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LDU Quito
LDU Quito logo.png
Full name Liga Deportiva Universitaria de Quito
Nickname(s) Los Albos (The Whites)
El Rey de Copas
Los Azucenas (The Lillies)
Los Universitarios (The Collegiates)
La Liga
Founded January 11, 1930
Ground Estadio de Liga Deportiva Universitaria
Quito, Ecuador
(Capacity: 55,400)
Chairman Ecuador Carlos Arroyo
Manager Argentina Edgardo Bauza
League Serie A
2009 4th
Principal colours
Alternate colours
Current season

Liga Deportiva Universitaria de Quito, commonly referred to as LDU de Quito, Liga de Quito, or simply la Liga, is a professional football club based in Quito, Ecuador. It plays in the Serie A, the highest level of the Ecuadorian professional football league.

LDU Quito are the current holders of both the Recopa Sudamericana and the Copa Sudamericana after winning the 2009 editions of both tournaments. Their participation in the Recopa Sudamericana is attributed to winning the 2008 Copa Libertadores, the first international title ever won by an Ecuadorian club (the Recopa Sudamericana being second and the Copa Sudamericana being the third). LDU Quito is one of eight teams to have won CONMEBOL's treble (the others being Boca Juniors, Olimpia, São Paulo, Independiente, Vélez Sársfield, Cruzeiro and Internacional). LDU Quito was also the runner-up at the 2008 FIFA Club World Cup. The club has won twenty domestic titles, including nine Serie A championships, two Serie B titles, a record six professional Inter-Andean titles, and three amateur Pichincha titles.

The club has its roots in the semi-pro sports teams at the Central University of Ecuador, and was officially founded in 1930. Liga's classic rivals include Quito clubs Aucas, Deportivo Quito and El Nacional. The squad plays its home games at the Estadio de Liga Deportiva Universitaria, better known as La Casa Blanca.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Creation and early years (1930-1953)

LDU Quito's roots lie in a semi-pro sports team based out of the Universidad Central del Ecuador in 1918, headed by Dr. César Jácome Moscoso. Under the leadership of Dr. Bolívar León, the club was officially founded on January 11, 1930.[1] In the early days, Liga participated in a variety of disciplines, including soccer, basketball, athletics, boxing, baseball, swimming, ping-pong, and chess. The club's initial budget was about 500 sucres. The first team's players were students from the university, and had to pay for their own uniforms, medicines, and expenses. Dr. León designed the first uniform, placing its crest, a white "U" on an inverted red and blue triangle, on a white shirt, honoring the team's beginnings at the university. Amongst Liga's first players were Carlos Andrade Marín, Oswaldo Mosquera, Alfonso Cevallos, Alfonso Troya and "El Mono" Icaza.

1930 squad

In 1932, LDU Quito won their first football title at an amateur Pichincha tournament; there was no national amateur league at the time. Five teams participated: Liga, Gladiador, Gimnástico, Atlético, and Cleveland. Liga won all their games, and in the final match, played at the Estadio El Ejido, defeated Gladiador by a score of 4-0. Playing for Liga were Jorge Zapater, Eduardo Flores, Alfonso Cevallos, César González, Jorge Vallarino, Jorge Naranjo, Bolívar "Ñato" León, Alejandro Dávalos, Humberto Yáñez, Humberto Freire, and Ernesto Guevara, with Bolívar León as coach. LDU would also win amateur titles in 1952 and 1953, before the league turned professional the following year.

[edit] Beginning of professional era (1954-1966)

By 1954, the amateur football association in Pichincha had evolved into the Asociación de Fútbol No Amateur de Pichincha (English: Pichincha Non-Amateur Football Association), which subsequently organized a professional league for their member clubs from Quito and Ambato. The inaugural Campeonato Professional Interandino (English: Inter-Andean Professional Championship) was held in 1954. Liga won the league's first title, under the management of Lucho Vásquez. The club finished as the runner-up in 1955 and 1956, before winning again in 1958 under Argentine Roberto Ortega. The club won four titles during the 1960s, in 1960, 1961, 1966, and 1967, and finished as runner-up in 1962, 1963, and 1964. LDU Quito had the most successful run of any professional Interandino-era club, accumulating a total of 6 regional titles.

In 1957 and from 1960 onwards, winning the Interandino title qualified a team to participate in a tournament which crowned a national champion of Ecuadorian professional football. Liga first participated in 1960, after winning the Interandino cup that year. The team's three subsequent Interandino victories did not lead to a national title; the club's best performance was a third place finish in 1964.

