Godoy Cruz Antonio Tomba


Club Deportivo Godoy Cruz Antonio Tomba, known simply as Godoy Cruz, is an Argentine sports club from Godoy Cruz, Mendoza. The club is best known for its football team, that plays in the Primera División, the top level of the Argentine football league system.
Other activities practised at Godoy Cruz are basketball, team handball, field hockey, tennis and volleyball.

History

Godoy Cruz was born as an institution in 1921. It all started when a group of friends, gathered in the "Victoria Bar", decided to found a club, taking advantage of the boom at the time. Thus was born on 1 June 1921, the Club Sportivo Godoy Cruz with the novice presidency of Don Romero Garay.
The club was founded on 21 June 1921 under the name sportivo Godoy Cruz, and changed to its current name on 25 April 1930 after the fusion with Deportivo Bodega Antonio Tomba. In 1959, Godoy Cruz' stadium, the , was constructed. The stadium is nicknamed La Bodega and holds 21,000 people.
Godoy Cruz played in the regional league for several years before reaching the national level. The club won the Mendoza first division championship in 1944, 1947, 1950, 1951, 1954, 1968, and also in 1989 and 1990 that qualified to play in the defunct Torneo del Interior national-level tournament.
Winning the Torneo del Interior in 1994, Godoy Cruz reached the Primera B Nacional that year. After more than ten years in the second division, the club was finally promoted to the Primera División in 2006, after winning the 2005–06 season of the Primera B Nacional, defeating Nueva Chicago in the final.
Twenty-year-old Enzo Pérez scored the first goal by Godoy Cruz in the Argentine Primera, in a 1–1 draw with Belgrano on 9 September 2006.
At the end of the 2006–07 season, Godoy Cruz was relegated from the Primera after losing their promotion/relegation play-off with Huracán. Their stay in the second division was short, as they earned automatic promotion to the first division after finishing runners-up to San Martín de Tucumán during the 2007–08 season.
Godoy Cruz under Omar Asad's management during the 2010 Clausura can be considered as a turning point in the club's success in top-level competition, earning accolades from both fans and sport journalists alike. In that tournament, they achieved the best-ever point total at the time, for a team indirectly affiliated to the Argentine Football Association. These results qualified them for the 2011 Copa Libertadores, their first appearance in this tournament.
The club's Superliga Argentina 2017/18 season, can be considered as the club's finest performance in Primera Division, finishing second place. After an erratic start to the season which lead to the sacking of Lucas Bernardi and his Uruguayan replacement, Mauricio Larriera, Godoy Cruz —placed midtable in league standing at the time— improvised to begin the 2018 half of the season by promoting manager Diego Dabove whom had been coaching the reserve team since 2017. Dabove restructured the starting 11 into an efficient counter-attacking unit. Although the club rarely dominated possession statistics game after game, "El Tomba" amassed 56 points in 27 games played, with in-form striker Santiago García —who converted 17 goals; earning him the Top Goals Scored and Best Forward awards— helping the team set their own club record of 6 consecutive wins during a late season push to keep eventual title winners Boca Juniors unable to clinch the division title until the penultimate matchday. Perhaps in hindsight, Godoy Cruz's early season inconsistency and Matchday 24 draw away at Banfield with a last-gasp 90'+3 goal-line save by Banfield defender Adrián Sporle, were key factors in finishing only two points behind Boca's 58 points.

