Governing body of association football in Peru
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, the Copa Federación , and the amateur leagues.[ 2] The Peruvian National football team has won two Copa América's , 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 de la Liga Peruana 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.
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
Summer Olympic Sports Aquatics Diving Swimming Synchronized Swimming Water Polo Archery Athletics Badminton Basketball Boxing Canoeing Cycling Equestrian Fencing Field Hockey Football Golf Gymnastics Handball Judo Modern Pentathlon Rugby 7's Rowing Sailing Shooting Table Tennis Taekwondo Tennis Triathlon Volleyball Weightlifting Wrestling Winter Olympic Sports Biathlon Bobsleigh Curling Skating (Figure, Speed & Short Track) Ice Hockey Luge Skeleton Skiing (Alpine, Cross Country, Nordic Combined, Freestyle & Jumping) Snowboarding Other IOC Recognised Sports Air sports Auto racing Bandy Baseball Billiard Sports Boules Bowling Bridge Chess Cricket Dance sport Floorball Karate Korfball Lifesaving Motorcycle racing Mountaineering and Climbing Netball Orienteering Pelota Vasca Polo Powerboating Racquetball Roller sports Rugby Softball Sport climbing Squash Sumo Surfing Tug of war Underwater sports Water Ski Wushu Paralympics and Disabled Sports Others Sports