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Valencia CF

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Valencia
Full nameValencia Club de Fútbol
NicknameLos Ches
Founded1919
GroundMestalla, Valencia
Capacity53,000
ChairmanJuan Bautista Soler
ManagerAntonio López
LeagueLa Liga
2003–04La Liga, 1st
 
Home colours
 
Away colours

Valencia Club de Fútbol (also known as Valencia, CF or just Valencia or Los Ches) is a football team in the first division of the Spanish Football League. Founded in 1919, Valencia CF is based in the city of Valencia, Spain. The team's home stadium is the 53,000 seater Mestalla, which was opened in 1923. Valencia CF won the Spanish title for the sixth time in May 2004, their second in three years.

Valencia CF won the UEFA Cup for the third time in 2004, tying four other teams for the most UEFA Cups won. After suffering recent tough losses in Europe in the finals of the UEFA Champions League in 2000 and 2001, the team was finally able to triumph in the finals of European play.

Thanks to good coaching, one of the best defences in world soccer, including the charismatic Italian Carboni and the fiery Argentinian Roberto Ayala, and an imaginative playmaker, young Pablo Aimar (also from Argentina), Valencia has grown into one of the world's great teams.

On June 1, 2004, Rafa Benitez stepped down as coach of Valencia amid rumors that he was headed to Liverpool F.C.; those rumors proved true, as he was hired by Liverpool two weeks later.

On June 8, 2004, Claudio Ranieri was named the new head coach, but following Valencia's failure to advance past the round of 32 in the UEFA Cup he was dismissed on 25 February 2005 and replaced by Antonio López.

On 5 October, 2004 Juan Bautista Soler, the chairman of a construction holding was appointed chairman of the club after acquiring the most of the shares of the club in a public bid. By this way, Juan Bautista Soler became the 23rd chairman since the club was founded in 1919, and succeeded Jaime Ortí, the former chairman who formed the better team in the history of the club and won 2 Ligas, 1 UEFA Cup and a European SuperCup.

Table of contents

Honours

  • Spanish First Division Champions
    • 1941/42 1943/44 1946/47 1970/71 2001/02 2003/04
  • Spanish Cups
    • 1941 1949 1954 1967 1979 1999
  • Spanish Super Cup
    • 1999 2004
  • UEFA Cup (formerly Inter-Cities Fairs Cup)
    • 1961/62 1962/63 2003/04
  • European Cup Winners Cup
    • 1979/80
  • European Super Cup
    • 1980/81 2004/2005
  • UEFA Intertoto Cup
    • 1998

Notable Players

2004/2005 squad

Goalkeepers


Defenders

    • 3 – Fabio Aurelio Rodrigues
    • 4 – Roberto Fabián Ayala
    • 5 – Carlos Marchena López
    • 12 – Marco Caneira
    • 15 – Amedeo Carboni
    • 17 – David Navarro Pedrós
    • 23 – Crístobal Emilio Torres Ruiz (Curro Torres)
    • 24 – Emiliano Moretti


Midfielders

    • 6 – David Albelda Aliques
    • 7 – Stefano Fiore
    • 8 – Rubén Baraja Vegas
    • 14 – Vicente Rodríguez Guillén
    • 16 – Mohamed Lamine Sissoko
    • 19 – Francisco Joaquín Pérez Rufete
    • 21 – Pablo César Aimar
    • 31 – Nicolas Karlamoff


Forwards

    • 9 – Bernardo Corradi
    • 10 – Miguel Angel Angulo Valderrey
    • 11 – Marco Di Vaio
    • 18 – Francisco Muñoz Llompart (Xisco)
    • 20 – Miguel Ángel Ferrer Martínez (Mista)

External links


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