General |
Sevilla | ||
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Full name | Sevilla Fútbol Club SAD | |
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Nickname(s) | Sevillistas Los Rojiblancos (The Red and Whites) Los Nervionenses (The Ones from Nervión) Los Palanganas (The Bathtubs) | |
Founded | 25 January 1890 | |
Ground | Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán (Capacity: 42,714) | |
Chairman | ![]() | |
Manager | ![]() | |
Current League | La Liga | |
2022–23 | La Liga, 12th | |
Website | Club home page | |
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Sevilla Fútbol Club is a Spanish professional football club based in Seville, the capital and largest city of the autonomous community of Andalusia, Spain. It plays in Spanish football's top flight, La Liga. Sevilla is one of the most successful clubs at the European level, winning the UEFA Europa League six times, more than any other European club. It is Spain's oldest sporting club solely devoted to football. The club was formed on 25 January 1890, with the Scottish born Edward Farquharson Johnston as their first president. On 14 October 1905, the club's articles of association were registered in the Civil Government of Seville under the presidency of the Jerez-born José Luis Gallegos Arnosa.
Players[]
Current squad[]
- As of 3 September 2023
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Reserve squad[]
- Main article:Sevilla Atlético
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Other players under contract[]
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Out on loan[]
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External links[]
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Current season •
Club honours •
Managers •
Players •
Reserve team •
Ramón Sánchez |
Sevilla FC squad - 2024–25 |
1 Álvaro · 3 Pedrosa · 4 Salas · 6 Gudelj · 7 Isaac · 8 Ortiz · 9 Iheanacho · 10 Suso · 11 Lukébakio · 12 Sambi Lokonga · 13 Nyland · 14 Peque · 15 Montiel · 16 Navas (c) · 17 Saúl · 18 Agoumé · 19 Barco · 20 Sow · 21 Ejuke · 22 Badé · 23 Marcão · 24 Nianzou · 26 Juanlu · 32 Carmona · Manager:![]() |
Sevilla FC - Managers |
Valenzuela (1908–10) · Eizaguirre (1910–17) · Brand (1917–21) · Ostos (1921–23) · O'Hagan (1923–24) · Villagrán (1924–27) · Hertzka (1927–30) · Quirante (1930–33) · Encinas (1933–36) · Brand (1939–41) · Santos (1941–42) · Brand (1942) · O'Connell (1942–45) · Encinas (1945–47) · Caicedo (1947–48) · Encinas (1948–49) · Campanal (1949–53) · Herrera (1953–56) · Campanal (1957) · Grech (1957) · Villalonga (1957–58) · Kálmár (1958) · Ipiña (1958–59) · Campanal (1959) · Encinas (1959) · Miró (1959–61) · Villalonga (1961) · Barrios (1961–63) · Busto (1963) · Bumbel (1963–64) · Daučík (1964–65) · Eizaguirre (1965–66) · Arza (1966) · Barinaga (1966) · Arza (1966–67) · Barrios (1967) · Arza (1967–69) · Merkel (1969–71) · Villalonga (1971) · Georgiadis (1971–1972) · Villalonga (1972) · Buckingham (1972) · Arza (1972–73) · Artigas (1973) · Happel (1973) · Bedoya (1973–74) · Buqué (1974) · Olsen (1974–76) · Carriega 1976–79) · Muñoz (1979–81) · Cardo (1981–86) · Wallace (1986–87) · Azkargorta (1987–89) · Ortega (1989) · Olsen (1989) · Cantatore (1989–91) · Espárrago (1991–92) · Bilardo (1992–93) · Aragonés (1993–95) · Toni (1995) · Juan Carlos (1995–96) · Camacho (1996–97) · Bilardo (1997) · Rubio (1997) · Miera (1997) · Juan Carlos (1997–98) · Castro Santos (1998–99) · Alonso (1999–2000) · Juan Carlos (2000) · Caparrós (2000–05) · Ramos (2005–07) · Jiménez (2007–10) · Álvarez (2010) · Manzano (2010–11) · Marcelino (2011–12) · Míchel (2012–13) · Emery (2013–16) · Sampaoli (2016–17) · Berizzo (2017) · Montella (2017–18) · Caparrósc (2018) · Machín (2018–19) · Caparrósc (2019) · Lopetegui (2019–22) · Sampaoli (2022–23) · Mendilibar (2023) · Alonso (2023) · Flores (2023–24) · Gª Pimienta (2024) |
Sevilla FC seasons |
2017–18 · 2018–19 · 2019–20 · 2020–21 · 2021–22 · 2022–23 · 2023–24 · 2024–25 · |
UEFA Super Cup winners |
1972: Ajax • 1973: Ajax • 1975: Dynamo Kiev • 1976: Anderlecht • 1977: Liverpool • 1978: Anderlecht • 1979: Nottingham Forest • 1980: Valencia • 1982: Aston Villa • 1983: Aberdeen • 1984: Juventus • 1986: Steaua Bucharest • 1987: Porto • 1988: Mechelen • 1989: Milan • 1990: Milan • 1991: Manchester United • 1992: Barcelona • 1993: Parma • 1994: Milan • 1995: Ajax • 1996: Juventus • 1997: Barcelona • 1998: Chelsea • 1999: Lazio • 2000: Galatasaray • 2001: Liverpool • 2002: Real Madrid • 2003: Milan • 2004: Valencia • 2005: Liverpool • 2006: Sevilla • 2007: Milan • 2008: Zenit St. Petersburg • 2009: Barcelona • 2010: Atlético Madrid • 2011: Barcelona • 2012: Atlético Madrid • 2013: Bayern Munich • 2014: Real Madrid • 2015: Barcelona • 2016: Real Madrid • 2017: Real Madrid • 2018: Atlético Madrid • 2019: Liverpool • 2020: Bayern Munich • 2021: Chelsea • 2022: Real Madrid • 2023: Manchester City • 2024: Real Madrid • |
La Liga 2024–25 |
Alavés · Athletic Bilbao · Atlético Madrid · Barcelona · Betis · Celta Vigo · Espanyol · Getafe · Girona · Las Palmas · Leganés · Mallorca · Osasuna · Rayo Vallecano · Real Madrid · Real Sociedad · Sevilla · Valladolid · Valencia · Villarreal |
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