Joined Esportiva Sant Andreu
The Unió Esportiva Sant Andreu (in Spanish: Unión Deportiva San Andrés) is a football club from the neighborhood and former municipality of San Andrés de Palomar, in the city of Barcelona. Its distant antecedents date back to 1909, with the Zeta Club. Its current name was taken in 1925, with the merger of several clubs. In 2008 it adopted the legal form of a Sports Joint Stock Company.
Origins of football in San Andrés del Palomar (1900-1911)
There are few references to the origins of football in San Andrés de Palomar. The first teams that are known are the Scottish Foot-ball Club and Team Rojo, linked to the British colonies that worked in the textile factories of San Andrés. Both emerged in 1900 and had a short life.
The first written document about the existence of the current club is an article published in "El Mundo Deportivo" on January 21, 1909:
"With great enthusiasm, a "football club" is being organized among the young Andresians, and the preparations necessary to inaugurate it in the next month have already begun. This club will be the first founded in San Andrés de Palomar, which until now seemed to show some indifference for the sports, but I do not doubt that the work undertaken by these sport lovers will yield its fruit and soon take this, increase in our important barriada"
This new team was called Club Z and played its first known matches in June 1909, as part of the Catalan Competition. Shortly after, Zeta gave way to Andreuenc Foot-ball Club. The first official match that the club played with this new name was on November 21, 1909, in the Catalan Junior Cup, beating Provençalenc 2-0. The team already wore a uniform with red and yellow vertical stripes and its playing field, known as Medicine Field, was located on Scotland Street.
The F.C. Andreuenc and the L'Avenç del Sport (1911-1925)
During its first three seasons of life, Andreuenc FC competed in the Catalan Junior Championship. In October 1911 the club experienced a split, when a group of players, led by Lluís Montell, left the discipline of the entity to form their own team, L'Avenç, under the protection of the Avenç Nacionalista Republicà society. Montell was the first president of the new club, whose board also included the poet from Andrés Ignasi Iglésias, who proposed the name L'Avenç, in allusion to the homonymous printing press that he had created together with another great figure of Catalan literature., Àngel Guimerà. The new club adopted the colors red and white, with vertical stripes. In 1913 the team moved its headquarters to the Fènix Andreuenc company, and adopted the definitive name of L'Avenç del Sport. In the 1914-15 season L'Avenç del Sport played for the first time on the land located between Virgili and Santa Coloma streets, location of the current Narcís Sala stadium.
Until the creation of the League, in 1928, the regional championships were the main football competitions held in Spain, and their winners took part in the Spanish Championship or Copa del Rey, the only official tournament at the national level. Both Andreuenc and L'Avenç del Sport participated in the Catalan regional championships, although with uneven luck. While the first always moved in lower categories, L'Avenç soon became among the leading teams in Catalonia, competing in the First Category Championship in the 1913/14, 1914/15 and 1915/16 seasons, along with clubs such as FC Barcelona, RCD Español, CE Sabadell or FC España. In the 1919/20 season, L'Avenç was proclaimed champion of Catalonia in the First Category B - equivalent to the second division of the Catalan Championship - and competed unsuccessfully for promotion against FC España. He repeated the title the following season, in which he did manage to return to the elite, after a new promotion with Spain. That same campaign, a place for the Spanish championship was played against the Primera A champion, FC Barcelona. The Blaugrana won the first leg 3-1, but L'Avenç achieved a historic victory in the second leg 1-0. The Andresenses finally fell in the tiebreaker 4-1. L'Avenç played two consecutive seasons in First Category A, 1920-21 and 1921-22, after which it returned to First B. Its most notable players at that time were Joan Coca and Pepe Planas, who later played in FC Barcelona.
Andreuenc FC, for its part, played in the Second Category - equivalent to a third division - achieving its greatest success with the championship in the 1917-18 season. However, promotion to Primera B was thwarted in a promotion match played at the Industria Street field against Terrassa FC, losing 3-0.
