AD Alcorcón

Agrupación Deportiva Alcorcón S.A.D. is a Spanish football team based in Alcorcón, in the autonomous community of Madrid. Founded in 1971, it currently plays in Segunda División, holding home matches at the Municipal de Santo Domingo, with a 5,100 seat capacity.[2]

Alcorcón
Full nameAgrupación Deportiva Alcorcón S.A.D.
Nickname(s)Los Alfareros (The Potters)
Founded20 July 1971 (20 July 1971)
GroundSanto Domingo, Alcorcón,
Madrid, Spain
Capacity5,100[1]
OwnerJosh Harris
PresidentIván Bravo
Head coachFran Fernández
LeagueSegunda División
2018–19Segunda División, 14th
WebsiteClub website

History

Founded in 1971 by Dionisio Muñoz Jerez. The founding act of the club was signed on 20 July that year.[3] Alcorcón spent roughly its first 30 years of existence in between the fourth division and the regional leagues. Alcorcón played its first match on 8 September 1971 against Atlético Madrid (youth team) and lost it 0:2.[3] In 2000–01, it made its Segunda División B debut, finishing in 12th place, and spending the following seasons immersed in mid-table positions. The 2003–04 season Alcolcórn led by coach Raúl González finished in 10th position in Segunda División B.[4]

In 2008–09, a third place in the regular season meant Alcorcón was allowed to appear in the promotion play-offs for the first time in its history. After disposing of Sant Andreu and Alcoyano, the club was ousted by Real Unión of Irun in the final round with a 3–1 aggregate scoreline.

2009–10 Copa del Rey

On 27 October 2009, Alcorcón secured the most famous victory in its history after it defeated La Liga powerhouse Real Madrid 4–0 at home in the first leg of its round-of-32 match in the Copa del Rey.[5] In the club's first ever official match against a team from the top flight, its opponent fielded nine international players in its starting eleven: Jerzy Dudek, Álvaro Arbeloa, Raúl Albiol, Christoph Metzelder, Royston Drenthe, Mahamadou Diarra, Guti, Esteban Granero, Raúl, Rafael van der Vaart and Karim Benzema, with Ruud van Nistelrooy, Fernando Gago and Marcelo appearing as substitutes in the second-half.[6]

On 10 November, in the second leg at the Santiago Bernabéu, the club lost 1–0, but won 4–1 on aggregate, thereby going through to the next round of 16,[7] where the club was ousted by Racing de Santander, 2–3 on aggregate.

2010–present

Following the Alcorconazo, in the 2009–10 season, Alcorcón was finally promoted to level two after defeating Pontevedra (3–0 on aggregate) and Ontinyent (4–3 on aggregate) in the promotion play-offs. In the second tier, the club played twice the promotion play-offs but were defeated by Real Valladolid in the final of the 2012 edition and by Girona in the semi-finals of the 2013 edition.

In 2017, Alcorcón qualified to the Copa del Rey quarter-finals for the first time in their history after a penalty shoot-out victory over Espanyol, but were beaten 2–0 on aggregate by Alavés. Alcolcórn was 13th in the 2017–18 season in the Segunda Dicisión B, just 4 points away from being relegated.[8] In the next campaign Alcolcón also struggled, but retained its place in Segunda División, finishing the season in the 14th position.[9]

Season-to-season

Season Tier Division Place Copa del Rey
1971–72 6 3ª Reg. 1st
1972–73 5 2ª Reg. 1st
1973–74 5 1ª Reg. 2nd
1974–75 4 Reg. Pref. 4th
1975–76 4 Reg. Pref. 3rd
1976–77 4 Reg. Pref. 5th
1977–78 4 19th First round
1978–79 5 Reg. Pref. 1st
1979–80 4 3rd Second round
1980–81 4 5th First round
1981–82 4 9th Second round
1982–83 4 12th
1983–84 4 9th
1984–85 4 4th
1985–86 4 10th Third round
1986–87 4 17th
1987–88 4 19th
1988–89 5 Reg. Pref. 3rd
1989–90 5 Reg. Pref. 1st
1990–91 4 19th
Season Tier Division Place Copa del Rey
1991–92 5 Reg. Pref. 10th
1992–93 5 Reg. Pref. 1st
1993–94 4 16th
1994–95 4 21st
1995–96 5 Reg. Pref. 3rd
1996–97 5 Reg. Pref. 2nd
1997–98 4 20th
1998–99 5 Reg. Pref. 1st
1999–00 4 5th
2000–01 3 2ªB 12th
2001–02 3 2ªB 16th
2002–03 3 2ªB 7th
2003–04 3 2ªB 10th First round
2004–05 3 2ªB 11th
2005–06 3 2ªB 7th
2006–07 3 2ªB 11th
2007–08 3 2ªB 14th
2008–09 3 2ªB 3rd
2009–10 3 2ªB 1st Round of 16
2010–11 2 9th Round of 32
Season Tier Division Place Copa del Rey
2011–12 2 4th Round of 16
2012–13 2 5th Third round
2013–14 2 9th Round of 16
2014–15 2 11th Second round
2015–16 2 7th Second round
2016–17 2 18th Quarter-finals
2017–18 2 13th Second round
2018–19 2 14th Third round
2019–20 2 First round