Foreign players became integral to the squad during the 1960s. International players included Paulista José Gomes Nogueira in 1960, Chilean Román Soto in 1961, and Paraguayan José María Ocampo in 1966.

[edit] National success, relegation, and comeback (1967-1989)

Uruguayan Oscar Zubia was instrumental to Liga's first two national titles

In 1967, all regional tournaments were discontinued in favor of a single national tournament. Liga won its first national championship in 1969, one year after joining the new league, under the leadership of Brazilian José Gomes Nogueira. Liga's ranks at the time included Francisco "El Tano" Bertocchi, Jorge Tapia, Armando "Tito" Larrea, Carlos Ríos, Santiago Alé, Enrique Portilla, and Ramiro Tobar. Liga's victory granted the club its first Copa Libertadores participation in 1970, where it reached the second phase of the tournament, with '"El Tano" Bertocchi tying for the title of top goalscorer of the tournament.

LDU Quito's success was short-lived; in 1972, the club finished seventh of the eight teams participating in the Serie A. At the time, only four teams from the province of Pichincha could play in the top flight. As the worst-performing Pichincha team, Liga took part in a playoff match against the best-performing Pichincha team in Serie B, Universidad Católica, for a berth in the next season's Serie A tournament. Liga lost the match, relegating it to Serie B for the 1973 season, at the end of which the club faced a second relegation, down to the Segunda Categoria of Ecuadorian football. The club was able to gain promotion back to the Serie B in time for the 1974 season. After winning the first stage of the 1974 Serie B, Liga returned to the Serie A after two years in the lower flights. Liga's rise continued as the team won their second national title after defeating El Nacional. The success was followed by another title win in 1975, marking Liga's first back-to-back national championships. Liga's 1975 and 1976 Copa Libertadores participations saw the squad twice reach the semifinals of the continental tournament. Key to Liga's success were players Polo Carrera, Oscar Zubia, Jorge Tapia, Gustavo Tapia, Walter Maesso, Juan Carlos Gómez, Ramiro Tobar, Juan José Pérez, and Roberto Sussman, along with Colombian coach Leonel Montoya. Liga would round out the decade with a runners-up finish in 1977, allowing for another Copa Libertadores participation in 1978.

In contrast to the team's good performances after coming back from relegation, the 1980s were a dismal decade for the club. Liga's best performance during that period was a runners-up finish in 1981, and a subsequent Copa Libertadores participation in 1982. Player Paulo Cesar was the top Serie A goalscorer in 1981.

[edit] Rise to powerhouse status (1990-present)

In the two decades since 1990, LDU Quito enjoyed a period of domestic success. They started the 1990s with a a national title, edging established powerhouse Barcelona. Before the end of the decade, Liga won two more national titles in 1998 and 1999. The 1998 title was won the year Liga inaugurated their new stadium, La Casa Blanca, and ended with an impressive 7–0 win over Emelec.

In 2000, the club experienced a period of crisis. This crisis resulted in a poor performance in the national league and Liga was relegated to the Serie B that season. The club mananged to bounce back from relegation and won the Serie B in 2001 to gain promotion back to the Serie A. Two years later in 2003, Liga won their 7th national title. Liga added another two national titles in 2005 (Apertura) and 2007 to bring their current count to nine, placing them fourth all-time domestically. Their six titles since 1990 is the most of any team in that period.

[edit] International success (2008-present)

Prior to 2008, Liga had participated in 16 international/continental tournaments. Their best success in South American football was reaching the semifinals of the 2004 Copa Sudamericana, which also matched their previous best in 1975 and 1976 when they reached the semifinals of the Copa Libertadores.

On July 2, 2008, Liga became the first-ever Ecuadorian team to win the Copa Libertadores, after defeating Fluminense by 3-1 in a penalty shootout, after tying 5-5 on aggregate. LDU Quito's Libertadores title gained the club an automatic berth in the semi-finals of the 2008 FIFA Club World Cup, becoming the first non-Argentine or Brazilian CONMEBOL squad to participate in the tournament. Liga defeated Pachuca by 2-0 in their semi-final match, advancing to the final against 2007-08 UEFA Champions League winners Manchester United. Liga lost the final, which was played on December 21 at Yokohama, Japan, by a score of 1-0.

