Valencia PES kits season 18/19
size: 2048x2048
type: PNG alpha
platform: PC/PS
kits:
goalkeeper (league-CL)
home (league-CL)
away (league-CL)
third (league-CL)
about the team:
PES name: ED WHITE ORANGE
PES ID: 110
Founded: 1919
Website: www.valenciacf.com
Address: Plaza del Valencia CF, 46010, Valencia
Country: Spain
Phone: +34 (902) 011 919
Stadium: Estadio de Mestalla (Valencia)
Capacity: 55000
Club History:
size: 2048x2048
type: PNG alpha
platform: PC/PS
kits:
goalkeeper (league-CL)
home (league-CL)
away (league-CL)
third (league-CL)
about the team:
PES name: ED WHITE ORANGE
PES ID: 110
Founded: 1919
Website: www.valenciacf.com
Address: Plaza del Valencia CF, 46010, Valencia
Country: Spain
Phone: +34 (902) 011 919
Stadium: Estadio de Mestalla (Valencia)
Capacity: 55000
Club History:
The club was established on 5 March 1919 and officially approved on 18 March 1919, with Octavio Augusto Milego Díaz as its first president; incidentally, the presidency was decided by a coin toss. The club played its first competitive match away from home on 21 May 1919 against Valencia Gimnástico, losing 1–0.
Valencia moved into the Mestalla Stadium in 1923, having played its home matches at the Algirós ground since 7 December 1919. The first match at Mestalla pitted the home side against Castellón Castalia and ended a 0–0 draw. In another match the day after, Valencia won against the same opposition, 1–0. Valencia won the Regional Championship in 1923, and was eligible to play in the domestic Copa del Rey cup competition for the first time in its history.
While managing indifferent league form in the early 1960s, the club had its first European success in the form of the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup (the forerunner to the UEFA Cup). In the 1961–62 season, Valencia defeated Barcelona in the final. The 1962–63 edition of the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup final pitted Valencia against Yugoslavian club Dinamo Zagreb, which the Valencians also won. Valencia were again present in the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup final in the 1963–64 season, but were defeated 2–1 by Real Zaragoza.
Former two-time European Footballer of the Year award winner Alfredo Di Stéfano was hired as head coach in 1970, and immediately inspired his new club to their fourth La Liga championship and first since 1947. This secured Valencia its first qualification for the prestigious European Cup, contested by the various European domestic champions. Valencia reached the third round of the 1971–72 competition before losing both legs to Hungarian champions Újpesti Dózsa. In 1972, the club also finished runners-up both in La Liga and the domestic cup, losing to Real Madrid and Atlético Madrid respectively. The most notable players of the 1970s era include Austrian midfielder Kurt Jara, forward Johnny Rep of the Netherlands, West German midfielder Rainer Bonhof and Argentinian forward Mario Kempes, who became the La Liga topscorer for two consecutive seasons in 1976–77 and 1977–78. Valencia would go on to win the Copa del Rey again in the 1978–79 season, and also capture the European Cup Winners' Cup the next season, after beating English club Arsenal in the final, with Kempes spearheading Valencia's success in Europe.
Trophies:
La Liga: 6 Titles
La Liga 2: 2 Titles
Copa del Rey: 7 Titles
UEFA Europa League: 1 Title
UEFA European Super Cup: 2 Titles
Supercopa de España: 1 Title
La Liga: 6 Titles
La Liga 2: 2 Titles
Copa del Rey: 7 Titles
UEFA Europa League: 1 Title
UEFA European Super Cup: 2 Titles
Supercopa de España: 1 Title
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