Current squad

The numbers are established according to the official website: www.adalcorcon.com and www.lfp.es

As of 11 January 2020

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

No. Position Player
1 GK Dani Jiménez
2 DF Laure
3 DF Carlos Pomares
5 MF Juan Aguilera
6 DF Adrián Diéguez (on loan from Alavés)
7 MF Richard Boateng
8 MF Albert Dorca
9 FW Jack Harper (on loan from Getafe)
10 MF Serhiy Myakushko
11 MF Ernesto Gómez
14 FW Dani Romera (on loan from Cádiz)
15 FW Rui Costa (on loan from Porto)
16 DF Carlos Bellvís (captain)
No. Position Player
17 MF Samuel Sosa (on loan from Talleres)
18 MF Álex Mula (on loan from Málaga)
19 DF David Fernández
20 DF Unai Elgezabal
21 FW Fran Sandaza
22 DF Paris Adot
23 MF Stoichkov (on loan from Mallorca)
24 MF Reko
26 FW Óscar Arribas
30 GK Samu Casado
31 GK Ximo Miralles
34 MF Luis Perea (on loan from Osasuna)

Reserve team

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

No. Position Player
27 DF Marvin Anieboh
28 MF Mario González
No. Position Player
29 DF Javier Castro
32 GK Carlos Mena

Out on loan

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

No. Position Player
DF Jonathan Bijimine (at Algeciras until 30 June 2020)
MF Alfonso Martín (at Cultural Leonesa until 30 June 2020)
MF Isi Ros (at Recreativo until 30 June 2020)
No. Position Player
MF Alfred Planas (at Valencia Mestalla until 30 June 2020)
MF Daniel Toribio (at Racing Santander until 30 June 2020)

Current technical staff

Position Staff
Manager Fran Fernández
Assistant manager Héctor Berenguel
Fitness coach Cristóbal Fuentes
Goalkeeping coach Francisco Javier Roda
Analyst José Miguel Marcos

Last updated: July 2019
Source: AD Alcorcón

Coaches

Reserve team

References

  1. https://www.adalcorcon.com/club/informacion
  2. "INFORMACIÓN AGRUPACIÓN DEPORTIVA ALCORCÓN | Alcorcón - Web Oficial". INFORMACIÓN AGRUPACIÓN DEPORTIVA ALCORCÓN | Alcorcón - Web Oficial (in Spanish). Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  3. "Nacimiento de la A.D. Alcorcón | Alcorcón - Web Oficial". Nacimiento de la A.D. Alcorcón | Alcorcón - Web Oficial (in Spanish). Retrieved 9 October 2019.
  4. "Nueva etapa en 2ª División "B" | Alcorcón - Web Oficial". Nueva etapa en 2ª División "B" | Alcorcón - Web Oficial (in Spanish). Retrieved 9 October 2019.
  5. Lowe, Sid (27 October 2009). "Real Madrid thrashed by lowly Alcorcón in Copa del Rey". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 November 2009.
  6. El ridículo del Madrid en Alcorcón, 1 por 1 (Real Madrid's travesty in Alcorcón, 1 by 1) (in Spanish)
  7. Real Madrid 1–0 Alcorcon: Segunda B minnows hold on for historic aggregate win
  8. "2017-2018 La Liga 2 Stats". FBref.com. Retrieved 9 October 2019.
  9. "2018-2019 La Liga 2 Stats". FBref.com. Retrieved 5 November 2019.


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