UDA Gramenet

Gramenet
Full name Unión Deportiva Atlético Gramenet Milán
Nickname(s) Grama
Founded 1945
Ground Nou Municipal, Santa Coloma,
Catalonia, Spain
Ground Capacity 5,000
Chairman Spain Rafael Osuna
Manager Spain Toni Díaz
League 3ª – Group 5
2013–14 3ª – Group 5, 20th

Unión Deportiva Atlético Gramenet Milán is a Spanish football team based in Santa Coloma de Gramenet, in the autonomous community of Catalonia. Founded in 1945 it currently plays in Tercera División – Group 5, holding home games at Nou Municipal de Gramenet, with a capacity of 5,000.

History

UDA Gramenet was founded in 1945, through the merger of three teams from Santa Coloma de Gramenet: FC Gramenet, UD Colomense and CF Baleares. The club first reached the national categories in 1956, and first promoted to the third division 37 years later.

Gramenet finished three times in the top three in its first four seasons, but successively underachieved in the playoffs, against Real Jaén, CD Ourense and Sestao Sport Club (1993–94), Deportivo Alavés, Jaén and UD Las Palmas (1994–95) and Jaén, SD Lemona and Ourense (1996–97); in 1996 the club merged with C.D. Milán, who became Gramenet B.

In the 2004–05 season, still in the third division, Gramenet could only rank 16th in the league, but reached the quarterfinals of the Copa del Rey after ousting FC Barcelona, Levante UD and UE Lleida,[1] only being downed by Real Betis (2–2 at home, 3–4 away) who later went on to win the tournament.[2] In the following years the club would only participate once in the promotion playoffs, losing 3–6 on aggregate to UD Salamanca in 2006.[3]

In 2014, the club was forced by the city hall to leave the municipal stadium and since the 2014–15, Gramenet plays its games at Sant Adrià de Besós.

Background

FC Gramenet - (¿?–1945) → ↓
UD Colomense - (¿?–1945)UDA Gramenet - (1945–95)UDA Gramenet Milán (1995–¿?)
CF Baleares - (¿?–1945) → ↑

UD Obreros- (¿?–1995) → ↓

UDA Gramenet - (1945–95)UDA Gramenet Milán (1995–¿?)

CD Milán- (¿?–1995) → ↑

Season to season

Season Tier Division Place Copa del Rey
1945–56 4 Regional
1956/57 3 3rd
1957/58 3 8th
1958/59 3 14th
1959/60 4 Regional
1960/61 3 9th
1961/62 3 12th
1962/63 3 14th
1963–68 4 Regional
1968/69 3 15th
1969/70 3 11th
1970–79 5 Regional
1979/80 4 10th
1980/81 4 19th
1981–86 5 Regional
Season Tier Division Place Copa del Rey
1986/87 4 15th
1987/88 4 9th
1988/89 4 12th
1989/90 4 8th
1990/91 4 11th
1991/92 4 1st
1992/93 4 2nd
1993/94 3 2ªB 1st
1994/95 3 2ªB 2nd
1995/96 3 2ªB 8th
1996/97 3 2ªB 3rd
1997/98 3 2ªB 10th
1998/99 3 2ªB 6th
1999/00 3 2ªB 3rd
2000/01 3 2ªB 1st
Season Tier Division Place Copa del Rey
2001/02 3 2ªB 7th
2002/03 3 2ªB 4th
2003/04 3 2ªB 5th
2004/05 3 2ªB 16th Quarterfinals
2005/06 3 2ªB 4th
2006/07 3 2ªB 11th First Round
2007/08 3 2ªB 8th
2008/09 3 2ªB 6th
2009/10 3 2ªB 15th
2010/11 3 2ªB 18th
2011/12 4 17th
2012/13 4 9th
2013/14 4 20th
2014/15 5 1ª Catal. 15th
2015/16 6 2ª Cat. 17th
2016/17 7 3ª Cat.

Current squad

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

No. Position Player
1 Spain GK Daniel Barragán
2 Argentina DF Juan Pablo Rezzonico
3 Spain MF Xavi Muñoz
4 Spain FW José Ramón Puga
5 Spain MF Monty
6 Spain FW Antonio Rodríguez
7 Spain FW José Manuel Meca
8 Spain FW Manel Expósito
9 Spain DF Rubén Canelada
No. Position Player
10 Spain DF Toni Lao
11 Spain MF Juan Alfaro
12 Spain FW Javier Simón
13 Spain FW Aarón Fernández
14 Spain MF Juanma
15 Spain GK Carles Jodar
16 Spain GK Miguel Ramos
17 Spain DF Daniel Medina

Famous players

Note: this list includes players that have played at least 100 league games and/or have reached international status.

References

External links

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