请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 Real Valladolid
释义

  1. History

      Summary of the historical trajectory    History in the 20 century (1928–2001)    Carlos Suárez era (2001–2018)    Ronaldo Nazario, new owner (2018–present)  

  2. Stadium

  3. Season to season

     European Cups history  UEFA Cup  UEFA Cup Winners' Cup 

  4. Current squad

     Reserve team  Out on loan  Technical staff 

  5. Honours

  6. Notable players

  7. See also

  8. References

  9. External links

{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2018}}{{Refimprove|date=August 2015}}{{Infobox football club
| clubname = Real Valladolid
| image = Real Valladolid Logo.svg
| fullname = Real Valladolid SAD
| nickname = Pucela / Pucelanos (Pucelle)
Blanquivioletas / Albivioletas (White and Violets)
| founded = {{Start date and age|df=y|20 June 1928}}
| ground = José Zorrilla, Valladolid,
Province of Valladolid,
Castile and León,
{{ESP}}
| capacity = 26,512
| owner = Ronaldo (51%)[1]
| chairman = Carlos Suárez Sureda
| chrtitle = President
| manager = Sergio González
| mgrtitle = Head coach
| league = La Liga
| season = 2017–18
| position = Segunda División, 5th, promoted via play-offs
| website = http://www.realvalladolid.es
|pattern_la1=_valladolid1819h|pattern_b1=_valladolid1819h|pattern_ra1=_valladolid1819h|pattern_sh1=_valladolid1819h|pattern_so1=_valladolid1819h|leftarm1=9765c1|body1=9765c1|rightarm1=9765c1|shorts1=FFFFFF|socks1=FFFFFF
|pattern_la2=_valladolid1819a|pattern_b2=_valladolid1819a|pattern_ra2=_valladolid1819a|pattern_sh2=_valladolid1819a|pattern_so2=_valladolid1819a|leftarm2=DC143C|body2=DC143C|rightarm2=DC143C|shorts2=DC143C|socks2=DC143C
| current = 2018–19 Real Valladolid season
}}

Real Valladolid Club de Fútbol, S.A.D., or simply Real Valladolid ({{IPA-es|reˈal βaʎaðoˈlið|pron}}) or Valladolid, is a football club based in Valladolid, Spain, in the autonomous community of Castile and León, from where the nickname Pucela is derived. The colors that identify the club are the violet and white, used in the form of streaks in his uniform holder from its foundation on 20 June 1928. It plays in La Liga, holding home games at the Estadio José Zorrilla, which seats 26,512 spectators.

Valladolid's honors include a single trophy of great relevance, the defunct Copa de la Liga 1983/84. It has been runner-up in the Copa del Rey on two occasions (1949/50 and 1988/89), and has participated in two editions of the UEFA Cup (1984/85 and 1997/98) and also one edition of the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup (1989/90). The team subsidiary, the Real Valladolid B, currently play in the Segunda División B.

Valladolid is the most successful football club in Castile and León by honors and history, with a total of 43 seasons in the First Division, 35 in the Second and 10 in the Third. Historically, Valladolid is the 13th best team in Spain by overall points. Two of its players have risen with the Pichichi Trophy: Manuel Badenes and Jorge da Silva; and ten were internationals with the Spain national football team.

On 3 September 2018, it was announced Brazilian former international footballer Ronaldo Nazario had become the majority shareholder after purchasing a 51% controlling stake in the club.[2]

History

Summary of the historical trajectory

TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal

ImageSize = width:1100 height:170

PlotArea = width:800 height:52 bottom:68 left:140

DateFormat = yyyy

Period = from:1925 till:2020

ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:5 start:1925

ScaleMinor = unit:year increment:1 start:1925

AlignBars = justify

Colors =

  id:nivel1 value:green  id:nivel2 value:blue  id:nivel3 value:orange  id:nivel4 value:red  id:nivel5 value:purple

BarData =

  bar:primera  text:"Primera División" (top)  bar:segunda  text:"Segunda División"  bar:segundab text:"Segunda División B"  bar:tercera  text:"Tercera División"  bar:regional text:"Divisiones regionales"

