Jump to content

A.D. Ramonense

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ramonense
Logo
Full nameAsociación Deportiva Ramonense
Nickname(s)The Poets, Moncho, The Giantkiller
Founded5 April 1953
GroundEstadio Guillermo Vargas Roldán
San Ramón, Costa Rica
Capacity5,000
ChairmanEdgardo Quesada
ManagerJavier de Lucas
LeagueLINAFA
Clausura 2022Group B - Occidente

Asociación Deportiva Ramonense is a Costa Rican football team playing at the top level. It was based in San Ramón, Alajuela. Their home stadium was Estadio Guillermo Vargas Roldán. Nowadays, A.D. Ramonense is playing at the 3rd division of the Costa Rican soccer.

History

[edit]

A.D. Ramonense

[edit]

Founded on 5 April 1953, Domingo Borja became their first president.[1] He was succeeded by Guillermo Vargas Roldán who oversaw the club's rise to ultimately the top tier of Costa Rican football. They remained there for 20 years until their relegation in 1988, clinched promotion again in 1992 and were in the Segunda División de Costa Rica again from 1999 to 2003 and from 2006 to 2008. They had two players at Costa Rica's first World Cup appearance: goalkeeping hero Luis Gabelo Conejo and Mauricio Montero.[2]

Ramonense won promotion to the Primera División de Costa Rica for the 2008–09 season by winning a play-off against Municipal Grecia.[3][4] Ramonense had previously won promotion to the Primera in 1967, 1992 and 2003.[5]

El Poeta de Occidente

[edit]

In 2010, the club was renamed from Asociación Deportiva Ramonense to Club Deportivo Ramonense Poeta de Occidente. In 2012, the club returned to its traditional name.

Financial problems and A.D. Municipal San Ramón

[edit]

In 2013 it transpired that second division side Ramonense were struggling with financial problems.[6] Due to these debts, the club were not cleared to play their first games in the 2013 Apertura championship,[7] forcing Uruguayan manager Orlando de León to resign.[8] They were relegated after not playing the entire season and renamed A.D. Municipal San Ramón.

On 18 April 2014, Ramonense founder Guillermo Vargas Roldán died at San Ramón Hospital .[9]

Player records

[edit]

Top Scorers

[edit]
  • Carlos Losilla (69)
  • William Cruz (63)
  • Omar Arroyo (34)
  • Jose Rodriguez (30)
  • Sergio Morales (27)
  • Efrain Orozco (26)
  • Ronald Perez (24)
  • Kervin Lacey (24)
  • Alejandro Sequeira (22)
  • Gerardo Najera (20)
  • Wayne Wilson (20)

Players with the most matches

[edit]
  • Carlos Losilla (328)
  • William Cruz (253)
  • Jose Angel Ortiz (232)
  • Juan Mora (191)
  • Gerardo Najera (176)
  • Juan Diego Ulate (173)
  • Hilario Falcon (170)
  • Leonel Ramirez (169)
  • Roger Alvarez (164)
  • Carlos Ulate (163)
  • ''Foreigner with the most crashes:

 Uruguay Víctor Pereira with 79 games

  • ''Goalkeepers with the most games:

Luis Gabelo Conejo with 140 and Álvaro Fuentes with 88

  • ''Defenses with more games:

José Ángel Ortiz with 232 and Juan Diego Ulate with 133

  • ''Flywheels with more games:

Carlos Losilla with 328 and Juan Mora with 191

  • ''Attackers with the most games:

William Cruz with 253 and Gerardo Nájera with 176

  • 'With the most games in a season':

Henry Fajardo with 45 in 1995-1996

Stadium

[edit]

The stadium is owned by the Municipality of San Ramón and is used by the Costa Rican Third Division team, the Ramonense Sports Association, which represents said canton. In addition, the team of the Women's Soccer Sports Association of San Ramón uses it as home in the First Division Championship of that discipline.

It is named after Mr. Guillermo Vargas Roldán, who remained in the team for more than three decades.

The stadium has a capacity for 3,500 fans, it has natural grass. Its stands are located on the east (sun) and west (shadow) sides and it has enough space to build stands on the north and south sides, as well as artificial lighting.

For the year 2016, the Costa Rican Sports Institute ICODER assigned a budget of 100,000,000 colones to make improvements to the sanitary battery, dressing rooms, enclosing walls and the roof of the bleachers.

Current squad

[edit]

As of June 5, 2022

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Costa Rica CRC Gabriel Mora
2 FW Costa Rica CRC Ignacio Pacheco
3 DF Costa Rica CRC Saul Elizondo
4 DF Costa Rica CRC Yeison Álvarez
5 FW Costa Rica CRC Daniel Gamboa
6 MF Costa Rica CRC Alexander Josue Rojas
7 MF Costa Rica CRC José Armando Álfaro
9 FW Costa Rica CRC Yustin Castro
10 MF Costa Rica CRC Julio Vargas
11 FW Costa Rica CRC Keilor García
12 DF Costa Rica CRC Kenneth Rojas
13 GK Costa Rica CRC Moisés Segura
14 MF Costa Rica CRC Jocksan Mora
No. Pos. Nation Player
15 DF Costa Rica CRC Yaudit Bogantes
16 FW Costa Rica CRC Fabricio Murillo
17 FW Costa Rica CRC Juan Diego Mejías
18 DF Costa Rica CRC Dany Rojas
19 DF Costa Rica CRC Giancarlo Palacios
21 MF Costa Rica CRC Marvin Alfaro
24 MF Costa Rica CRC Kevin Arroyo
28 MF Costa Rica CRC Yeimer González
DF Costa Rica CRC John Herrera
DF Costa Rica CRC Jefferson Guzmán
MF Costa Rica CRC Jorge Santamaria
MF Costa Rica CRC Johan Villalobos
FW Costa Rica CRC Dylan Morera

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Ascenso poeta a Primera División – Nación (in Spanish)
  2. ^ Feliz poema futbolero Archived 2014-04-26 at the Wayback Machine – UNAFUT (in Spanish)
  3. ^ "Ramonense de nuevo en Primera División". Al Día. 2008-05-26.
  4. ^ Final de Segunda División La fórmula nunca falló... Ramonense a Primera – Nación (in Spanish)
  5. ^ Ramonense y la ilusión del retorno – Nación (in Spanish)
  6. ^ Ramonense y Orión luchan por seguir vivos en el futbol – Nación (in Spanish)
  7. ^ Ramonense seguirá sin debutar – Nación (in Spanish)
  8. ^ Orlando de León dejó el banquillo de Ramonense – Nación (in Spanish)
  9. ^ Fundador de Asociación Deportiva Ramonense, Guillermo Vargas Roldán, falleció este viernes en hospital de San Ramón Archived 2015-02-24 at the Wayback Machine – Al Día (in Spanish)
[edit]