Deportivo Pereira is a professional Colombian football team based in Pereira, that currently plays in the Categoría Primera A. They play their home games at the Hernán Ramírez Villegas stadium.

Deportivo Pereira
Full nameDeportivo Pereira F.C. S.A.[1]
Nickname(s)
Los Matecañas (The Matecañas)
El Grande Matecaña (The Matecaña Great)
La Furia Matecaña (The Matecaña Fury)
Aurirrojo (Yellow-and-Red)
El Lobo (The Wolf)
Founded12 February 1944; 80 years ago (1944-02-12)
GroundEstadio Hernán Ramírez Villegas
Capacity30,297
ChairmanÁlvaro López Bedoya
ManagerLuis Fernando Suárez
LeagueCategoría Primera A
2023Primera A, 15th of 20
Websitehttps://deportivopereira.com.co/

History

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Early years

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While there are several amateur teams from the Risaralda Department in the Third Division (Primera C), Pereira is the department's only professional team. Deportivo Pereira was founded on 12 February 1944 by Pedro Patiño 'Peruco', Luis Carlos Marulanda, Rogelio Díaz 'Control', Faustino Chiquito y Gabriel Cardona Rojas, aiming to end the rivalry between the local clubs Deportivo Otún and Vidriocol. On 12 March 1944 they played their first game, facing Guadalajara de Buga at Estadio Alberto Mora Mora in Pereira.[2]

Deportivo Pereira made its First Division debut (Primera A) in the 1949 season, replacing Universidad, a football club founded in Bogotá that had played its previous season in the Pearl of the Otún River, nickname of the city of Pereira, but moved back to Bogotá for that season. Precisely, the team played its first game against that same team, losing 2–1. The team's first goal was scored by Ecuadorian player Humberto Suárez. Its first victory was against Atlético Bucaramanga, with a final score of 2–1 and goals scored by Omar Barahona and José “Mico” Zapata. A second victory was obtained against Bucaramanga, this time away from home and by a score of 4–3. The team's first victory playing at home was on 9 October 1949, beating Huracán de Medellín 4–1, with goals scored by Carmelo Enrique Colombo, José "Mico" Zapata, Inocencio Paz Lasso "Cencio" and an own goal from Huracan's player Santos Isaza. The first top scorer of the "Matecaña" (another of Pereira's nicknames) team was the Colombian Inocencio Paz Lasso "Cencio", with 11 goals. The team finished the season in last place with only 14 points.

The team's most successful campaigns were in 1952, 1962, 1966, and 1974, in which the team placed third.[3] However the most remembered team was the one that competed in the 1982 season which was led by Gilberto Osorio. Their roster included Óscar Héctor Quintabani, "Ratón" Echeverri, Víctor Longo, Henry Viáfara, Gilberto Cabrera, Farid Perchy, Sergio Cierra, Benjamin "Mincho" Cardona, Eduardo Emilio Vilarete, Jairo "Chiqui" Aguirre, and as substitutes goalkeeper Reynel Ruiz, midfielders Manzi and Ponciano Castro and strikers Abel Augusto Lobatón, Hernán "Pistolero" Villa and Iván Darío "Chumi" Castañeda. The team finished the tournament in fourth place.[4]

Deportivo Pereira also gained recognition for the large number of Paraguayan players that have joined its ranks starting from its early years, beginning with the arrival of player and manager César López Fretes, who managed the team for seven seasons between 1964 and 1970. The first Paraguayan in the squad was striker Carmelo Enrique Colombo who arrived in 1949, and from that moment onwards over 100 Paraguayan footballers have played for Deportivo Pereira throughout its history. By 1951, 10 out of the 11 starting players were Paraguayans who had participated in the 1950 FIFA World Cup with their national team, including Enrique Ávalos, Marcelino Vargas, and López Fretes himself. Other outstanding Paraguayan players at Deportivo Pereira were Casimiro Ávalos, who is the club's all-time top scorer with 141 goals, Ángel Chávez who played 276 matches with the team, Apolinar Paniagua, Alcides Sossa and Benicio Ferreira, among several others who even established their permanent residency in the city.[5]

First relegation and return to Primera A

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In 1991, Colombia's Dimayor created the second tier tournament Categoría Primera B, granting its champion the chance to promote to the first division (which became Categoría Primera A) and replace the last-placed team from the league, which would be demoted to the second division. In 1995, the team got a decent sixth place that placed it comfortably far from the second tier. However, during the 1997 Adecuación tournament, the team was relegated to Primera B for the first time after a 3–2 win for Deportivo Unicosta against Millonarios.[6]

Deportivo Pereira played in the second tier for three seasons between 1998 and 2000, placing as runners-up in 1998 behind Deportivo Pasto and third the following year.[7] In 2000 they eventually won the Primera B tournament and returned to the top tier.[8] In that season they were led by coach Walter Aristizábal and players such as Rafael Castillo, Guillermo Berrío, Hernán Darío Cardona, Daniel Vélez and Jairo Serna.

