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SDC San Antonio

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

San Antonio
Full nameSociedad Deportiva Cultural San Antonio
Founded1955
Dissolved2013
ArenaPabellón de Zizur Mayor, Zizur Mayor,
Navarre,
Spain
Capacity3,000
2011–12Liga ASOBAL, 10th

Sociedad Deportiva Cultural San Antonio was a Spanish handball team based in Pamplona, Navarra.

In July 2012, the team resigned from the Liga ASOBAL for the 2012–13 season due to the failure to find a new sponsor, being demoted two divisions (to Primera Estatal).[1][2] After an uncertain few weeks, its spot in Primera Estatal was transferred to BM Ardoi, therefore, the club no longer owned any sporting team.[3]

In April 2013, when the bankruptcy process finished, SDC San Antonio was officially liquidated.[4]

History

Sponsors

  • 1968-1969: Kaiku
  • 1971-1972: Werner
  • 1972-1977: Schweppes
  • 1977-1978: No sponsor
  • 1978-1979: Reynolds
  • 1979-1980: Ronkari
  • 1980-1981: Chistu
  • 1981-1982: Berberana
  • 1982-1983: Vinos de Navarra
  • 1983-1984: Garsa
  • 1984-1987: Larios
  • 1987-1989: Espárragos de Navarra
  • 1989-1993: Mepamsa
  • 1993-1994: Proedina
  • 1994-1995: Ariston
  • 1995-1997: Lagun Aro
  • 1997–2009: Cementos Portland
  • 2009–2010 : Reyno de Navarra
  • 2010–2012 : AMAYA Sport
  • 2012–2013: No sponsor

Season by season

Season Tier Division Pos. Notes
1990–91 1 ASOBAL 5th / 8th
1991–92 1 ASOBAL 4th / 8th
1992–93 1 ASOBAL 6th / 2nd Relegated
1993–94 2 1ª Nacional 12th (Group II)
1994–95 2 Honor B 2nd Promoted
1995–96 1 ASOBAL 11th
1996–97 1 ASOBAL 9th
1997–98 1 ASOBAL 2nd
1998–99 1 ASOBAL 2nd
1999–00 1 ASOBAL 3rd
2000–01 1 ASOBAL 3rd
Season Tier Division Pos. Notes
2001–02 1 ASOBAL 1st Champion
2002–03 1 ASOBAL 4th
2003–04 1 ASOBAL 3rd
2004–05 1 ASOBAL 1st Champion
2005–06 1 ASOBAL 3rd
2006–07 1 ASOBAL 2nd
2007–08 1 ASOBAL 4th
2008–09 1 ASOBAL 4th
2009–10 1 ASOBAL 6th
2010–11 1 ASOBAL 7th
2011–12 1 ASOBAL 10th Disbanded

Trophies

Last squad

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 {{{pos}}} Serbia SRB Radivoje Ristanović
2 {{{pos}}} Montenegro MNE Vasko Ševaljević
3 {{{pos}}} Spain ESP Gedeón Guardiola
4 {{{pos}}} Spain ESP David Jiménez
5 {{{pos}}} Spain ESP Niko Mindegía
6 {{{pos}}} Spain ESP Ignacio Peciña
8 {{{pos}}} Spain ESP Julen López
9 {{{pos}}} Serbia SRB David Rašić
10 {{{pos}}} Spain ESP Ibai Meoki
11 {{{pos}}} Spain ESP Víctor Álvarez
No. Pos. Nation Player
12 {{{pos}}} Sweden SWE Herdeiro Lucau
13 {{{pos}}} Netherlands NED Iso Sluijters
14 {{{pos}}} Serbia SRB Danimir Ćurković
15 {{{pos}}} Spain ESP Adrián Crowley
16 {{{pos}}} Spain ESP Álvaro Amezqueta
17 {{{pos}}} Spain ESP Iñaki Iriarte
18 {{{pos}}} Spain ESP Iñaki Miquele
22 {{{pos}}} Spain ESP Luis Jiménez
88 {{{pos}}} Spain ESP Alberto Aguirrezabalaga

Stadium Information

Notable former players

References

External links

This page was last edited on 19 January 2024, at 00:17
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