2023 Uruguayan Segunda División Season
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2023 Uruguayan Segunda División Season
The 2023 Uruguayan Segunda División will be the season of second division professional of football in Uruguay. A total of 14 teams competed; the top two teams and the winner of the Championship play-offs will be promoted to the Uruguayan Primera División. Club information Torneo Competencia Serie A Serie B Final Fase Regular Promotion Playoffs Semi-finals First leg Second leg Finals Relegation See also *2023 Uruguayan Primera División season The 2023 Liga Profesional de Primera División season, also known as the Campeonato Uruguayo de Primera División 2023, is the 120th season of the Uruguayan Primera División, Uruguay's top-flight football league, and the 93rd in which it is prof ... * 2023 Copa Uruguay References {{DEFAULTSORT:2023 Uruguayan Segunda Division season Uruguayan Segunda División seasons 2 ...
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Parque Luis Méndez Piana
Parque Luis Méndez Piana is a multi-use stadium in Montevideo, Uruguay. It is currently used primarily for football matches and is the home stadium of Miramar Misiones. The stadium holds 4,000 people. The stadium is the located in the Parque Batlle, between the Estadio Centenario and the Parque Palermo Parque Palermo is a multi-use stadium in Montevideo, Uruguay. It is currently used primarily for football matches and is the home stadium of Central Español. The stadium holds 6,500 spectators. Parque Palermo is located within Parque Batll .... References Multi-purpose stadiums in Uruguay Football venues in Montevideo Miramar Misiones {{Uruguay-sports-venue-stub ...
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Final
Final, Finals or The Final may refer to: *Final (competition), the last or championship round of a sporting competition, match, game, or other contest which decides a winner for an event ** Another term for playoffs, describing a sequence of contests taking place after a regular season or round-robin tournament, culminating in a final by the first definition. *final (Java), a keyword in the Java programming language *Final case, a grammatical case *Final examination or finals, a test given at the end of a course of study or training *Part of a syllable *Final, a tone of the Gregorian mode Art and entertainment * ''Final'' (film), a science fiction film * ''The Final'' (film), a thriller film * ''Finals'' (film), a 2019 Malayalam sports drama film *Final (band), an English electronic musical group * ''Final'' (Vol. 1), album by Enrique Iglesias * ''The Final'' (album), by Wham! *"The Final", a song by Dir en grey on the album ''Withering to Death'' * ''Finals'' (comics), a four-i ...
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Estadio Goyenola
Estadio Goyenola (Estadio Ingeniero Raúl Goyenola) is a multi-use stadium in Tacuarembó, Uruguay. It is currently used mostly for football matches and is the home stadium of Tacuarembó FC Tacuarembó ( Guarani: ''Takuarembo'', literally: "Bamboo shoot") is the capital city of the Tacuarembó Department in north-central Uruguay. Location and geography The city is located on Km. 390 of Route 5, south-southwest of Rivera, the ca .... The stadium holds 12,000 people and was built in 1955. References Sports venues completed in 1955 Goyenola Goyenola Buildings and structures in Tacuarembó Department Tacuarembó F.C. 1955 establishments in Uruguay Sport in Tacuarembó Department {{Uruguay-sports-venue-stub ...
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Tacuarembó
Tacuarembó ( Guarani: ''Takuarembo'', literally: "Bamboo shoot") is the capital city of the Tacuarembó Department in north-central Uruguay. Location and geography The city is located on Km. 390 of Route 5, south-southwest of Rivera, the capital city of the Rivera Department. Routes 26 and 31 also meet Route 5 within the city limits. The stream Arroyo Tacuarembó Chico, a tributary of Río Tacuarembó, flows through the north part of the city. As of the census of 2011, it is the eighth most populated city of the country. History On 24 October 1831, a presidential decree by Fructuoso Rivera ordered the creation of a city in the region. The task was entrusted to the President's brother, Colonel Bernabé Rivera. Colonel Rivera left Montevideo on a three-month journey with a caravan of wagons and families, towards the shore of the Tacuaremboty River, which in the Guaraní language means "river of the reeds". The area was surveyed and divided into blocks for settlement. On ...
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Tacuarembó F
Tacuarembó ( Guarani: ''Takuarembo'', literally: "Bamboo shoot") is the capital city of the Tacuarembó Department in north-central Uruguay. Location and geography The city is located on Km. 390 of Route 5, south-southwest of Rivera, the capital city of the Rivera Department. Routes 26 and 31 also meet Route 5 within the city limits. The stream Arroyo Tacuarembó Chico, a tributary of Río Tacuarembó, flows through the north part of the city. As of the census of 2011, it is the eighth most populated city of the country. History On 24 October 1831, a presidential decree by Fructuoso Rivera ordered the creation of a city in the region. The task was entrusted to the President's brother, Colonel Bernabé Rivera. Colonel Rivera left Montevideo on a three-month journey with a caravan of wagons and families, towards the shore of the Tacuaremboty River, which in the Guaraní language means "river of the reeds". The area was surveyed and divided into blocks for settlement. On ...
