Guabirá
Full nameClub Social y Deportivo Guabirá
Nickname(s)Los Diablos del Norte
Los Azucareros
FoundedApril 14, 1962 (1962-04-14)
GroundEstadio Gilberto Parada
Montero, Bolivia
Capacity18,000
ChairmanRafael Paz
ManagerHumberto Viviani
LeagueDivisión Profesional
2023División Profesional, 13th of 17

Club Deportivo Guabirá is a Bolivian professional football club from Montero, Santa Cruz, that currently plays in the Bolivian Primera División. Their home ground is the Estadio Gilberto Parada, which has a capacity of 18,000 spectators.

Although the team has always been based in Montero, they played in Santa Cruz de la Sierra until 1999 when their stadium was finally brought up to first division standards.

History

The club was formed on 14 April 1962.[1] Guabirá won its first trophy with the 1975 league title.[2] The championship also gave the club a spot in their first continental participation: the 1976 Copa Libertadores, where it finished last in its group. The next year, in 1977, the club was one of the 16 clubs that founded the Bolivian professional league. In 1995 the club finished runner-up, which granted it a spot in the 1996 Copa Libertadores. The club finished last in the group again, although it got a victory over fellow Bolivian side Club San José.

The club almost won the Copa Bolivia in 2000, but lost to The Strongest in the final.

The club earned its first Copa Sudamericana participation and made the return to continental tournaments after 22 years with its participation in the 2018 Copa Sudamericana, where the club was eliminated in the first round on away goals to LDU Quito. They earned this right because they finished 6th in the aggregate table for the 2016–17 season. Guabirá participated again in the 2019 and 2021 editions. In 2019 they were eliminated in the first round to an Ecuadorian team again, this time to Macará, while in 2021 they defeated fellow Bolivian side Nacional Potosí to advance to the group stage, in which they lost all of their matches.

Honours

Performance in CONMEBOL competitions

Best: First Round in 1976, 1996
1976 – first round
1996 – first round
Best: Group Stage in 2021
2018 – first stage
2019 – first stage
2021 – group stage

Current squad

As of 8 October 2022

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Bolivia BOL Elder Arauz
2 DF Bolivia BOL Mauricio Cabral
3 DF Bolivia BOL Fran Supayabe
6 MF Bolivia BOL Alvaro Quiroga
7 MF Bolivia BOL Gustavo Peredo
8 MF Bolivia BOL Alejandro Meleán
9 FW Bolivia BOL Justo Contreras
10 MF Bolivia BOL Juan Montenegro
11 FW Bolivia BOL Jeremy Castro
12 GK Bolivia BOL Manuel Ferrel
13 MF Bolivia BOL Hugo Salvatierra
15 DF Bolivia BOL Jefferson Ibáñez
16 DF Bolivia BOL Carlos Chore
17 DF Bolivia BOL Juan Carlos Zampiery
No. Pos. Nation Player
18 FW Bolivia BOL Brahian Egüez
19 DF Bolivia BOL Jhon Velasco
20 DF Bolivia BOL Luis Hurtado
21 FW Bolivia BOL Angel Vaca
22 MF Bolivia BOL Diego Hoyos
24 DF Bolivia BOL Yoel Alvarado
25 GK Bolivia BOL Jairo Cuéllar
27 MF Bolivia BOL Layonel Figueroa
29 DF Bolivia BOL Guillermo Ortuño
32 FW Bolivia BOL Brayan Parada
33 DF Bolivia BOL Walter Antelo
35 DF Bolivia BOL Harry Céspedes
42 FW Bolivia BOL Jhon Pérez
50 MF Bolivia BOL Diosdado Montero

References

  1. Vanauskas, Laura (1999). An Encyclopedia of Football in Bolivia – 1914 to 1998. Heart Books – Belgium. p. 192. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  2. "Guabirá". Apostar al Futbol (in Spanish). 2014-04-17. Retrieved 2021-07-07.


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