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Real Betis

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Real Betis
Full name Real Betis Balompié S.A.D.
Nickname(s) Béticos del Universo
Verdiblancos
Founded 1907
Ground Manuel Ruiz de Lopera, Seville
(Capacity: 52,745)
Owner Flag of Spain Manuel Ruiz de Lopera
Chairman Flag of Spain José León Gómez
Manager Flag of Spain Antonio Tapia
League Segunda División
2008-09 La Liga, 18th
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Home colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Away colours

Real Betis Balompié S.A.D. is a Spanish football club in Seville founded in 1907. The team currently plays in Segunda Division. Its home stadium is the 52,700-seat Manuel Ruiz de Lopera and its home colours are green and white. Real Betis celebrated their centenary year during the 2007–08 La Liga season.

Real Betis were relegated in the last round of the 2008-09 season despite ending with 42 points.

Real Betis were noted as the 37th best followed team in Europe as regard average attendances during the 2007–08 season.[1]

Contents

[edit] History

Real Betis holds the distinction of being the first Andalusian football team to play in the La Liga and to reach the UEFA Champions League although city rivals Sevilla already played this competition but with a different format, known as European Cup, in the 1957-58 season. Betis are also the only Spanish club to have won the 1st, 2nd and 3rd division leagues. Supporters of Real Betis are known as béticos. The club came close to folding in the summer of 1992 when they were saved by then vice-chairman Manuel Ruiz de Lopera, who later became chairman and is the current owner of the club.

[edit] Early years

Seville was the venue for the first official football game played in Spain. On 8 March 1890 at the Tablada Hippodrome a team from the Seville Water Works defeated the Huelva Recreation Club 2-0. With the exception of two Spanish players on the Huelva team, the players on both teams were British. Despite this historic event, it was not until 1905 that Sevilla FC was formed. The name is derived from Baetis, the Roman name for Guadalquivir river. Betis initially attracted support from the working classes although a large number of aristocracts including the King of Spain also supported the team. The foundation date is disputed. The 1907 foundation date comes from Sevilla Balompie, a club founded by students from the Escuela Politécnica on Calle Cervantes. This club merged with Betis FC in late 1914.

[edit] Name and colours

Balompie is the literal Spanish word for football as opposed to the anglicized version, futbol. Betis is one of only a handful of Spanish clubs that use this version in their name. As with other Spanish clubs Real was added after receiving patronage from the King of Spain Don Alfonso XIII in 1914. In 1912, Manuel Ramos Asensio, one of the club's founding members, returned from a business trip to Glasgow with a set of green and black striped shirts, donated by Celtic F.C, and proposed Betis take up the colours. The green and black strip was subsequently deemed unlucky after a losing streak and was replaced by a green and white version - the Andalucian national colours. During the Second Spanish Republic the club was once again called Betis Balompie, reverting to its current name after the Spanish Civil War.

[edit] Domestic success

Betis have won the La Liga once - in 1935 under the guidance of Patrick O'Connell - and won their first Copa del Rey in 1977. They made it to the final in 1997 but lost to FC Barcelona. Betis made it to the final again on 11 June 2005 against CA Osasuna at the Vicente Calderón Stadium and won their second Copa del Rey 2-1.

Betis was also once runner-up of the defunct Copa de la Liga (Spanish League Cup) (1985/86)

[edit] Centenary celebrations

Betis celebrated their centenary year in 2007, during the 2006–07 and 2007–08 league campaigns. In celebration of their centenary year they played A.C. Milan on 9 August 2007. Betis won the game 1-0 when new signing Mark González scored from the penalty spot early into the second half. On 15 August Betis competed in the Estadio Ramón de Carranza Trophy, playing against Real Madrid in the semi-final, winning the game 1-0 with an injury time free-kick scored by Juan Pablo Caffa. The following day, Betis contested in the final of the Estadio Ramón de Carranza Trophy against Real Zaragoza. The match ended 1-1, with a goal from David Rivas for Betis, before winning the game 4-3 on penalties, with Antonio Doblas decisively saving a Ricardo Oliveira penalty. The summer brought with it a complete change to the Betis squad, with eight arrivals that included Mark González, Ricardo, and Mariano Pavone, and fourteen sales.

[edit] Segunda División

Sadly, after a very tight race to stay in La Liga. Betis efforts failed with a 1–1 draw against Valladolid at the end of the 2008-09 season. With this draw and having finished 18th in the table, Betis will be relegated to Segunda División.

