Club Atlético 3 de Febrero
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Full name | Club Atlético 3 de Febrero | ||
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Nickname(s) | Los Rojos | ||
Founded | 20 November 1970 | ||
Ground | Estadio Antonio Aranda Ciudad del Este, Paraguay | ||
Capacity | 28,000 | ||
Chairman | Antonio Aranda | ||
Manager | Mauro Caballero[1] | ||
League | Primera B Nacional | ||
2024 | División Intermedia, 14th of 16 (relegated by average) | ||
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Club Atlético 3 de Febrero, also known as Atlético 3 de Febrero or simply 3 de Febrero, is a professional Paraguayan football club from Ciudad del Este, the capital city of the department of Alto Paraná. The club was founded in 1970, and named after St. Blaise Day, February 3, a national holiday throughout many Hispanic countries. Atlético 3 de Febrero have played 9 seasons in the Primera División. At present plays in Primera B Nacional, one of the third division leagues in the Paraguayan football league system.
History
The team started playing in the Liga Paranaense and finally made their way to the second division of the Paraguayan League in 2000. In 2004 the club won the second division title and got promoted to the first division. In 2011, the club was relegated to the Paraguayan 2nd division, but won the title again in 2013, once again being promoted to the first division.
Stadium
3 de Febrero's stadium is the Estadio Antonio Aranda, also known as Estadio 3 de Febrero. It is located next to Ciudad del Este's bus terminal. The stadium is on the Avenue General Bernardino Caballero, and was opened in 1973.[2] The capacity of the stadium, is 28,000. It has a grass surface and was renovated in 1999, for which it was utilized as one of the venues of the 1999 Copa América. Fixtures of the 2004 South American U-16 Championship and the 2007 South American U-20 Championship were also disputed at the stadium. The stadium is Paraguay's third largest, according to its seating capacity.[3] The stadium was the venue which saw Paraguayan footballers, Roque Santa Cruz score his first international goal for the Albirroja on 17 June 1999 in a friendly match against Uruguay, and Nelson Haedo score his first international goal for the Albirroja on 17 August 2005 in a friendly match against El Salvador.
Gallery
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Fachada principal del remodelado estadio rojo.
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Interior del Estadio Antonio Oddone Sarubbi del Club Atlético 3 de Febrero in 2017
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Interior del Estadio Antonio Oddone Sarubbi del Club Atlético 3 de Febrero in 2017
Honours
- 2004, 2013
- 2000
- 1973, 1975, 1977, 1986, 1992, 1997
Notable players
- To appear in this section a player must have either:
- Played at least 125 games for the club.
- Set a club record or won an individual award while at the club.
- Been part of a national team at any time.
- Played in the first division of any other football association (outside of Paraguay).
- Played in a continental and/or intercontinental competition.
1990's
- Paraguay Justo Jacquet (1994)
2000's
- Paraguay Ignacio Paniagua (2000–2001)
- Paraguay Celso Guerrero (2001)
- Paraguay Darío Espínola (2001)
- Paraguay Óscar Cardozo (2003–2004)
- Paraguay Angel Antar (2003)
- Paraguay Juan Cardozo (2004–2005)
- Paraguay Juan Ramón Jara (2005)
- Paraguay Osvaldo Mendoza (2005)[4]
- Paraguay Edgar Robles (2005)
- Paraguay Milton Benítez (2006, 2008–2010)
- Paraguay Fidencio Oviedo (2006)
- Paraguay Blas López (2006)
- Paraguay Miguel Cárdenas (2006)
- Paraguay Pablo Caballero (2006)
- Paraguay Jorge Valdez (2007)
- Paraguay Eric Ramos (2007)
- Paraguay Richard Salinas (2007)
- Paraguay Rodrigo Romero (2008)
- Paraguay José Antonio Franco (2008)
- Paraguay Gustavo Mencia (2008)
- Paraguay Felipe Villalba (2008–2012)
- Paraguay Troadio Duarte (2008, 2009)
- Paraguay César Llamas (2008–2011, 2013–)
- Brazil Rafael Baiano (2009, 2010–2011)
2010's
- Paraguay Miguel Ángel Cuéllar (2010)
- Paraguay Henry Lapczyk (2010)
- Paraguay Hugo Santacruz (2010, 2014)
- Paraguay Carlos Antonio Mereles (2011)
- Paraguay Osvaldo Moreno (2011)
- Paraguay Delio Toledo (2011)
- Paraguay Gilberto Velásquez (2011)
- Paraguay Derlis Cardozo (2011–2013)
- Paraguay Joel Zayas (2011–2012)
- Brazil Diego Balbinot (2012–2014)
- Paraguay Derlis Gómez (2012)
- Paraguay Jorge Salinas (2014)
- Paraguay Antony Silva (2014)
- Paraguay Julio Aguilar (2014)
- Paraguay Rodrigo Burgos (2014)
- Paraguay Ricardo Mazacotte (2014)
- Uruguay Leonardo Migliónico (2014–)
- Argentina Hugo Iriarte (2014)
- Argentina Juan Pablo Raponi (2014)
- Paraguay Domingo Salcedo (2014)
- Uruguay Alejandro Prieto (2018–)[5]
- Brazil Bruno Renan (2018–)[6]
Non-CONMEBOL players
- Portugal Thiago França (2011)[7][8]
References
- ↑ "Mauro Caballero fue presentado en un ambicioso club de Intermedia". 6 January 2022.
- ↑ "Paraguay - CA 3 de Febrero - Results, fixtures, squad, statistics, photos, videos and news - Soccerway".
- ↑ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 17 January 2013. Retrieved 30 November 2014.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ↑ "Osvaldo Mendoza :: Osvaldo Martin Mendoza Sosa ::".
- ↑ "Tigo Sports Paraguay".
- ↑ "Tigo Sports Paraguay".
- ↑ "Thiago Franca".
- ↑ "Portugal - Thiago - Profile with news, career statistics and history - Soccerway".
External links
- Official website (archived)