PlotData =

  1. set defaults
      width:10 fontsize:s textcolor:white align:left anchor:from shift:(5,-5)  bar:primera color:nivel1              from:1948 till:1958              from:1959 till:1961              from:1962 till:1964              from:1980 till:1992              from:1993 till:2004              from:2007 till:2010              from:2012 till:2014              from:2018 till:2019  bar:segunda color:nivel2              from:1934 till:1936              from:1939 till:1944              from:1947 till:1948              from:1958 till:1959              from:1961 till:1962              from:1964 till:1970              from:1971 till:1980              from:1992 till:1993              from:2004 till:2007              from:2010 till:2012              from:2014 till:2018  bar:tercera color:nivel3              from:1928 till:1934              from:1944 till:1947              from:1970 till:1971

History in the 20 century (1928–2001)

Founded from the amalgamation of Real Unión Deportiva de Valladolid and Club Deportivo Español, Valladolid first reached the top level in the 1947–48 season, as champions of the Segunda División. The following year, the team pushed on from this success and reached the finals of the domestic cup in the Chamartín Stadium against Athletic Bilbao, losing 4–1.

The next ten years were spent in the first division, and relegation was short-lived as Valladolid gained promotion again in 1958–59 with a 5–0 win over Terrassa under manager José Luis Saso, a legendary figure in club history. He had originally been a goalkeeper for the club and went on to perform many roles, including serving as president of the club.

Valladolid swung between the first and second divisions in subsequent years, falling as low as to the third division in 1970–71. Next year promoted to second division and on 1980 promoted to first división, where it played until 1992 when it downs to second division again. Promoted in 1992–93, the club was again sent down after the 2003–04 season. In 1984, Valladolid also won the Copa de la Liga (a competition only played in the early 1980s) over Atlético Madrid.

The side's highest position during this 11-year stint was seventh in 1996–97, being coached in the previous seasons by former Real Madrid Castilla coach Rafael Benítez, as various players from that team would also later appear for Valladolid.

Carlos Suárez era (2001–2018)

In the 2006–07 season, after signing Basque José Luis Mendilibar as head coach, Valladolid had one of its best years in history while playing in the second level. The club took the league lead in the 15th matchday and went on to finish with a competition all-time high 88 points, winning the championship by a total margin of eight points, and holding an advantage of 26 points over the non-promotion zone (fourth and below), both being all-time records in the league. Valladolid also achieved the honour of going unbeaten in 29-straight matches, from 10 October 2006 to 6 May 2007, being mathematically promoted after a 2–0 away win against Tenerife on 22 April 2007 (the 34th matchday of the season), the earliest any club has achieved promotion in Spanish history.

Also remarkable was the side's role in the season's Copa del Rey, reaching the quarter-finals after defeating two top division teams, Gimnàstic de Tarragona (4–1 aggregate) and the 2005–06 UEFA Champions League contender Villarreal (3–1), while playing the entire competition with reserve players.

Two relatively successful seasons in the top division followed, finishing in 15th place while avoiding relegation after a 1–1 draw on the last matchday of both seasons (against Recreativo de Huelva in 2007–08 and Real Betis in the following campaign).

{{See also|2009–10 Real Valladolid season}}

After a slow start to 2009–10 (3 wins in the first 20 matches), Mendilibar was sacked on 1 February 2010 following a draw at home against Almería. The week following his sacking, Valladolid dropped for the first time to the relegation zone (something that never happened during Mendilibar's 138-match stint), with former player Onésimo Sánchez taking charge.

After only 1 win in 10 matches, Sánchez was fired. Former Spain national team manager Javier Clemente was named Sánchez's replacement in a desperate move to avoid relegation with only eight matches remaining. After a brief breather (16th position), Valladolid again returned to the last three, then faced a must-win last game at the Camp Nou against a Barcelona squad needing a win to secure the Liga championship. Level in the standings with Racing de Santander, Málaga and Tenerife for the two final safe positions, Valladolid lost 0–4 and consequently was relegated, ending a three-year stay in the top flight.

The 2011–12 season saw Valladolid return to La Liga under the management of Miroslav Đukić, promoted through the play-offs after finishing third in the division.

Valladolid were relegated back to the Segunda División on the last matchday of the 2013–14 season.[3]

On 2017–18 season, Valladolid was promoted back to first division after four years via play-off defeating Sporting de Gijón and Numancia.

