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Primera D Metropolitana





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(Redirected from Primera D)
 


The Primera D was one of two leagues that form the fifth division of the Argentine football league system. Made up of 11 clubs from Buenos Aires Province, the league is the only one that remains amateur.[2] The other league at level five is the Torneo Federal C, where teams from regional leagues take part.

Primera D
Founded1950 [1]
Folded2023; 1 year ago (2023)
Country Argentina
ConfederationCONMEBOL
Number of teams11 (2023)
Level on pyramid5
PromotiontoPrimera C
RelegationtoDisaffiliation for one season
Domestic cup(s)Copa Argentina
Last championsCentro Español
(2023)
Most championships
  • Ferrocarril Midland
  • Liniers
  • Sacachispas
  • (3 titles each)
  • TV partnersDirecTV Sports

    It was created in 1950 under the name "Tercera de Ascenso" ("third level of promotion").[1] The first champion was Liniers. In 1962 the tournament changed its name to "Primera de Aficionados", which lasted to 1974, when it was called "Primera D", which has remained to date.[3]

    Since the restructuring of the league system in 1986, the division became the fifth category of Argentine football (lower than Primera División, Primera B Nacional, Primera B Metropolitana and Primera C).[4]

    In 2023 its last edition was held because from 2024, the category was unified with the Primera C in a single tournament.[5]

    Format

    edit

    The winners of Primera D gain automatic promotion to Primera C. The club finishing in 2nd to 9th place behind enter a playoff series; the winner of which faces the club finishing second bottom in Primera C in a promotion/relegation playoff.

    The team that finishes bottom of Primera D Metropolitana faces relegation. However, because Primera D Metropolitana is the lowest league in the Argentine football system relegation this means that the relegated team will not participate in the league system the following season.

    List of Champions

    edit

    Tournament names

    Ed. Season Champion Runner-up
    1 1950 Liniers (1) Brown (A)
    1951 [note 1]
    (No championship held)
    2 1952 Flandria (1) J. J. de Urquiza
    3 1953 Deportivo Riestra (1) Juventud de Bernal
    4 1954 Sacachispas (1) Juventud de Bernal
    5 1955 Deportivo Morón (1) Juventud de Bernal
    6 1956 Almirante Brown (1) Juventud de Bernal
    7 1957 Leandro N. Alem (1) Defensores de Cambaceres
    8 1958 Deportivo Español (1) Defensores de Cambaceres
    9 1959 Defensores de Cambaceres (1) Sportivo Italiano
    10 1960 Sportivo Italiano (1) Defensores de Almagro
    11 1961 Villa Dálmine (1) Arsenal
    12 1962 Arsenal (1) Estudiantes (BA)
    13 1963 Luján (1) Estudiantes (BA)
    14 1964 Arsenal (Llavallol) (1) Ituzaingó
    15 1965 General Mitre (Sarandí) (1) [note 2] Piraña
    16 1966 Luz y Fuerza (1) [note 3] Ferrocarril Midland
    17 1967 Macabi (1) [note 4] Central Argentino
    18 1968 Ferrocarril Midland (1) Sportivo Barracas
    19 1969 Defensores Unidos (1) Sportivo Barracas
    20 1970 Defensores de Almagro (1) Sportivo Barracas
    21 1971 Acassuso (1) Central Argentino
    22 1972 Deportivo Armenio (1) Liniers
    23 1973 Luján (2) Villa San Carlos
    24 1974 Barracas Central (1) Victoriano Arenas
    25 1975 Tristán Suarez (1) Deportivo Merlo
    26 1976 Defensores de Cambaceres (2) Berazategui
    27 1977 General Lamadrid (1) Ferrocarril Midland
    28 1978 Piraña (1) J. J. de Urquiza
    29 1979 San Miguel (1) Brown (A)
    30 1980 Brown (A) (1) Juventud Unida
    31 1981 Barracas Central (2) Muñiz
    32 1982 Defensa y Justicia (1) Ituzaingó
    33 1983 San Martín (B) (1) Leandro N. Alem
    34 1984 Dock Sud (1) Argentino (Merlo)
    35 1985 Argentino (Merlo) (1) Deportivo Laferrere
    36 1986–87 Muñiz (1) Brown (A)
    37 1987–88 Lugano (1) Puerto Nuevo
    38 1988–89 Ferrocarril Midland (2) Liniers
    39 1989–90 Liniers (2) Deportivo Paraguayo
    40 1990–91 Victoriano Arenas (1) Puerto Nuevo
    41 1991–92 Deportivo Paraguayo (1) Juventud Unida
    42 1992–93 Villa San Carlos (1) Acassuso
    43 1993–94 Puerto Nuevo Cañuelas
    44 1994–95 J. J. de Urquiza Victoriano Arenas
    45 1995–96 Central Ballester (1) San Martín (B)
    46 1996–97 Claypole (1) Comunicaciones
    47 1997–98 Juventud Unida (1) Sacachispas
    48 1998–99 Argentino (Merlo) (2) Victoriano Arenas
    49 1999–00 Sacachispas (2) Fénix
    50 2000–01 Acassuso (2) Villa San Carlos
    51 2001–02 Villa San Carlos (2) Sacachispas
    52 2002–03 Sacachispas (3) Victoriano Arenas
    53 2003–04 Sportivo Barracas (1) Fénix
    54 2004–05 Fénix (1) Liniers
    55 2005–06 Ituzaingó (1) Liniers
    56 2006–07 Leandro N. Alem (2) Berazategui
    57 2007–08 Defensores Unidos (2) Berazategui
    58 2008–09 Ferrocarril Midland (3) Deportivo Riestra
    59 2009–10 UAI Urquiza (1) San Martín (B)
    60 2010–11 Dock Sud (2) Atlas
    61 2011–12 Fénix (2) Argentino (Q)
    62 2012–13 Argentino (Q) (1) Deportivo Riestra
    63 2013–14 Deportivo Riestra (1) San Martín (B)
    64 2014 [note 5] [note 5]
    65 2015 Sportivo Barracas (2) Atlas
    66 2016 El Porvenir (1) Ituzaingó
    67 2016–17 Ituzaingó (2) Leandro N. Alem
    68 2017–18 Victoriano Arenas (2) Argentino (Merlo)
    69 2018–19 Argentino (Merlo) (3) Liniers
    70 2019–20
    (Abandoned because of the COVID-19 pandemic in Argentina) [note 6]
    71 2020 Claypole (2) Atlas
    72 2021 Liniers (3) Puerto Nuevo
    73 2022 Yupanqui (1) Centro Español
    74 2023 Centro Español (1) Argentino (R)
    The division was unified with the Primera C

