Independiente Medellín
Deportivo Independiente Medellín, also known as DIM, is a Colombian professional football team, based in Medellín, that currently plays in the Categoría Primera A. They play their home games at the Atanasio Girardot stadium, which is part of the Atanasio Girardot Sports Complex.
Independiente Medellín has won the Categoría Primera A six times: in 1955, 1957, 2002-II, 2004-I, 2009-II and 2016-I. Its best performance at international level was in 2003, when the team reached the semifinals at the Copa Libertadores.
History
Independiente Medellín was founded on 14 November 1913 under the name of Medellín Foot Ball Club by siblings Alberto, Luis and Rafael Uribe Piedrahíta. The team played its first match with the amateur team Sporting of Medellin, who defeated them 11–0. After several years, Medellín joined professional football and played the first edition of the league. Medellín placed 7 out of 10, winning seven matches. Their first match was a 4–0 defeat against América de Cali.The next decade, Medellín signed Peruvian Segundo Castillo Varela, whom won the 1939 South American Championship, the first title of his country, in a movement of what was known as El Dorado, when teams of the league signed a lot of foreign footballers. Medellín won its first title in the 1955 Campeonato Profesional. The team was first with 31 points and just one defeat. Argentine Felipe Marino was the top goalscorer of the team and the tournament, with 22 goals. In 2009, with the departure of Santiago Escobar as the coach of the team, his assistant, Leonel Álvarez, replaced him to play 2009 Torneo Finalización, where the team got its fifth title against Atlético Huila. In that season, the forward, Jackson Martinez, broke a record of the player with the most goal in the league.
Rivalries
Medellín's greatest rivalry is with the city's other major club Atlético Nacional, with whom they share the home stadium Atanasio Girardot. The team is dubbed "El Poderoso de la Montaña" or the "Mighty of the Mountain" due to Medellín's geographical location high in the Andean mountains. The rivalry is especially strong due to each team's main fanbases, Rexixtenxia Norte for Medellín and Los Del Sur for Atlético Nacional. The two clubs are named with the location that they occupy in the stadium where Rexixtenxia occupies the section behind the northern goal and Los Del Sur occupy the section behind the southern goal.In 2004 Medellín and Nacional qualified for the final of the Apertura tournament; in Antioquia everybody was very excited because this was the first "Paisa" final in the history of short tournaments. The final was played over two legs: in the first game Medellín won 2–1 with a goal by Rafael Castillo in the 87th minute after goals by Jorge Serna and Carlos "Chumi" Álvarez in the first half. The second leg was on 27 June, it ended 0–0 and Medellín became the champion of the Colombian National League.
Controversies
Medellín won its third league title after 45 years of agony. However, there were two seasons where Medellín had the title within its reach only to lose it amid great controversy. From its foundation until 2002, the Colombian First Division League had adopted a league format commonly used in European leagues. The format was a year-long tournament where the team at the end of the year in best standing was declared the winner. This format was changed in 2002 to an Apertura-Clausura format where two separate seasons are played during the year to determine two winners. In 1993 during the last game of the year, Medellín and Atlético Junior were fighting for a tight first place. Junior was playing América de Cali at home in Barranquilla while simultaneously Medellín played hometown rivals Atlético Nacional. The games were to start and end at the same time. A Medellín win with a Junior loss or draw would have given Medellín the title. Medellín beat Nacional 1–0 while awaiting the 2–2 game in Barranquilla to end. Medellín players were celebrating with a victory lap and giving interviews with reporters waiting for the final whistle in