In June 2009, Liga, as the 2008 Copa Libertadores champion, participated in the Recopa Sudamericana against the 2008 Copa Sudamericana champion, Internacional of Porto Alegre, Brazil. LDU Quito won the first leg, played at Beira Rio stadium in Porto Alegre, by a score of 1-0, with a goal from Claudio Bieler. In the second leg, played at La Casa Blanca, Liga won 3-0 with goals from Carlos Espínola, Claudio Bieler, and Enrique Vera. The 2009 Recopa title was Liga's second international title, as well as being the second international title ever achieved by any Ecuadorian club.

Soon after the Recopa victory, Liga earned their third international trophy in their history, the 2009 Copa Sudamericana. In a rematch of the 2008 Copa Libertadores Final, Liga defeated Fluminense by an aggreagate score of 5-4, after winning at home by an impressive 5-1. On their way to the finals, they disposed of important clubs from all over South America, such as Libertad of Paraguay, Argentine clubs Lanús and Vélez Sársfield, and Uruguayan club River Plate.

With the Copa Sudamericana title, Liga is one of eight teams to have won CONMEBOL's treble. Liga achieved this feat in exactly 17 months, less than the other clubs to have done that.

[edit] LDU Quito and the national team

LDU Quito contributesd many players to Ecuador's 2002 and 2006 FIFA World Cup-qualifying squads. Liga was the South American squad that contributed the most players to national teams, a total of seven Ecuadorian players: Patricio Urrutia, Edison Méndez, Agustín Delgado, Cristian Mora, Paúl Ambrosi, Giovanny Espinoza, and Néicer Reasco. Liga also contributed four players to Ecuador's first title-winning Under-17 squad, which won Ecuador's first official international football trophy at the 2007 Pan American Games. The four players were Deison Méndez, Pablo Ochoa, Carlos Delgado, and Israel Chango.

[edit] Colors and badge

Historically, Liga's badge consisted of a large red block-letter "U". In the 1990s, the team adopted the current badge, a white "U" superimposed on an inverted triangle. The colors of the triangle were the deep red and blue of the flag of the city of Quito. Throughout most of the decade and into the 2000s, the crest carried several blue stars above it representing Liga's league championships. After being removed from the jersey for a period of time, the blue stars were replaced by a single yellow star atop the badge following the Copa Libertadores win in 2008. Two more stars were added to commemorate the 2009 Recopa Sudamericana and Copa Sudamericana titles.

As indicated by their nickname, los Albos (The Whites), Liga's kit is historically all-white, with the team's crest over the left breast. The current away kit consists of a gold-colored shirt with gray piping, gray shorts and socks. Previous alternate kits were grey with orange detailing (domestically), and black with red detailing (for the Copa Libertadores). During 2008, special kits were worn for the Copa Sudamericana (gold kit) and the 2008 FIFA Club World Cup (black kit). Umbro is the team's kit provider, and Swiss cement company Holcim is the team's current shirt sponsor since 2008. Powerade and Chevrolet are also sponsors.

2008 principal kit
2008 domestic alternate kit

[edit] Stadium

The Casa Blanca during a 2008 Copa Libertadores match against San Lorenzo
A southerly view from the stadium's upper grandstands

Liga has used four stadium for their home stadium. Their first stadium was Estadio Universitario César Aníbal Espinoza, on the grounds of the Universidad Central del Ecuador. In 1932, Liga moved to Estadio El Ejido, where a number of other teams in Quito used as a home ground. In 1962, Liga moved to Estadio Olímpico Atahualpa, along with a number of other teams from the city. They would use that stadium as a home ground until 1996.

In 1997, LDU Quito inaugurated their own stadium, Estadio Casa Blanca, in the northern part of the city. It is the largest stadium in Quito in terms of capacity, and the second largest in Ecuador after the Estadio Monumental Banco Pichincha in Guayaquil. The stadium officially opened on March 5, 1997 in a match against Brazilian club Atlético Mineiro. Liga won the match 3–1.

[edit] Supporters

La Muerte Blanca during a home match.

LDU Quito has the largest fan base of any club in Quito,[2] and is one of the three most popular teams in Ecuador.[3] The club's fans and supporters are known as liguistas (singular: liguista). The team's most diehard liguistas are known as La Muerte Blanca (English: The White Death). During home games, these fans situate themselves in the southern general stands of the Casa Blanca where they fervently cheer for Liga using large banners, flares, and drums.