South American Tournament Qualification

Godoy Cruz is the first club in Mendoza and the fifth indirectly-affiliated club to play in CONMEBOL tournaments.
The club's absolute debut in the 2011 Copa Libertadores Group 8, pitted the club against a trifecta of historic Libertadores champions: 2008 winners LDU Quito from Ecuador, 5-time champions Peñarol of Uruguay, and the record-holding 7-time champions Independiente. The opening match on 17 February 2011 against LDU Quito marked a historic moment; Godoy Cruz had become the second indirectly affiliated side ever to represent Argentina in the Copa Libertadores, however was the first of these to win their debut match. The "Tomba" was eliminated in the group stage.
Later in 2011, the club debut in the 2011 Copa Sudamericana tournament in the Second Stage round, defeating Lanús on an away goal tiebreaker, arriving until Round of 16, losing in Peru to Universitario on penalties on 20 October 2011.
In 2012 he plays his second Copa Libertadores, playing in the group stage against Peñarol, Universidad de Chile and Atlético Nacional The "Express" could not pass another instance more than this phase.
In 2014, Godoy Cruz would play the second Copa Sudamericana, being eliminated before Club Atlético River Plate in parties of ida and return.
In 2017, Tomba will play for the third time in its history of the Copa Libertadores, fruit of the good championship that secured in 2016, and thus achieving the classification of the name of the tournament.
SeasonCompetitionRoundClubHomeAwayAggregate
2011Copa LibertadoresSecond stage LDU Quito2–10–24th
2011Copa LibertadoresSecond stage Peñarol1–31–24th
2011Copa LibertadoresSecond stage Independiente1–13–14th
2011Copa SudamericanaSecond stage Lanús0–02–22–2
2011Copa SudamericanaRound of 16 Universitario1–11–12–2
2012Copa LibertadoresSecond stage Universidad de Chile0–11–53rd
2012Copa LibertadoresSecond stage Atlético Nacional4–42–23rd
2012Copa LibertadoresSecond stage Peñarol1–02–43rd
2014Copa SudamericanaSecond stage River Plate0–10–20–3
2017Copa LibertadoresGroup stage Atlético Mineiro1–11–42nd
2017Copa LibertadoresGroup stage Libertad1–12–12nd
2017Copa LibertadoresGroup stage Sport Boys2–03–12nd
2017Copa LibertadoresRound of 16 Grêmio0–11–21–3
2019Copa LibertadoresGroup stage Olimpia0–01–22nd
2019Copa LibertadoresGroup stage Sporting Cristal2–01–12nd
2019Copa LibertadoresGroup stage Universidad de Concepción1–00–02nd
2019Copa LibertadoresRound of 16 Palmeiras2–20–42–6

Rivalries

Godoy Cruz's classic rival is Andes Talleres Sport Club, a neighborhood classic that has not been played since 1993, thanks to the "Tomba" promotions and the "Azulgrana" soccer debacle.
In addition, Godoy Cruz has provincial classics such as San Martín de Mendoza, Independiente Rivadavia and Gimnasia y Esgrima de Mendoza.
He also has a rivalry with San Martin de San Juan, with whom he plays the Cuyo Classic.

Nickname

Godoy Cruz is nicknamed Tomba and Bodeguero, in reference to the wine selling activity of the Deportivo Bodega Antonio Tomba, one of the merging clubs of 1921. Since the stadium is located near a railway, the club is also called El Expreso.

Players

Current squad

Out on loan

Friendly matches

Godoy Cruz played friendly matches against both domestic clubs and from other countries. A memorable friendly played in 1964, against Santos Football Club, with soccer star Pelé ended in favor of the Brazilian team by a score of 3-2. In 1969, against Universidad de Chile, the "Expreso" claimed a 3-0 victory. Another match in 1990, against Sevilla in which the team from Mendoza claimed victory by a score of 2-1. In 2007, a visiting Godoy Cruz squad were defeated 5-nil by Nacional de Montevideo.
Godoy Cruz also played several friendly matches against national teams, such as Argentina in 1969, Chile in 1970, and Poland in 1977.
A source of historical pride for the team's supporters are two friendly matches won against Argentine giants: in 1965, they defeated Boca Juniors 4–0, and in 1997 they defeated River Plate by the same margin.
Godoy Cruz won the summer 2009 edition of the friendly pentagonal cup known as the "Copa Ciudad de Tandil", after defeating both Chacarita Juniors and Quilmes in penalty shootouts.

Managers

The official club stadium is the Estadio Feliciano Gambarte opened in 1959. It was last used for AFA-sanctioned matches in 2004, hosting Tiro Federal, to a 0–0 draw. AFA applied changes to the "Reglamento General" competition rulebook in 2005, leading to the club's stadium no longer meeting the new standards indicated in Article 74.
The club have since rented the provincial Estadio Malvinas Argentinas for use on matchdays.
A vocal group of fans, supported by a select group of local media personalities, began infrequent campaigns since 2014 to begin renovations to the club stadium, in a bid to gain AFA re-certification. These campaigns have accomplished to this date the repair and repainting of the grandstands, as well as some general refurbishments to the roof and pressbox structures and perimeter fencing of the turf.

Coquimbito Practice Facility

The club owns a 12-hectare "High-Performance Sports Park" in the rural district of Coquimbito, Maipu.
Incorporating hotel-styled player barracks, a multimedia library for team research, press/media rooms, and 11 separate fields —of various dimensions, field, and turf types— it is one of the largest practice facilities of this type in Argentina outside of Buenos Aires.

Honours

National