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PosiciónEquipoPWDLFA+/-PuntosFormulario
1Racing crestRacing9621168820
W
D
W
W
W
2Peñarol crestPeñarol9612158719
L
W
W
W
D
3Nacional crestNacional95131410416
W
W
L
W
L
4Deportivo Maldonado crestDeportivo Maldonado95131310316
L
W
L
W
D
5Montevideo City Torque crestMontevideo City Torque94231310314
L
L
W
D
W
6Central Espanol crestCentral Espanol94231311214
W
D
L
L
D
7Montevideo Wanderers crestMontevideo Wanderers94231011-114
W
L
W
L
D
8Liverpool FC crestLiverpool FC93421311213
D
D
L
D
W
9Defensor Sporting crestDefensor Sporting833265112
D
W
L
D
L
10Danubio crestDanubio93331112-112
L
D
L
W
D
11Cerro Largo crestCerro Largo94051011-112
W
L
W
W
L
12Albion crestAlbion8323109111
W
W
L
D
L
13Boston River crestBoston River9225510-58
W
L
W
L
L
14Progreso crestProgreso9144915-67
D
D
L
W
D
15Cerro crestCerro9126414-105
L
W
L
L
L
16Juventud de las Piedras crestJuventud de las Piedras9117815-74
L
L
L
L
W

Preguntas frecuentes

Initially founded as Sunderland and District Teachers A.F.C. in 1879, the club was renamed to Sunderland A.F.C. in October 1880. The club turned professional a decade later, when it joined The Football League ahead of the 1890-91 campaign.

Kyril Louis-Dreyfus (64% stake) and Juan Sartori (36% stake) are the co-owners of Sunderland. The former first acquired shares in February 2021, joining the latter who has been associated with the club since 2018.

Sunderland's home stadium is known as The Stadium of Light, which replaced the iconic Roker Park in 1997. Roker Park served as Sunderland's home ground for almost a century, from 1898 to 1997.

The Stadium of Light has a capacity of 49,000, making it England's ninth-largest football stadium.

Sunderland have won a total of nine trophies, which includes six top-flight titles as well as two FA Cups.

Sunderland have clinched the English top-flight title on six occasions. Their first win came in the 1891-92 season, while they haven't won a single league title since going all the way at the end of the 1935-36 campaign.

Former English goalkeeper Jimmy Montgomery holds the record for making the most appearances in Sunderland history. Montgomery made 627 appearances between 1960 and 1977 and was a part of the Sunderland team that won the 1973 FA Cup.

The Sunderland faithful will never forget the contributions of legendary striker Bobby Gurney, who churned out 228 goals in 390 appearances in what is a club record.

Charlie Hurley, Simon Mignolet, John O'Shea, Jordan Pickford, Jermain Defoe, Bobby Kerr, and Jimmy Montgomery are among the most prominent players to have donned the Sunderland shirt.

Bob Kyle, Roy Keane, and Sam Allardyce are among Sunderland's most famous managers.

Previously known as The Rokermen when they played at Roker Park, Sunderland are now officially nicknamed The Black Cats based on 10,000 votes cast by the supporters through the official magazine in 2000. The nickname originates from the names of battery guns which protected the mouth of the River Wear in the 18th century.