2022 WORLD CUP - DAY 11 - GROUP E - JAPAN VS SPAIN 2:1

Japan and Spain reach the last sixteen

1 Dec 2022
2022 WORLD CUP - DAY 07 - GROUP E - SPAIN VS GERMANY 1:1

a draw between Spain and Germany

27 Nov 2022
2022 WORLD CUP - DAY 03 - GROUP E - SPAIN VS COSTA RICA 7:0

Spain beats Costa Rica

23 Nov 2022
2018 WORLD CUP - DAY 17 - LAST SIXTEEN - SPAIN VS RUSSIA 3:4

Russia stun Spain with penalty shootout win to reach quarter finals

1 Jul 2018
2018 WORLD CUP - DAY 12 - GROUP B - SPAIN VS MOROCCO 2:2

Spain advance to face Russia in the round of the last sixteen.

25 Jun 2018
2018 WORLD CUP - DAY 07 - GROUP B - IRAN VS SPAIN 0:1

...

20 Jun 2018
2018 WORLD CUP - GROUP B - SPAIN - SQUAD

The final squad was announced on 14 May 2018.

20 Jun 2018
2018 WORLD CUP - DAY 02 - GROUP B - PORTUGAL VS SPAIN 3:3

WORLD CUP 2018 - HIGHLIGHT - CR7 scores a hat trick.

15 Jun 2018
<< club list

UD Las Palmas
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 08/2016


Full name
Unión Deportiva Las Palmas, S.A.D.

Nickname
Los Amarillos (The Yellows)

Founded
1949

Ground
Estadio Gran Canaria
Las Palmas, Canary Islands

Capacity
32,150

Chairman
Miguel Ángel Ramírez

Manager
Quique Setien

League
La Liga

2015-16
La Liga, 11th


Unión Deportiva Las Palmas, S.A.D. is a Spanish football team based in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, in the autonomous community of Canary Islands. 

Founded on 22 August 1949 it plays in La Liga, holding home games at the Estadio de Gran Canaria, with a capacity of 32,150 seats.

The club remains the only one in Spanish football to achieve back-to-back promotions to La Liga in its first two seasons.

It had a 19-year run in the competition, ending in 1982-83.


History

Foundation and early years

Even though the club registered with the Royal Spanish Football Federation on 6 June 1949, UD Las Palmas was officially founded on 22 August of that year, as the result of a merger between all five clubs on the island: Club Deportivo Gran Canaria, Atlético Club de Fútbol, Real Club Victoria, Arenas Club and Marino Fútbol Club. 

The union was to create a club strong enough to keep Canarian players on the island and not to seek a better career on the mainland.

Debate was held on the name of the club, which it was agreed would not include the names of any of its predecessors. 

An early option, Deportivo Canarias, was scrapped due to referring to the Canary Islands on a whole rather than the island of Gran Canaria. 

The name Las Palmas by itself was also put forward, and then rejected due to the name having already been taken by a defunct club in the city; Unión Deportiva Las Palmas was finally chosen due to its connection to the union which created the team, and its home city of Las Palmas. 

The first training session at the new club was held on 16 September 1949.

Las Palmas finished second in their first season in the Tercera División (1949-50), ranking third in the following year's Segunda División to reach La Liga for the first time ever, and became the first Spanish club to achieve consecutive promotions in its first two years of existence. 

The first season in the top flight ended, however, in relegation, but the team returned to the category in 1954, going on to enjoy a six-year spell.


Top-flight success

After Las Palmas returned to La Liga at the end of the 1963-64 season, again as champions, the club went on to have their most successful spell in the competition. 

Managed by Vicente Dauder, they finished third in 1967-68 behind Real Madrid and FC Barcelona, and four club players made the Spain squad which hosted and won the UEFA Euro 1968 tournament.

the following season the team fared even better and only lost the league to Real Madrid, and thus qualified for European competition for the first time in its history, appearing in the 1969-70 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup and being knocked out in the first round by Germany's Hertha BSC (0:0 home draw, 0:1 away loss).

Las Palmas player Juan Guedes died suddenly on 9 March 1971 at the age of 28. 

The next season, French coach Pierre Sinibaldi led the club to the fifth place, with subsequent qualification for the UEFA Cup. 

After disposing of Torino F.C. and ŠK Slovan Bratislava, the Spaniards bowed out to Dutch club FC Twente.

At the end of 1974-75 another team player, Tonono - a defender who played with Guedes – died of a liver infection.

Las Palmas' third appearance in European competition came with the 1977-78 UEFA Cup, where they defeated FK Sloboda Tuzla of Yugoslavia in the first round before falling to eventual champions Ipswich Town.

Under the management of Miguel Muñoz, and with players such as Argentines Miguel Ángel Brindisi, Daniel Carnevali (the first to arrive in 1973), Carlos Morete and Quique Wolff, the club also reached their first final of the Copa del Rey in that year, losing on 19 April to Barcelona at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium (1:3).

From the 1990s onwards, Las Palmas played mainly in the Segunda División, but also spent six years in Segunda División B - the new third level created in 1977 - and, from 2000-02, competed in the top flight. 

On 3 October 2001 the side managed a 4:2 home win against Real Madrid, with youth product Rubén Castro scoring two goals for the hosts, but the season ended nonetheless in relegation.
 
On the 22 December 2001, Las Palmas played its 1,000th
game in La Liga. 

On 21 June 2015 Las Palmas was promoted back to La Liga after defeating Real Zaragoza on the away goals rule.