Dorados de Sinaloa



























Dorados de Sinaloa

Dorados de Sinaloa.png
Full name
Club Social y Deportivo Dorados de Sinaloa
Nickname(s)
Los Dorados (The Dorados)
El Gran Pez (The Great Fish)
Founded
9 August 2003; 15 years ago (2003-08-09)
Ground
Estadio Banorte
Culiacán, Sinaloa, Mexico

Ground Capacity

20,108
Owner
Grupo Caliente (60%)
Eustaquio de Nicolás (30%)
Chairman
José Antonio Núñez
Manager
Paco Ramírez
League
Ascenso MX
Clausura 2018
2nd
Website
Club website

















Home colours














Away colours


Dorados de Sinaloa, or Dorados, is a Mexican professional football club based in Culiacán. The club plays its home games in Culiacán, Mexico. Dorados was the youngest franchise to play in the Primera División de México, having joined the division for the first time for the Apertura 2004 tournament, when the club was only one year old. Dorados currently plays in Ascenso MX, the second tier of the Mexican league.




Contents





  • 1 History

    • 1.1 First promotion and relegation


    • 1.2 Return to first Division


    • 1.3 Second relegation



  • 2 Rivalry with Club Leon


  • 3 Honours


  • 4 Players

    • 4.1 First-team squad


    • 4.2 Out on loan


    • 4.3 Reserve teams



  • 5 Notable players


  • 6 Coaches


  • 7 References


  • 8 External links




History


Dorados was founded on 9 August 2003, when Eustaquio de Nicolas and Valente Aguirre announced the creation of the Dorados.[1]



First promotion and relegation


On 20 December 2003, Dorados won their first title in the Apertura 2003 tournament of Primera División A. Guadalupe Castaneda scored the goal beating Cobras de Ciudad Juárez, they finished as runner up in the Apertura 2004 but they won the play-off promotion beating Club León with a goal of Roberto Dominguez and winning the promotion to Liga MX just one year after the club was founded. The club was relegated in the Apertura 2006 tournament after playing just two years in the top tier.



Return to first Division


On 27 July 2015, Dorados played their first game in the First Division after 8 seasons in the Second Division. The game was celebrated in the Banorte Stadium, against Jaguares de Chiapas, with a 0-0 final score.
Their first 3 points came on the second game of the season on July 31, against Xoloitzcuintles de Tijuana in the Caliente Stadium. Dayro Moreno scored for the North Californian team, but Mauricio Martín Romero scored the first goal of Dorados in the 2015–16 Liga MX season. At minute 71' the Chilean Héctor Raúl Mancilla scored the away team, making it 1-2 and winning their first game in the first division in 9 years. The last game the team won in the first division was on 22 April 2006, when Dorados beat Jaguares de Chiapas 4-2, with goals from Andrés Orozco, Cristian Patiño, and Pep Guardiola.




Dorados de Sinaloa, playing against C.F. Monterrey at Estadio Banorte



Second relegation


On 16 April 2016, after losing 5–2 to Tigres UANL, Dorados was relegated after just one season in Liga MX, finishing last in the relegation table of 2015–16 Liga MX season. This was the second time the club was relegated to Ascenso MX.



Rivalry with Club Leon


Since Dorados de Culiacán's arrival to Primera División A in 2003, a rivalry was born. When the franchise was first created, in the year 2003, Dorados became champions on their first tournament, becoming the first team to ever accomplish this feat in the Primera A. In their second tournament, Dorados made it to the final once again, facing Club Leon though they lost. Despite losing this final, Dorados and Leon, played the promotion game to Primera División de México where Dorados were victorious. Dorados and Leon have played a total of four finals, of which Dorados and Leon have both won two.



Honours


  • Ascenso MX: 4
Apertura 2003, Clausura 2007, Clausura 2015, Apertura 2016
  • Campeón de Ascenso: 2
2004, 2015
  • Copa MX: 1
Apertura 2012
  • International Copa Ricardo:
Second Place


Players



First-team squad


[citation needed]


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






























































No.

Position
Player
2

Mexico

DF

Diego Barbosa (on loan from Atlas)
4

Mexico

DF

Jesús Chávez (on loan from Tijuana)
5

Argentina

MF

Luis Jerez Silva (on loan from Godoy Cruz)
6

United States

MF

Fernando Arce Jr. (on loan from Tijuana)
7

Mexico

MF

Édson Rivera (on loan from Atlas)
8

Mexico

MF

Alonso Escoboza (on loan from Tijuana)
9

Argentina

FW

Jorge Córdoba
10

Ecuador

FW

Vinicio Angulo
11

Mexico

MF

Julio Nava
12

Mexico

GK

Luis López
14

Mexico

FW

Edgar López (on loan from Tijuana)
17

Mexico

DF

Juan Pablo Meza
18

Mexico

MF

Pedro Rentería






















































No.

Position
Player
19

Colombia

FW

Juan Galindrez (on loan from Tijuana)
20

Mexico

DF

Adrián Ramos (on loan from Tijuana)
21

Mexico

DF

Víctor Torres
23

Argentina

GK

Gaspar Servio (on loan from Banfield)
24

United States

DF

Ángel Uribe (on loan from Tijuana)
26

Mexico

DF

Héctor Xibille (on loan from Tijuana)
27

Argentina

FW

Facundo Juárez (on loan from Celaya)
28

Mexico

MF

Francisco Contreras
30

Mexico

DF

Raúl Sandoval (on loan from Tijuana)
33

Paraguay

DF

Cristian Báez
34

Mexico

FW

José Alberto García (on loan from Tijuana)
35

Mexico

MF

Ricardo Somera


Out on loan


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


































No.

Position
Player


Mexico

GK

Luis Ernesto Michel (at Tijuana)


Mexico

DF

Leonardo Bedolla (at Tuxtla)


Mexico

DF

Elio Castro (at Juárez)


Uruguay

DF

Jonathan Lacerda (at Juárez)


Mexico

DF

Gilberto López (at UdeC)


Mexico

DF

Juan Mendoza (at Pacific)






























No.

Position
Player


Mexico

DF

Raúl Valdéz (at UdeC)


Mexico

MF

Pedro Hernández (at UdeC)


Mexico

FW

Jesús Angulo (at Tijuana)


Mexico

FW

Christopher Gastelum (at Pacific)


Mexico

FW

Johan Mendívil (at Pacific)


Colombia

FW

Jairo Molina (at Deportivo Pasto)


Reserve teams


Sinaloa Premier


Reserve team that plays in the Liga Premier in the third level of the Mexican league system.


Notable players











Coaches









References




  1. ^ "Historia Dorados". Dorados official website. 5 April 2013. 




External links


  • Official website





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