[edit] Rivalries

LDU Quito has formed a number of footballing rivalries throughout its history. The longest-standing rivalry is with Sociedad Deportiva Aucas, a southern Quito squad founded in 1945, making the two clubs the oldest in the city. Liga-Aucas matches are referred to as El Superclásico de Quito (English: The Quito Super Derby), and the rivalry traces its history back to the first match on February 1, 1945, which ended in a 1-1 tie. A second match, played on February 18, 1945, ended in a 2-2 draw. At the end of the 90 minutes, the game was 2-1; the timekeeper ended the match, but the referee did not notice, allowing the game to continue into extra time, where Aucas equalized the score. The Superclásico has not been played since 2006, when Aucas was relegated to the Serie B.

The small number of teams in the Ecuadorian first division means that matches between any two teams are played several times during the year, allowing important rivalries to develop between most of the teams. LDU Quito has rivalries with a number of teams in Quito: the Clásico Capitalino against Deportivo Quito, local derbies against El Nacional, ESPOLI, and now-defunct club Politécnico; and also with teams from around the country, including Guayaquilean clubs Barcelona and Emelec. Barcelona has been unable to defeat Liga at La Casa Blanca in more than twelve years of play there.

[edit] Current squad

No. Position Player
1 Ecuador GK José Francisco Cevallos
2 Argentina DF Norberto Araujo
3 Ecuador DF Renán Calle
4 Ecuador DF Ulises de la Cruz
5 Ecuador MF Alfonso Obregón
7 Ecuador MF Edder Vaca
8 Ecuador MF Édison Méndez
9 Ecuador FW Walter Calderón
10 Ecuador MF Christian Lara
11 Ecuador FW Franklin Salas
13 Ecuador DF Néicer Reasco (captain)
14 Ecuador MF Diego Calderón
No. Position Player
15 Ecuador DF Willian Araujo
16 Argentina FW Claudio Bieler
18 Ecuador MF Gonzalo Chila
20 Paraguay MF Enrique Vera
22 Ecuador GK Alexander Domínguez
24 Ecuador MF Gabriel Espinosa
33 Ecuador DF Carlos Espínola
Ecuador MF Miguel Bravo
Ecuador MF Alex Bolaños
Ecuador MF Enrique Gámez
Ecuador DF Jorge Guagua
Ecuador GK Manuel Mendoza

[edit] From the youth squad

No. Position Player
50 Ecuador MF Danny Vaca
51 Ecuador MF Miller Bolaños
53 Ecuador MF Eduardo Bone
54 Ecuador MF Jefferson Lara
55 Ecuador MF Pedro Romo
56 Ecuador MF Galo Corozo
No. Position Player
57 Ecuador MF Christian Hurtado
58 Ecuador MF Efren de la Cruz
59 Ecuador MF Carlos Delgado
Ecuador MF Sigifredo Arroyo
Ecuador MF David Navarette

[edit] Out on loan

No. Position Player
6 Ecuador MF Pedro Larrea (at Macará)
52 Ecuador MF Israel Chango (at Macará)
27 Ecuador FW Víctor Estupiñán (at Macará)

[edit] 2008 Copa Libertadores winners squad

No. Position Player
1 Ecuador GK José Francisco Cevallos
2 Argentina DF Norberto Araujo
3 Ecuador DF Renán Calle
4 Ecuador DF Paúl Ambrosi
5 Ecuador MF Alfonso Obregón
6 Ecuador DF Jefferson Lara
7 Ecuador FW Luis Bolaños
8 Ecuador MF Patricio Urrutia (captain)
9 Ecuador FW Agustín Delgado
10 Ecuador FW Víctor Estupiñán
11 Ecuador FW Franklin Salas
12 Ecuador GK Luis Preti
13 Ecuador MF Pedro Larrea
14 Ecuador MF Diego Calderón
15 Ecuador MF William Araujo
16 Argentina FW Claudio Bieler
17 Ecuador MF Cristian Suárez
18 Ecuador MF Byron Camacho
19 Ecuador FW Joffre Guerrón
20 Paraguay MF Enrique Vera
21 Argentina MF Damián Manso
22 Ecuador MF Edder Vaca
23 Ecuador DF Jairo Campos
24 Ecuador MF Israel Chango
25 Ecuador GK Daniel Viteri
 
