Atlético Balboa

Atlético Balboa
Full nameClub Deportivo Atlético Balboa
NicknamesLos Porteños, La Ciclón
Founded1950
GroundEstadio Marcelino Imbers,
La Unión, El Salvador
Capacity4,000
ChairmanEl Salvador Kevin Rubio
ManagerEl Salvador David Paz
LeagueEl Salvador Segunda División

Club Deportivo Atlético Balboa, commonly known as Atlético Balboa or simply Balboa, is a Salvadoran football club. The team play in La Unión, La Unión department.

History

Foundation

The foundation of Atletico Balboa occurred in 1950 in La Union. Mauro "El Turco" Granados, Simón Reyes, Paulino Cáceres, Pablo Rubio, Rodolfo Guzmán, Carlos Villalta, Carlos Juárez, René Pantoja, Luis Ávila, Chico Osorio, Juan Guevara, Chico Ruíz and Timoteo Hernández were the original members of the team. The team was intended to be a baseball team, but it was changed to a football team. The club was named "Balboa" after the Panamanian balboa and its first match was played against the Honduran team América de Choluteca. The team's first colours were white with green diagonal stripes which were soon changed by the team's president Ricardo Flores to black and red. [1]

Primera División

After becoming champions of the Segunda División in 1998, Atlético Balboa ascended to the Salvadoran Primera División where in their first season they finished runner-up while being coached by Mario Martínez and Óscar Benítez. The team's player lineup that season included Franklin Webster and Elvis Perreira.

Irregular way

The team's results and goal count declined between 1999 and 2001. During this time the team was coached by Óscar Benítez, Saúl Molina and Juan Quarterone. Luciano Suárez, Manuel Díaz, Camilo Bonilla and Carlos Edgar Villareal played for Balboa in this period.

Days of crisis

The team had just started the 2002–2003 season when the team ran into economic and performance problems. Juan Quarterone was replaced by the Paraguayan Nelson Brizuela. Under Brizuela, the team was only able to achieve 3 draws from 6 games. Brizuela was soon replaced by Argentine-Italian Carlos Barone whose team's last four games almost got them relegated but in the end Dragón had a poorer record. Atlético Balboa purchased many foreign players during the season but the only successful one was the Colombian Carlos Asprilla. Webster, the highest scoring player from the team was sold to San Salvador F.C. The club then changed its coach several times during the 2003-2004 season, with Costa Rican Manuel Solano, Gabriel Avedissian and Paulo Roberto de Oliveira serving as coach at various points in time. These coaches, except for assistant coach Jesús Fuentes, all failed to produce a high number of wins.

Almost glory

After the events of 2002-2004 season, Balboa advanced in the rankings of the Primera División. The team finished in second place in the 2006-2007 while being coached by Juan Quarterone and Jorge Alberto García. Then, the tension between the board and the two coaches divided the club. The team, including Colombian player Henry Vargas did not participate in the UNCAF tournament due to losing a playoff to C.D. Luis Ángel Firpo. However the next season Atlético Balboa was relegated from the Primera División when they lost to C.D. Vista Hermosa.

Current history

The club was promoted to the Salvadoran Primera División again after defeating Juventud Independiente in the 2008 season.[2] Two years of moderate success followed under Guatemalan coach Carlos Alberto Mijangos and Argentine coach Roberto Gamarra, during which the team came close to entering the finals series in both seasons. However, financial problems appeared again and after two subsequent years of debt, the club was demoted to the Second Division in the 2011 season. It then disbanded and played its last game in 2011.[3]

After 10 years, It was announced the club would be returning to the third division and professional football.[4]

On June 18, 2024 Atletico Balboa announced due to lack of financial support the club would be selling their spot in the Segunda Division.[5]

On June 2025, The club returned back to the Segunda Division for the Apertura 2025 season, under the leadership of newly hired manager Carlos Romero. Atletico Balboa finished forth in the regular season standing before defeating Fuerte Aguilares 4-2 on aggregate and Batanecos 3-2 on aggreate. They reached the final against Dragon, which they won 2-1 thanks to a double by Colombian Miguel Murillo.[6]

Honours

League

Cups

Sponsorship

Companies that Atletico Balboa currently has sponsorship deals with for 2025–2026 includes:

  • Honduras Huriver  – Official kit suppliers
  • El Salvador CAMSEB – Official sponsors
  • El Salvador Alcadia de La Union Sur – Official sponsors
  • El Salvador TBD – Official sponsors
  • El Salvador TBD – Official sponsors

Current squad

Updated January 2026. Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
8 MF  SLV Orlando Martinez
10 FW  SLV Edgar Cruz
20 DF  SLV Kevin Berrios
23 DF  SLV Nelson Moreno
No. Pos. Nation Player
24 MF  SLV Diego Guerrero
30 GK  SLV Alcides Gomez
32 FW  SLV Fredy Meza

Coaching staff

As of June, 2025

Position Staff
Manager El Salvador Carlos Romero
Assistant Manager El Salvador TBD
Reserve Manager El Salvador TBD
Ladies's Manager El Salvador TBD
Physical coach El Salvador TBD
Assistant Physical coach El Salvador TBD
Goalkeeper Coach El Salvador TBD
Kineslogic El Salvador TBD
Utility Equipment El Salvador TBD
Football director El Salvador TBD
Team Doctor El Salvador TBD

Notable players

Team captains

Name Years
El Salvador Mario Marconi Burro TBD
El Salvador Carlos Rivas 1979
El Salvador Domingo Escobar 1986
El Salvador Carlos Antonio Meléndez 1991
El Salvador Manrique Vargas Romero 1996
El Salvador TBD 2000
El Salvador Daniel Sagastizado 2001
El Salvador Armando Mercado 2004
El Salvador Jefrey Francisco Cruz 2022
El Salvador Francisco Valladarez 2023-2024
Hiatus 2024-2025
El Salvador Gabriel Alvarez 2025-Present

Notable Players Atletico Balboa

Players marked in bold gained their caps while playing at Atletico Balboa.

