Lota Schwager Sports Club is a Chilean professional team based in Coronel that currently play in Tercera A (fourth-tier).

Lota Schwager
Full nameClub de Deportes Lota Schwager
Nickname(s)Lamparita (The little lamp)
Mineros (Miners)
Carboneros (Coal miners)
Founded10 May 1966
GroundEstadio Federico Schwager,
Coronel, Chile
Capacity5,700
ChairmanChile Claudio Castro
ManagerChile Cristián Gómez
LeagueTercera B
2021Group C , 2nd

History edit

The Lota Schwafer Sports Club was founded on 10 May 1966 as a merge between the Federico Schwager Club (named after local businessman Federico Schwager) and the Minas Lota Club (teams that competed in Campeonato Regional de Concepción representing Lota and Schwager companies), under the name of "Lota Schwager", making reference to both companies latest mentioned. Having their debut–season the same year (where they finished ninth, after a poor campaign), "The Little Lamp" under the coach Isaac Carrasco achieved its first promotion to top-division in 1969, where Coronel-based team remained until 1980.

After they won their second Primera B title in 1986, Lota returned to first-tier thanks to manager Juan Carlos Gangas' job, but they only stayed at Primera División one season, after of defeat the Promotion Play-offs against O'Higgins and Regional Atacama. Following Coronel mining-crisis of 1994, the club disappeared during seven years, starting out again in 2001 for play as an amateur team in Tercera División, winning that in they first attempt to reach it.

In 2006, after a good campaign in secondgontier (where even so were four managers who coached Lota: Leonardo Vinés, Humberto López, Márcio da Silva and Jaime Nova), finishing third in the table behind the champion Deportes Melipilla and runner-up Ñublense, the team played the Promotion Play-offs against Talca-based club Rangers, which won at their home stadium Federico Schwager on the penalties thanks to Cristián Limenza's performances in the goal saving penalties.[1]

Honours edit

1969, 1986
2001

Current squad edit

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 GK   CHI Siegfried Jordan
2 DF   CHI Leonel Mena
3 DF   CHI Cristián Gómez
4 DF   CHI Felipe Lucares
5 DF   CHI Patricio Jeria
6 MF   CHI John Munizaga
7 MF   CHI Jesús Urrutia
8 MF   CHI Daniel Briceño
9 FW   CHI Freddy Barahona
10 MF   CHI Matt Lagos
11 FW   CHI Jordan Durán
No. Pos. Nation Player
12 GK   CHI Felipe Yáñez
13 DF   CHI Marcelo Rojas
14 MF   CHI José Miguel Farías
15 FW   CHI Felipe Valencia
16 MF   CHI Carlos Henríquez
17 DF   CHI Juan Pablo Vera
18 FW   CHI Kevin Salazar
19 MF   CHI Cristián Fernández
20 MF   CHI Nicolas Bastias
21 GK   CHI Ángelo Giolito
23 FW   CHI Matías Acosta

Managers edit

Players edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Chile 2006". Rsssf.com. 21 February 2007. Retrieved 12 October 2013.
  2. ^ "Australian Player Database - CR".

External links edit