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CD Tudelano
Club Deportivo Tudelano is a Spanish football team based in Tudela, in the autonomous community of Navarre. Founded in 1935 it plays in Segunda Federación – Group 2, holding home matches at Estadio Ciudad de Tudela, with a capacity of 11,000 seats.
After the Navarre Football Federation was established on 21 May 1928, Tudela lacked a major federated club competing in the region’s official leagues. Only school teams from the Jesuit and Marist Brothers’ colleges were affiliated as associate members. In 1935, efforts began to create a club that would represent the city, prompting discussions among several existing local teams.
On 29 November 1935, several local clubs — C.D. Vegetariano, Tudela F.C., Áncora Fordin, Sociedad Gaztesuna, and Muskaria Club — merged to establish Club Deportivo Tudelano. Lucas Gallego was named president, and the newly formed team adopted a white shirt and black shorts as its official kit. The club played its home matches at Campo de Griseras, which had been enclosed since 1934. Tudelano entered competition in the Segunda Regional during the 1935–36 season and secured first place in its debut campaign.
At the same time, C.D. Arenas, which had not joined the merger, continued competing in the Primera Regional as another representative of Tudela. In July 1936, just as CD Tudelano was preparing to compete in the Primera Regional, the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War brought an abrupt suspension of activity that lasted nearly two years. Football resumed in the city in late 1938, once circumstances allowed.
In the 1939–40 season, national and regional football competitions resumed, and CD Tudelano quickly became a prominent club in Navarre. The team finished as runner-up in the Primera Regional in 1940–41 and won the league in both the 1941–42 and 1942–43 seasons. During this period, the renamed C.D. Arenas E.yD. competed in the Segunda Regional.
At the time, the renamed C.D. Arenas E.yD. competed in the Segunda Regional. In 1943, Spain’s National Sports Delegation (DND) sought to strengthen football in key population centers by using the newly restructured Tercera División as a platform for smaller clubs. As champions of their region, CD Tudelano earned promotion to the Tercera División and took part in the 1943–44 season in Group III, which included teams from the Basque Country and La Rioja, finishing in sixth place.
In the subsequent seasons, Tudelano placed ninth in 1944–45, eighth in 1945–46, and sixth in 1946–47. In 1947–48, they competed in a group with teams from the Valencia and Castile regions and finished ninth. The 1948–49 campaign saw the club drop to fourteenth and last in a group made up of Basque and Cantabrian clubs. Despite this result, a league restructuring allowed Tudelano to remain in the Tercera División for the 1949–50 season, which they ended in twelfth position.
In the 1950–51 season, CD Tudelano’s financial situation had deteriorated significantly, and the team finished in last place (18th), resulting in relegation to the Primera Regional. Over the next two seasons, the club focused on rebuilding both its finances and competitive form, eventually earning promotion back to the Tercera División at the end of the 1952–53 campaign. Tudelano returned to the national league in the 1953–54 season, finishing in a modest fifteenth place.
CD Tudelano
Club Deportivo Tudelano is a Spanish football team based in Tudela, in the autonomous community of Navarre. Founded in 1935 it plays in Segunda Federación – Group 2, holding home matches at Estadio Ciudad de Tudela, with a capacity of 11,000 seats.
After the Navarre Football Federation was established on 21 May 1928, Tudela lacked a major federated club competing in the region’s official leagues. Only school teams from the Jesuit and Marist Brothers’ colleges were affiliated as associate members. In 1935, efforts began to create a club that would represent the city, prompting discussions among several existing local teams.
On 29 November 1935, several local clubs — C.D. Vegetariano, Tudela F.C., Áncora Fordin, Sociedad Gaztesuna, and Muskaria Club — merged to establish Club Deportivo Tudelano. Lucas Gallego was named president, and the newly formed team adopted a white shirt and black shorts as its official kit. The club played its home matches at Campo de Griseras, which had been enclosed since 1934. Tudelano entered competition in the Segunda Regional during the 1935–36 season and secured first place in its debut campaign.
At the same time, C.D. Arenas, which had not joined the merger, continued competing in the Primera Regional as another representative of Tudela. In July 1936, just as CD Tudelano was preparing to compete in the Primera Regional, the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War brought an abrupt suspension of activity that lasted nearly two years. Football resumed in the city in late 1938, once circumstances allowed.
In the 1939–40 season, national and regional football competitions resumed, and CD Tudelano quickly became a prominent club in Navarre. The team finished as runner-up in the Primera Regional in 1940–41 and won the league in both the 1941–42 and 1942–43 seasons. During this period, the renamed C.D. Arenas E.yD. competed in the Segunda Regional.
At the time, the renamed C.D. Arenas E.yD. competed in the Segunda Regional. In 1943, Spain’s National Sports Delegation (DND) sought to strengthen football in key population centers by using the newly restructured Tercera División as a platform for smaller clubs. As champions of their region, CD Tudelano earned promotion to the Tercera División and took part in the 1943–44 season in Group III, which included teams from the Basque Country and La Rioja, finishing in sixth place.
In the subsequent seasons, Tudelano placed ninth in 1944–45, eighth in 1945–46, and sixth in 1946–47. In 1947–48, they competed in a group with teams from the Valencia and Castile regions and finished ninth. The 1948–49 campaign saw the club drop to fourteenth and last in a group made up of Basque and Cantabrian clubs. Despite this result, a league restructuring allowed Tudelano to remain in the Tercera División for the 1949–50 season, which they ended in twelfth position.
In the 1950–51 season, CD Tudelano’s financial situation had deteriorated significantly, and the team finished in last place (18th), resulting in relegation to the Primera Regional. Over the next two seasons, the club focused on rebuilding both its finances and competitive form, eventually earning promotion back to the Tercera División at the end of the 1952–53 campaign. Tudelano returned to the national league in the 1953–54 season, finishing in a modest fifteenth place.