Unió Esportiva Sant Andreu is born. Early years (1925-1939)
In 1925 the two football clubs of San Andrés de Palomar were experiencing low times, which led them to join forces after 14 years competing separately. Messrs. Guardia (L'Avenç del Sport) and Labaleta (Andreuenc FC) reached an agreement and on June 14, 1925 the merger was approved, in which two other clubs also participated. other sports disciplines: the Esport Ciclista Andreuenc and the Life Athletic Section of the Ateneo Obrero de San Andrés. The club resulting from the merger was named Unió Sportiva Sant Andreu, with José Guardia being its first president. The L'Avenç stadium, on Santa Coloma Street, was maintained as the playing field, and the red and yellow stripes of Andreuenc were adopted for the kit. Sant Andreu maintained the L'Avenç square in First Category B - renamed Second Preferential Category from the 1928/29 season -, unsuccessfully competing for promotion to First A in 1929, 1930 and 1935.
Starting in 1936, sporting activity was conditioned by the Spanish Civil War. In 1937, in the midst of the anarcho-syndicalist and anticlerical revolution, place names named after saints were abolished. The San Andrés neighborhood was renamed Armonía de Palomar and the club recovered the old name of L'Avenç del Sport.
From Regional to almost promotion to First Division (1939-1953)
The Franco dictatorship, after the Civil War, had consequences in Sant Andreu, which was forced to Spanishize its name as Club Deportivo San Andrés. The sports authorities of the new regime imposed a new directive on the club, which adopted a new shield, where the señera was replaced by the flag of Spain, in the same way that the colors of the Catalan flag were eliminated from the uniform, replacing the red lines. for blues.
The official competition returned in the 1939/40 season, with the Andresenses competing in the regional championship of Group B. With the forward formed by Mariano Martín and Manuel Va and under the direction of Pepe Planas, the team was proclaimed champion with great authority, achieving promotion to Group A of the regional category for the following season and, in addition, a place to compete in the Generalissimo Cup.
On May 5, 1940, the Andresense club inaugurated its remodeled stadium on Santa Coloma Street with a match against Barcelona CF. A week later, on May 12, they made their debut in the Generalissimo Cup against Valencia CF, which they beat at Mestalla 8-2 and also won in Barcelona 1-3.
In the 1940/41 season the club continued its progression, finishing runners-up in Regional A. Consequently, at the end of the campaign it played in the Third Division, which at that time was the name of the final league for promotion to the Second Division. This first attempt to promote to the silver division was frustrated when they finished in second position in their group. From 1940 to 1947 it remained in First Regional Category A (later renamed First Catalana), except for the 1942/43 season, in which it briefly returned to Regional B.
In the 1945/46 season, a key figure in the history of Sant Andreu became president: Narcís Sala, who took the club to its highest levels. In four years, the team would go from playing in the Regional to staying at the gates of the First Division. The first step was taken in the 1946/47 campaign, finishing as champion of the Primera Catalana league and being promoted to the Third Division. In the bronze category he achieved second and fourth place and, finally, the championship in the 1949/50 season. After a long promotion phase, on July 9, 1950, at the Torrero Stadium in Zaragoza, they defeated SD Erandio 3-1 in the final tie, achieving promotion to the Second Division for the first time in their history.
On September 9, 1950, CD San Andrés debuted in the Second Division, with a 1-2 victory at Gerona CF. The lineup was made up of Almansa, Ferrer, Sans, Guillén, Madurga, Pérez, Peralta, Buqué, Mariano Martín, Tejedor and Massós, with Benito García as coach. Despite its inexperience in the category, the team finished the league in fourth position, just three points away from the promotion spot to the First Division, occupied by CD Sabadell, and ahead of historic clubs in the top category such as Real Oviedo, CA Osasuna or Tarragona. This is, to date, the best classification obtained by the club in its entire history.
The Second Division was an excessive financial waste for a modest entity like CD San Andrés. Despite the difficulties in strengthening itself, the 1951/52 season managed to maintain the category by finishing in 12th position, four points above relegation. At the end of the course, President Narcís Sala resigned, due to the delicate economic situation. In order to continue competing in the silver category, Pedro Conde Geneve became president and the team completed a good campaign, ending the 1952/53 season in eighth position. Given the impossibility of staying financially in the Second Division, CD San Andrés gave up its place and was relegated to the Third Division.
