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Superclásico

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El Superclásico


Top: Boca vs River at La Bombonera
Below: River vs Boca at El Monumental
City or region Buenos Aires, Argentina
First contested 24 August 1913
Teams involved Boca Juniors, River Plate
Most wins Boca Juniors (118 wins)
Most player appearances Reinaldo Merlo (42 matches)

Superclásico is the name used to describe the football match in Argentina between Buenos Aires rivals Boca Juniors and River Plate. It derives from the Spanish usage of "clásico" to mean derby, with the prefix "super" used as the two clubs are the most popular and successful clubs in Argentine football. According to some statistics, commandeering more than 70% of all Argentine football fans between them,[1][dead link] with Boca claiming 40% and River 32%.[2]

The Superclásico is known worldwide as one of the fiercest and most important derbies.[3] In April 2004, the English newspaper The Observer put the Superclásico at the top of their list of "50 sporting things you must do before you die", saying that "Derby day in Buenos Aires makes the Old Firm game look like a primary school kick-about."[4]

Contents

[edit] Origins and background

The two clubs both have origins in La Boca, the working class dockland area of Buenos Aires, with River being founded in 1901 and Boca in 1905. However, River moved to the affluent district of Núñez in the north of the city in 1925. Since then Boca Juniors has been known as the club of Argentina's working class or the peoples club, with many Boca fans coming from the local Italian immigrant community. By contrast, River Plate became known by the nickname, Los Millonarios (The Millionaires), with a supposedly upper-class support base.[3] Boca fans meanwhile are known as Xeneizes (Genoese).[2] Both clubs do though have supporters from all social classes.[2]

The first ever recorded Superclásico was a friendly played on 2 August 1908, when Boca prevailed 2-1.

The first official match was played on 24 August 1913, with River winning 2-1.[5]

The Superclásico is particularly noted for the passion of the fans, with what the BBC describe as "a sea of colourful flowing banners, screams and roars, chanting, dancing and never-ending fireworks."[3] Both sets of supporters sing passionate chants aimed at their rivals, often based on popular Argentine rock band tunes. Each stadium, Boca's La Bombonera and River's El Monumental are known to bounce with the simultaneous jumping of the fans. At times the matches have been known to end in fights between the violent factions on both sides or with the police.[6][dead link]

Boca fans refer to River supporters as gallinas (chickens) claiming the lack of stomach of River fans and players. River fans call their Boca rivals los chanchitos (little pigs) because their stadium is located in a poorer Boca area and they claim that it smells most of the time[3] and bosteros (manure collectors) a reference to the smell of the sewers and the polluted river in La Boca.[2] Another infamous slur, coined in the late 1990s over remarks of Boca's forward Diego Latorre, is to brand Boca Juniors as "The Cabaret", due to the alleged aspiration of some players to steal the limelight.[7]

The rivalry between the two clubs can also affect players, particularly those who are transferred between the two clubs. Cataldo Spitale was the first to make the change, when he left Boca to sign for River in 1933. Oscar Ruggeri, who moved to River from Boca in 1985 said, "It's not easy I can tell you. One side looks on you as a traitor and the other doesn't really trust you. You need time to adapt and a lot of character to win people over." Some players have gone so far as to state that they would not play for the other club such as River's Uruguayan player Enzo Francescoli while Diego Maradona during his time playing for Argentinos Juniors, refused to even contemplate a move to El Monumental, stating that his dream was to play for Boca.[8]

[edit] Puerta 12 tragedy

On 23 June 1968 in El Monumental after a match between the two teams 71 fans were killed in a crush at gate 12 and 150 fans injured. The disaster was the worst football related incident in the history of Argentine football and the majority of the dead were teenagers and young adults. The average age of the victims was 19.

There are various claims as to what exactly happened that day. Some claim that the disaster happened after Boca Juniors fans threw burning River flags from the upper tiers of the stadium, causing a stampede of their own fans in the lower tier.[9]

Others claim that it happened after River fans arrived at the Boca section, causing the stampede of the visiting fans. Yet others claim that gate 12 was locked, or would not open at the time, and that the fans at the back did not hear the ones at the front telling them to stop coming out. William Kent, River's former president, claimed that the police were the culprits, as they began repressing Boca fans after they had thrown urine at them from the stands. Some witnesses claim that the turnstiles to the exit were blocked by a huge iron pole.[10]

After three years of investigation a government enquiry found no-one guilty, much to the disappointment of the families of the victims. Since the tragedy, the gates at El Monumental have been identified by letters instead of numbers.[11]

At the end of the 1968 season the 68 football clubs in the Argentine Football Association collected 100,000 pesos for the families of the deceased.