Ups and downs and second relegation

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Since their return to the top flight for the 2001 season, Deportivo Pereira reached the semi-finals of the Primera A tournament five times: in the 2003 Apertura, 2005 Finalización, 2006 Apertura, 2008 Finalización, and 2009 Finalización. The best campaign of those was the 2008 one, in which the team managed by Luis Fernando Suárez advanced to the semi-finals in sixth place with 28 points and ended missing out on the final after placing second in their group behind the eventual champions América de Cali. In the final table of that tournament, Deportivo Pereira placed fourth, behind América, runners-up Independiente Medellín, and Deportes Tolima.[4]

In spite of those good campaigns, Pereira were still troubled with relegation: in 2007, the team finished second to last in the relegation table and had to play a relegation playoff against the 2007 Primera B runners-up Academia. Deportivo Pereira were able to keep their place in Primera A, beating Academia 4–2 on aggregate thanks to striker Óscar Restrepo. The following year, they only avoided relegation on the last day of the regular season, defeating Atlético Bucaramanga 3–0 and sending them to the second tier instead, and in 2009 they had to play the relegation playoff again, beating Bucaramanga 5–3 on aggregate.[9]

A democratization process of the club was started by the end of 2008. After several months of legal processes, the club was confirmed by the División Mayor del Fútbol Colombiano (Dimayor) and the Colombian Football Federation as Deportivo Pereira S.A., led by Luis Fernando Osorio Acevedo. However in September 2010 it returned to its previous owners, the López Bedoya family, as they argued that Osorio had failed to pay the agreed fee for their shares.[10]

In the 2010 Finalización tournament, Deportivo Pereira failed to win a single game in the first stage, placing second-from-bottom with nine draws and nine losses,[11] and the situation did not improve in the immediately following tournament, the 2011 Apertura, in which they only won one game out of 18 and placed last,[12] that only victory being in the derby against Once Caldas where they broke a record 34-game winless streak.[13] Although they had chances to qualify for the final stages of the 2011 Finalización tournament, those previous poor campaigns took their toll in the relegation table and Deportivo Pereira were relegated to Primera B for the second time on 5 November 2011 by losing 1–0 against Deportes Tolima in Ibagué.[14]

Second spell in Primera B and administrative crisis

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In the second tournament of the 2012 Primera B season, and under the leadership of manager Octavio Zambrano, Deportivo Pereira achieved a points record with a total of 43 points out of 54 possible obtained in a single season, making it the first team to have achieved this number in a single campaign.[15] However, the club missed the chance to return to the top flight in the semi-finals.

On 29 October 2013, Coldeportes announced in a statement that it was withdrawing the sporting license (reconocimiento deportivo) of the Social, Sports and Cultural Corporation of Pereira (Corpereira), due to the recurrence of non-compliance with their labor obligations, reason for which Deportivo Pereira could not carry out any sports-related activity while said sanction was not lifted. Coldeportes had renewed the club's license after it entered bankruptcy law and committed to pay its debts within the deadlines set by law. However, when carrying out inspection and control, the government entity again found failures in the payment of salaries, social security and parafiscal contributions, which compelled them to withdraw Pereira's sporting license.[16] Although attempts to create another team to represent the city due to Deportivo Pereira's administrative issues and potential dissolution were made,[17] in November the club was able to pay nearly COP 180 million to its creditors to have its sanction lifted by Coldeportes.[18] With their sporting license reinstated, Pereira were eventually able to compete in the 2014 season, in which they again failed to earn promotion.

In early 2015, Deportivo Pereira along with other seven traditional teams took part in a special promotion tournament in Bogotá, in which two teams would be promoted to the top flight which expanded to 20 teams starting from that season. However, they again failed to promote as they placed last in their group which was won by Cortuluá. In the Primera B tournament itself, they qualified for the semi-finals in second place with 60 points but failed to advance to the finals and earn promotion as they ended in second place of their group behind Fortaleza.

