Alianza Lima

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Alianza Lima
logo
Full name Club Alianza Lima
Nickname(s) "Los Grones, "Los Íntimos",
"Los Blanquiazules"
Founded 1901
Ground Estadio Alejandro Villanueva,
Lima
(Capacity 35,000)
President Flag of Peru Carlos Franco Chipoco
D.T. Flag of Chile Miguel Angel Arrue
League Primera División Peruana
2007 6th
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours

Alianza Lima is a Peruvian professional football club based in Lima. Along with Universitario de Deportes, It is one of the most popular clubs from Peru.[1] It was founded on 15 February 1901 and currently plays in the top tier of the Peruvian Football League (Liga Peruana de Futbol) known as the Copa Cable Magico. The club has won twenty-two First Division titles, two less than Universitario's record and seven more than Sporting Cristal. They play their home games at the Estadio Alejandro Villanueva which has a capacity for 35,000 people.

Contents

The club was founded on February 15, 1901 as Sport Alianza by a group of young workers of a horse stud called "Alianza", property of former President of Peru, Augusto B. Leguía. The stud was located in downtown Lima at the time.

Its first uniform consisted of vertical green and white stripes, similar to the uniforms worn by the stud's jockeys. It later changed to the current uniform, dark blue and white vertical stripes. The closeness between players earned them the nickname Los íntimos ("The intimates").

Alianza participated in the Peruvian football league since the first season 1912, winning its first title in 1918. During its first years, it played irregularly against other teams from Lima and the port of Callao. Its matches against Atlético Chalaco from Callao stirred interest as a clash between limeños and chalacos. Sport Alianza had started to become a popular team drawing large support.

While the Alianza stud changed owners and locations continuously, the team was forced to constantly relocate in turn, until 1928, when under the new name Alianza Lima, the club settled in the third block of the Manco Capac avenue in the La Victoria District, where it would stay and become emotionally attached.

That same year they played against the Federación Universitaria (University Federation) for the first time, which would be later renamed Universitario de Deportes and become their greatest rivals in what is today the most important Peruvian derby.

The 1930s brought great joy and frustration to the team. In 1931, 1932 and 1933, Alianza Lima won three championships in a row for the first time in Peruvian football. But the memory of this achievement should be tainted by the relegation in 1938. After a year in the Second Division the team returned to the first level and has stayed there ever since.

Champion team: 1977, 1978
Champion team: 1977, 1978

Alianza Lima has traditionally fought for the first places in Peruvian leagues, and yielded great players to the country. During the 1940s, 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, Alianza would win 10 championships, with two in a row in 1977 and 1978, when its players formed almost the entirety of the Peru national football team. By this time, the club already played at the Estadio Alejandro Villanueva in La Victoria, located in the neighborhood of Matute where there is vast identification with the team.

The 1980s were probably the most bitter years in the club's history. During the first years of the decade, despite having very good players, Alianza could not obtain titles, some which were snatched by Sporting Cristal, which was establishing itself as one of the three big clubs.

In 1987, Alianza Lima was first in the standings with a few matches left, and it looked like a new title would be obtained, but tragedy would get in the way. On 7 December of that year, Alianza made a trip to Pucallpa to play against Deportivo Pucallpa for the league. The match was won 1-0, with Carlos Bustamante scoring. The team took a charter flight for the round trip. The return flight departed on 8 December in a Peruvian Navy Fokker F27 airplane, which crashed into the sea when it was a few kilometers away from the Lima-Callao Airport, close to the Ventanilla district in Callao. The only survivor was the pilot, all the players and the coaching staff died.

Alianza finished the championship playing with youngsters and a few players on loan from Chilean club Colo Colo, which had suffered a similar tragedy and offered to help. Friendship between both teams has been strong since then. Alianza could not keep the first place and its greatest rival, Universitario de Deportes, obtained the title.

The team had to restart from scratch and even former players who had already retired, like Teófilo Cubillas, or others who were about to, like Cesar Cueto, returned to play to help the club get out of these bitter times.

Alianza Lima was close to relegation in 1988, but it managed to hold on in the last matches. In the next few years, despite being competitive, it failed to obtain a title. This drought extended until 1997, which closed 18 sad seasons without winning a single championship and having lost a very promising team.

In 1997, Alianza Lima obtained its first title since 1978, under Colombian manager Jorge Luis Pinto. In 1999 it came in second place, after losing to Universitario in the finals. In the early hours of year 2000, tragedy struck again, when the young captain, Sandro Baylón died in a car accident after crashing with a post.

