Fixtures

Argentina Liga Profesional 09/14 23:00 8 Tigre vs Talleres Cordoba - View
Argentina Liga Profesional 09/21 22:00 9 Rosario Central vs CA Talleres de Córdoba - View
Argentina Liga Profesional 09/28 00:15 10 CA Talleres de Córdoba vs Sarmiento - View
Argentina Liga Profesional 10/05 13:00 11 CA Talleres de Córdoba vs Belgrano - View
Argentina Liga Profesional 10/12 13:00 12 Gimnasia LP vs CA Talleres de Córdoba - View
Argentina Liga Profesional 10/19 13:00 13 CA Talleres de Córdoba vs River Plate - View

Results

Argentina Liga Profesional 08/31 19:45 7 [13] Talleres Cordoba v Deportivo Riestra [4] L 0-1
Argentina Liga Profesional 08/23 23:00 6 [8] Atlético Tucumán v Talleres Cordoba [12] L 3-0
Argentina Liga Profesional 08/19 00:00 5 [13] Talleres Cordoba v San Martin SJ [12] D 0-0
Argentina Liga Profesional 08/09 00:15 4 [11] Lanus v Talleres Cordoba [9] L 1-0
Argentina Liga Profesional 07/27 19:00 3 [9] Talleres Cordoba v Godoy Cruz [11] D 0-0
Argentina Liga Profesional 07/21 00:00 2 [10] Independiente v Talleres Cordoba [14] W 1-2
Argentina Liga Profesional 07/11 23:00 1 [14] Talleres Cordoba v San Lorenzo [11] L 1-2
Copa Libertadores 05/27 22:00 6 [1] Sao Paulo v CA Talleres de Córdoba [3] L 2-1
Copa Libertadores 05/15 22:00 5 [4] CA Talleres de Córdoba v Alianza Lima [3] W 2-0
Copa Libertadores 05/08 22:00 4 [4] CA Talleres de Córdoba v Libertad Asuncion [2] D 0-0
Argentina Liga Profesional 05/03 19:00 16 [12] CA Talleres de Córdoba v Instituto AC Cordoba [9] L 1-2
Argentina Liga Profesional 04/29 22:00 15 [7] CA Platense v CA Talleres de Córdoba [12] L 2-1

Stats

 TotalHomeAway
Matches played 46 23 23
Wins 11 5 6
Draws 17 8 9
Losses 18 10 8
Goals for 39 21 18
Goals against 48 23 25
Clean sheets 19 10 9
Failed to score 19 9 10

Wikipedia - Talleres de Córdoba

Club Atlético Talleres (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈkluβ aˈtletiko taˈʎeɾes]; lit.'Workshops Athletic Club'), mostly known simply as Talleres ([taˈʃeɾes] in Rioplatense accent and [taˈʒeɾes] or [taˈjeɾe] in Cordobés accent; lit.'Workshops'), is an Argentine professional sports club based in the city of Córdoba.

The institution is mostly known for its football team, which currently plays in the Argentine Primera División. Talleres was three times runner-up of the First Division (1977, 2023, and 2024), and two times runner-up of the Copa Argentina (2020 and 2022).

They won an international tournament in 1999, the Copa Conmebol (now Copa Sudamericana). "La T" participated in many recent editions of the Copa Sudamericana as well as the Copa Libertadores, the highest level football competition in South America, in which they reached the Quarter-Finals in 2022.

"La T" also invests actively on its Academy, which has nurtured a number of well-known footballers: José Luis Cuciuffo, Daniel Willington, Luis Antonio Ludueña, Luis Galván, and Victorio Ocaño, in previous years; and Javier Pastore, Julio Buffarini, Cristian Pavón, and Emanuel Reynoso in recent years.

Galván, as well as Miguel Oviedo and José Daniel Valencia (the three of them playing for Talleres), were part of the squad that lead Argentina's national team to win the 1978 FIFA World Cup. Other players that made it to their national teams include Mateo Retegui, Facundo Medina, Piero Hincapié, Ramón Sosa, and Guido Herrera.

