| Full name | Association Liga Deportiva Alajuelense | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nicknames | Leones (The Lions), La Liga (The League) Manudos (Big-Handed) | |||
| Short name | LDA | |||
| Founded | June 18, 1919; 106 years ago (1919-06-18) | |||
| Ground | Estadio Alejandro Morera Soto | |||
| Capacity | 17,895 | |||
| President | Joseph Joseph Saidy | |||
| Head coach | Óscar Ramírez | |||
| League | Liga Promerica | |||
| Clausura 2023 | 1° | |||
| Website | lda | |||
Liga Deportiva Alajuelense (LDA,Spanish pronunciation:[ˈliɣaðepoɾˈtiβaalaxweˈlense]), commonly known asAlajuelense and nicknamedLa Liga (Spanish pronunciation:[laˈliɣa]), is aCosta Rican multisport club based in the borough of El Llano,Alajuela,Alajuela province. Although they compete in a number of different sports, Alajuelense is mostly known for itsassociation football team. It plays in thePrimera División de Costa Rica, the top tier of theCosta Rican football league system. Alajuelense is one of two clubs to havenever been relegated, along withHerediano.[1][2]
Alajuelense was founded on the former Paris Hall, west of Alajuela's Central Park, on June 18, 1919, by six former players of a historic city club,Once de Abril, with the intention of uniting all the sportsmen and associations present at that time in Alajuela under a single banner. However, it wouldn't be until 1928 when Alajuelense managed to become national champions for the first time in a season that saw the club's first star:Alejandro Morera. Morera, who would later go on to becomeBarcelona's mainstriker for two seasons, is regarded as one of the finest players Costa Rica has ever produced. He would later manage Alajuelense to their second national title in 1939 as well as two others in 1941 and 1945. Since then, Alajuelense has become one of the most supported football clubs in Costa Rica.[3][4]
Alajuelense is one of the most successful teams in Costa Rica andCentral America, having won 30 national championships, 2CONCACAF Champions Cup titles, 1CONCACAF League, 2CONCACAF Central American Cup, 3UNCAF Interclub Cup and 1Campeonato Centroamericano y Caribe. Alajuelense was the first Costa Rican club to win an official international competition when they defeatedSuranamese clubTransvaal in the final series in 1986. Alajuelense has also participated in theCopa Interamericana,Copa Merconorte, andCopa Sudamericana. In 1996, Alajuelense became the first club in the world to reach 100 points in any national league, finishing with a total of 102 points. This feat was repeated in 1998 and 2000 with 105 and 102 points gained, respectively.[5][4]
Alajuelense plays itshome matches at theEstadio Alejandro Morera Soto. Alajuelense's home kit is composed of red and black vertical striped shirts, with black shorts, accompanied by red or black socks. This combination has been used since the club's foundation.Kelme are the kit manufacturers. Alajuelense holds many long-standing rivalries, most notably againstSaprissa,Herediano, andCartaginés. It has contributed many key and famous players towardsCosta Rica'sFIFA World Cup squads such asJosé Carlos Chaves,Óscar Ramírez,Mauricio Montero,Wilmer López,Luis Marín,Jhonny Acosta, andPatrick Pemberton.
The team was created in 1919 when a group of friends that used to play in a team called the "Electra" at first and then "Once de Abril" (April the 11th) met at "Salon París". They wanted to give the city a team that could represent them at a national level. They played their first official game on August 2 of that same year againstCartaginés getting their first victory, 3–1.[6][7]

Alajuelense was part of the 7 teams that built and formed the National League inCosta Rica, back in 1921, along with La Libertad,Gimnástica Española,Herediano,Cartaginés, CS Tres Rios de La Union, and Sociedad Gimnástica Limonense. They won their first championship in 1928. They are the only team to win the championship with a perfect record; in 1941 they won all 6 games.[9] In 1960, the team made a tour around the world, leaving Costa Rica on September 17. In 78 days, the team played 24 games, winning 12, losing seven and drawing five. They scored 71 goals and allowed 47, with a remarkable performance from Juan Ulloa Ramírez, the best player and top scorer of this tour.[10][11]

