªB

Current squad

As of 3 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 José Aurelio Suárez
Spain GK Marc Vito
Poland GK Marcel Lizak
Spain DF Iago López
France DF Jordan Barroilhet
Venezuela DF Nahuel Ferraresi (on loan from Torque)
Spain DF Paco López
Uruguay DF Santi Bueno (on loan from Barcelona)
Spain DF Sergi Álamo
Spain DF Èric Montes
South Korea MF Seung-ho Paik
Spain MF Rober Sierra
No. Position Player
Georgia (country) MF Giorgi Kochorashvili
Cameroon MF Kévin Soni
Spain MF Mario Rodríguez
Spain MF Kilian Durán
Spain MF Álex Pachón
Spain MF Jofre Cherta
Republic of the Congo FW Yhoan Andzouana
Spain FW Pau Miguélez
Spain FW Valery Fernández
Japan FW Yuya Nakasaka
Spain FW Mouhamadou Keita

Former players

References

  1. 1 2 Padrosa Gorgot, Inés. Quaderns de la Revista de Girona: Peralada [Notebook of the records of Girona: Peralada] (in Catalan). p. 80-81.
  2. "El CF Peralada fa el pagament per la plaça a Segona B" (in cat). CF Peralada. 7 July 2017. Retrieved 8 July 2017.
  3. "La RFEF acepta a Cerceda y Peralada y ya se conocen los 80 equipos de Segunda B" (in Spanish). Marca. 7 July 2017. Retrieved 9 July 2017.
  4. "El CF Peralada aprueba el cambio de nombre" [CF Peralada approves name change]. Marca (in Spanish). 23 July 2017. Retrieved 23 July 2017.
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