Lota Schwager

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Full nameClub de Deportes Lota Schwager
NicknamesLamparita (The little lamp)
Mineros (Miners)
Carboneros (Coal miners)
Founded10 May 1966
Lota Schwager
Full nameClub de Deportes Lota Schwager
NicknamesLamparita (The little lamp)
Mineros (Miners)
Carboneros (Coal miners)
Founded10 May 1966
GroundEstadio Federico Schwager,
Coronel, Chile
Capacity5,700
ChairmanChile Claudio Castro
ManagerChile Cristián Gómez
LeagueTercera B
2021Group C, 2nd

Club de Deportes Lota Schwager is a Chilean football team based in Coronel.

The Lota Schwafer Sports Club was founded on 10 May 1966 as a merge between the Federico Schwager Club (named after local businessman Federico Schwager) and the Minas Lota Club (teams that competed in Campeonato Regional de Concepción representing Lota and Schwager companies), under the name of "Lota Schwager", making reference to both companies latest mentioned. Having their debut–season the same year (where they finished ninth, after a poor campaign), "The Little Lamp" under the coach Isaac Carrasco achieved its first promotion to top-division in 1969, where Coronel-based team remained until 1980.

After they won their second Primera B title in 1986, Lota returned to first-tier thanks to manager Juan Carlos Gangas' job, but they only stayed at Primera División one season, after of defeat the Promotion Play-offs against O'Higgins and Regional Atacama. Following Coronel mining-crisis of 1994, the club disappeared during seven years, starting out again in 2001 for play as an amateur team in Tercera División, winning that in they first attempt to reach it.

In 2006, after a good campaign in second-tier (where even so were four managers who coached Lota: Leonardo Vinés, Humberto López, Márcio da Silva and Jaime Nova), finishing third in the table behind the champion Deportes Melipilla and runner-up Ñublense, the team played the Promotion Play-offs against Talca-based club Rangers, which won at their home stadium Federico Schwager on the penalties thanks to Cristián Limenza's performances in the goal saving penalties.[1]

Honours

Current squad

As of 26 April 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
1 GK  CHI Benjamín Lagos
2 DF  CHI Juan Pablo Reyes
3 DF  CHI Pablo Cabrera
4 DF  CHI Agustín Ambiado
5 DF  CHI Mijael Muñoz
6 DF  CHI Juan José Contreras
7 FW  CHI Cristóbal Díaz
8 MF  CHI Leonardo Povea (c)
9 FW  ARG Lucas Quiroga
10 MF  CHI Diego Bravo
11 FW  CHI Fabián Neira
12 GK  CHI Gabriel Fuentes
13 DF  CHI Dilan Alvarado
14 MF  CHI Gerardo Navarrete
15 DF  CHI Byron Hermosilla
16 MF  CHI Nicolás Lincopán (loan from Universidad de Concepción)
17 FW  CHI Vicente Oñate (loan from Universidad de Concepción)
No. Pos. Nation Player
18 FW  CHI Cristofer Salas
19 DF  CHI Cristóbal Vergara
20 MF  CHI Paolo Fuentes
21 DF  CHI Claudio Jopia
22 DF  CHI Gianfranco Catrileo
23 MF  CHI Sebastián Torres
24 MF  CHI Felipe Ortiz
25 FW  CHI Luca Pontigo
26 GK  CHI Patricio Silva
28 MF  CHI Jordy Contreras
29 GK  CHI Martín Lavanderos
30 FW  CHI Ignacio Chandía
31 MF  CHI Marcelo Zambrano
GK  CHI José Alburquenque (loan from Universidad de Chile)
MF  CHI Diego Fernández
DF  CHI Diego Torres
MF  CHI Juan Villablanca

Managers

Players

See also

References

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