On 15 June over 65,000 Beticos including such icons as Rafael Gordillo, Luis del Sol, Hipolito Rincon, Julio Cardenosa and others joined the protest march in Sevilla with the slogan "15-J Yo Voy Betis "to let the majority owner Manuel Ruiz de Lopera know that it was time to put his 54% share of the club on the market for someone,some entity or the Betis supporters to buy those shares and remove Lopera from the day to day operations of the club. As to date he has not announced the price of each share that he owns although there are 3-4 entities that have expressed in interest in purchasing his shares.

[edit] Stadium information

Estadio Manuel Ruiz de Lopera is a football stadium in Seville, Spain. The stadium is the home ground of Real Betis. It was previously called Estadio Benito Villamarín before the new owner of the club, Manuel Ruiz de Lopera, decided to build a new stadium over the old one.

See main article: Manuel Ruiz de Lopera

[edit] Club honours

[edit] Competition participation

[edit] Domestic

[edit] Players

[edit] Current squad

As of June 20, 2009 - [2][3][4]

No. Position Player
1 Flag of Portugal GK Ricardo
2 Flag of Spain DF Melli
3 Flag of Spain DF Fernando Vega
4 Flag of Spain DF Carlos García
5 Flag of Spain DF David Rivas
6 Flag of Slovenia DF Branko Ilič
7 Flag of Spain MF Juanma
8 Flag of Spain MF Arzu
9 Flag of Spain FW Sergio García
11 Flag of Chile MF Mark González
12 Flag of Spain MF Damià Abella
13 Flag of Spain GK Casto
14 Flag of Spain MF Capi
No. Position Player
15 Flag of Brazil MF Iriney
16 Flag of Argentina FW Mariano Pavone
17 Flag of Brazil FW Ricardo Oliveira
19 Flag of Spain FW Xisco
20 Flag of Cameroon MF Achille Emana
21 Flag of Turkey MF Mehmet Aurélio
22 Flag of Brazil DF Lima
23 Flag of Portugal DF Nélson
24 Flag of Spain MF Sunny
25 Flag of Germany MF David Odonkor
27 Flag of Spain MF Juande
33 Flag of Spain FW Diego Segura
37 Flag of Spain MF José Cañas
-- Flag of Spain GK Iñaki Goitia

[edit] Loaned players

No. Position Player

[edit] Non-EU players

[edit] Notable former players

[edit] Club management

[edit] Current technical body

Position Name Nationality
Manager: Antonio Tapia Flag of Spain Spanish
Assistant Manager: Juan Merino Flag of Spain Spanish
B Team Manager: Rafát Kámal Flag of Spain Spanish
Goalkeeping Coach: José Ramón Esnaola Flag of Spain Spanish
Physical Coach: Carmelo del Pozo Flag of Spain Spanish
Recuperation Coach: David Gómez Flag of Spain Spanish
Doctor: Tomás Calero Flag of Spain Spanish
Surgeon Santiago Pérez Hidalgo Flag of Spain Spanish
Physiotherapist: Ildefonso Blanco Flag of Spain Spanish
Masseuse: José Mª Montiel Salas Flag of Spain Spanish
Masseuse: Francisco Bizcocho Flag of Spain Spanish
Podiatrist: Angel Olivia Flag of Spain Spanish
Helper: Jose Manuel Acuña Flag of Spain Spanish
Helper: Manuel Barrera Castro Flag of Spain Spanish

[edit] Management positions

Name Nationality Role
Manuel Ruiz de Lopera  Spain Owner
José León Gómez  Spain Acting President
Ángel Martín Vega  Spain Vice-President
Rufino González Navarro  Spain Vice-President
Jaime Rodriguez Sacristán-Cascajo  Spain Counsel Secretary
Óscar Arredondo Prieto  Spain Chief Legal Services
Francisco Nuchera Cejudo  Spain Counselor
Luís Salcedo Gómez  Spain Counselor
Javier Páez Ruíz  Spain Counselor
Balbino de Bernado Barrio  Spain Counselor
Gregorio Conejo Muñoz  Spain Counselor
Víctor López García-Aranda  Spain Counselor
Manuel Castaño Martín  Spain Counselor
José Manuel Villarán Toribio  Spain Counselor
Francisco Sánchez Moreno  Spain Counselor
Fernando Rubiales Torrejón  Spain Counselor
Diego García León  Spain Counselor
José Antonio González Flores  Spain General Manager
Manuel Ortega Momparlet  Spain Sporting Director
Ignacio Lasa Puech  Spain Marketing Director
Iván Larriba  Spain Chief Press Officer

