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A.C.C.D. Mineros de Guayana

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Mineros de Guayana
Full nameAsociación Civil Club Deportivo Mineros de Guayana
Nickname(s)Los Negriazules (The Black and Blues)
La Pandilla del Sur (The Southern Gang)
Founded20 November 1981; 43 years ago (1981-11-20)
GroundPolideportivo Cachamay
Capacity41,600[1]
ChairmanJulio César Fuentes Manzulli
ManagerJesús Alonso Cabello
LeagueVenezuelan Segunda División
2023Primera División, 15th of 15 (relegated)
Websitehttp://www.accdminerosdeguayana.com/

Asociación Civil Club Deportivo Mineros de Guayana, known as Mineros de Guayana or simply Mineros, is a professional football club based in Puerto Ordaz, Venezuela.

History

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The Colegio Loyola Gumilla's field, located in Puerto Ordaz, was used in football matches. The people who played at the field decided to found a football club. On November 11, 1981, the club was founded as Club Deportivo Mineros de Guayana.

On November 20, 1981, the club's foundation constitutive act was signed.

On January 3, 1982, the club played its first match, against Villa Colombia FC, a Guayana's amateur club. Mineros won 2-0, both goals scored by José Pacheco.

On September 5, 1982, the club won the Segunda División Venezolana, being promoted to the following year's first division.

In 1989, the club won the first Primera División Venezolana.

Crest and colours

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The club's logo is composed of a geometrical figure, which is a carbon diamond crystal zoomed millions of times with a microscope. The club's colors are blue and black.

Stadium

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Mineros plays their home matches at CTE Cachamay, which has a maximum capacity of 41,600 people.[2] It was 1 of the 9 venues of the Copa America 2007, for this, US$160,000 were invested for the expansion of the stadium. The stadium has multiple uses, like a special kids area, an indoor gym, basketball and volleyball courts, a racing track, ten media station booths, a commercial center, movie theaters and three enormous parking lots. The stadium is surrounded by the river Caroní and the waterfall of the Cachamay Park.

Players

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Current squad

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As of 13 December 2020[3]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Venezuela VEN Alan Liebeskind
1 GK Venezuela VEN Daniel Iemma
2 DF Venezuela VEN Adrian Martinez
3 DF Venezuela VEN Karim Saab
4 DF Colombia COL Luis Vergara
5 DF Venezuela VEN Julio Machado
6 FW Venezuela VEN Alfredo Mendoza
7 MF Venezuela VEN Argenis Gómez
8 DF Venezuela VEN Johan Micolta
8 MF Venezuela VEN Édgar Jiménez
9 FW Venezuela VEN Richard Blanco
10 MF Venezuela VEN Pierangelo Pagnano
10 MF Venezuela VEN Michael Covea
11 FW Venezuela VEN Darwin Gómez
12 GK Venezuela VEN Edgar Pérez
13 DF Venezuela VEN Anthony Matos
14 DF Venezuela VEN Danny Hernández
16 FW Venezuela VEN Gustavo Páez
No. Pos. Nation Player
16 FW Venezuela VEN Pedro Zaragoza
17 MF Venezuela VEN Ely Valderrey
18 MF Venezuela VEN Nelson Hernández
19 MF Venezuela VEN Francisco Pol Hurtado
19 MF Venezuela VEN Andrés Godoy
20 MF Venezuela VEN Arnold López
20 DF Venezuela VEN José González
21 FW Costa Rica CRC Mynor Escoe
22 DF Venezuela VEN Jorbert Trillo
22 DF Venezuela VEN Ángel Faria
23 MF Venezuela VEN Josmar Zambrano
24 DF Venezuela VEN Brayan Hurtado
25 FW Venezuela VEN Andres Saavedra
26 GK Venezuela VEN Edixson González
28 DF Venezuela VEN Christian Gómez
30 FW Venezuela VEN Víctor Navas
30 DF Venezuela VEN José Luis Granados

Former managers

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Honours

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South American record

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1990: Group stage
1997: Group stage
2005: Preliminary round
2008: First stage
2005: Preliminary round
2006: Preliminary round
2012: Second stage
2013: TBD
1995: Quarter-finals

References

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  1. ^ "Stadiums in Venezuela". World Stadiums. Archived from the original on 5 November 2001. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
  2. ^ http://www.worldstadiums.com/south_america/countries/venezuela.shtml [bare URL]
  3. ^ "ACCD Mineros de Guayana - Soccer - Team Profile - Results, fixtures, squad, statistics - Global Sports Archive". globalsportsarchive.com. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
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