In 2001 the club celebrated its centenary and obtained the national title after beating Cienciano in Cusco, after penalty kicks. Later on, Alianza Lima would win the 2003 and 2004 championships, after defeating Sporting Cristal in both finals, this time under Argentinian manager Gustavo Costas. In the year 2006 Alianza Lima won again the championship beating Cienciano del Cusco in the play-off, becoming so far the most successful team of the Peruvian League in the 21st century.

Right now Alianza Lima is the most popular team in Peru

Alianza Lima's traditional uniform. The number of stripes the jersey carries has changed over the years.
Alianza Lima's traditional uniform. The number of stripes the jersey carries has changed over the years.
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
The kit used during October in honor of the club's patron saint.

The team's home colours consists of a shirt with navy blue and white vertical stripes, navy blue shorts and navy blue socks. Its away colours are not commonly used nor well established, playing sometimes in blue or in white.

During the month of October, as a tribute to the "Señor de los Milagros", patron saint of the team, the regular colours are switched for an alternative purple one. The color purple is often associated with the religious image and its procession.

The Club's headquarters are located at the district of la Victoria, city of Lima.

The infrastructure includes the Stadium Alejandro Villanueva with a capacity for approximately 35,000 spectators, training facilities and administrative offices.

The Comando Sur waving a large banner
The Comando Sur waving a large banner

The fans from Alianza Lima are mostly people who life in the populous and poor areas of Lima like El Augustino, San Juan de Lurigancho,Lince, Chorillos, San Luis, parts of San Martin de Porres and other poor neighbourhoods but most of the fans come from the notorious neighbourhood of La Victoria. Throughout whole Peru the poor will mostly support Alianza Lima this gives the club the nickname "Los Del Pueblo" (The Team of The People).

The main fan organization is known as "Comando Svr". They receive this name because they locate themselves in the Southern Bleachers of the Stadium. The word Sur (which means South in Spanish) is written with a v because the letter U identifies their eternal rival (Universitario de Deportes).

Comando Svr is not one group of fans but its a organization of groups of fans: barras bravas. The neighbourhood you came from decides to wich barra you are part of. Since every district has more neighbourhoods every barra has a name for example: if you are born in Chorillos you can be part of AsALto, VandALos, MALicia or Los ALiados.

Note that if you have al (Alianza Lima) in your name you must write it in capitals (AL).

The biggest barra brava is Barraca Rebelde named after the notorious street a few blocks from the stadium.

If you say to someone in Peru your in a barra brava of Alianza Lima (but actually every barra brava) they will consider you a criminal because barra bravas of Alianza Lima have a reputation of violence, the most known is the conquering, sacking and almost razing the old stadium of Universitario Lolo Fernandez.More recently is the sensational stealing of almost all the flags and instruments of Trinchera Norte, the organization of barra bravas of Universitario.

There is a strong rivalry between Comando Svr and the Trinchera Norte (the biggest fan organization in la U).

In the other bleachers there are also other fan groups: in the eastern bleachers (Tribuna Oriente) we find the fan group known as "Los de Oriente" and in the western bleachers (Tribuna Occidente) the fan group called "Los de Abajo".

On the field

As of May 28, 2007[2]

No. Position Player
1 Flag of Peru GK Eder Hermoza
3 Flag of Peru DF Santiago Salazar
4 Flag of Peru DF Ernesto Arakaki
5 Flag of Peru DF Guillermo Salas
6 Flag of Peru MF Junior Viza
7 Flag of Peru MF Marko Ciurlizza
8 Flag of Peru MF Juan Jayo Legario (Captain)
9 Flag of Peru FW Flavio Maestri
10 Flag of Ecuador MF Luis Saritama
13 Flag of Paraguay FW Juan Acosta
14 Flag of Peru MF Erick Torres
No. Position Player
17 Flag of Peru MF Carlos Zegarra
18 Flag of Peru FW Reimond Manco
20 Flag of Colombia MF Jhonnier Montaño
23 Flag of Peru DF Jair Iglesias
24 Flag of Peru MF Oscar Vílchez
27 Flag of Peru FW Carlos Elías
28 Flag of Peru MF Carlos Flores
29 Flag of Peru DF Paolo Hurtado
30 Flag of Colombia FW Mauricio Mendoza
31 Flag of Peru DF Jaime Huerta
33 Flag of Peru DF Kerwin Peixoto
34 Flag of Peru DF Jeikson Reyes

Many of the most notable players in Peruvian football have played in Alianza Lima, with the following standing out:

  1. ^ peru.com/futbol/ In Spanish
  2. ^ Alianza Lima Squad 2007. Clubalianzalima.com. Retrieved on 2007-05-06.
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