In 2016, Deportivo Pereira placed first in the regular stage of the Primera B tournament with 70 points in 32 matches, 22 wins, 4 draws and 6 losses, scoring 58 goals and conceding 28, for a 73% performance. In this tournament they got their biggest win in the second tier, thrashing Atlético F.C. 7–2 on 1 August.[19] In the semi-finals, they played in Group A against Leones, Tigres, and Bogotá. This was the closest Deportivo Pereira were to clinch promotion, as they were defeating Leones 2–1 on the last round of the semi-finals and winning their group. However, a last-minute equalizer by the team from Itagüí ended up dashing Pereira's promotion hopes since Tigres defeated Bogotá to win the group as well as promotion to Primera A.[20]

Promotion, first league title and Copa Libertadores debut

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Deportivo Pereira stayed in the second tier until the 2019 season in which they won both of the season's short tournaments and topped the aggregate table with 90 points, defeating Cortuluá in the Torneo Apertura finals and Boyacá Chicó in the Finalización finals to clinch their second Primera B title as well as direct promotion to the top flight.[21]

Since their return to Primera A for the 2020 season, Deportivo Pereira have been able to avoid relegation consistently while also making some deep campaigns, losing the final of the Liguilla tournament to Millonarios in 2020. In 2021, and managed by their former player Alexis Márquez, Deportivo Pereira made history by qualifying for the finals of the Copa Colombia after beating Deportes Tolima in the semi-finals.[22] There they faced Atlético Nacional, losing 5–1 on aggregate.[23]

Under the managerial direction of Alejandro Restrepo, who replaced Alexis Márquez for the 2022 Finalización tournament, Deportivo Pereira qualified for their first Primera A championship final. The Matecañas, backed by the scoring prowess of striker Leonardo Castro as well as a strong campaign away from Pereira that saw them become the tournament's best away side by winning in Montería, Cali, Ibagué, Bogotá, and Bucaramanga during the first stage of the tournament,[24] advanced to the semi-finals in fifth place with 32 points. For the semi-finals, they were drawn in Group A along with Bogotá sides Santa Fe and Millonarios as well as Junior from Barranquilla, advancing to their first final in the Colombian first division after a 2–0 win over Junior in Barranquilla and a 1–1 draw in the Bogotá derby on the last matchday of the semi-finals which allowed them to win Group A with 12 points and face Independiente Medellín in the tournament's final series.[25] After a 1–1 draw in the first leg and a scoreless draw in the return leg played in Pereira, the Matecañas defeated Independiente Medellín 4–3 on a penalty shootout to claim their first Primera A title, as well as qualification for their first Copa Libertadores.[26]

Deportivo Pereira took part in the Copa Libertadores for the first time in 2023, being drawn into Group F along with Argentine side Boca Juniors, Colo-Colo from Chile, and Monagas from Venezuela. Their first match in the competition was a 1–1 draw at home with Colo-Colo, and they later went on to narrowly lose to Boca Juniors in Buenos Aires. A couple of wins in their remaining matches at home against Monagas and Boca Juniors as well as another draw with Colo-Colo in Santiago were enough for Pereira to advance out of the group in second place with 8 points, facing Ecuadorian side Independiente del Valle in the round of 16.[27] The first leg, hosted by Pereira, ended with a 1–0 win for the Colombian side, whilst in the return leg played in Quito the Matecaña side drew 1–1 to advance to the quarter-finals of the competition.[28] In that round they faced Brazilian side Palmeiras, losing 4–0 in the first leg played at home. Pereira ended their maiden Copa Libertadores participation with a scoreless draw at Allianz Parque in São Paulo in the second leg.[29]

Stadium

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Deportivo Pereira play their home matches at Estadio Hernán Ramírez Villegas, with a capacity of 30,297 and opened in 1971. From their foundation in 1944 to 1971, they played their home matches at Estadio Alberto Mora Mora also located in Pereira, in its Kennedy neighborhood to the east of the city. This stadium became known as El Fortín de Libaré ("Libaré's little fort") due to the strength that Deportivo Pereira came to acquire playing there, to the extent that visiting teams considered a draw there as a very good result.[30]

Honours

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Domestic

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Performance in CONMEBOL competitions