Coach: Edgardo Bauza

[edit] 2009 Copa Sudamericana winners squad

No. Position Player
1 Ecuador GK José Francisco Cevallos
2 Argentina DF Norberto Araujo
3 Ecuador DF Renán Calle
4 Ecuador MF Gonzalo Chila
5 Ecuador MF Ulises de la Cruz
6 Ecuador MF Pedro Larrea
7 Ecuador MF Miller Bolaños
8 Ecuador MF Patricio Urrutia
9 Ecuador FW Walter Calderón
10 Ecuador MF Christian Lara
11 Ecuador FW Franklin Salas
12 Ecuador MF Édison Méndez
13 Ecuador DF Néicer Reasco (captain)
14 Ecuador MF Diego Calderón
15 Ecuador MF William Araujo
16 Argentina FW Claudio Bieler
17 Ecuador FW Víctor Estupiñán
18 Ecuador MF Gabriel Espinosa
19 Argentina FW Claudio Graf
20 Paraguay MF Enrique Vera
20 Ecuador MF Alex Bolaños
21 Ecuador MF Pedro Romo
22 Ecuador GK Alexander Domínguez
23 Ecuador DF Jairo Campos
24 Ecuador DF Carlos Espínola
25 Ecuador GK Daniel Viteri
 
Coach: Jorge Fossati

[edit] Notable players

Listed according to debut.

[edit] Top scorers

LDU Quito has had six players become the season top-scorer in the Serie A, five players become the top-scorer in the Campeaonato Profesional Interandino, three players as the top-scorer in the Copa Libertadores, one player become the top-scorer in the Copa Sudamericana, and one player become the top-scorer in the Copa CONMEBOL. The team's all-time top scorer is José Vicente Charro Moreno, with 68 goals.

Serie A[4]

  • Brazil Coutinho (1966, 13 goals)
  • Uruguay Francisco Bertocchi (1969, 26 goals)
  • Brazil Paulo Cesar (1981, 25 goals)
  • Brazil Janio Pinto (1988, 18 goals)
  • Ecuador Diego Herrera (1993, 21 goals)
  • Argentina Claudio Bieler (2009, 22 goals)

Interandino[5]

  • Eduardo Bores (1954, 8 goals)
  • Armando Larrea (1963, 7 goals)
  • Epifanio Brizuela (1963, 7 goals)
  • Nelson Cabezas (1963, 7 goals)
  • Coutinho (1967, 7 goals)

Copa Libertadores[6]

Copa Sudamericana

Copa CONMEBOL[7]

[edit] Noted managers

[edit] Achievements

[edit] National

[edit] International

[edit] Statistics

Competition Part Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Eff Champion Runner-up Other info
Serie A 48 1603 675 431 497 2461 1930 +531 - - 9 3 4th all-time
Copa Libertadores 14 121 46 29 46 171 167 +4 167 46.01% 1 0 Best: Champion (2008)
Copa Sudamericana 6 32 12 9 11 55 46 +9 45 46.88% 1 0 Defending champion
Copa CONMEBOL 1 4 2 1 1 8 7 1 7 58.33% 0 0 Best: Quarterfinals (1998)
Club World Cup 1 2 1 0 1 2 1 1 3 50.00% 0 1 Best: Runner-up (2008)
Recopa Sudamericana 1 2 2 0 0 4 0 +4 6 100.00% 1 0 Defending champion
Note: Updated as of December 2, 2009 (except the Serie A).

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.fifa.com/classicfootball/clubs/club=1916907/index.html
  2. ^ Sica, Gregory (2008-09-12). "Club World Cup Profile: Liga Deportiva Universitaria de Quito". Club World Cup. Goal.com. http://www.goal.com/en/news/1776/club-world-cup/2008/12/09/1004835/club-world-cup-profile-liga-deportiva-universitaria-de-quito. Retrieved 2009-07-13. 
  3. ^ Estudiantes de Carrera de Mercadotecnia, Octavo Nivel de la Escuela Politécnica del Ejército de Ecuador, Departamento de Ciencias Economicas, Administrativas y de Comercio (8th level Market Technologies students, of the Ecuadorian Army Polytechnic School, Department of Economic, Administrative, and Commerce Sciences) (2008) (Flash Video). Investigacion de Mercados Aplicada: Popularidad de los Equipos del Futbol Ecuatoriano (Applied Markets Investigation: Popularity of Ecuadorian Football Clubs). http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Dv4uoPJb64. Retrieved 2009-07-13. 
  4. ^ http://www.rsssf.com/tablese/ecuatops.html
  5. ^ http://www.rsssf.com/tablese/ecuaandeschamp.html
  6. ^ http://www.rsssf.com/sacups/copalibtops.html
  7. ^ http://www.rsssf.com/sacups/conmeboltops.html

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