[edit] Notable former managers

see also Cat:Real Betis managers

Spain
Argentina
Slovakia
France
Hungary
Ireland
Netherlands
Uruguay

[edit] Notable former players

[edit] Presidents

  • SEVILLE BALOMPIÉ
    • 1907-1909: Juan del Castillo Ochoa
    • 1909-1910: Alfonso del Castillo Ochoa
    • 1910-1911: José Gutiérrez Fernández
    • 1912: Juan del Castillo Ochoa
    • 1914: Herbert Richard Jones
  • BETIS FUTBOL CLUB
    • 1909: Eladio García de la Borbolla
    • 1910-1911: Manuel Gutiérrez Fernández
    • 1913-1914: Miguel Folgado
    • 1914: Pedro Rodríguez de la Borbolla
  • REAL BETIS BALOMPIÉ
    • 1914-1915: Herbert Richard Jones
    • 1915-1917: Pedro Rodríguez de la Borbolla
    • 1917-1918: Roberto Vicente de Mata
    • 1918-1919: Eduardo Hernández Nalda
    • 1919-1920: Carlos Alarcón de la Lastra
    • 1920-1921: Jerónimo Pérez de Vargas
    • 1921-1922: Carlos Alarcón de la Lastra
    • 1922-1923: Gil Gómez Bajuelo
    • 1923-1925: Ramón Navarro Cáceres
    • 1925-1926: Antonio Polo Roma
    • 1926-1927: Ramón Cortecero
    • 1927-1928: Antonio de la Guardia
    • 1928-1929: Ignacio Sánchez Mejías
    • 1929-1930: Daniel Mezquita Moreno
    • 1930: Camilo Romero Sánchez
    • 1930-1931: Adolfo Cuellar Rodríguez
    • 1931-1933: Jose Ignacio Mantecón Novasal
    • 1933-1939: Antonio Moreno Sevillano
    • 1940-1942: Ramón Poll Carbonell
    • 1942-1943: Alfonso Alarcón de Lastra
    • 1943-1944: Francisco Cantalapiedra Fernández
    • 1944-1945: Eduardo Benjumena Vázquez
    • 1945-1946: Manuel Romero Puerto
    • 1946-1947: Filomeno de Aspe Martín
    • 1947-1950: Pascual Aparicio García
    • 1950-1952: Francisco de la Cerda Carmona
    • 1952-1955: Manuel Ruiz Rodríguez
    • 1955-1965: Benito Villamarín Prieto
    • 1965-1966: Avelino Villamarín Prieto
    • 1966-1967: Andrés Gaviño
    • 1967-1969: Julio de la Puerta
    • 1969: José León Gómez
    • 1969-1979: José Núñez Naranjo
    • 1979-1983: Juan Manuel Mauduit Caller
    • 1983-1989: Gerardo Martínez Retamero
    • 1989-1992: Hugo Galera Davidson
    • 1992-1996: José León Gómez
    • 1996-2006: Manuel Ruiz de Lopera
    • 2006: José León Gómez

[edit] Domestic position

[edit] Recent La Liga history

Real Betis currently compete in the top flight of Spanish football, La Liga. Real Betis were relegated during the 1999–2000 La Liga season and so competed in the Segunda División during the 2000–01 season. They were promoted on their first attempt.[5]

Season Pos P W D L F A Pts
1996–97 4 42 21 14 7 81 46 77
1997–98 8 38 17 8 13 49 50 59
1998–99 11 38 14 7 17 47 58 49
1999–00 18 38 11 9 18 33 56 42
2001–02 6 38 15 14 9 42 34 59
2002–03 8 38 14 12 12 56 53 54
2003–04 9 38 13 13 12 46 43 52
2004–05 4 38 16 14 8 62 50 62
2005–06 14 38 10 12 16 34 51 42
2006–07 16 38 8 16 14 36 49 40
2007–08 13 38 12 11 15 45 51 47
2008–09 18 38 10 12 16 51 58 42

[edit] Records

[edit] References and footnotes

[edit] External links

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