Fixtures

Uruguay - Apertura 05/03 15:30 - Danubio vs Rampla Juniors - View
Copa Sudamericana 05/08 00:30 4 Sportivo Ameliano vs Danubio - View
Uruguay - Apertura 05/11 13:00 - Cerro vs Danubio - View
Copa Sudamericana 05/15 22:00 5 Athletico Paranaense vs Danubio - View
Copa Sudamericana 05/30 00:00 6 Danubio vs Deportivo Rayo Zuliano - View

Results

Uruguay - Apertura 04/28 13:00 - [15] Miramar Misiones v Danubio [10] W 3-5
Copa Sudamericana 04/24 22:00 3 [2] Danubio v Athletico Paranaense [1] L 0-1
Uruguay - Apertura 04/20 13:00 - [10] Danubio v Cerro Largo [9] D 1-1
Uruguay - Apertura 04/14 21:00 - [2] Penarol v Danubio [9] L 2-0
Copa Sudamericana 04/10 00:30 2 [2] Danubio v Sportivo Ameliano [4] D 0-0
Uruguay - Apertura 04/06 18:00 7 [9] Danubio v Club Atletico Progreso [2] D 1-1
Copa Sudamericana 04/03 22:00 1 [2] Deportivo Rayo Zuliano v Danubio [2] W 0-2
Uruguay - Apertura 03/30 22:00 6 [7] Defensor Sporting v Danubio [10] L 1-0
Uruguay - Apertura 03/25 23:00 6 Defensor Sporting v Danubio - PPT.
Uruguay - Apertura 03/24 19:00 5 [8] Danubio v Montevideo Wanderers [14] L 0-2
Uruguay - Apertura 03/17 19:30 5 Danubio v Montevideo Wanderers - PPT.
Uruguay - Cup 03/13 23:30 3 Defensor Sporting v Danubio L 1-0

Statistikk

 TotalHjemmeBorte
Matches played 47 21 26
Wins 17 6 11
Draws 12 8 4
Losses 18 7 11
Goals for 45 14 31
Goals against 46 17 29
Clean sheets 14 8 6
Failed to score 19 10 9

Wikipedia - Danubio F.C.

Danubio Fútbol Club is a Uruguayan football club based in Jardines del Hipódromo, Montevideo that currently plays in the Uruguayan Primera División.

Founded in 1945, the club's home stadium is Jardines del Hipódromo, which has a capacity of 19,450.

History

Danubio was founded by the Bulgarian-born brothers Mihail (Miguel) and Ivan (Juan) Lazaroff on 1 March 1932 together with other youths from the "Republica de Nicaragua" school in Montevideo. The club's name is a reference to the Danube river, the second-longest river in Europe. It was proposed by Mihail and Ivan's mother, María Mincheff de Lazaroff. Initially, she suggested the club be named after a different river in Bulgaria – Maritsa. However, the proposal was not approved, as the name was viewed as too feminine.

Danubio won its first league title in 1988 with a fantastic young squad that included Rubén da Silva, who was the league's top scorer that season with 23 goals. This title gave the club qualification to its first Copa Libertadores, the 1989 Copa Libertadores, where they reached the semi-finals and had their best continental tournament participation. Their campaign started in Group 5, where they finished second with three wins and three losses. In the round of 16, the club beat fellow Uruguayan powerhouse Nacional 3–1 on aggregate, and in the quarter-finals, they beat Chilean club Cobreloa 4–1 on aggregate. In the semi-finals, they faced Colombian club Atlético Nacional; the first leg in Montevideo finished in a 0–0 draw, but Atletico Nacional dominated the second leg with a 6–0 victory, eliminating Danubio from the tournament.

Danubio won its second league title in 2004 by beating Nacional with a last minute backheel goal scored by Diego Perrone. Although the squad lost the first leg 4–1, Danubio won the title by placing first in the Clausura and in the Annual table.

The club won its third league title in the 2006 Apertura after defeating Peñarol 4–1 in December 2006. Danubio went into the final matchday with 31 points behind Peñarol, who was first with 32 points. This meant Danubio had to win the match to secure the league title, and Peñarol would only need a draw to win the title. Peñarol scored first, but then Danubio turned the score around to secure the top position in the league table with a very young Edinson Cavani scoring the last goal. In the following season, the 2007 Clausura, the club defeated Peñarol again on penalties after a 1–1 draw at the end of extra time. With this title, Danubio became the first club to win both Apertura and Clausura tournaments since Nacional did in the 1998 season.

Danubio won their fourth Uruguayan league title in the 2013–14 season by defeating Montevideo Wanderers on penalties after extra time in the second leg of the final that finished 2–2 with a last minute bicycle kick equalizer from Camilo Mayada.

Danubio Fútbol Club er en uruguayansk fotballklubb fra Parque Batlle i Montevideo. Klubben ble stiftet i 1932 av italienske innvandrere og har vunnet den uruguayanske ligaen 4 ganger, senest i 2013-14-sesongen. Danubio har også vunnet den uruguayanske cupen 1 gang, i 2004.

Klubben spiller sine hjemmekamper på Estadio Jardines del Hipódromo, som har en kapasitet på 18 000 tilskuere. Danubios tradisjonelle draktfarger er hvit og blå, og lagets kallenavn er "La Franja" (stripen).

Danubio har en sterk ungdomsavdeling og har fostret opp en rekke kjente spillere, inkludert Diego Forlán, Edinson Cavani og Álvaro Recoba. Klubben er også kjent for sin offensive spillestil og for å spille med mange unge spillere.