    Titles by club

    edit
    Club Titles Years won
    Argentino (Merlo) 3 1985, 1998–99, 2018–19
    Ferrocarril Midland 3 1968, 1988–89, 2008–09
    Liniers 3 1950, 1989–90, 2021
    Sacachispas 3 1954, 1999–00, 2002–03
    Deportivo Riestra 2 1953, 2013–14
    Acassuso 2 1971, 2000–01
    Barracas Central 2 1974, 1981
    Claypole 2 1996–97, 2020
    Defensores de Cambaceres 2 1959, 1976
    Defensores Unidos 2 1969, 2007–08
    Dock Sud 2 1984, 2010–11
    Fénix 2 2004–05, 2011–12
    Ituzaingó 2 2005–06, 2016–17
    Leandro N. Alem 2 1957, 2006–07
    Luján 2 1963, 1973
    Sportivo Barracas 2 2003–04, 2015
    Victoriano Arenas 2 1990–91, 2017–18
    Villa San Carlos 2 1992–93, 2001–02
    Almirante Brown 1 1956
    Argentino (Q) 1 2012–13
    Arsenal (Llavallol) 1 1964
    Arsenal (Sarandí) 1 1962
    Brown (A) 1 1980
    Central Ballester 1 1995–96
    Centro Español 1 2023
    Defensa y Justicia 1 1982
    Defensores de Almagro 1 1970
    Deportivo Armenio 1 1972
    Deportivo Español 1 1958
    Deportivo Paraguayo 1 1991–92
    Deportivo Morón 1 1955
    El Porvenir 1 2016
    Flandria 1 1952
    General Lamadrid 1 1977
    General Mitre 1 1965
    J. J. de Urquiza 1 1994–95
    Juventud Unida 1 1997–98
    Lugano 1 1987–88
    Luz y Fuerza 1 1966
    Macabi 1 1967
    Muñiz 1 1986–87
    Piraña 1 1978
    Puerto Nuevo 1 1993–94
    San Martín (B) 1 1983
    San Miguel 1 1979
    Sportivo Italiano 1 1960
    Tristán Suárez 1 1975
    UAI Urquiza 1 2009–10
    Villa Dálmine 1 1961
    Yupanqui 1 2022

    Notes

    edit
    1. ^ A special tournament was played, where team from several categories competed together. The champion was Tiro Federal, promoting to Primera División B.
  • ^ Affiliated to AFA in 1963, remaining in the Association until 1965.[6]
  • ^ The football team from the "Luz y Fuerza" trade union was located in Villa Udaondo[7] and affiliated to AFA in 1964 under the name "Instituto Cultural y Deportivo Luz y Fuerza".[8]
  • ^ The team from the Jewish organization of Argentina, got affiliated to AFA in 1953. The team disaffiliated in 1968, just one year after promoting to Primera C.[9]
  • ^ a b At the end of the season no champion was crowned. Three teams (Cañuelas, San Martín de Burzaco and San Miguel were promoted while no teams were disaffiliated.
  • ^ On 28 April 2020, AFA decided to abandon the competition and declare the season finished. All official competitions had been suspended on 17 March.[10]
  • References

    edit
    1. ^ a b Campeones de la Cuarta División, AFA website (Archive, 2013-08-13)
  • ^ Marcha atrás en el Ascenso: no se juega la fecha de la B Metropolitana y la Primera C, Clarín, 4 Mar 2017
  • ^ Argentina fourth level champions - RSSSF
  • ^ Campeones de la Quinta División (1986-), AFA website (Archive, 2013-08-13)
  • ^ _la AFA confirmó la unificación de la Primera C y la D
  • ^ "Desafiliados: General Mitre"
  • ^ Argentina - Primera C AFA 1971 by José Carluccio on Historia y Fútbol
  • ^ "Desafiliados: Luz y Fuerza", Piel de Ascenso, 14 Aug 2013
  • ^ "Querido ascenso - El año inolvidable de Macabi" by Guillermo Tagliaferri, Clarín, 10 Nov 2011
  • ^ Oficial: suspendido el fútbol argentino por el coronavirus by Fede González on As, 17 March 2020
  • edit

    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Primera_D_Metropolitana&oldid=1215138106"
     



    Last edited on 23 March 2024, at 10:16  





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    This page was last edited on 23 March 2024, at 10:16 (UTC).

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