Internationals who have played at Atletico Balboa

Players marked in bold gained their caps while playing at Atletico Balboa.

List of presidents

  • Ricardo Flores
  • Juan Pablo Robles (2003)
  • Noel Benítez (2004, 2006–2007)
  • Mario Sorto (2005)
  • Andrés Alonso Gómez (2007–2008)
  • Juan Pablo Robles (2009–2011) [1]
  • Kevin Rubio (2021-2024)
  • Francisco Cruz Martínez (2025-Present)

List of coaches

Name From To
El Salvador Salvador Churrillo Rivas 1979 1979
El Salvador Juan Evangelista Zelaya 1981 1981
El Salvador Francisco Jovel 1985 1985
El Salvador Jose Mario Martínez 1990 1990
El Salvador Salvador Reyes 1996 1996
El Salvador Jose Mario Martínez 1998 February 2001
El Salvador Óscar Benítez February 2001 October 2001
El Salvador Saúl Molina[7] November 2001 December 2001
Argentina Juan Quarterone January 2002 December 2002
Paraguay Nelson Brizuela January 2003 April 2003
Argentina Italy Carlos Barone April 2003 April 2003
Uruguay Carlos Garabet Avedissian June 2003 August 2003
Costa Rica Manuel Alberto Solano Madrigal September 2003 December 2003
Brazil Paulo Roberto de Oliveira December 2003 December 2003
El Salvador Jesus Fuentes December 2003 January 2004
El Salvador Óscar Benítez January 2004 June 2004
Argentina Jorge García June 2004 October 2004
Argentina Juan Quarterone October 2004 January 2005
Colombia Henry Vanegas February 2005 September 2005
Argentina Jorge García September 2005 December 2005
El Salvador Nelson Ancheta January 2006 2006
Argentina Jorge García 2006 2007
El Salvador Fausto Omar Vásquez 2008 June 2008
Uruguay Gustavo de Simone 25 July 2008 30 Aug 2008
Paraguay Roberto Gamarra 2007 Jan 2009
Argentina Carlos de Toro 21 Jan 2009 Feb 2009
El Salvador Luis Zapata Feb 2009 June 2009
Brazil Eduardo Santana June 2009 Aug 2009
El Salvador Angel Orellana Aug 2009 Sep 2009
Argentina Jorge García Sep 2009 Sep 2009
El Salvador Luis Zapata Sep 2009 Dec 2009
Guatemala Carlos Mijangos Jan 2010 June 2010
Paraguay Roberto Gamarra June 2010 December 2010
El Salvador Mario Martínez December 2010 June 2011
Hiatus July 2011 June 2021
Colombia Luis Carlos Asprilla July 2021 February 2022
El Salvador William Cheves February 2022 February 2022
Paraguay Roberto Gamarra February 2022 May 2022
El Salvador Omar Sevilla May 2022 November 2022
Colombia Luis Carlos Asprilla November 2022 December 12, 2022
El Salvador Misael Alfaro December 13, 2022 October 11, 2023
El Salvador David Paz October, 2023 May 2024
Hiatus June 2024 June 2025
El Salvador Carlos Romero June 2025 Present

Notable managers

The following managers have won at least one trophy while in charge at Atletico Balboa:

Name Nationality From To Honours
José Mario Martínez El Salvador El Salvador 1 June 1998 1 February 2001 1 Segunda División Salvadorean (1999-2000)
Fausto Omar Vásquez El Salvador El Salvador 1 January 2008 1 June 2008 1 Segunda División Salvadorean (2008)
Jorge García Argentina Argentina 1 June 2006 1 June 2007 1 Copa Presidente (2006)
Carlos Romero El Salvador El Salvador 1 June 2025 Present 1 Segunda División Salvadorean (2025 Apertura)

Records

Most appearances

No. Player period Appearances
1 El Salvador TBD TBD-TBD 71
2 El Salvador TBD TBD-TBD 71
3 El Salvador Yuvini Salamanca TBD-TBD 94
4 El Salvador Adan Reyes TBD-TBD 92
5 El Salvador TBD TBD-TBD 71

Most Goals

No. Player Period Goals
1 Honduras Franklin Webster 2000-2002, 2005, 2008–2009, 2011-2012 77
2 El Salvador Alexander Campos 2010–2011 14
3 Colombia Luis Carlos Asprilla 2002-2005 30
4 El Salvador TBD TBD-TBD 92
5 El Salvador TBD TBD-TBD 71

References

  1. ^ "El Balboa renace entre tradición, historia y resistencia". www.elgrafico.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 2025-12-01.
  2. ^ El Salvador 2007/08 – RSSSF
  3. ^ "FlashScore: Atletico Balboa - results, fixtures". www.flashscore.ca. Retrieved 2020-11-21.
  4. ^ "Cd Atlético Balboa Regresa al Fútbol Profesional". 7 July 2021.
  5. ^ "Atlético Balboa pone a la venta categoría en Segunda División" [Atletico Balboa puts up spot in the Segunda Division for sale]. elgrafico.com (in Spanish). 18 June 2024. Retrieved 13 July 2024.
  6. ^ "Atletico Balboa se consagra campeon de la Segunda Division". elgrafico.com (in Spanish). 30 November 2025. Retrieved 1 December 2025.
  7. ^ "Deportes en el Diario de Hoy".