Fifteen long years in Tercera (1953-1968)
In the first seasons of CD San Andrés' return to the Third Division, the team remained in the top zone, becoming champion of its group in the 1957/58 season. With Pepe Planas on the bench and international Rosendo Hernández as the most outstanding player, the team competed that year for promotion against UD Lérida. After drawing in the home and away matches (2-2 in Barcelona and 1-1 in Lérida) the Ilerida team won 2-0 in the tiebreaker match.
The following seasons were discreet for the Andresenses, who became accustomed to fighting to remain in Third Division. In the 1964/65 campaign, Narcís Sala returned to the presidency of the club, beginning the second golden age of the entity.
The great golden age (1968-1980)
In August 1968, Sant Andreu decided to try to return to professional football by creating a great team, signing coach Antonio Argilés and players like Moya, Pepín Cabezas, Giralt, Rué, Tovar, Marín, Rodri and Patro. Thanks to these reinforcements, they were comfortably proclaimed champions of their Third Division group. In the first leg of the promotion campaign, Sant Andreu beat CA Osasuna by a narrow margin in Barcelona, but the Pamplona team equalized in the second leg and won 2-0 in the tiebreaker, in a match played at the Estadio de La Romareda. The people from Andres had a second chance with CD Alcoyano. The first leg, at the Santa Coloma Street field, ended with a 2-2 draw, with goals from Marín. In the second leg in Alcoy, the tie remained at one until the 77th minute, when Giralt scored the winning goal and Sant Andreu's promotion to the Second Division, for the second time in its history, unleashing true madness in the Andrés neighborhood. where thousands of people welcomed the players as true heroes.
In the following years the club lived its golden age, having eight seasons in the silver category, with outstanding performances in the Copa del Rey and exceeding 6,000 members, which led to the construction of a new stadium.
The financial difficulties derived from keeping the club in the elite weighed down the team during the 1976/77 season. A management board took charge of the entity throughout the campaign, after the resignation of president Joan Coma. The last day of the league was agonizing, with Sant Andreu and Calvo Sotelo CF's permanence at stake in a direct duel in Puertollano. The locals won 2-1 and were saved, at the expense of the Catalans, who since then have never returned to the silver division of Spanish football.
In the 1977/78 season, Sant Andreu began to play in the newly created Second Division 'B', a new intermediate category between professional football and the Third Division. The Andresenses spent three campaigns in this category, which were marked by economic difficulties. Despite being reinforced with experienced players in the First Division, such as Pepín Cabezas or Iselín Santos Ovejero, it was not possible to recover the lost category and at the end of the 1979/80 season it returned to the Third Division, eleven years later.
A decade in the well (1980-1990)
In 1980 Sant Andreu began a period in the Third Division, until 1990. There were ten seasons of suffering, successes and failures. The objective of the new president, Francesc Aresté, is to return the team to Second B. To achieve this, coach Francesc Ricart is hired first, and then Luis Aloy (1981), as well as players like Vilches, Mendoza, Jose and Telechea. In the first two seasons a ninth position was achieved, and in the third the team finished fourth, qualifying to compete in the Copa del Rey the following year. In the 1983-84 season, coach Roberto Puerto arrived, who was fired in the second round due to poor results and a conflict with the players of the Mendoza team, Rafa and especially Guri and Nicolás. Curiously, after his dismissal, the team improved its performance and finished in fourth position.
Jaume Sabaté, Puerto's replacement, is in charge of making Sant Andreu third division champion the following season. The team makes a great comeback in the second round and surpasses the main rival in the fight for the title, Lloret. The fundamental elements of the champion team are Mendoza, in goal, De Frías, López Torres, Toni and Tomás in defense, Pedro in the midfield, and Aleñá, José and Rafa in the forward. But despite this success, promotion was not achieved, as they were defeated by Alzira. In the first leg they lose 4-2 and in the second leg they can only win 1-0.
After a good season, 1985-86, financial problems arrived that ended with Aresté's resignation, so the club was governed by a manager. The squad is dismantled and the team is about to be relegated to the Regional. In fact, Sant Andreu is saved from relegation thanks to a miraculous goal by defender López Torres in extra time of the second leg of an agonizing promotion played against Martinenc.
