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Club de Deportes Green Cross

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Chilean football club

Football club
Green Cross
Full nameClub de Deportes Green Cross
Nickname(s)Los pijes
Founded27 June 1916
Dissolved20 March 1965 (48 years)
GroundEstadio Nacional, Santiago
Capacity70,000
LeaguePrimera División
Home colours Away colours

Green Cross was a Chilean sports club that was based in the city of Santiago until 1965, when it moved to Temuco.

History

The club was founded on 27 June 1916, and its first chairman was Francisco Tapia. It was one of the eight teams that founded the professional Chilean football league in 1933.

The club had other sports branches besides football; these were basketball, cycling, and water polo.

The club won its first and only Chilean league title in 1945.

In April 1961 a number of players were killed in a plane crash in the Chilean Andes. The remains of the plane were found ten days after the accident. The wreckage was rediscovered in February 2015 by a climbing party.

In 1965 the club moved to Temuco where it merged with the local football team Deportes Temuco. Known for the first two decades as Green Cross Temuco, in 1985 the club reverted to the name Deportes Temuco.

Honours

National

Regional

  • Honour Division of Liga Metropolitana de Deportes
    • Winners (2): 1917, 1918

Friendly

  • Nino Brusadelli Cup (1): 1928

Records and data

  • Seasons in Primera División: 25 (1933–1934; 1939–1958; 1961–1962; 1964).
  • Seasons in Segunda División: 3 (1959–1960; 1963).
  • Bigger victory achieved:
  • Bigger defeat received:.
  • Best position in Primera División: 1º (1945)
  • Worst position in Primera División: 18º (1962)
  • Best scorer: Juan Morcillo (75 goals)

Notes

  1. "Football team's plane wreck found in Chile after over 50 years". 5 February 2015.
  2. ABC.net: "Chile: Plane carrying Green Cross football players found in Andes 53 years after crash". Retrieved 9 February 2015.

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References

Primera División de Chile
2025 clubs
Former teams
Tournaments
As
Primera División
  • (A): Apertura, (C): Clausura, (T): Transición
Seasons
  • It covers the Apertura and Clausura tournaments (short tournaments) into a single-year season.
Venues
Associated competitions
ANFP
Original Primera División clubs, 1933


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