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Uruguay Montevideo
Uruguay Montevideo Football Club is a football club from Montevideo in Uruguay. The club were disaffiliated from the second professional division of the Uruguayan Football Association in 2007 and re-entered the league for 2008-2009 at the third level, which is the bottom and the only amateur level of the league's pyramid, named the Segunda División Amateur. The club got their name from two ships from the Uruguayan Navy, called Destructor Uruguay and Destructor Montevideo. Titles * Uruguayan Segunda División Amateur Segunda División Amateur was the third division of the Asociación Uruguaya de Fútbol The Uruguayan Football Association ( es, Asociación Uruguaya de Fútbol — ) is the governing body of football in Uruguay. It was founded in 1900, as The ... (2): 1993, 2002 * Divisional Intermedia (4): 1950, 1955, 1957, 1965 External links Official site Football clubs in Uruguay Association football clubs established in 1921 Football clubs in Montevideo 1921 es ...
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Sud América
Institución Atlética Sud América, usually known as Sud América or just IASA, is a football club from Montevideo. They currently play in the Uruguayan Segunda Division. History Sud América has won the Uruguayan 2nd Division on 7 occasions, this is a national record they share with Fénix. It was a hard-to-beat team back in the days and it was very economically stable. After the relegation to 2nd Division in 1996, Sud América competed consecutively without success for 16 seasons, becoming the most popular team of the division. In the 2013 season (17th consecutive season in second) the club achieved the promotion to the Elite Division complying with its objectives wanting to return to it as a celebration of its centenary. Sud América usually play their home games at Estadio Carlos Angel Fossa which is located in Montevideo and has a capacity of 6,000 spectators. Kit evolution Performance in CONMEBOL competitions *Copa CONMEBOL: 1 appearances ::1995: Second Round ...
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Estadio Complejo Rentistas
Estadio Complejo Rentistas is a multi-use stadium in Montevideo, Uruguay. It is currently used primarily for football (soccer), football matches. It is the home stadium of C.A. Rentistas, Club Atlético Rentistas. The stadium holds 6,500 people and was opened in 1998. References Multi-purpose stadiums in Uruguay, Complejo Rentistas Football venues in Montevideo, Complejo Rentistas Sports venues in Montevideo C.A. Rentistas {{Uruguay-sports-venue-stub ...
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Estadio Olímpico (Montevideo)
, nickname = , logo_image = , logo_caption = , image = Estadio Olimpico de Montevideo.jpg , caption = Montevideo Olympic Stadium , fullname = , former_names = , location = Montevideo, Uruguay , coordinates = , broke_ground = , built = 1923 , opened = , renovated = , expanded = , closed = , demolished = , owner = Rampla Juniors , operator = , surface = grass , scoreboard = , cost = , architect = Carlos Vaia , project_manager = , structural engineer = , services engineer = , general_contractor = , main_contractors = , capacity = 9,500 , suites = , record_attendance = , dimensions = 98 x 68 m , acreage = , tenants = Rampla Junior ...
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Rampla Juniors
Rampla Juniors Fútbol Club, commonly known as Rampla Juniors, is a Uruguayan football club based in Montevideo. The team was actively playing the 2021 season by January 2021. In their home stadium, Rampla won the Uruguayan championship in 1927. In 2019, the Rampla Juniors Fútbol Club had Estadio Olímpico, with 6,000 capacity, as its home stadium. Fans are nicknamed "The Flinstones," as they helped build the team's home stadium in the 1960s, which resembled a quarry. History Origin and colours Rampla Juniors were founded in the Aduana area (also the birthplace of River Plate FC), then moved first to the Aguada neighborhood, and finally, around 1920, to the Cerro neighborhood. Their colors are taken from Fortaleza, a club that existed in the early years of Rampla's stint in the Cerro area. Another story of how they chose their colors is similar to how Boca Juniors supposedly got the idea for their kit colors from a Swedish flag on a ship. It is rumored that Rampla's founder ...
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Estadio Abraham Paladino
Parque Abraham Paladino is a multi-use stadium in Montevideo, Uruguay Uruguay (; ), officially the Oriental Republic of Uruguay ( es, República Oriental del Uruguay), is a country in South America. It shares borders with Argentina to its west and southwest and Brazil to its north and northeast; while bordering .... It is currently used primarily for football matches and is the home ground of CA Progreso. The stadium holds 8,000 spectators and was built in 1983. References Buildings and structures completed in 1983 Multi-purpose stadiums in Uruguay Football venues in Montevideo C.A. Progreso {{Uruguay-sports-venue-stub ...
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