|  logo | |||
| Full name | Club de Fútbol Ciudad de Murcia, S.A.D. | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Founded | 1999 | ||
| Dissolved | 2007 (relocated) | ||
| Ground | La Condomina | ||
| Capacity | 16,000 | ||
|  | |||
Club de Fútbol Ciudad de Murcia, usually abbreviated to Ciudad de Murcia, was a Spanish football club based in Murcia, in the namesake autonomous community. They played at the 16,000-seater Estadio de La Condomina.
Ciudad Murcia was relocated to Granada and renamed Granada 74 CF after the end of the 2006–07 season.
History
Ciudad de Murcia was formed in the heat of the summer of 1999, when Quique Pina, a former player of Real Murcia, started the club with the help of local businesses and influential friendships.
In the 2003–04 season, the new club first appeared in Segunda División. After reaching as high as a 12th place, it finished 17th, narrowly avoiding relegation, repeating the feat in the following campaign (18th).
Impressive performances, particularly towards the back end of the season, saw Ciudad attain a much higher league standing in 2005–06. Influential players such as José Juan Luque (20 goals) and Daniel Kome helped to keep the club in the promotion picture until the last day, eventually losing out to Levante UD for the third place; in the 2006–07 season, more of the same, but now 13 points behind the last promotee, neighbouring Real Murcia.
On 6 June 2007, Ciudad de Murcia was acquired by an investor from Granada, transferring it to that city and renaming it Granada 74 CF. The players still under contract with Ciudad had the option to cancel their contract or stay on with the newly formed club.[1]
As the second division team moved to Granada, the reserve team, CF Atlético Ciudad, playing in the fourth level, became the club's first team in 2007–08.
Season to season
| Season | Tier | Division | Place | Copa del Rey | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1999–2000 | 5 | Reg. Pref. | 1st | |
| 2000–01 | 4 | 3ª | 1st | |
| 2001–02 | 3 | 2ªB | 5th | Round of 16 | 
| 2002–03 | 3 | 2ªB | 3rd | |
| 2003–04 | 2 | 2ª | 17th | |
| 2004–05 | 2 | 2ª | 18th | |
| 2005–06 | 2 | 2ª | 4th | |
| 2006–07 | 2 | 2ª | 4th | |
| 2007–2009 | as Granada 74 CF | |||
- 4 seasons in Segunda División
- 2 seasons in Segunda División B
- 1 season in Tercera División
Statistics 2006–07
| Segunda División | Position | Pts | P | W | D | L | F | A | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ciudad de Murcia | 4 | 63 | 42 | 18 | 9 | 15 | 52 | 44 | 
- Top Scorers:
- Goitom – 15 goals
- Luque – 11 goals
- Saizar – 8 goals
 
- Top Goalkeepers:
- Jaime Jiménez – 23 goals in 21 matches
- José Juan – 20 goals in 20 matches
 
Notable players
 Rolando Zárate Rolando Zárate
 Damián Timpani Damián Timpani
 Cristian Díaz Cristian Díaz
 Luciano Becchio Luciano Becchio
 Turu Flores Turu Flores
 Javier Liendo Javier Liendo
 Alexandre Alexandre
 Thiago Schumacher Thiago Schumacher
 David Eto'o David Eto'o
 Bleriot Heuyot Bleriot Heuyot
 Daniel Kome Daniel Kome
 Juan Pablo Úbeda Juan Pablo Úbeda
 Romain Ferrier Romain Ferrier
 Carlos Torres Carlos Torres
 João Manuel Pinto João Manuel Pinto
 Marco Almeida Marco Almeida
 Leo Lerinc Leo Lerinc
 Slaviša Jokanović Slaviša Jokanović
 Héctor Font Héctor Font
 Javier Camuñas Javier Camuñas
 Roberto Cuevas Roberto Cuevas
 Ibán Espadas Ibán Espadas
 Daniel Güiza Daniel Güiza
 Mikel Lasa Mikel Lasa
 Mikel Labaka Mikel Labaka
 Dani Bautista Dani Bautista
 José Juan Luque José Juan Luque
 Raúl Medina Raúl Medina
 Ayoze Ayoze
 Xabi Jiménez Xabi Jiménez
 Rubén Torrecilla Rubén Torrecilla
   Roberto Merino Roberto Merino
   Henok Goitom Henok Goitom
   Ludovic Assemoassa Ludovic Assemoassa
 Jonay Hernández Jonay Hernández
 Miku Miku
Famous coaches
References
External links
- Official website (in Spanish)