[edit] Statistics

[edit] Head to Head

Match record as of April 19, 2009

Championship Played Boca Draws River
National League 184 67 56 61
Amateur Matches 12 3 4 5
International Competitions 24 10 8 6
Friendlies & other 103 38 33 32
Total 323 118 101 104
Source:statistics at RSSSF and ESPN Deportes statistics

[edit] Most appearances

Player Games Club
Reinaldo Merlo 42 River
Hugo Gatti 38 both
Silvio Marzolini 37 Boca
Ángel Labruna 35 River
Roberto Mouzo 35 Boca
Source: ESPN Deportes statistics

[edit] Top scorers

Player Goals Club
Ángel Labruna 16 River
Oscar Más 12 River
Paulo Valentim 10 Boca
Carlos Manuel Morete 9 River
Bernabé Ferreyra 8 River
Hugo Alberto Curioni 7 Boca
Martín Palermo* 7 Boca
Osvaldo Potente 7 Boca
Diego Latorre 6 Boca
Alfredo Rojas 6 Boca
Francisco Varallo 6 Boca
Norberto Alonso 6 River
Asterisk denotes player is still active

[edit] Biggest wins

Result Date
River 5-1 Boca 19 October 1941
River 4-0 Boca 19 July 1942
River 0-4 Boca 17 August 1955
Boca 5-1 River 19 May 1959
River 1-5 Boca 7 March 1982
Source: ESPN Deportes statistics

[edit] Highest scoring games

Result Date
River 5-4 Boca 15 October 1972
River 5-3 Boca 24 November 1957
Boca 5-2 River 27 June 1973
Boca 5-2 River 3 February 1974
Boca 2-5 River 2 March 1980
Source: ESPN Deportes statistics

[edit] Players to have played for both clubs

Please note - this is a non-exhaustive list of players to have played for both clubs

[edit] River's greatest moments

[edit] Boca's greatest moments

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Argentine football statistics" (PDF). consultoraequis.com. http://www.consultoraequis.com/Estudios_PDF/futbol_marzo06_.pdf. Retrieved on 2009-01-22. 
  2. ^ a b c d "La Doce, Los Borrac del Tablon". footballderbies.com. http://www.footballderbies.com/fans/index.php?id=34. Retrieved on 2009-01-22. 
  3. ^ a b c d "Boca Juniors v River Plate". bbc.co.uk. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sportacademy/hi/sa/football/features/newsid_2297000/2297495.stm. Retrieved on 2009-01-22. 
  4. ^ Hamilton, Gavin (4 April 2004). "50 sporting things you must do before you die". The Observer. http://observer.guardian.co.uk/osm/story/0,6903,1182710,00.html. Retrieved on 2009-01-22. 
  5. ^ Periódico para todos
  6. ^ "Marca America article about the violence" (in Spanish). marca.com. http://www.marca.com/marca_america/argentina/clausura01/violencia.html. Retrieved on 2009-01-22. 
  7. ^ Latorre comparó al plantel de Boca con un cabaret (Spanish)
  8. ^ "Crossing the Superclasico divide". FIFA. 17 October 2008. http://www.fifa.com/worldfootball/clubfootball/news/newsid=916996.html. Retrieved on 2009-01-22. 
  9. ^ "disasters". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. 18 October 1996. http://www.rsssf.com/rssbest/disasters.html. Retrieved on 2009-01-22. 
  10. ^ Prieto, Carlos; Andres Burg (27 June 2000). "Puerta 12: Memorias del horror" (in Spanish). Clarin. http://www.clarin.com/diario/2000/06/27/d-04201.htm. Retrieved on 2009-01-22. 
  11. ^ Prieto, Carlos (7 October 2006). "Puerta 12, horror de película" (in Spanish). Clarin. http://www.clarin.com/diario/2006/10/07/deportes/d-08005.htm. Retrieved on 2009-01-22. 
  12. ^ Scandolo, Ramiro (22 December 2006). ""Ganamos la final más importante"" (in Spanish). Olé. http://www.ole.clarin.com/notas/2006/12/22/01332343.html. Retrieved on 2009-01-23. 

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