Ronaldo Nazario, new owner (2018–present)

On 3 September 2018, it was announced Brazilian former international footballer Ronaldo had become the majority shareholder after purchasing a 51% controlling stake in the club.[4]

{{clear}}

Stadium

{{main|Estadio Nuevo José Zorrilla}}

Real Valladolid play at the 26,512-capacity Estadio Nuevo José Zorrilla, finished in 1982 to replace the previous stadium of the same name which had stood since 1940. Both grounds are named after José Zorrilla y Moral, a 19th-century poet from the city. After opening for the club on 20 February 1982, it hosted the Copa del Rey Final on 13 April of that year, and then three Group D matches at the 1982 FIFA World Cup.

In 2010, it was announced that there were plans to expand the stadium to 40,000 spectators. This project was known as Valladolid Arena {{IPA-es|baʎaˈðolið aˈɾena|}}, but was contingent on Spain winning the right to host the 2018 FIFA World cup.[5]

{{clear}}

Season to season

The following list shows Valladolid's record as well as all the presidents and coaches for every season since its foundation in 1929.[6] All presidents and coaches are Spanish unless otherwise noted.

SeasonTierDivisionPlacePresidentCoachAccomplishments
192935thPedro Zuloaga
Santos Rodríguez
{{flagicon|Hungary}} István Plattkó
1929/302ndSantos Rodríguez
1930/312ndJosé CantalapiedraAntón Achalandabaso
1931/323rd
1932/331st
1933/341st{{flagicon|Hungary}} István Plattkó tekioPromoted to 2ª
1934/3522nd
1935/364th
1936/37No competitionNo competition was held
due to Spanish Civil War
1937/38
1938/39
1939/4026thHungary}} István Plattkó
Manuel M. Ordax
1940/4110thJuan Bilbao "Juanín"
1941/425th{{flagicon|Hungary}} Károly Plattkó
1942/432nd
1943/4414thJosé Cantalapiedra
José González
Alfonso Martínez
José Planas
Relegated to 3ª
1944/4533rdGermán Adánez
Ángel Soria
Quirico ArteagaRunner-up Copa Federación
1945/461stÁngel SoriaAntonio Barrios
1946/471stJuan RepresaPromoted to 2ª
1947/4821stPromoted to La Liga
1948/49112thArgentina}} {{flagicon|France}} Helenio Herrera
1949/509thAntonio Barrios
Julián Vaquero
Antonio Barrios
Spanish Cup: Runners-up
(4–1 v. Athletic Bilbao)
1950/516thManuel González AquisoJuan Antonio Ipiña
1951/528thRamón Pradera
1952/5312thJosé IraragorriWinner Copa Federación
1953/5412thLuis Miró
1954/559th
1955/569th
1956/578thRafael Yunta
1957/5815thRafael Yunta
José Luis Saso
Relegated to 2ª
1958/5921stCarlos del Río HortegaJosé Luis SasoPromoted to La Liga
1959/60113th
1960/6115thJosé Luis Saso
Pedro Eguiluz
Paco Lesmes
Relegated to 2ª
1961/6222ndJosé Miguel ArrarteManuel Soler
{{flagicon>Paraguay}} Heriberto Herrera
Promoted to La Liga
1962/6314thAntonio Ramallets
1963/6416thÁngel Zubieta
Paco Lesmes
Relegated to 2ª
1964/6523rdHungary}} Janos Kalmar
Julián Vaquero
1965/664thJosé Luis SasoAntonio Barrios
Antonio Ramallets
1966/679thPedro Torres
Héctor Martín
Emilio Aldecoa
Héctor Martín
Emilio Aldecoa
Héctor Martín
1967/682ndAntonio AlfonsoJosé Molinuevo
Enrique Orizaola
1968/6910thAntonio Barrios
Enrique Orizaola
1969/7017thJosé Antonio Olmedo
José Luis Saso
Gerardo Coque
Relegated to 3ª
1970/7132ndSantiago GallegoGerardo Coque
Héctor Martín
Promoted to 2ª
1971/7227thHéctor Martín
1972/735th
1973/747thGustau Biosca
Fernando Redondo
1974/7511thFernando AlonsoSantiago Vázquez
{{flagicon>Germany}} Rudi Gutendorf