In the summer of 1987, Josep Vivancos assumed the presidency, and with the help of partner and patron Joan Gaspart, formed a great team that would take Sant Andreu to Second B in three years. In the first season, the return of Toni, Pedro and Jose, in addition to signing Hans, Blanco, Totó and the great former RCD Español player Daniel Solsona. In goal, meanwhile, Esteban has replaced Mendoza.
But despite the effort, it is not until the third season that the long-awaited promotion is achieved, since in the first season Palamós frustrates Sant Andreu's options and in the second it is the irregularity of the team itself that achieves it. But the third time is the charm. In that 1989-90 season with Jaume Creixell on the bench, the four-bar team was proclaimed champion and promoted to Second B, since at that time there was no promotion.
From bordering on the rise to decadence (1990-1997)
In the 1990-91 season the team managed to remain in the Second Division B by finishing in thirteenth position in Group IV, finishing five points away from relegation.
For the 1991-92 season, Sant Andreu improved its performance, finishing the regular phase in first position in Group II of the category and gaining access to promotion to the Second Division, at that stage the quadribardos were placed in the group D along with the Lugo, Extremadura and Elche clubs. After a good performance in the first five days, Sant Andreu arrived at the final match against Lugo as a favorite to move up the category, since a draw was enough for the team's promotion, however, in the match the referee Japan Sevilla ignored a penalty committed against Ramón Calderé and also sent off the player since he considered that he had simulated the foul, finally the Galician team won the match by a score of 2-1 and was left with the ticket to the silver category in the midst of the angry protests by the Sant Andreu players.
In the 1992-93 season the team once again gained access to promotion after finishing second in Group III. In the final phase, Sant Andreu was placed in Group A with Real Jaén, Deportivo Alavés and Club Deportivo Toledo. In the league, the quadribar team only achieved a draw with Real Jaén, which is why it finished in last place. of the group, while the promotion went to Toledo.
Starting in the 1993-94 season, the team began to decline in the category, until consummating its relegation to the Third Division in the 1996-97 season.
The fight for survival (1997-2004)
In the 1998-99 season, Sant Andreu was relegated to the Catalan First Division, although it managed to return to the Third Division in one season after becoming champion of the Catalan category. In 2000 the team returned to the Third Division and achieved permanence with some ease, later the team achieved promotion in 2002 and 2003 without being promoted from category.
The presidency of Joan Gaspart (2004-2011)
After several years of patronage in the background, finally in the 2004/05 season Joan Gaspart became president, with the aim of taking the entity to professional football and converting it into a Sports Joint Stock Company (SAD). That same campaign the Adresenses achieved promotion to Second Division B.
After being relegated to the Third Division in the 2006-07 season, Sant Andreu managed to return to the Second Division B in the 2007-08 campaign, at the end of which it completed its conversion into a Sociedad Anónima Deportiva (SAD), leaving Joan Gaspart as the majority shareholder, with 99%. In the 2008/09 season, in which the club celebrated its centenary, it played in the Copa del Rey, reaching the second round, and won its first Catalunya Cup, after beating FC Barcelona in the semi-finals. and RCD Espanyol in the final. In the league they finished in third position, competing for promotion to the Second Division, but fell in the first round against AD Alcorcón.
In the 2009-10 campaign, the team qualified for the play-off for promotion to the Second Division by having finished the regular league first in its group. They lost the direct promotion round against Ponferradina 0-1 at the Narcís Sala and on penalties at El Toralín. Saving the second round against the Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, they qualified for the third and final promotion round.. Barcelona Atlètic eliminated UE Sant Andreu after winning 1-0 at the Blaugrana Mini Estadi and tying the second leg 0-0 at the Narcís Sala stadium.
The summer of 2011 ended Joan Gaspart's time as head of the club, selling his majority share to businessman and former director Manuel Camino.
Instability and fall to Third (2012-2022)
In the 2012/13 season, the team finished in seventh position in the table. Although that year they won the RFEF Cup after beating La Hoya Lorca in the final 0-3 in Murcia and 1-0 in Barcelona.
