|  | |||
| Full name | Unió Esportiva Lleida | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Nickname(s) | Els Blaus (The Blues) Els de la Terra Ferma (Firmlanders) | ||
| Founded | 1939 (as Lérida Balompié-AEM) 1947 (as Unión Deportiva Lérida) | ||
| Dissolved | 10 May 2011 | ||
| Ground | Camp d´Esports, Lleida, Catalonia, Spain | ||
| Capacity | 13,500 | ||
|  | |||
Unió Esportiva Lleida was a Spanish football team based in Lleida, in the autonomous community of Catalonia. It was founded as Lérida Balompié-AEM on 30 October 1939, and became Unión Deportiva Lérida in 1947, after a merger with CD Leridano. It held home matches at Camp d´Esports, with a 13,500-seat capacity. It was dissolved in 2011. The soul of the club was reformed as Lleida Esportiu.
Lleida adopted the Catalan version of its name in 1978. The club spent most of its history in the lower divisions, but in the early 1950s and early 1990s, the club won promotion to La Liga.
During the 1990s the club was managed by Mané, Juande Ramos and Víctor Muñoz, all of whom subsequently became successful managers with other clubs. From 1987 the club organised its own summer trophy, the Ciutat de Lleida Trophy.
History
Early Lleida football clubs
Football was first introduced to Lleida in 1910 by Manuel Azoz, a Barcelona business man. Among the earliest clubs in the city were Montserrat, founded in 1913 by Marist Brothers, and FC Lleida founded in 1914. Both played their early games in the district of Pla d’en Gardeny. In 1915, the Associació Cultural Lleidatana was founded by Catalan nationalists.
By 1917 two other clubs, Club Colonial and Athlètic Metalúrgic, began playing at the Camp de Mart. In 1918 FC Joventut was formed by left-wing Catalan republicans and during the 1920s they emerged as the city’s strongest side.
In 1919, Lleida became the first club to use the Camp d´Esports, but this team was dissolved in 1927. Other clubs of the 1920s included AE Lleida Calaveres, Lleida Sport Club and AEM Lleida, all of which disappeared during the 1930s.
Lérida Balompié and CD Leridano
After the Spanish Civil War, former members of AE Lleida Calaveres, Lleida Sport Club and AEM Lleida formed Lérida Balompié-AEM. After playing in regional leagues for four seasons they made their debut in the fourth division in 1943. The following year, the club split into two clubs, Lérida Balompié and AEM.
Meanwhile, in 1941 Spanish nationalists formed CD Leridano, and a local rivalry developed between that club and Lérida Balompié. On March 9, 1947, these two sides merged to become Unión Deportiva Lérida. The new team retained both the blue and white colours and club shield of Lérida Balompié, the first president of the new club being Eduard Estadella.
First golden era
UD Lérida enjoyed a golden age in the late 1940s and early 1950s, when they progressed from the third to the first division in just three seasons. In 1949, they won the third-tier and, the following season, 1949–50, they made their debut in Segunda División.
In the 1949–50 season the club achieved their biggest league victory in their history with a 9–2 win against CD Lugo, along with finishing second in the league achieving promotion to the topflight for the first time ever. However, during its debut season, it was heavily defeated on several occasions: 9–0 to CD Málaga, 10–1 to Deportivo de La Coruña and 10–0 to Athletic Bilbao, being ultimately relegated back. Lleida's first eleven in the first division was: Rivero, Rigau, Telechea, Carrillo, Esquerda, Roca, Gausí, Pellicer, Ramón, Bidegain and Fustero.
The Mané era
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Lleida enjoyed a second solid moment, under coach Mané. He joined the club in 1988 and took it from Segunda División B to La Liga.
1993–94 was the second topflight experience for the club; in spite of a 1–0 win over the FC Barcelona Dream Team at the Camp Nou, and another against Real Madrid, 2–1 at home, Lleida only won seven times altogether and was relegated once again.
The 1994–95 season saw the club finish third in the second division, with a subsequent promotion play-off defeat against Sporting de Gijón. In 2001, the team returned to level three and, in 2004–05 and the following campaign, played again in the second division. From 1996 and during an entire decade (with some interruptions), legendary player Miguel Ángel Rubio served as its manager.
Liquidation
On 10 May 2011, Lleida was placed in a liquidation auction due to a €28 million debt.[1] On 12 July, the team's seat was acquired by local entrepreneur Sisco Pujol,[2] with the new club being named Lleida Esportiu.