Barranquilla. After Oswaldo Mackenzie to score an extremely late goal giving Junior the win 3–2 and the title. This was not the first time Medellín had a heartbreaking season, in 1989 a year where Medellín had one of the best teams in the league and was expected to win the title but Junior with legendary players such as Valderrama, Mackenzie, Pacheco and Valenciano. A tragic event occurred in Colombian soccer. During the final games of the season, Medellín tied América de Cali 0–0 at home. During the game, the linesman Álvaro Ortega made a mistake and annulled a Medellín goal. Afterwards, a Medellín sympathizer hunted down the linesman and assassinated him. In response, the Colombian Football Federation decided to cancel the rest of the season leaving the 1989 league without a winner.Honours
Domestic honours
Official tournaments
- Categoría Primera A:
- Copa Colombia:
- Superliga Colombiana:
Amateur
- Copa Jimenez Jaramillo : 1923
- Campeonato Nacional : 1918, 1920, 1922, 1930, 1936, 1937, 1938
- Campeonato Departamental : 1937, 1938, 1939, 1941, 1942, 1943, 1944, 1945
Friendly tournaments
- Copa Club Unión: 1942
- Triangular ‘Trofeo Coltejer’: 1955
- Torneo "Medellín sin tugurios": 1983
- Copa Montreal : 1992
- Copa DC United: 1994
- Copa Ciudad de Popayan: 2005
- Copa Gobernación de Antioquia: 2008, 2010
- Copa del Pacífico: 2009
- Runner-up Copa Movilco – Gobernación del Meta: 2009
- Runner-up Copa del Pacífico: 2010
International participation
- Copa Libertadores de America: 0
- Copa Sudamericana: 0
- Copa Conmebol: 0
Players
Current squad
Out on loan
Top scorers
No. | Name | Goals | Country |
1 | German Cano | 129 | |
2 | José Vicente Grecco | 92 | |
3 | Carlos Castro | 90 | |
4 | Felipe Marino | 77 | |
5 | Jorge Serna | 75 | |
6 | Diego Álvarez | 69 | |
7 | Uriel Cadavid | 65 | |
8 | Perfecto Rodríguez | 64 | |
9 | Jackson Martinez | 56 | |
10 | Jaime Castrillón | 55 |
Most games played
No. | Name | Games | Country |
1 | Héctor Echeverri | 457 | |
2 | Ricardo Calle | 418 | |
3 | Roberto Carlos Cortés | 351 | |
4 | Ponciano Castro | 342 | |
5 | John Restrepo | 335 | |
6 | José Zárate | 318 | |
7 | Álvaro Escobar | 315 | |
8 | Carlos Castro | 283 | |
9 | Uriel Cadavid | 277 | |
10 | Jaime Castrillón | 276 |
Managers
- Delfín Benítez Cáceres
- José Manuel Moreno
- René Seghini
- Pedro Roque Retamozo '
- René Seghini
- Fernando Paternoster
- Efraín Sánchez
- José Manuel Moreno
- Carlos Alberto Díaz
- Efraín Sánchez
- José Vicente Grecco
- Luis López García
- José Vicente Grecco
- Francisco Hormazábal
- Leonel Vargas '
- Rodrigo Fonnegra
- Héctor Molina '
- Humberto Álvarez '
- Ricardo Ramaciotti
- Francisco Hormazábal
- Humberto Ortiz
- José Vicente Grecco
- Juan José Pizutti
- Justo Lopera
- Edilberto Righi & Pedro Soma
- Darío Velez '
- Efraín Sánchez
- Bernardo Valencia '
- Néstor Togneri
- Bernando Valencia
- Víctor Rodríguez
- Ricardo Ramaciotti
- Leonel Montoya
- Jorge Olmedo
- Julio Avelino Comesaña
- Carlos Miguel Diaz '
- Bernando Valencia
- Ricardo Ramaciotti
- German Aceros
- Gonzalo Montoya '
- Hugo Gallego
- :es:Jaime Rodríguez Suárez|Jaime Rodríguez
- Julio Avelino Comesaña
- Hugo Gallego
- Nelson Gallego
- :es:Luis Augusto García|Luis Augusto García
- Juan Mujica
- Nolberto Molina
- Jairo Rios
- Carlos Restrepo
- :es:Víctor Luna Gómez|Víctor Luna
- Zlatko Petričević
- :es:Fernando Castro Lozada|Fernando Castro
- Óscar Aristizábal
- Julio Avelino Comesaña
- :es:Víctor Luna Gómez|Víctor Luna
- :es:Juan José Peláez|Juan José Peláez
- Álvaro Escobar '
- Reynaldo Rueda
- :es:Víctor Luna Gómez|Víctor Luna
- :es:Jaime Rodríguez Suárez|Jaime Rodríguez
- Pedro Sarmiento
- :es:Javier Álvarez Arteaga|Javier Álvarez
- :es:Édgar Carvajal|Édgar Carvajal '
- :es:Víctor Luna Gómez|Víctor Luna
- :es:Juan José Peláez|Juan José Peláez
- Santiago Escobar
- Leonel Álvarez
- :es:Édgar Carvajal|Édgar Carvajal
- :es:Víctor Luna Gómez|Víctor Luna
- :es:Guillermo Berrío|Guillermo Berrío
- H.D. Gómez
- Pedro Sarmiento
- Hernán Torres
- Leonel Álvarez
- Luis Zubeldía
- :es:Juan José Peláez|Juan José Peláez
- Ismael Rescalvo
- Octavio Zambrano