In the 2013/14 campaign, the "cuatribarrado" club finished the league in 15th position, struggling to maintain the category until the penultimate matchday. On the contrary, in the Copa del Rey the team completed a notable performance, reaching the round of 32, where they were eliminated by Atlético de Madrid.
Given the economic difficulties of the entity, due to the debts contracted with the Public Treasury and Social Security, in July 2014 the largest shareholder, Manuel Camino, sold his 96% package to the company Strategic Business Development XXI Century SL, owned by the Brazilian Dinorah Santa Ana, ex-wife and representative of the footballer Dani Alves. The new CEO appointed her compatriot Marcos Martins as president. Although the sports project of the new owners aspired to achieve promotion to the Second Division & #34;A" In the short term, the club finished the season in 18th position and lost the category. In June 2015, after relegation to the Third Division was completed, Dinorah Santa Ana resold her share package to Manuel Camino.
After the relegation to the Third Division, the team became a regular in promotion promotions but without obtaining the desired ticket in the Second B. In 2021 the lower categories of Spanish football were reformed, so the new Third Federation became the fifth level of the national league system, Sant Andreu had to stay in that category after losing the promotion play-off against Cerdanyola del Vallès Fútbol Club and being left out of the RFEF Second Division, a category that was substituted partial of the old Second B and the new fourth level of the pyramid, so the "quatribarrados" suffered a hidden decline by losing a level on the Spanish sports ladder.
Recovery (2022 -)
In the 2022-23 season, Sant Andreu managed to improve its performance and finished the regular season in second position in Group V, this after a strong fight with Club Esportiu Europa, which would finally win the title and the direct ascent.
At the end of the regular phase of the season the team accessed the promotion promotion, in the Catalan phase the "cuatribarrados" left out C. F. Peralada and Centro Parroquial San Cristóbal, so they accessed the national phase and were placed one step away from the ascent. In the promotion series, Sant Andreu was drawn against Salamanca Club de Fútbol UDS, the first leg ended with a one-goal tie, so everything was left to be decided in the second leg. In the match held on June 4, 2023, Sant Andreu won by a score of 1-2, so the "four-barred" team achieved promotion to the Second Federation, eight years after having fallen into the pit of the Third Division..
Presidents
Shield
Current shield
The shield of the Unió Esportiva Sant Andreu is shaped like a "pot". In the upper part the flag of San Andrés de Palomar is represented, and in the lower part the team colors, the four bars, with a ball on top.
History of shields
In 1940, after the Civil War and the victory of Franco's regime, Sant Andreu underwent numerous changes: the name was castilianized (Club Deportivo San Andrés), the yellow and blue colors were imposed, and The shield changed radically. The four bars were eliminated and the Spanish flag was introduced. As the years went by, Sant Andreu recovered its name and its original colors, but on the shield, despite the modifications that were introduced, the Spanish flag still remained.
When democracy arrived, an important sector of the Sant Andreu fans did not identify with the Spanish flag on the shield, and in 1990 a referendum was held to decide which shield Sant Andreu should carry. Three alternatives were presented: continue with the current shield, recover the 1925 shield or change the Spanish flag to the characteristic blue of the flag of San Andrés de Palomar. The vote in favor of the change was divided between the last two options and the continuing option won.
With the arrival of Joan Gaspart to the presidency, the debate was revived, since Sant Andreu was the only team that carried the Spanish flag on its shield, and yet the flag of Sant Andreu did not appear. A new shield was designed, with the Andreu flag at the top, and the team colors - the four Catalan bars - at the bottom. On January 16, 2005, coinciding with the Sant Andreu-Mataró match in the 3rd division, a referendum was held among all members of legal age to decide whether to accept the new design or continue with the current shield. The voting results were as follows:
- Census (aged partners): 698
- Votes: 328
- In favor of the new shield: 177 (54.0 %)
- Against: 139 (42.4 %)
- White votes: 11 (3.3 %)
- Null votes: 1 (0.3 %)
The members' assembly on July 25, 2005 ratified and made the new shield official. Since the 2006-07 season he has worn the Sant Andreu shirt.
Hymn
Flames i ginesta is the anthem of Sant Andreu, composed on the occasion of the club's Golden Jubilee, celebrated in 1963 and not before, due to financial problems. The Sant Andreu anthem is the oldest in all of Catalan football.
