The Peruvian Football Federation (Spanish: Federación Peruana de Fútbol or FPF) is the body that governs Association football in Peru. It was founded on August 23, 1922, and affiliated with FIFA in 1924.[1] It is a member of CONMEBOL since 1925, and directly oversees the Peru national football team, futsal team youth teams, Peruvian Primera División, and the amateur leagues.[2] The Peruvian National football team has won two Copa Américas, six Bolivarian Games titles and qualified for the FIFA World Cup five times.
It is indirectly involved in the organization of the Primera División (today Liga 1), the Liga Femenina, Liga 2, Liga 3, Copa Perú, Copa LFP - FPF and others.[3] It is headquartered in the Villa Deportiva Nacional (VIDENA) on Aviación Avenue 2085 in San Luis, Lima, which is also the training center of most Peruvian sports federations.
Association staff
Competitions
The list of official competitions organized by the Peruvian Football Federation since its creation in 1922 are:
Youth
Men's Futsal
Women's Futsal
List of Presidents
Period
|
Name
|
1922–1925 |
Claudio Martínez Bodero
|
1926 |
Guillermo Amesquita
|
1927 |
Alejandro Garland
|
1928 |
León M. Vega
|
1928 |
Eladio Lanatta
|
1929 |
Federico Fernandini
|
1930 |
Gastón Basadre
|
1930–1931 |
Ricardo Guzmán Marquina
|
1931 |
Gastón Basadre
|
1932–1933 |
Manuel Mujica Gallo
|
1933–1936 |
Luis Picasso Rodríguez
|
1936–1937 |
Claudio Martínez Bodero
|
1938–1939 |
Luis Marrou Correa
|
1939–1941 |
Luis Vásquez Benavides
|
1941–1942 |
Alejandro Valdivia
|
1942 |
Guillermo Garavito
|
1943 |
Humberto Meza
|
1943–1948 |
Juan Bromley
|
1948–1952 |
Leoncio Gómez Ruiz
|
1952 |
Augusto Montes
|
1952–1953 |
Juan Escudero Villar
|
1953 |
Miguel Marticorrena
|
1953–1954 |
Pablo Jhery Camino
|
1954 |
José Merino Reyba
|
1954–1955 |
Luis Razetto
|
1956 |
Enrique Velásquez Villavicencio
|
1956–1959 |
José Salom Maúrtua
|
1959–1960 |
Nicanor Arteaga Domínguez
|
1961 |
Jorge Barreto Alván
|
1962–1964 |
Teófilo Salinas Fuller
|
1965 |
Andrés Dianderas
|
1966–1970 |
Gustavo Escudero Molina
|
1970–1973 |
José Salom Maúrtua
|
1973–1975 |
Luciano Cúneo Marsini
|
1975–1976 |
Miguel Pelnny Guardia
|
1976–1977 |
Manuel Monasi
|
1977–1978 |
Álvaro Valdivia Aspiazú
|
1979 |
Augusto Ciccia
|
1980–1983 |
Alberto Espantoso Pérez
|
1983–1984 |
Luis Vargas Hornes
|
1985 |
Jorge Quiroz Castro
|
1985–1987 |
Oswaldo Ramírez
|
1987–1991 |
Josué Grande Fernández
|
1992 |
Manuel Burga Seoane
|
1992 |
Walter Indacochea Queirolo
|
1992–2002 |
Nicolás Delfino
|
2002–2015 |
Manuel Burga Seoane
|
2015–2018 |
Edwin Oviedo
|
2018– |
Agustín Lozano Saavedra
|
See also
References
External links
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Summer Olympic Sports |
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Paralympics and Disabled Sports | |
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Others Sports | |
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Authority control databases |
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International | |
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National | |
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