Atlético Ottawa

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Atlético Ottawa
File:Atlético Ottawa logo.svg
Full name Atlético Ottawa
Nickname(s) Ottleti[1]
Founded January 29, 2020; 5 years ago (2020-01-29)
Stadium TD Place, Ottawa
Stadium
capacity
24,000
Owner Atlético Madrid
CEO Fernando Lopez
President Jeff Hunt
Coach Carlos González
League Canadian Premier League
2023 Regular season, 6th
Playoffs, did not qualify
Website Club home page
Current season
Active departments of Atlético Madrid
Football pictogram.svg Football pictogram.svg Football pictogram.svg
Football (Men's) Football B (Men's) Football Youth (Men's)
Football pictogram.svg Rugby union pictogram.svg Football pictogram.svg
Football (Women's) Rugby Football in India

Atlético Ottawa is a Canadian professional soccer club based in Ottawa, Ontario. The club competes in the Canadian Premier League and plays its home games at TD Place.[2] The team was founded in 2020 by Spanish club Atlético Madrid.

History

From 2014 to 2019, Ottawa Fury FC competed in American-based soccer leagues, most recently the USL Championship.[3] The Fury dissolved after the 2019 season due to sanctioning issues associated with competing in the United States with the emergence of the domestic Canadian Premier League.[4] This left Ottawa without a professional soccer team heading into the 2020 season.

File:Atleticoottawakickoff.jpg
Moments after kick-off at Atlético Ottawa's first home game on August 14, 2021

On January 29, 2020, it was announced that Ottawa had been awarded the Canadian Premier League's first expansion team to be owned by Spanish club Atlético Madrid with Ottawa businessman Jeff Hunt as a strategic partner.[5] The club debuted in the 2020 Canadian Premier League season under the name Atlético Ottawa.[6][7]

The club's identity, including name, crest, and colours, was unveiled on February 11, 2020.[7][8] The day was proclaimed "Atlético Ottawa Day" by Ottawa mayor Jim Watson.[9] Mista was announced as the first head coach and general manager of the club.[7]

As of their inaugural season, Atlético Ottawa home and away games are broadcast on OneSoccer, and on TSN1200 in radio format.

After playing the 2020 season and start of the 2021 season at neutral-site venues due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Atlético Ottawa made their home debut on August 14, 2021. Over 12,000 spectators were in attendance as Ottawa defeated the HFX Wanderers 2–1.[10]

Following a 3–1 victory over Cavalry FC on September 24, 2022, Atlético Ottawa qualified for the Canadian Premier League playoffs for the first time.[11] On October 8, 2022, Atlético Ottawa clinched the 2022 CPL regular season championship.[12]

Stadium

Atlético Ottawa play at TD Place at Lansdowne Park in the Glebe neighbourhood of Ottawa. The stadium is shared with the Ottawa Redblacks Canadian football team and formerly hosted Ottawa Fury FC and hosted nine matches from the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup.[13]

Crest and colours

The club's identity is based upon that of its parent club, Atlético Madrid. The crest features a blue silhouette of the Peace Tower on Ottawa's Parliament Hill. Underneath are red and white stripes, evoking Atlético Madrid's crest and Canada's flag. At the base of the crest is a maple leaf. The club's alternate logo is a canoe paddle crossed by two arrows, taken from the Coat of arms of Ottawa, with the monogram "AO".[14]

Like Atlético Madrid, the club's colours are red, white, and blue (branded by the club as "federal red", "blanc d'Ottawa", and "Rideau blue").[14]

Club culture

Supporters

Atlético Ottawa's two main supporters groups are the Capital City Supporters Group (CCSG) and the Bytown Boys. The two groups are located in Section W of TD Place during home games and have gained a reputation for being a leading example for supporters culture in the Canadian Premier League.[15]

Some notable introductions to the gameday atmosphere from the supporters include Wally, an inflatable dinosaur that has become an adoptive mascot of the supporters section, the "Olliewood" sign on the eastern hill of TD Place, in honour of 2022 CPL Player of the Year Ollie Bassett, and wide variety of characters strewn about the supporters section in non-traditional matchday garb.[15]

The support for the club has continued to grow and manifested in a record crowd of 14,992 for the 2022 Canadian Premier League Final against Forge FC. This marked the largest paid attendance for any Atlético Ottawa match to date.[16]

Honours

Players and staff

Squad

As of August 29, 2024[18]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
2 Canada DF Zachary Roy
3 Spain DF Jesús del Amo
4 Canada DF Tyr Walker
5 Trinidad and Tobago DF Luke Singh (on loan from Toronto FC)
6 Ecuador DF Liberman Torres (on loan from Villarreal)
7 Portugal FW Kévin dos Santos
8 Spain DF Dani Morer (on loan from Famalicão)
9 Canada FW Samuel Salter
10 Northern Ireland MF Ollie Bassett
11 Brazil MF Gabriel Antinoro
13 Canada FW Ballou Tabla
15 Canada DF Maxim Tissot
No. Position Player
18 Canada MF Luca Piccioli
19 Switzerland FW Rubén del Campo
21 Spain MF Alberto Zapater
22 Canada MF Matteo de Brienne
23 Canada MF Kris Twardek
29 Canada GK Nathan Ingham
33 Mali MF Aboubacar Sissoko
34 Canada MF Manny Aparicio
55 Canada DF Amer Didić
96 Greece MF Ilias Iliadis
99 Algeria GK Rayane Yesli
Guyana DF Jonathan Grant