Uniform
- Local uniform: Yellow t-shirt with red stripes, black pants and yellow and red stockings.
- Uniform visitor: Black t-shirt with grey stripes, red pants and black stockings.
- Alternative uniform: Grey t-shirt, yellow pants and yellow stockings.
Stadium
Narcís Sala Stadium
Name: Narcís Sala
Capacity: 6,563 spectators
Inauguration: March 19, 1970
Inauguration of artificial lighting: April 13, 1972
Old name: Camp Municipal del Carrer Santa Coloma
Current name: Camp Municipal Narcís Sala (since December 7, 1980)
Surface: FIFA artificial grass
Dimensions: 106 x 64 meters
Address: C/ Santa Coloma 39.
08030 San Andrés de Palomar, Barcelona
Phone: (+34) 93 311 29 54
Uses: official matches and training sessions of the first team, the majority of Grassroots Football teams and the UE Sant Andreu Football School. Private night-time 7-a-side soccer leagues.
Other facilities
Name: Camp del Centenari
Capacity: 1500 spectators
Inauguration: September 22, 2004
Surface: Artificial grass
Address: Riera de Horta / Ronda San Martín
08020 San Martín, Barcelona
Uses: official matches and training sessions of some UE Sant Andreu grassroots football teams.
Previous fields
- Campo de la Calle Santa Coloma (1914-1969), located on the same grounds as the current Narcís Sala.
- Campo de las Medicinas (1912-1925), located near the current street Concepción Arenal.
- Can Tisó (1909-1914), located near the neighborhood of the Old Trinity.
Provisional fields
- Les Corts Stadium (1950-1953): the Sant Andreu played some Second Division matches at the former FC Barcelona stadium to get a better collection.
- Stadium of Sarriá (1969-1970): Sant Andreu played 9 Second Division matches in the former stadium of the Spanish RCD on the occasion of the construction works of the current Narcís Sala.
- Avenida de Navarra (1982): the field owned by CF Badalona, currently called Campo del Centenario, hosted two games of Third Division of Sant Andreu as a local, in the 1981-82 season, due to the closing of the Narcís Sala.
- Lluís Companys Olympic Stadium (1991-1992): the Sant Andreu played 8 Second Division B matches at the stadium that hosted the Olympic Games in Barcelona 1992, due to works in the Narcís Sala that never came to be held.
Players
2023-24 Squad
Coaches
Club details
In Spanish competitions (RFEF)
Second Division
- Seasons in 2nd: 11 (1950-53, 1969-77)
- Best place in the league: 4th (temporary 1950-51)
- Worse placed in the league: 19th (temporary 1976-77)
- Matches played: 396 (198 at home, 198 out)
- Points achieved: 394 (297 at home, 97 out)
- Gained parties: 148 (128 at home, 20 out)
- Matched parties: 98 (41 home, 57 out)
- Lost parties: 150 (29 at home, 121 out)
- Goles in favor: 481 (364 at home, 117 out)
- Goles against: 511 (174 at home, 337 out)
- Greatest goleada at home: 5-0 (Osasuna 1950-51, Lleida 1951-52, Logroñés 1971-72, Valladolid 1973-74, Ensidesa 1975-76), 6-1 (Orensana 1950-51), 7-2 (Gimnàstic 1951-52)
- Major goleada got out: 1-4 (Tenerife 1974-75)
- Greatest goleada at home: 0-5 (Lleida 1952-53)
- Major goleada fit out: 8-0 (Ferrol 1951-52)
Second Division B
- Seasons in 2nd B: 19 (1977-80, 1990-97, 2005-07, 2008-15)
- Best place in the league: 1 (1991-92, 2009-10)
- Worse placed in the league: Nineteenth (temporary 1996-97)
- 1 Second Division B league subfielder (1992-93)
- Matches played: 456 (228 at home, 228 out)
- Points achieved: 510 (338 at home, 172 out)