Talleres women's team plays in the Primera División A and is one of the most winning teams in the country. Florencia Pianello is the all-time scorer taking into account both men's and women's divisions of the club.

Talleres' main rival is Belgrano: Their rivalry is known as "el clásico cordobés". Talleres won 96 matches, while their rival won 76 times, in official games. Both teams also share derbies with Instituto and Racing, two other important teams of the city.

Talleres is among the teams with the highest number of spectators per match in the world.

History

A team of Talleres in 1922

The club was founded in 1913 as "Atlético Talleres Central Córdoba" by workers of the Córdoba Central Railway, with support from the company. Apart from Atlético Talleres, one of the clubs affiliated to "Federación Cordobesa de Fútbol" (Córdoba Football Federation) was Olimpo, formed by young players participating in second and third divisions.

In 1913 Olimpo was expelled after their players were involved in a riot in disagreement with some referee decisions. After Olimpo beat Atlético Talleres in a friendly match, the club executives encouraged the merger of both clubs with the aim of adding Olimpo players to their team. In 1914, the merger was fulfilled keeping the name "Talleres Central Córdoba". In 1914 Talleres joined the Córdoba local league.

Under this name, Talleres Central Córdoba won the 1915 and 1916 championships. The following year the club was forced to change its name after some incidents in a match that caused player Horacio Salvatelli to be arrested. When some days later Talleres did not allow its players to a local combined, the body expelled the club from the league. Nevertheless, Talleres would rejoined the league in 1918 under the condition to change its name so the club was registered as "Club Atlético Talleres", also winning the championship that same year. Apart from its name, Talleres had to modify the date of foundation (to 12 October 1913) to register as a legal entity.

In 1931 the club was given a land in "Barrio Jardín" to build its own stadium. The project was carried out by engineers Allende Posse and Agenor Villagra, at a cost of $70,000. The stadium was inaugurated on 12 October 1931, with a friendly match between Talleres and Uruguayan side Rampla Juniors. The stadium would be refurbished in 1951 to host a maximum of 18,000 spectators.

A team of Talleres in 1977. One year later, the club was about to win the Primera División championship but lost to C.A. Independiente in the final

In 1969 the team played for the first time in the Argentine Primera División in the Nacional Championship. During the 1970s, the heyday of the Córdoba local league in the national scene, they participated several times in the Nacional championship, in 1976 Luis Ludueña was the championship top scorer with 12 goals, in the 1977 Nacional Championship Talleres finished in second place, losing to Independiente the finals on the away goals rule, and in 1978 José Reinaldi scored 18 goals and was the championship top scorer. Talleres contributed three players to the Argentine squad that won the 1978 FIFA World Cup, with Talleres' captain Luis Galván as a starter in the final as a center back. Miguel Oviedo and Jose Daniel Valencia were substitutes. The '78 WC team featured several other prominent players that got their start in the golden era of the Córdoba local league, such as Mario Kempes and Osvaldo Ardiles, both at Instituto Atletico Central Cordoba in the early-1970s.

Starting in 1980, Talleres became a regular of the Metropolitano championship and finished in third place.

Talleres played in the Argentine Primera División until the 1993 Torneo Clausura when Talleres was relegated to the Primera B Nacional. Talleres was promoted to Argentine Primera División after the 1993–94 championship, but was again related after a poor performance in 1994–95 season. The following season, the club finished first during the Clausura tournament of the Second Division but lost the Championship to Huracán de Corrientes.

The team that won the Copa CONMEBOL in 1999

In 1998, during a game (later remembered by fans as "The Final of the Century", Talleres won its first Argentine title, the 1997/98 Primera B Nacional championship on penalty kick shootout against all-time rival Belgrano de Córdoba, earning them a promotion to the First Division. Next year the club won its first and only international title, the 1999 Copa CONMEBOL (the precursor of the current Copa Sudamericana) against CSA from Brazil.