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2023: Quarter-finals

Players

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Current squad

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As of 19 August 2024

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK   URU Salvador Ichazo
3 DF   COL Sebastián Urrea
3 DF   COL José Moya
5 MF   COL Jorge Bermúdez
7 MF   COL Darwin Quintero
8 MF   COL Sebastián Acosta
10 MF   COL Yesus Cabrera
11 FW   COL Faber Gil
12 GK   COL Franklin Mosquera
13 MF   COL Yuber Quiñones
14 MF   COL Juan David Ríos
15 DF   COL Santiago Aguilar
16 DF   COL Eber Moreno (on loan from América de Cali)
19 FW   ARG Gonzalo Lencina
20 FW   COL Fernando Uribe
21 DF   COL Walmer Pacheco
No. Pos. Nation Player
22 DF   COL Nicolás Giraldo
24 DF   COL Jean Pestaña
25 MF   COL Jhonny Vásquez (captain)
26 DF   COL Yeison Suárez (on loan from Bogotá F.C.)
28 MF   COL Jhonny Jordán
29 MF   COL Ederson Moreno
30 FW   COL Alejandro Álvarez
31 MF   COL Luis González
32 FW   COL Javier Mena
33 GK   COL Neyder Aragón
34 MF   COL Julián Bazán
35 MF   COL Nicolás Rengifo
37 FW   COL Miguel Palacios
38 FW   LBN Samy Merheg
77 FW   COL Alejandro Piedrahita
92 MF   COL Andrés Ibargüen

Out on loan

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Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player

World Cup players

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The following players were chosen to represent their country at the FIFA World Cup while contracted to Deportivo Pereira.

Notable players

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Club captains

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Notable fans

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Managers

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Name Starting Ending Nationality
Luis Fernando Suárez 1994 1995   Colombian
Humberto Ortiz Echavarría 1996 1997   Colombian
Polaco Escobar 1998 1998   Colombian
José Alberto Suárez 1999 1999   Colombian
Juan Eugenio Jiménez 1999 1999   Colombian
Walter Aristizabal 2000 2001   Colombian
Carlos Restrepo Isaza 2002 2002   Colombian
Walter Aristizabal 2003 2003   Colombian
Carlos Navarrete Zuleta October-06 March-07   Colombian
Hugo Castaño March-07 August-07   Colombian
Hugo Gallego August-07 December-07   Colombian
Edgar Ospina January-08 May-08   Colombian
Luis Fernando Suárez May-08 December-08   Colombian
Pedro Sarmiento January-09 May-09   Colombian
Adrián Magnoli (e) May-09 June-09   Argentinian
  Colombian
Oscar Héctor Quintabani June-09 May-10   Argentinian
  Colombian
Walter Aristizábal May-10 September-10   Colombian
Einar Angulo October-10 April-11   Colombian
Julio Comesaña April-11 September-11   Uruguayan
Alfredo Araujo September-11 December-11   Colombian
Octavio Zambrano January-12 April-13   Ecuadorian
Jesús Barrios April-13 March-14   Colombian
Jairo Aguirre April-14 May-14   Colombian
José Fernando Santa April-14 December-14   Colombian
Hernán Lisi January-15 December-15   Argentinian
Néstor Craviotto January-16 December-16   Argentinian
Alberto Bulleri January-17 December-17   Argentinian
José Fernando Santa January-18 December-18   Colombian
Néstor Craviotto December-18 October-20   Argentinian
José Alexis Márquez November-20 December-20   Colombian
Jorge Artigas January-21 February-21   Uruguayan
José Alexis Márquez March-21 May-22   Colombian
Alejandro Restrepo June-22 November-23   Colombian
Leonel Álvarez November-23   Colombian