- Gained parties: 175 (128 at home, 47 out)
- Matched parties: 122 (56 at home, 66 out)
- Lost parties: 161 (44 at home, 115 out)
- Goles in favor: 592 (384 at home, 208 out)
- Goles against: 523 (213 at home, 310 out)
- Greatest goleada at home: 10-0 (Manacor 1993-94)
- Major goleada got out: 0-5 (Gramenet 2009-10)
- Greatest goleada at home: 0-6 (Sabadell 1998-99)
- Major goleada fit out: 4-0 (Girona 1977-78, Levante 1978-79, Gandía 1990-91), 5-1 (Levante 1977-78, Gimnàstic 1978-79), 7-3 (Mallorca B 1995-96)
Third Division
- Seasons in 3rd: 38 (1940-41, 1947-50, 1953-69, 1980-90, 1997-99, 2000-05, 2007-08)
- Best place in the league: 1 (1949-50, 1957-58, 1968-69, 1984-85, 1989-90)
- Worse placed in the league: 20th (1986-87)
- 4 Third Division league subfielders (1940-41, 1947-48, 1987-88)(2007-2008)
Data up to 12/16/07:
- Matches played: 1,310 (655 at home, 655 out)
- Points achieved: 1,595 (1.004 at home, 591 out)
- Gained parties: 598 (400 at home, 198 out)
- Matched parties: 284 (139 at home, 145 out)
- Lost parties: 428 (116 at home, 312 out)
- Goles in favor: 2.196 (1,389 at home, 807 out)
- Goles against: 1,747 (689 at home, 1,058 out)
- Greatest goleada at home: 9-1 (Sueca 1949-50)
- Major goleada got out: 0-6 (Vilafranca 1989-90)
- Greatest goleada at home: 0-5 (Terrassa 1961-62)
- Major goleada fit out: 7-0 (Lleida 1959-60, Mataró 1997-98)
Spanish Championship (Copa del Rey)
- Participation in the King’s Cup: 25
- Best place in the Cup: 1/4 final (eliminated by Seville 1970-71)
- 1 participation in 1/4 Cup (1970-71)
- 4 participations in 1/8 Cup (1970-71, 1971-72, 1973-74, 1974-75)
- Disputed: 53
- Overseas elimination: 28
- Matches played: 102 (51 home, 51 out)
- Gained parties: 39 (29 at home, 10 out)
- Matched parties: 22 (9 home, 13 out)
- Lost parties: 41 (13 home, 28 out)
- Goles in favor: 147 (105 at home, 42 out)
- Goles against: 142 (61 at home, 81 out)
- Greatest goleada at home: 6-0 (Vilobi 1991-92)
- Major goleada got out: 0-4 (Vilobi 1991-92, Blanes 1992-93)
- Greatest goleada at home: 1-5 (Lleida 1985-86)
- Major goleada fit out: 7-0 (Lleida 1985-86)
In Catalan competitions (FCF)
- Seasons in First Catalan Division: 2 (1946-47, 1999-2000)
- Seasons in First Regional: 6 (1940-46)
- Seasons at the Catalonia Championship, First Category, group A: 6 (1912-16, 1921-23)
- Seasons at the Catalonia Championship, First Category, B Group: 14 (1917-21, 1923-28, 1934-38, 1939-40)
- Seasons at the Catalonia Championship, Second Category: 7 (1916-17, 1928-34)
Palmarés
National Championships
- RFEF Cup: 1 (2012-13)
- Second Division B League: 2 (1991/92 and 2009/10)
- Spanish Third Division League: 3 (1949-50, 1957-58, 1968-69)
- Third Division League Group V: 2 (1984-85, 1989-90)
Territorial championships
- Copa Catalunya: 2 (2008, 2019)
- Catalan First Division League: 2 (1946-47, 1999-2000)
- First Regional League Championship: 1 (1945-46)
- Catalan Regional League Championship: 1 (1939-40)
- Catalonia Championship, First Category B: 4 (1919-20, 1920-21 [L'Avenç del Sport], 1928-29, 1939-40 [UE Sant Andreu])
- Catalonia Championship, Second Category: 2 (1909-10, 1918-19) [CF Andreuenc]
Friendly tournaments
- Historic Tournament of Catalan Football: 5 (2005, 2007, 2014, 2021, 2023)
- Trofeo Hospitalet City: 2 (1981, 1986)
- Trofeo Villa de Gracia: 1 (2011)
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