Club Ciudad de Bolívar
Full name | Club Ciudad de Bolívar |
---|---|
Nickname(s) | Cele, Ciudad, Águilas[1] |
Founded | October 23, 2002; 22 years ago (2002年10月23日) |
Ground | Estadio Municipal Eva Perón, San Carlos de Bolívar |
Capacity | 4,000 |
President | Pablo Tello |
Manager | Héctor Storti |
Coach | Cristian Piarrou |
League | Torneo Federal A |
2023 | semi-finals |
Club Ciudad de Bolívar is an Argentine sports club based in San Carlos de Bolívar, Buenos Aires Province. The club, founded in 2002 as a volleyball institution at the initiative of local TV host Marcelo Tinelli, won the championship the same season it debuted, beating Rojas Scholem at the finals. Bolívar it is one of the most winning clubs in the Liga Argentina de Voleibol with eight titles, winning the last one in 2019.
The football team participates in regional league Torneo Federal A, while volleyball squads play in the "Liga Olavarriense", based in Olavarría Partido, where Bolívar won its last title in 2022.[2]
Other sports practised in the club are field hockey, rugby union, basketball, and paddle tennis.
History
[edit ]The club was founded on October 23, 2002, subsequent to that year's FIVB Men's World Championship held in Argentina. The club's foundation was initiative of TV host and entrepreneur Marcelo Tinelli (who was born in San Carlos de Bolívar).[3] [4] Tinelli called former national team captain Daniel Castellani to the project, which conceived the club as a youth player recruiter and former. The colors chosen were the light blue and white, as a tribute to the city of Bolívar's football team that wore those colors.
Bolívar won the championship in the first league it played, the 2002–03 season, defeating Rojas Scholem in the finals. The squad would win its second consecutive title in the 2003–04 season. In 2006 Javier Weber became the team's manager. Under his coaching, the team won its first international title in Brazil.[5]
The team has used different names for sponsorship reasons, such as Bolívar Signia, Orígenes Bolívar, DirecTV Bolívar, and Drean Bolívar among others.
Bolívar it is one of the most winning clubs in the Liga Argentina de Voleibol with eight titles, winning the last one in 2019 after beating Obras Sanitarias in the final.[6] The club also won the South American Men's Club Volleyball Championship in 2010, earning the right to represent the continent in the FIVB Men's Club World Championship.
The club inaugurated a field hockey pitch with artificial turf and dimensions of 91 x 55 m, in 2016.[1]
Bolívar opened a football section in 2019 and affiliated to Bolívar League to play in the regional competition. In 2020 the team was invited to play in Torneo Regional Federal Amateur by Consejo Federal, the division of AFA that maanages provincial competitions.[7] Bolívar gained promotion to Torneo Federal A, the regionalised 3rd. division of the Argentine football league system, after defeating Independiente de Neuquén 3–0 in Carmen de Patagones.[3] The first national competition contested by Bolívar was the 2023 Copa Argentina, where the squad lost to Independiente 3–0.[8] That same year the club reached the semifinal playoffs for promotion to Primera B Nacional, where it was eliminated at the hands of Douglas Haig 2-1.[9] In the club's second participation in the 2024 Copa Argentina, the team lost to Banfield 6-0.[10]
For the 2024 season, the club hired Héctor Storti as the club's manager.[11]
Football
[edit ]Current squad
[edit ]As of 2024, source: Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Staff
[edit ]- Coach : Cristian Piarrou [12]
- Second coach: José Maxwell
Volleyball
[edit ]Players
[edit ]The following names are important, outstanding, historical players who passed through the club.