References

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  1. ^ "Comunicado: Traslado de afiliación de la Corporación Social Deportiva y Cultural de Pereira -Corpereira- en liquidación a la sociedad Deportivo Pereira F.C. S.A." [Statement: Transfer of affiliation from the Social, Sports and Cultural Corporation of Pereira -Corpereira- in liquidation to the company Deportivo Pereira F.C. S.A.] (in Spanish). Dimayor. 17 March 2023. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  2. ^ "Los 150 hechos que marcaron la historia de Pereira" [The 150 events that marked the history of Pereira] (in Spanish). La Tarde. 30 August 2013. Archived from the original on 5 November 2013. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  3. ^ "Deportivo Pereira | Historia" [Deportivo Pereira | History] (in Spanish). Deportivo Pereira. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  4. ^ a b "Pereira, ¡más cerca que nunca de la final!" [Pereira, closer than ever to the final!] (in Spanish). El Diario. 29 November 2022. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  5. ^ "Deportivo Pereira: 78 años de historia y garra 'matecaña'" [Deportivo Pereira: 78 years of history and matecaña drive] (in Spanish). Radio Nacional de Colombia. 4 December 2022. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  6. ^ "UNICOSTA SE SALVÓ Y PEREIRA DESCENDIÓ" [UNICOSTA SAVED THEMSELVES AND PEREIRA WERE RELEGATED] (in Spanish). El Tiempo. 10 November 1997. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  7. ^ "PEREIRA VUELVE A GOZAR" [PEREIRA ENJOYS AGAIN] (in Spanish). El Tiempo. 19 November 2000. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  8. ^ "Colombia 2000". RSSSF. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  9. ^ ""Queremos acabar con el predomino de Pereira"" ["We want to end Pereira's predominance"] (in Spanish). Vanguardia. 12 February 2012. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  10. ^ "CÁNCER EN EL DEPORTIVO PEREIRA" [CANCER AT DEPORTIVO PEREIRA] (in Spanish). La Cola de Rata. 31 August 2011. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  11. ^ "Colombia 2010". RSSSF. 21 December 2017. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  12. ^ "Colombia 2011". RSSSF. 21 December 2017. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  13. ^ "Pereira rompió el hechizo en el clásico; Tolima goleó al Huila" [Pereira broke the spell in the derby; Tolima thrashed Huila] (in Spanish). El Espectador. 3 April 2011. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  14. ^ "Pereira confirmó su descenso al perder 1-0 frente al Tolima" [Pereira confirmed their relegation after losing 1–0 to Tolima] (in Spanish). Futbolred. 6 November 2011. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  15. ^ "DEPORTIVO PEREIRA A RATIFICAR EN CUADRANGULARES SU BUEN MOMENTO EN EL TORNEO POSTOBÓN" [DEPORTIVO PEREIRA OUT TO RATIFY IN QUADRANGULARS THEIR GOOD MOMENT IN THE TORNEO POSTOBÓN] (in Spanish). Antena 2. 21 October 2012. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  16. ^ "Pereira pierde reconocimiento deportivo por incumplimientos laborales" [Pereira loses sporting license due to labor breaches] (in Spanish). Caracol Radio. 29 October 2013. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  17. ^ "Nace proyecto del Deportivo Matecaña nuevo equipo profesional en Pereira" [Deportivo Matecaña project is born; new professional team in Pereira] (in Spanish). Antena 2. 5 July 2013. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  18. ^ "Deportivo Pereira espera el reconocimiento deportivo" [Deportivo Pereira await the sporting license] (in Spanish). La Tarde. 26 November 2013. Archived from the original on 3 December 2013. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  19. ^ "Pereira sigue cabalgando en la B: goleó este lunes 7-2 a Atlético FC" [Pereira continue riding in the B: they thrashed Atlético FC 7–2 this Monday] (in Spanish). Futbolred. 2 August 2016. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  20. ^ "Al Pereira se le fue el ascenso en el último suspiro, Tigres FC subió a la A" [Pereira lost promotion at the last breath, Tigres FC went up to the A] (in Spanish). Colombia.com. 28 November 2016. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  21. ^ "El mejor de 2019: Deportivo Pereira es campeón del Torneo Águila" [The best of 2019: Deportivo Pereira are Torneo Águila champions] (in Spanish). Caracol Radio. 26 November 2019. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  22. ^ "Deportivo Pereira, el primer finalista de la Copa Colombia" [Deportivo Pereira, the first Copa Colombia finalist] (in Spanish). El Tiempo. 20 October 2021. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  23. ^ "Nacional, campeón de Copa BetPlay tras vencer a Pereira" [Nacional, Copa Betplay champions after beating Pereira] (in Spanish). AS Colombia. 24 November 2021. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  24. ^ "El camino paso a paso a la anhelada final" [The path step by step to the long-awaited final] (in Spanish). El Diario. 4 December 2022. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  25. ^ "Deportivo Pereira eliminó a Millonarios y a Santa Fe; jugará su primera final de Liga BetPlay en toda su historia" [Deportivo Pereira knocked both Millonarios and Santa Fe out; they will play their first Liga BetPlay final ever] (in Spanish). Semana. 30 November 2022. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  26. ^ "Bienvenidos a la historia: ¡Pereira grita campeón por primera vez!" [Welcome to history: Pereira shout champion for the first time!] (in Spanish). Futbolred. 7 December 2022. Retrieved 7 December 2022.
  27. ^ "Así ha sido el camino del Deportivo Pereira en la Conmebol Libertadores 2023" [This is how Deportivo Pereira's path at the 2023 CONMEBOL Libertadores has been] (in Spanish). Dimayor. 15 August 2023. Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  28. ^ "¡Histórico! Deportivo Pereira se clasifica a los cuartos de final de la Copa Libertadores" [Historical! Deportivo Pereira qualify for the quarter-finals of the Copa Libertadores] (in Spanish). Caracol Radio. 9 August 2023. Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  29. ^ "Se acabó el sueño del Deportivo Pereira: así terminó su histórica Copa Libertadores" [Deportivo Pereira's dream is over: this is how their historical Copa Libertadores ended] (in Spanish). El Tiempo. 30 August 2023. Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  30. ^ "Estadio Alberto Mora Mora" (in Spanish). Deporte Risaraldense. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
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