Throughout their history, Alajuelense has generated a lot of great players and stunning performances. They are known as one of the best teams in the Central America area. Their best decade was the 1990s, during which they won 4 Championships and 4 sub-championships (runner up) as well. In addition to that, by the end of the 90's and the middle of the 2000s, they won a total of 5 local championships (4 of them in a row), 2Copa Interclubes UNCAF Trophies and aCONCACAF Club Championship, being the base for the Costa Rican football team in the Korea and Japan2002 FIFA World Cup, with 9 players.
By November 11, 2000,[12] and after participating in theCopa Merconorte, Alajuelense was ranked 27th inIFFHS's Club World Ranking. It is the best rank any Central American club has reached.
The club struggled with financial and administrative problems in the second part on the 2000s decade, so they decided to end contract with a lot of their regular and known players and started to build a team based on their younger divisions and make some structural changes. Nowadays the club is free of debts and with a team averaging 25-year-old players is still one of the best teams in the area and one of the teams with most fans in Costa Rica. On June 10, 2019, the club celebrated its 100th anniversary, being the second Costa Rican team to do so.
In 2023, Alajuelense participated in the2023 CONCACAF Central American Cup, and they would advance to quarter-finals after being leaders on the Group D. They would faceCartaginés, that they would defeat 6–1 on aggregate, advancing to semifinals, where they would faceHerediano, defeating them 5–4 on penalties after a 4–4 aggregate draw. In the final, they would faceReal Estelí, but they would defeat them easily after a 4–1 victory on aggregate, being the first champions of the CONCACAF Central American Cup, and qualifying directly for the round of 16 of the2024 CONCACAF Champions Cup.
The Estadio Alejandro Morera Soto is the home of Alajuelense and is owned and operated by La Liga Deportiva Alajuelense. It is located inEl Llano neighborhood ofAlajuela.[13]
On July 20, 1966, due to a motion by the Municipality of Alajuela, the stadium was renamed in honor ofAlejandro Morera, nicknamedel mago del balón, which meansthe magician of the ball. He was a notable former player of Alajuelense,Barcelona, andHércules, and for commercial purposes, in an agreement with the financial institutionScotiabank in 2011, the name Scotiabank was added.[14]

The project to find a proper site for a permanent home started in 1938, when the director of the club, Carlos Bolaños, proposed that the club should purchase its own land. The land was purchased on October 7, 1940, but the terrain would not be football-ready until when the first game was played on January 18, 1942, when Alajuelense played againstCartaginés; the stadium only had a simple wooden stand that was previously used in theEstadio Nacional.[15]
On September 27, 1949, a professor from a local high school named Armando Morux Sancho started what was calledLa marcha del ladrillo, meaningThe March of Bricks in which every student would donate a brick to help build the walls and stands of the stadium. The first stands to be built were located in north, west and east around the pitch.
On March 19, 1970, the stadium saw its first night game when Alajuelense facedHonduran clubMotagua, beating them 4–1.
In 1979, the enlargement of the stadium was initiated with the project of building a second stand on top of the existing stand and adding an additional stand over the dressing and conference rooms (south) and also adding a roof to the stands located to the east and the south. The project was fully completed in 1984. The stadium was re-inaugurated that year along with the new illuminations, which were amongst the best illuminations systems at the time.[16]
On 8 April 2021, the team announced plans fora new stadium, with an expected opening by January 2025.[17]
The team is now represented by a Lion and Lioness dressed with the team uniform and wearing cleats as if he was going to play.
In every home game, the mascot comes out at the pitch before the game starts and plays on the field with fans, jokes with rival's fans, walk through the pitch with models giving away gifts from their sponsors and cheers the team with a huge team's flag. Before the game starts and during the half-time break, the Lion walks among the crowd and stands for pictures with the children.[18]
The original mascot used to be a Mango, this because the team is located in Alajuela that is known as "La Ciudad de los Mangos" ("The Mangoes' City") because of the high amount of Mango Trees that could be located in the province due its weather, but later on in the early 80's, the mascot was changed into a Lion.
The Lion was chosen years ago because it represents four main attributes of the major king of the jungle, that are reflected on the team's vision and mission: Courage, Strength, Dynamism and Fidelity.[19]
| Manufacturer | Period | Sponsor |
|---|---|---|
| None | 1980 | |
| 1983–1986 | ||
| 1986–1987 | ||
| None | 1987–1988 | |
| 1988 | ||
| 1988–1992 | ||
| 1992–1996 | ||
| 1996–1998 | ||
| 1998–2000 | ||
| 2000–2001 | ||
| 2001–2002 | ||
| 2003–2008 | ||
| 2008–2009 | ||
| 2010–2011 | ||
| 2012–2015 | ||
| 2016 | ||
| 2017 | ||
| 2018 | ||
| 2024 | ||
| 2025–present |
Below are listed the club's history performances in national compétition.
| Season | Pos | Pld | Pts | Torneo apertura | Position | Torneo clausura | Position | Copa de Costa rica | Supercopa | Other competitions | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined underFIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
|
|
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined underFIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
|
20 –
Mauricio Montero,defender (1987–98)
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link){{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)