1975/764thUruguay}} Héctor Núñez
1976/7712thLuis Aloy
José Luis Saso
1977/787thFrancisco García "Paquito"
1978/794thGonzalo AlonsoEnrique Pérez "Pachín"
1979/802ndEusebio RíosPromoted to La Liga
1980/81112thGonzalo AlonsoFrancisco García "Paquito"
1981/829th
1982/8312thManuel EstebanArgentina}} Felipe Mesones
Santi Llorente
José Luis García Traid
1983/8414thPedro San Martín
Mariano Hernández
Gonzalo Alonso
José Luis García Traid
Fernando Redondo
League Cup: Winners
(Agg. 3–0 vs. Atlético)
1984/8513thGonzalo AlonsoFernando Redondo
1985/8610thArgentina}} {{flagicon|Chile}} Vicente Cantatore
1986/8710thGonzalo Alonso
José Agad
Miguel Ángel Pérez Herrán
Argentina}} {{flagicon|Chile}} Vicente Cantatore
Xabier Azkargorta
Antonio Sánchez Santos
José Pérez Garcia
1987/888thMiguel Ángel Pérez Herrán{{flagicon|Argentina}} {{flagicon|Chile}} Vicente Cantatore
1988/896thSpanish Cup: Runners-up
(1–0 vs. Real Madrid)
1989/9016thMiguel Ángel Pérez Herrán
Carlos García Zúñiga
Croatia}} Josip Skoblar
José Moré
Fernando Redondo
1990/919thGonzalo GonzaloColombia}} "Pacho" Maturana
1991/9219thGonzalo Gonzalo
Andrés Martín
Marcos Fernández Fernández
Colombia}} "Pacho" Maturana
Javier Yepes Peñas
Relegated to 2ª
1992/9322ndMarcos Fernández FernándezJosé Luis Saso
{{flagicon>Argentina}} Felipe Mesones
Promoted to La Liga
1993/94118thArgentina}} Felipe Mesones
José Moré
1994/9519thUruguay}} Víctor Espárrago
José Moré
Fernando Redondo
Antonio Sánchez Santos
1995/9616thAntonio Sánchez Santos
{{flagicon>Argentina}} {{flagicon|Chile}} Vicente Cantatore
1996/977thArgentina}} {{flagicon|Chile}} Vicente Cantatore
1997/9811thMarcos Fernández Fernández
Marcos Fernández Fermoselle
Argentina}} {{flagicon|Chile}} Vicente Cantatore
Antonio Sánchez Santos
{{flagicon|Croatia}} Sergije Krešić
1998/9912thMarcos Fernández FermoselleCroatia}} Sergije Krešić
1999/008thMarcos Fernández Fermoselle
Ángel Fernández Fermoselle
Ignacio Lewin
Gregorio Manzano
2000/0116thIgnacio Lewin
Carlos Suárez
Argentina}} Francisco "Pancho" Ferraro
José Moré
2001/0212thCarlos SuárezJosé Moré
2002/0314th
2003/0418thFernando Vázquez
Antonio Sánchez Santos
Relegated to 2ª
2004/0526thCroatia}} Sergije Krešić
Marcos Alonso
2005/0610thMarcos Alonso
Alfredo Merino
2006/071stJosé Luis MendilibarPromoted to La Liga
2007/08115th
2008/0915th
2009/1018thJosé Luis Mendilibar
Onésimo Sánchez
Javier Clemente
Relegated to 2ª
2010/1127thAntonio Gómez
Abel Resino
Qualified for Promotion play-off
2011/123rd{{flagicon|Serbia}} Miroslav ĐukićQualified for Promotion play-off
Promoted to La Liga
2012/13114th
2013/1419thJuan Ignacio MartínezRelegated to 2ª
2014/1525thRubiQualified for Promotion play-off
2015/1616thGaizka Garitano
Miguel Ángel Portugal
Alberto López
2016/177thPaco Herrera
2017/185thLuis César Sampedro
Sergio González
Qualified for Promotion play-off
Promoted to La Liga
2018/191Sergio González

  • 41 seasons in La Liga
  • 34 seasons in Segunda División
  • 10 seasons in Tercera División

European Cups history

UEFA Cup

Season Round Club Home Away Aggregate
1984–85Round of 64YUG}} Rijeka1–01–42–4
1997–98Round of 64LAT}} Skonto2–00–12–1
Round of 32RUS}} Spartak Moscow1–20–21–4

UEFA Cup Winners' Cup

Season Round Club Home Away Aggregate
1989–90Round of 32Malta}} Ħamrun Spartans5–01–06–0
Round of 16SWE}} Djurgårdens IF2–02–24–2
Quarter-finalsFRA}} Monaco0–00–0 (aet)1–3 (pen.)

