Real Oviedo
Full nameReal Oviedo Femenino
FoundedJanuary 24, 1980 (1980-01-24)
GroundEstadio Díaz Vega, Oviedo
Capacity5,000
ChairmanJosé Moro
ManagerPedro Arboleya
LeagueSegunda Federación
2022–2314th in Primera Federación (relegated)

Real Oviedo Femenino, officially named as Oviedo Moderno Club de Fútbol, is a Spanish women's football club based in Oviedo, Asturias. It acts as the women's section of Real Oviedo.

History

Logo of the club from 2001 to 2017.

Founded in 1980 as México-La Corredoria CF to play a friendly match in the local midsummer celebration, the team was officially registered two years later as Meseico-La Corredoria CF.[1] It was subsequently renamed CFF Tradehi (1984) and Peña Azul Oviedo (1996) before taking the name of Oviedo Moderno CF in 2001.

In 1990 Tradehi was promoted to the 8-teams División de Honor, the top national category back then, and in 2001 Oviedo Moderno was one of the eleven founding members of the unified premier league.[2] Always a bottom half team, its best result in the nine seasons it has spent in the new championship was an eighth place in 2003. The team was relegated in 2008 and 2011,[3] and spent the two next seasons Segunda División.[4] In the first one, Oviedo Moderno topped its group but lost to CD Femarguín in the promotion play-offs.[5]

In the 2012–13 season, Oviedo Moderno won again its group but was beaten by Granada CF in its second attempt to promote. However, the club promoted to Primera División due to the existence of a vacant berth in the league.

Oviedo Moderno remained in the top tier three more seasons before its relegation to Segunda División in 2016.

On 28 August 2017, Oviedo Moderno signed an agreement with local men's club Real Oviedo for using their name and their blue and white colors, instead of the club's black and green, since the 2017–18 season, with the aim to be completely integrated into the structure of the club for the 2018–19 season onwards.[6]

Season to season

Estadio Manuel Díaz Vega, main stadium of the club until 2019.
Season League Cup
DivPosPWDLFAPts
CFF Tradehi
1990–918th14121117454
1991–921st10721431316 QF
1992–935th1233622439 R16
1993–948th175111174616 QF
1994–958th184311265115
1995–969th15011413631
Peña Azul Oviedo
1996–976th206410294822
1997–989th225611224721
1998–996th206212336120
1999–007th2611213576735
2000–017th2612212496338
Oviedo Moderno CF
2001–0210th203314216512 R1
2002–038th225413215218 R1
2003–0411th265516256220
2004–0510th266515275723
2005–0611th246414416022
2006–0711th265714295822
2007–0813th264220206814
2008–091st2520321071763
W220042
2009–1016th2611510565338
2010–1119th2811510374238
2011–121st262501116775
L100112
2012–131st2624111201073
L412132
2013–1413th3061212304130
2014–1510th308814356132
2015–1615th302523217811
2016–171st262240108970
L201116
Real Oviedo
2017–181st262501113775
L210112
2018–192nd2621321062566
2019–202ªP9th22949373731

Titles

Invitational

References

  1. Oviedo Moderno was created to take part in a festivity. Diario AS
  2. Superliga results and table Archived 2013-01-04 at the Wayback Machine in futbolme.com
  3. Oviedo Moderno loses the category in Valencia. La Nueva España
  4. 2011-12 Segunda División results and tables in soccerway.com
  5. Oviedo Moderno won't be promoted. Magazine Oviedista
  6. "El Oviedo Moderno se convierte en Real Oviedo Femenino" [Oviedo Moderno becomes Real Oviedo Femenino] (in Spanish). Oviedo Moderno. 28 August 2017. Retrieved 28 August 2017.
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