Cusco Fútbol Club (known as Real Garcilaso until 2019) is a professional Peruvian football club based in the city of Cusco, that competes in the Liga 1, the top flight of Peruvian football. It was founded on 28 August 2008 as Real Garcilaso, changing their name to Cusco FC in 2019. The teams home stadium is Estadio Inca Garcilaso de la Vega, which is shares with city rivals Cienciano and Deportivo Garcilaso.

Cusco
Full nameCusco Fútbol Club
Nickname(s)Los cusqueños
Los dorados
El Imperio
Guerreros dorados
La máquina dorada
FoundedAugust 28, 2008; 15 years ago (2008-08-28) as Real Garcilaso
GroundInca Garcilaso de la Vega,
Cusco, Peru
Capacity45,056
PresidentJulio Gerardo Vásquez Granilla
ManagerLuis Flores
LeagueLiga 1
2024Liga 1, 5th of 18
WebsiteClub website

History edit

 
The badge of Real Garcilaso, 2008–2019

Beginnings edit

The club was founded in 2008 by students of the Inca Garcilaso de la Vega school as Real Garcilaso, in that year Real Garcilaso played the second division in Cusco. Real Garcilaso got to the finals where they defeated Cienciano and went up to first division of Cusco. They participated in the Copa Perú up until 2011, where they got promoted to the Peruvian Primera División, then known as the Torneo Descentralizado.

In the 2010 Copa Perú, the club qualified for the National Stage but was eliminated by Sportivo Huracán de Arequipa in the Round of 16.

In the 2011 Torneo Intermedio, the club was eliminated by Sport Áncash in the quarter-finals.

In the 2011 Copa Perú, the club defeated Pacífico in the finals and was promoted to the 2012 Torneo Descentralizado. for the first time.

Copa Libertadores edit

Real Garcilaso qualified for the 2013 Copa Libertadores for the first time. The club was eliminated by Colombian team Santa Fe in the quarter-finals. The tournament was Real Garcilaso's best result in an international competition.

In the 2014 Copa Libertadores, according to Soccerly, Cruzeiro player Paulo César Fonseca do Nascimento (better known as Tinga) was subjected to racist abuse at the game against Real Garcilaso in Huancayo. The South American Football Federation (CONMEBOL) tweeted that they would “handle this situation and any pertinent sanctions.” The club ended up getting eliminated in the Group Stage.

Primera División edit

In the 2012 Torneo Descentralizado, the club had a successful campaign with Andy Pando who was the tournament's top goal scorer, and made it to the final where it was defeated by Sporting Cristal. It also qualified for the 2013 Copa Libertadores second round after being placed second on the aggregate table. In 2013, They reached the final for the second year in a row and qualified for the 2014 Copa Libertadores after finishing as the top club during the tournament's first stage. In the Liguilla A, the club fought against Sporting Cristal for a spot in the finals which they played against Universitario. After winning at home and losing away, a third match was played in which they lost the play-offs 4–5 on penalties.

On 23 December 2019, Real Garcilaso announced its name change to Cusco Fútbol Club.[1]

In the 2021 season, the team finished next to last and was relegated to the Liga 2. In the 2022 Liga 2, Cusco won the league and got promoted back to the Liga 1, where they currently still stand.

Rivalries edit

Cusco FC has a rivalry with other Cusco clubs, Deportivo Garcilaso and Cienciano. The three clubs share the same home stadium, Estadio Garcilaso.

Stadium edit

Cusco FC play their home games in Estadio Garcilaso de la Vega which is in Cusco. It was named after the Peruvian Inca Garcilaso de la Vega. When first inaugurated in 1950, it had a spectator capacity of 22,000 and had a running track. In 2004, the stadium's capacity was expanded to 42,000, losing its running track, because of Cienciano's success in international tournaments and it would be a venue in the 2004 Copa América. The team also plays some games at Estadio Túpac Amaru in Sicuani.

The club's current training ground is at the Complejo Deportivo in Oropesa, approximately 25 km east of Cusco.

Current squad edit

As of 31 January, 2024.

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 DF   PER Jonathan Bilbao
3 DF   PER Franz Schmidt
4 DF   PER Francys Arévalo
5 MF   PER Miguel Aucca (captain)
6 MF   ARG Alan Pérez
7 FW   PER James Morales
9 FW   PER Luis Ramos
10 MF   ARG Iván Colman
11 FW   ARG Juan Manuel Tévez
13 GK   PER Andy Vidal
14 DF   PER José Zevallos
15 MF   PER Sebastián Zarabia
No. Pos. Nation Player
16 MF   PER Oswaldo Valenzuela
17 DF   CHI Pablo Cárdenas
18 FW   PER Jhosep Núñez
19 DF   PER Alonso Tamariz
20 MF   PER André Vasquez
21 DF   PER Alonso Yovera
22 FW   ARG Lucas Colitto
23 DF   ECU Rubén Ramírez
26 FW   ARG Nicolás Silva
27 FW   PER Rely Fernández
29 MF   PER Eslyn Correa
33 GK   PER Carlos Solís

Honours edit

National edit

League edit

Runner-up (3): 2012, 2013, 2017
Runner-up (1): 2017
Runner-up (2): 2015, 2017
Winners (1): 2022
Winners (1): 2011

Regional edit

Winners (1): 2011
Runner-up (1): 2010
Winners (1): 2010
Winners (1): 2010
Winners (1): 2010
Winners (1): 2009

Performance in CONMEBOL competitions edit

Competition A P W D L GF GA
Copa Libertadores 4 24 7 4 13 18 35
Copa Sudamericana 1 4 1 1 2 4 5

A = appearances, P = matches played, W = won, D = drawn, L = lost, GF = goals for, GA = goals against.

Season Competition Round Club Home Away
2013 Copa Libertadores Group Stage   Santa Fe 1–1 0–2
  Deportes Tolima 0–3 1–0
  Cerro Porteño 5–1 1–0
R2   Nacional 1–0 0–1 (pen. 4–1)
QF   Santa Fe 1–3 0–2
2014 Copa Libertadores Group Stage   Cruzeiro 2–1 3–0
  Defensor Sporting 0–2 4–1
  Universidad de Chile 1–2 1–0
2016 Copa Sudamericana First Stage   Aucas 1–0 1–2
Second Stage   Palestino 2–2 0–1
2018 Copa Libertadores Group Stage   Santos 2–0 0–0
  Estudiantes 0–0 0–3
  Nacional 0–0 0–4
2019 Copa Libertadores First Stage   Deportivo La Guaira 1–0 2–1

Managers edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Comunicado Oficial" (in Spanish). Real Garcilaso Facebook. 23 December 2019.

External links edit