[1] Born in 1907 in Vigo, Pontevedra, Fernando Ponte Conde studied at the Instituto Cardenal Cisneros [es] in Madrid between 1920 and 1922, and in the following year, he earned his bachelor's degree.
[2] On 16 October 1941, the two top teams in Pontevedra, Eiriña CF and Alfonso XIII CF, which had been hindered by the Spanish Civil War, decided to join forces and merge into a single entity that was capable of representing the city with the proper support: Pontevedra Club de Fútbol, and Ponte Conde was elected as its first president.
[1][3][4][5][6] Eiriña's secretary, José Soto Martínez, was an officer of the prison corps, and thus he knew that, in order to avoid arising suspicions in the others, the president had to be someone from Alfonso, with Ponte being the most suitable for this position.
[7] The paperwork that officially established the club was held in Las Palmeras because Ponte, who was already set to be the first president, was a colonel and had his office there.
[7][8] Pontevedra CF made its official debut just two months later, on 28 December, in a friendly against Celta de Vigo at the Pasarón, which ended in a 3–3 home draw.