Current squad

{{updated|27 March 2019}}.[7]{{Fs start}}{{Fs player|no= 1|nat=ESP|name=Jordi Masip|pos=GK|other=3rd captain}}{{Fs player|no= 2|nat=ESP|name=Joaquín|pos=DF}}{{Fs player|no= 3|nat=ESP|name=Moi|pos=DF}}{{Fs player|no= 4|nat=ESP|name=Kiko Olivas|pos=DF}}{{Fs player|no= 5|nat=ESP|name=Fernando Calero|pos=DF}}{{Fs player|no= 6|nat=ESP|name=Luismi|pos=MF}}{{Fs player|no= 7|nat=ESP|name=Waldo Rubio|pos=FW}}{{Fs player|no= 8|nat=ESP|name=Borja Fernández|pos=MF|other=4th captain}}{{Fs player|no= 9|nat=TUR|name=Enes Ünal|pos=FW|other=on loan from Villarreal}}{{Fs player|no=10|nat=ESP|name=Óscar Plano|pos=FW}}{{Fs player|no=11|nat=ITA|name=Daniele Verde|pos=MF|other=on loan from Roma}}{{Fs player|no=12|nat=ESP|name=Sergi Guardiola|pos=FW}}{{Fs mid}}{{Fs player|no=13|nat=ESP|name=Yoel|pos=GK|other=on loan from Eibar}}{{Fs player|no=14|nat=ESP|name=Rubén Alcaraz|pos=MF}}{{Fs player|no=15|nat=ESP|name=Pablo Hervías|pos=MF|other=on loan from Eibar}}{{Fs player|no=17|nat=ESP|name=Javi Moyano|pos=DF|other=captain}}{{Fs player|no=18|nat=ESP|name=Antoñito|pos=DF}}{{Fs player|no=19|nat=ESP|name=Toni|pos=MF}}{{Fs player|no=20|nat=CRO|name=Duje Čop|pos=FW|other=on loan from Standard Liège}}{{Fs player|no=21|nat=ESP|name=Míchel|pos=MF|other=Vice-captain}}{{Fs player|no=22|nat=ESP|name=Nacho|pos=DF}}{{Fs player|no=23|nat=MAR|name=Anuar Tuhami|pos=MF}}{{Fs player|no=24|nat=ESP|name=Keko|pos=MF|other=on loan from Málaga}}{{Fs player|no=42|nat=ECU|name=Stiven Plaza|pos=FW}}{{Fs end}}

Reserve team

{{main article|Real Valladolid B}}{{Fs start}}{{Fs player|no=26|nat=ESP|pos=GK|name=Samu Pérez}}{{Fs player|no=27|nat=ESP|pos=FW|name=Miguelín}}{{Fs player|no=28|nat=GHA|pos=DF|name=Mohammed Salisu}}{{Fs player|no=31|nat=ESP|pos=MF|name=Pablo Muñoz}}{{Fs mid}}{{Fs player|no=34|nat=ESP|pos=DF|name=Roberto Corral}}{{Fs player|no=37|nat=MTN|pos=MF|name=Hacen}}{{Fs player|no=38|nat=ESP|pos=DF|name=Apa}}{{Fs player|no=39|nat=ESP|pos=MF|name=Kuki Zalazar}}{{Fs end}}

Out on loan

{{Fs start}}{{Fs player|no= —|pos=GK|nat=ESP|name=Churripi|other=at Albacete until 30 June 2019}}{{Fs player|no= —|pos=MF|nat=ESP|name=Álvaro Aguado |other=at Córdoba until 30 June 2019}}{{Fs player|no= —|pos=MF|nat=ESP|name=Fede San Emeterio|other=at Granada until 30 June 2019}}{{Fs mid}}{{Fs player|no= —|pos=MF|nat=ESP|name=David Mayoral|other=at Alcorcón until 30 June 2019}}{{Fs player|no= —|pos=MF|nat=ESP|name=Antonio Domínguez |other=at Sabadell until 30 June 2019}}{{Fs player|no= —|pos=FW|nat=ESP|name=Chris Ramos|other=at Sevilla Atlético until 30 June 2019}}{{Fs end}}