Out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
11 Canada MF Noah Verhoeven (at Valour FC for 2024 season)

Staff

As of April 12, 2023[19][20][21][22]
Executive
CEO Spain Fernando Lopez
President Canada Jeff Hunt
Senior director, soccer operations / match director Canada Carrie McKay
Director, soccer operations Canada JD Ulanowski
Coaching staff
Head coach Spain Carlos González
Assistant coach / physical preparation lead Spain David Galán
Assistant coach Canada Kwesi Loney
Goalkeeping coach Spain Borja Montero
Team manager Canada Drew Beckie

Head coaches

As of May 11, 2024
Coach Nation Tenure Record
G W D L Win %
Mista  Spain February 11, 2020 – December 28, 2021[23] 36 8 10 18 22.22
Carlos González  Spain February 24, 2022[21] – present 68 29 19 20 42.65

Club captains

Years Name Nation
2020 Ben Fisk  Canada
2021 Milovan Kapor  Canada
2021–2022 Drew Beckie  Canada
2023 Carl Haworth[24]  Canada
2024 Maxim Tissot  Canada

Records

Year-by-year

Season League Playoffs CC Continental Average
attendance
Top goalscorer(s)
Div League Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts PPG Pos. Name Goals
2020a 1 CPL 7 2 2 3 7 12 −5 8 1.14 7th DNQ DNQ Ineligible N/A Mexico Francisco Acuña
Canada Malcolm Shaw
2
2021 CPL 28 6 8 14 30 47 −17 26 0.93 8th DNQ PR DNQ 3,618 Canada Malcolm Shaw 10
2022 CPL 28 13 10 5 36 29 7 49 1.78 1st RU PR DNQ 4,069 Northern Ireland Ollie Bassett 8
2023 CPL 28 10 6 12 38 34 4 36 1.29 6th DNQ QF N/A 4,959 Northern Ireland Ollie Bassett 12
2024 CPL 28 11 11 6 42 31 11 44 1.57 3rd TBD QF DNQ 5,478 Switzerland Rubén Del Campo 13

1. Average attendance include statistics from league matches only.
2. Top goalscorer(s) includes all goals scored in league season, league playoffs, Canadian Championship, CONCACAF League, and other competitive continental matches.
a: Due to the COVID-19 Pandemic, the season was held exclusively in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, without fans formatted as a double round robin season with a single match final[25]

Most appearances

As of October 19, 2024
# Name Nation Career at club Games played
CPL Cup Int'l Total
1 Ollie Bassett  Northern Ireland 2022– 84 6 0 90
2 Miguel Acosta  Spain 2021–2023 81 4 0 85
3 Malcolm Shaw  Trinidad and Tobago 2020–2023 80 3 0 83
4 Nathan Ingham  Canada 2022– 70 2 0 72
5 Zach Verhoven  Canada 2021–2023 62 3 0 65
6 Ballou Tabla  Canada 2022, 2024– 58 4 0 62
7 Maxim Tissot  Canada 2022– 56 5 0 61
8 Ben McKendry  Canada 2020–2022 59 1 0 60
Samuel Salter  Canada 2023– 55 5 0 60
10 Brian Wright  Canada 2021–2022 51 2 0 53

Note: Bold indicates active player

Most goals

As of October 12, 2024
# Name Nation Career at club Goals scored
CPL Cup Int'l Total
1 Ollie Bassett  Northern Ireland 2022– 22 3 0 25
2 Malcolm Shaw  Trinidad and Tobago 2020–2023 17 2 0 19
3 Brian Wright  Canada 2021–2022 13 1 0 14
4 Rubén Del Campo   Switzerland 2023– 11 2 0 13
Sam Salter  Canada 2023– 12 1 0 13
6 Ballou Tabla  Canada 2022, 2024– 9 1 0 10
7 Zach Verhoven  Canada 2021–2023 7 0 0 7
8 Maxim Tissot  Canada 2022– 5 1 0 6
9 Alberto Zapater  Spain 2023– 3 2 0 5
Manny Aparicio  Canada 2024– 5 0 0 5

Note: Bold indicates active player

Most assists

As of September 22, 2024
# Name Nation Career at club Assists
CPL Cup Int'l Total
1 Ollie Bassett  Northern Ireland 2022– 10 0 0 10
2 Zach Verhoven  Canada 2021–2023 9 0 0 9
Carl Haworth  Canada 2022–2023 8 1 0 9
Ballou Tabla  Canada 2022, 2024– 8 1 0 9
5 Dani Morer  Spain 2024– 6 1 0 7
6 Miguel Acosta  Spain 2021–2023 6 0 0 6
7 Malcolm Shaw  Trinidad and Tobago 2020–2023 4 0 0 4
Jean-Aniel Assi  Canada 2023 3 1 0 4
Maxim Tissot  Canada 2022– 3 1 0 4
Rubén Del Campo   Switzerland 2023– 4 0 0 4

Note: Bold indicates active player

Note: 4 others tied on 3

References

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External links

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Template:CPL Shield winners

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