Season to season
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- 2 seasons in La Liga
- 24 seasons in Segunda División
- 19 seasons in Segunda División B
- 22 seasons in Tercera División (until 1976–77 as third level)
Honours
Official
- Segunda División: 1992–93
- Segunda División B: 1989–90, 2003–04
- Tercera División: 1948–49
- Regional Preferente: 1970–71
- Segunda Regional: 1939–40, 1940–41
- Copa Catalunya: Runner-up 1991–92, 1998–99
Friendly
- Nostra Catalunya Trophy: 1974, 1975, 1977, 1981, 1986, 1987, 1990
- Ciutat de Lleida Trophy: 1987, 1992, 1994, 1995, 1997, 2001, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008
Records
Club
- Best league performance: 16th, La Liga, 1950–51
- Best cup performance: Last 16 (six times), 1986, 1993, 1995, 1997, 2000, 2005
- Most league points: 68, 2003–04 (three points for a win) 60, 1957–58 (two points for a win)
- Most league goals: 102, 1957–58
- Most league wins in one season: 26, 1957–58
- Best league win home: 9–0 v. Calella, 30 November 1941
- Best league win away: 8–1 v. Europa, 22 February 1942
- Best cup win: 7–0 v. Sant Andreu, 19 December 1985
Player
- Most league appearances: 460, Miguel Rubio (1982–96)
- Most league goals: 82, Mariano Azcona (1984–91)
- Most league goals in a season: 25, Mariano Azcona (1989–90)
- Most league goals in a match: 5, Mariano Azcona 6–1 v. Fraga, 15 October 1989 and Vallejo 7–1 v. Alavés, 23 May 1965
- Most international appearances: 12, Miguel Mea Vitali (Venezuela) (2000–01)
Top goalscorers by season
| Season | Top scorer | Goals | 
|---|---|---|
| 2011–12 |  Asier Eizaguirre | 10 | 
| 2010–11 |  Rubén Rayos | 19 | 
| 2009–10 |  Marc Sellarés | 12 | 
| 2008–09 |  Mikel Álvaro | 13 | 
| 2007–08 |  Keko | 7 | 
|  Fernando Esparza | 7 | |
|  Luismi Gracia | 7 | |
| 2006–07 |  Luis Tevenet | 14 | 
| 2005–06 |  Mate Bilić | 18 | 
| 2004–05 |  Nakor Bueno | 13 | 
| 2003–04 |  Nakor Bueno | 16 | 
| 2002–03 |  Nano | 15 | 
| 2001/02 |  Raúl Caballero | 11 | 
| 2000–01 |  Renaldo | 8 | 
| 1999–00 |  Josemi | 15 | 
| 1998–99 |  Josemi | 12 | 
| 1997–98 |  Óscar Arias | 8 | 
|  Vicente Fernández | 8 | |
| 1996–97 |  Estefan Juliá | 8 | 
| 1995–96 |  Paco Salillas | 10 | 
| 1994–95 |  Paco Salillas | 18 | 
| 1993–94 |  Nikola Milinković | 6 | 
| 1992–93 |  Xabi Gracia | 13 | 
| 1991–92 |  José Emilio Amavisca | 14 | 
| 1990–91 |  James Cantero | 17 | 
| 1989–90 |  Mariano Azcona | 26 | 
| 1988–89 |  Mariano Azcona | 6 | 
|  Álvaro Sánchez Pose | 6 | |
| 1987–88 |  Mariano Azcona | 13 | 
| 1986–87 |  Mariano Azcona | 16 | 
|  Ignacio Alcelay | 16 | |
| 1985–86 |  Mariano Azcona | 9 | 
| 1984–85 |  José María Serna | 17 | 
| 1983–84 |  José García Juárez | 10 | 
| 1982–83 |  Javier Lozano | 13 | 
| 1981–82 |  Ramón Clotet | 15 | 
| 1980–81 |  Luis Alonso | 21 | 
| 1950–51 |  Ignacio Bidegain | 8 | 
Appearance records
La Liga appearances
 Mauro Ravnic: 37 Mauro Ravnic: 37
 Urbano Ortega: 36 Urbano Ortega: 36
 Virgilio Hernández: 35 Virgilio Hernández: 35
 Miguel Rubio: 35 Miguel Rubio: 35
 Jaime Quesada: 34 Jaime Quesada: 34
 Txema Alonso: 34 Txema Alonso: 34
 Gonzalo Arguiñano: 32 Gonzalo Arguiñano: 32
 Guillermo Ramón: 28 Guillermo Ramón: 28
 Sebastián Herrera: 27 Sebastián Herrera: 27
 Nikola Milinković: 26 Nikola Milinković: 26
Goalscoring records
La Liga goals
 Ignacio Bidegain: 8 Ignacio Bidegain: 8
 Luis Pellicer: 7 Luis Pellicer: 7
 Nikola Milinković: 6 Nikola Milinković: 6
 Juan Manuel Martínez: 5 Juan Manuel Martínez: 5
 Guillermo Ramón: 5 Guillermo Ramón: 5
 Francisco Nogués: 4 Francisco Nogués: 4
 Virgilio Hernández: 4 Virgilio Hernández: 4
Selected former players
Only international players or UEFA Champions League winners. Flags represent national teams player appeared for.