Technical staff

{{Fb cs header}}{{Fb cs staff |bg= |p=Head coach |s={{flagicon|ESP}} Sergio González }}{{Fb cs staff |bg=y |p=Assistant coach |s={{flagicon|ESP}} Diego Ribera }}{{Fb cs staff |bg= |p=Fitness coach |s={{flagicon|ESP}} Fran Albert }}{{Fb cs staff |bg=y |p=Goalkeeper coach |s={{flagicon|ESP}} José Manuel Santisteban }}{{Fb cs staff |bg= |p=Coach |s={{flagicon|ESP}} Álvaro Rubio }}{{Fb cs staff |bg=y |p=Analyst |s={{flagicon|ESP}} Dani del Valle }}{{Fb cs footer |u=21 May 2018|date=August 2011 |s= }}

Honours

{{Unreferenced section|date=October 2017}}
  • Segunda División: 1947–48, 1958–59, 2006–07
  • Copa de la Liga: 1983–84
  • Copa Real Federación Española de Fútbol: 1953. Runner-up 1945.
  • Copa del Rey: Runner-up 1949–50, 1988–89
Best finishes
  • UEFA Cup: 1984–85 (1st round), 1997–98 (2nd)
  • UEFA Cup Winners' Cup: 1989–90 (QF)
  • La Liga: Fourth 1962–63
Records
  • Most games unbeaten in Segunda División – 29 in 2006–07
  • Earliest promotion in Segunda División – Day 34 (out of 42), 22 April 2007
  • Fastest goal in La Liga history – 7.42 seconds, scored by Joseba Llorente on 20 January 2008, vs Espanyol (2–1 win)

Notable players

{{see also|Category:Real Valladolid footballers}}

See also

{{portal|Association football|Spain|Football in Spain}}
  • Real Valladolid B – Valladolid's B team
  • Real Valladolid (women)
{{clear}}

References

1. ^{{cite news |title=Ronaldo becomes primary owner of Real Valladolid following takeover |url=http://www.espn.co.uk/football/spanish-primera-division/story/3622235/ronaldo-becomes-primary-owner-of-real-valladolid-following-takeover |accessdate=3 September 2018 |publisher=ESPN}}
2. ^{{cite web| url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/45397137| title=Ronaldo: Former Brazil striker buys controlling stake in Real Valladolid| date=3 September 2018| accessdate=3 September 2018}}
3. ^{{cite news|title=Primera Division: Osasuna and Real Valladolid both relegated|url=http://www1.skysports.com/football/news/11848/9316844/primera-division-osasuna-and-real-valladolid-both-relegated|accessdate=22 July 2014|work=Sky Sports News|date=17 May 2014}}
4. ^{{cite web| url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/45397137| title=Ronaldo: Former Brazil striker buys controlling stake in Real Valladolid| date=3 September 2018| accessdate=3 September 2018}}
5. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.eldiadevalladolid.com/noticia.cfm/Local/20101007/proyecto/valladolid/arena/deja/via/libre/cerrar/cubrir/estadio/1D0B0B0F-A01B-3377-7258653587FA9DC4 |title=El proyecto ‘Valladolid Arena’ deja vía libre para cerrar o cubrir el Estadio |language=Spanish | trans-title= The 'Valladolid Arena" project leaving the way open to close or cover the Stadium |publisher=Eldiadevalladolid.com |accessdate=17 November 2011}}
6. ^{{Cite web|url= http://www.realvalladolid.es/elclub/historia/presidentesyentrenadores/|title=Presidentes y Entrenadores del Real Valladolid C.F. S.A.D.|trans-title=Real Valladolid CF S.A.D. presidents and managers|publisher=Real Valladolid|language=Spanish|accessdate=2 December 2010}}
7. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.realvalladolid.es/primer-equipo/plantilla/|title=Primer equipo|trans-title=First team|publisher=Real Valladolid|language=Spanish|accessdate=3 February 2016}}

External links

{{commons category|Real Valladolid}}
  • Official website {{es icon}}
  • Futbolme team profile {{es icon}}
  • BDFutbol team profile
{{Real Valladolid}}{{La Liga teamlist}}

6 : Football clubs in Castile and León|Segunda División clubs|Real Valladolid|Association football clubs established in 1928|Organisations based in Spain with royal patronage|1928 establishments in Spain

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/11/17 11:13:54