The following season, Talleres' good performance in first division qualified the team to play the 2001 Copa Mercosur and the 2002 Copa Libertadores, being the first and only team from Córdoba to qualify for those continental tournaments. Talleres reached the round of 16 in the Mercosur, only to lose against Gremio. In Copa Libertadores, Talleres had a poor performance, being eliminated in the first stage.

Despite finishing in third place during the Torneo Clausura tournament of the 2003–04 season and qualifying for the Copa Libertadores again, Talleres was relegated, due to poor results in the previous 2 seasons, after losing to Argentinos Juniors in the promotion/relegation play-off. By Argentine rules, the team lost its Libertadores bid because of this.

In 2008–09 Talleres was dismissed again, this time to the Torneo Argentino A via the point average system despite finishing in 12th place of 20 teams in Primera B Nacional.

On 15 November 2010, the IFFHS produced a report on the top 200 teams in the American continent from 2001 to that date. Talleres was No. 130, the highest position for a Córdoba Province team in the ranking.

In May 2013, Talleres was promoted to Primera B Nacional after defeating San Jorge by 1–0. Later, Talleres returned to the third division but it was promoted in 2015, and, in 2016, after 12 years Talleres earned the promotion to First Division. They achieved so by not losing any match in the whole tournament, being the first time to accomplish this in Argentine football.

During those years, Talleres has become famous for its good Reserves and Academy divisions. Talleres won the national Reserves Tournament two times in a row in 2016-17 and 2017-18.

In 2019, Talleres played the Copa Libertadores again. In 2021, Talleres played Copa Sudamericana. After an outstanding performance in Copa Argentina, in which "la T" reached the final, and the national league, in which it finished in the third position, Talleres returned once again to Copa Libertadores for the next year.

Talleres made its best performance yet at 2022 Copa Libertadores, by reaching the Quarter-finals. However, the poor performance at the national league left the club with no international participation for 2023. For the second year in a row, Talleres was runner-up in Copa Argentina, losing the final 0-1 to Patronato.

The club has also sold players to important clubs in Europe in that time, in a historical context in which most clubs that sell players directly to UEFA teams are mostly the ones of Buenos Aires. Some of them were Nahuel Bustos, Piero Hincapié, Facundo Medina, Andrés Cubas and Ramón Sosa. Many of them got to play in their national teams.

Other footballers that were capped to play for their country after their time in Talleres include Julio Buffarini and Mateo Retegui; while Alan Franco, Matías Catalán, Miguel Navarro, and Diego Valoyes were capped while they were part of the club.

Between 2023 and 2024, Talleres finished in the second position of the Primera División two times in a row. This allowed the club to be considered one of the best South American clubs of the last decades and secured consecutive berths for playing Copa Libertadores.

Club Atlético Talleres de Córdoba, commonly known as Talleres, is a prominent Argentine soccer team based in Córdoba, Argentina. Founded on October 12, 1913, Talleres has a rich history and is one of the most respected clubs in Argentine football. The team plays its home matches at the Estadio Mario Alberto Kempes, a modern stadium with a capacity of over 57,000 spectators, which creates an electrifying atmosphere during matches.

Talleres is known for its passionate fan base, often referred to as "La T" or "Los Albiazules," due to the club's iconic blue and white striped jerseys. The team has a storied rivalry with Belgrano, another Córdoba-based club, with their matches known as the "Clásico Cordobés," drawing significant attention and fervor from local supporters.

Throughout its history, Talleres has experienced various successes, including multiple domestic league titles and notable performances in international competitions. The club has a strong youth academy, which has produced several talented players who have gone on to achieve success both in Argentina and abroad.

Talleres continues to be a competitive force in Argentine football, striving for excellence in both domestic leagues and international tournaments, while maintaining a deep connection with its community and a commitment to developing future generations of soccer talent.