Santos de Guápiles

Santos
Full nameAsociación Deportiva Santos
NicknamesLos Guapileños
Rojiblancos
La Marea Roja
Founded1961 (1961)
GroundEstadio Ebal Rodríguez
Guápiles, Costa Rica
Capacity3,000
ManagerRandall Row
LeagueLiga FPD (Disqualified)
2025–26 cycleDisqualified (Licensing issues)

Asociación Deportiva Santos, commonly known simply as Santos de Guápiles, is a Costa Rican association football club. Historically a mainstay in the Liga FPD, the club was excluded from the top-tier competition for the 2026 Clausura season due to its failure to comply with mandatory licensing regulations.[1]

The club plays its home matches at Estadio Ebal Rodríguez in Guápiles, Limón.

History

The club was founded in 1961[2] and have never been league champions. They were runner-up twice, in 2001–02 and in the 2012 Verano championship. They reached the top tier after winning promotion in 1999[3] after beating Municipal Liberia in a May 1999 play-off final marred by violence off the pitch.[4]

2026 Licensing Disqualification

In December 2025, the Costa Rican Football Federation (FCRF) Licensing Committee announced that Santos de Guápiles, alongside AD Guanacasteca, did not meet the necessary administrative and financial criteria to maintain their professional license for the 2026 cycle.[5] Consequently, the club was barred from participating in the Clausura 2026 tournament, and their scheduled matches were removed from the official UNAFUT calendar. The club management has since announced plans to restructure their administrative finances to regain their status in future seasons.

Stadium

Santos play their home games in the Estadio Ebal Rodríguez, where Alajuelense's Wilson Muñoz scored the first Primera División goal in a 1999 4–0 league win over the hosts.[6]

Current squad

As of 28 August, 2024

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  CRC Brayan Morales
3 DF  CRC Jhamir Ordain
4 DF  CRC Kendrick Enríquez
5 DF  PAN Reyniel Perdomo (on loan from Alianza Panama)
7 FW  COL Cristian Zúñiga
8 MF  CRC Denilson Mason
9 FW  HON Joshua Canales (on loan from Herediano)
11 MF  CRC Reimond Salas
12 MF  CRC Jefferson Sánchez
14 MF  CRC Gustavo Méndez (on loan from San Carlos)
15 MF  CRC Davis Paniagua
16 MF  CRC Isaac Salas
19 FW  CRC Marvin Chinchilla
No. Pos. Nation Player
20 DF  CRC Armando Ruiz
21 DF  CRC Juan Diego Madrigal
23 GK  CRC Alejandro Barrientos
25 DF  SLV Adán Clímaco
26 DF  CRC Jordan Smith
28 MF  CRC Randy Chirino
29 DF  CRC Rigoberto Jiménez
30 GK  CRC Iker Sanabria
31 GK  CRC Alexandre Lezcano (on loan from Herediano)
53 FW  PAN Juan Villalobos (on loan from Árabe Unido)
70 FW  COL Lorenzo Orellano
79 DF  PAN Óscar Linton
91 DF  CRC Jordy Evans

References

  1. ^ Vargas, Dinia (2 December 2025). "14 de enero iniciará el Torneo de Clausura 2026: Así quedó el calendario". CRHoy. Retrieved 20 January 2026.
  2. ^ Club de Costa Rica pasará a tener dueños mexicanos – Diez (in Spanish)
  3. ^ Costa Rica 1998/99 – RSSSF
  4. ^ Con simpleza al cetro•El Santos se coronó campeón ante un confundido Liberia – Nación (in Spanish)
  5. ^ "Licencias confirma exclusión de Santos y Guanacasteca para el Clausura". La Nación. 15 December 2025. Retrieved 20 January 2026.
  6. ^ Estadio Ebal Rodríguez consiguió su gol 600 Archived 2015-04-02 at the Wayback Machine – UNAFUT (in Spanish)