- Argentina Sebastián Firpo
- Argentina Guillermo Quaini
- Argentina Sebastián Jabif
- Argentina Eduardo Rodríguez
- Argentina Mariano Baracetti
- Argentina Alejandro Spajic
- Argentina Leonardo Patti
- Argentina Guillermo García
- Argentina Marcelo Román
- Argentina Santiago Darraidou
- Argentina Pablo Peralta
- Argentina Gabriel Arroyo
- Argentina Luciano de Cecco
- Argentina Diego Stepanenko
- Argentina Juan Pablo Alanís
- Argentina Pablo Meana
- Argentina Javier Filardi
- Argentina Agustín Loser
- Argentina Nicolás Uriarte
- Argentina Alexis González
- Argentina Facundo Imhoff
- Argentina Sebastián Solé
- Argentina Pablo Crer
- Argentina Agustín Ramonda
- Argentina Lucas Ocampo
- Argentina Federico Pereyra
- Argentina Matí Sánchez
- Argentina Ignacio Bernasconi
- Argentina Bruno Lima
- Argentina Joaquín Gallego
- Argentina Nicolás Bruno
- Argentina Martín Hernández
- Argentina Maximiliano Gauna
- Argentina Demián González
- Argentina Jan Martínez
- Argentina Maximiliano Chirivino
- Argentina Pablo Kukartsev
- Argentina Brian Melgarejo
- Argentina Franco Medina
- Brazil Badá
- Brazil Pezao
- Brazil William
- Brazil Wallace
- Brazil "Junior" Souza
- Brazil Giba
- Brazil Raphael Thiago Oliveira
- Brazil Théo Lopes
- Brazil Lucas Madalóz
- Brazil Tuba
- Venezuela Ronald Méndez
- Venezuela Iván Márquez
- Cuba Osniel Melgarejo
- Cuba Yadrian Escobar
- Cuba Raydel Hierrezuelo
- Cuba Yadier Sánchez
- Cuba Jesús Herrera
- Cuba Yohan León
- United States Gabriel Gardner
- United States Donald Suxho
- Czech Republic Dalibor Polak
- Denmark Axel Jacobsen
- Australia Thomas Edgar
- Bulgaria Rozalin Penchev
- Bulgaria Todor Aleksiev
- Belgium Frank Depestele
- Serbia Vladimir Jekić
Managers
[edit ]- Argentina Daniel Castellani (2002–2006)
- Argentina Javier Weber (2006–2013) - (2014-2020)
- Argentina Rodrigo Martínez Granados (2021–present)
Titles
[edit ]Volleyball
[edit ]- Liga Argentina A1 (8): 2002–03, 2003–04, 2006–07, 2007–08, 2008–09, 2009–10, 2016–17, 2018–19 [6]
- Copa Argentina (5): 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2014
- Copa Máster (2): 2012, 2015
- Torneo Súper 8 (1): 2008–09 [13]
- South American Volleyball Club Championship (1): 2010
- Copa Libertadores (1): 2018-19 [6] [14]
Friendly
[edit ]- Copa Internacional Ciudad Bolívar (3): (2006, 2008, 2009)
- Campeón Copa World Challenge Club Volleyball (3) : (2008, 2009, 2012)
- Campeón Copa Grand prix San Ludgero 2006
- Campeón Copa 75 ́ Aniversario Federación Metropolitana 2007
- Campeón Supercopa MERCOSUR 2007
- Campeón Copa Internacional Courmayeur 2007
- Campeón Copa Ciudad de Manacor 2007
- Campeón Top Four (Brasil) 2012
References
[edit ]- ^ a b Club Ciudad de Bolívar at the Municipality of Bolívar
- ^ "Bolívar Voley se consagró campeón del Torneo de Primera de la Liga Olavarriense 2022". www.presentenoticias.com. Retrieved 2023年06月23日.
- ^ a b Cómo es Ciudad de Bolívar, el club de una localidad de 38 mil habitantes con costumbres de pueblo by Fernando Bajo on 2023年3月25日
- ^ "La Liga llega con novedades". Clarín (in Spanish). 2002年11月11日. Retrieved 2010年09月17日.
- ^ Historia del club - official website Archived 2013年03月04日 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b c Liga Nacional de Vóleibol: Bolívar venció a Obras y es el más ganador de la historia on Infobae, 26 Apr 2019
- ^ Club Ciudad de Bolívar overview on Copa Argentina
- ^ Independiente goleó a Ciudad de Bolívar y comenzó la Copa Argentina con el pie derecho, TyC Sports, 26 Mar 2023
- ^ "The Ciudad de Bolívar Club was eliminated from the Federal A Tournament". www.presentenoticias.com. Retrieved 2024年09月13日.
- ^ "The Ciudad de Bolívar Club made its presentation in the Argentine Cup and lost to Banfield". www.presentenoticias.com. Retrieved 2024年09月13日.
- ^ "Héctor Storti is the new manager of the Ciudad de Bolívar Club for the 2024 season". www.presentenoticias.com. Retrieved 2024年09月13日.
- ^ "Cristian Piarrou is the new City coach and José Maxwell joins the coaching staff". www.presentenoticias.com. Retrieved 2024年10月10日.
- ^ Bolivar se quedó con un nuevo título on Infobae, 28 Oct 2017
- ^ Bolívar, el primer campeón de la historia de la Copa Libertadores de Voleibol on Somos Voley, 13 Feb 2019