 Tito Vilanova Tito Vilanova
 José Emilio Amavisca (1991–92) José Emilio Amavisca (1991–92)
 Estanislao Basora (1955–56) Estanislao Basora (1955–56)
 Carles Busquets (1999–2002) Carles Busquets (1999–2002)
 Canito (1975–76) Canito (1975–76)
 Enric Gensana (1954–56) Enric Gensana (1954–56)
 Marià Gonzalvo (1955–56) Marià Gonzalvo (1955–56)
 Tomás Hernández (1955–56) Tomás Hernández (1955–56)
 Eladio Silvestre (1960–61) Eladio Silvestre (1960–61)
 Raúl Tamudo (1999) Raúl Tamudo (1999)
 Unai Vergara (2005–07) Unai Vergara (2005–07)
 Ali Benhalima (1990–93) Ali Benhalima (1990–93)
 Renaldo (2000–01) Renaldo (2000–01)
 Mate Bilić (2005–06) Mate Bilić (2005–06)
 Søren Andersen (1993–94) Søren Andersen (1993–94)
 Goran Stanić (1998–2000) Goran Stanić (1998–2000)
 Michael Emenalo (1997–98) Michael Emenalo (1997–98)
 Carlos González (2000–01) Carlos González (2000–01)
 Melanio Olmedo (1956–57) Melanio Olmedo (1956–57)
.svg.png.webp) Ilija Stolica (1998–00) Ilija Stolica (1998–00)
     Dmitri Kuznetsov (1994–95) Dmitri Kuznetsov (1994–95)
 Julio Rodríguez (1995–98) Julio Rodríguez (1995–98)
 Gustavo Matosas (1993–94) Gustavo Matosas (1993–94)
 Manny Lagos (1991–92) Manny Lagos (1991–92)
 Miguel Mea Vitali (2000–01) Miguel Mea Vitali (2000–01)
.svg.png.webp)   Boban Babunski (1994–96) Boban Babunski (1994–96)
.svg.png.webp)  .svg.png.webp) Jovan Stanković (2004–05) Jovan Stanković (2004–05)
.svg.png.webp) Mauro Ravnić (1992–94) Mauro Ravnić (1992–94)
Selected former coaches
 Mané (1988–95) Mané (1988–95)
 Víctor Muñoz (1999–2000) Víctor Muñoz (1999–2000)
 Juan José Nogués (1954–55) Juan José Nogués (1954–55)
 Juande Ramos (1997–98) Juande Ramos (1997–98)
 Manuel Ruiz Sosa (1971–72) Manuel Ruiz Sosa (1971–72)
 Marcel Domingo (1962–63) Marcel Domingo (1962–63)
 Nicolae Simatoc (1959–60) Nicolae Simatoc (1959–60)
Presidents
 Sebastià Tàpies: 1939–40 Sebastià Tàpies: 1939–40
 Joan Porta: 1941–47 Joan Porta: 1941–47
 Eduard Estadella: 1947–51 Eduard Estadella: 1947–51
 Llorenç Agustí: 1951–54 Llorenç Agustí: 1951–54
 Josep Servat: 1954–57 Josep Servat: 1954–57
 Antoni Rocafort: 1957 Antoni Rocafort: 1957
 Laureà Torres: 1957–60 Laureà Torres: 1957–60
 Antoni Teixidó: 1960–62 Antoni Teixidó: 1960–62
 Ramon Vilaltella: 1962–67 Ramon Vilaltella: 1962–67
 Josep Jové: 1967–68 Josep Jové: 1967–68
 Pere Roig: 1968–69 Pere Roig: 1968–69
 Manel Rosell: 1969–70 Manel Rosell: 1969–70
 Miquel Martínez: 1970–72 Miquel Martínez: 1970–72
 Josep Montañola: 1972–74 Josep Montañola: 1972–74
 Lluís Nadal: 1974–77 Lluís Nadal: 1974–77
 Josep Esteve: 1977–79 Josep Esteve: 1977–79
 Joan Planes: 1979–82 Joan Planes: 1979–82
 Antoni Gausí: 1982–86 Antoni Gausí: 1982–86
 Màrius Durán: 1986–96 Màrius Durán: 1986–96
 Josep Lluís González: 1996–97 Josep Lluís González: 1996–97
 Màrius Durán: 1997–98 Màrius Durán: 1997–98
 Antoni Gausí: 1998–2002 Antoni Gausí: 1998–2002
 Miquel Pons: 2002–06 Miquel Pons: 2002–06
 Xavier Massana: 2006–07 Xavier Massana: 2006–07
 Ignasi Rivadulla: 2007–10 Ignasi Rivadulla: 2007–10
 Anabel Junyent: 2010–11 Anabel Junyent: 2010–11
See also
References
- ↑ El juez abre el proceso de subasta de la Unió Esportiva Lleida (Judge starts liquidation of Unió Esportiva Lleida); La Vanguardia, 10 May 2011 (in Spanish)
- ↑ El juez resuelve a favor de Sisco Pujol la adjudicación de la UE Lleida (Judge rules UE Lleida's allocation in favor of Sisco Pujol); La Vanguardia, 12 July 2011 (in Spanish)
External links

- Official website (in Spanish)
- Futbolme team profile (in Spanish)
- Unofficial website (in Spanish)
- Unofficial website #2 (in Spanish)




