Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Chivas USA

Defunct American soccer club


Defunct American soccer club

FieldValue
clubnameChivas USA
imageChivas USA logo.svg
upright0.7
fullnameClub Deportivo Chivas USA
nicknameThe Goats, Los Rojiblancos (The Red-and-White)
founded
dissolved
stadiumStubHub Center
Carson, California
capacity27,000 (2005–11)
18,800 (2011–12)
owntitleOwner
mgrtitleHead coach
leagueMajor League Soccer
Americantrue
pattern_la1_CHIVAS-USA_14h
pattern_b1_CHIVAS-USA_14h
pattern_ra1_CHIVAS-USA_14h
pattern_sh1_adidasonnavy
pattern_so1_3_stripes_black
leftarm1FFFFFF
body1FFFFFF
rightarm1FFFFFF
shorts1DD0000
socks1DD0000
pattern_la2_CHIVASUSA_13a
pattern_b2_CHIVASUSA_13a
pattern_ra2_CHIVASUSA_13a
pattern_sh2_CHIVASUSA_13a
pattern_so2_3_stripes_red
leftarm2FF0000
body2FFFFFF
rightarm2FF0000
shorts2FFFFFF
socks2000040

Carson, California 18,800 (2011–12)

Chivas USA (pronounced CHEE-vahs) was an American professional soccer club based in the Greater Los Angeles area. The club competed in Major League Soccer (MLS) as a member of the Western Conference. The team played from 2005 to 2014. It was a subsidiary of Mexican club C.D. Guadalajara, sharing common ownership and branding. The team played its home games at StubHub Center in Carson, California.

The club was the eleventh MLS team upon its entry into the league in 2004. Chivas USA was intended to be seen as a "little brother" to its parent club C.D. Guadalajara, one of the most widely supported and successful teams in Mexico. Chiva is Latin American Spanish for "goat", seen as a tough and resilient animal in Mexico, and is the nickname of C.D. Guadalajara.

The club was originally owned by Antonio Cue and Jorge Vergara, who also owned C.D. Guadalajara. In 2014, MLS purchased the club from Vergara with plans to sell to new owners.

The club ceased operations after the 2014 regular season and played their final match on October 26, 2014. That same year, MLS awarded a new expansion team in the Los Angeles area under a new ownership group. They began play as Los Angeles FC in 2018.

History

Founding

Mexican businessman Jorge Vergara took ownership of the struggling Chivas de Guadalajara in 2002 and sought to use the rejuvenated club to establish an international brand. In June 2003, the league announced that the 2003 MLS All-Star Game would be played against Chivas and that Vergara was interested in purchasing an expansion team. The team, named "Chivas USA", would be affiliated with Chivas and play in either Los Angeles or San Diego beginning in the 2005 season; a bid from Houston was also considered. On August 2, 2004, Major League Soccer announced that Chivas USA would share The Home Depot Center in Carson with the Galaxy, and begin play in 2005 as the league's eleventh team.

Early success (2005–2009)

In 2005, Chivas USA kicked off its inaugural season in Major League Soccer at The Home Depot Center with a 2–0 loss to then MLS Cup Champions D.C. United on April 2, 2005, under the guidance of Chivas USA's first head coach Thomas Rongen. After a 1–8–1 start (their sole win coming against fellow expansion club Real Salt Lake), Thomas Rongen was named Chivas USA's sporting director and assistant coach Javier Ledesma became the club's interim head coach. On June 3, 2005, Hans Westerhof was named Chivas USA's second head coach. After a disappointing season, Westerhof did not return to coach the team in 2006.

On November 23, 2005, former MLS Coach of the Year Bob Bradley became Chivas USA's third head coach, replacing Hans Westerhof. Under Bradley, the 2006 season saw a major turnaround for Chivas USA. The team finished the 2006 season with a 10–9–13 record and earned a spot in the Western Conference playoffs. Bradley was named MLS Coach of the Year, becoming the first two-time winner of the award and Chivas USA defender Jonathan Bornstein was named 2006 Gatorade Rookie of the Year. After the season ended, Coach Bradley was named interim head coach of the U.S. men's national soccer team and head coach of the U.S. men's Olympic soccer team by the U.S. Soccer Federation, and was replaced by Chivas USA's fourth head coach, Predrag "Preki" Radosavljevic.

The team's third season, under Preki, was the most successful. Chivas USA goalkeeper Brad Guzan was named MLS's Goalkeeper of the Year for the 2007 season. On November 7, 2007, Preki was named MLS Coach of the Year for 2007 after the first-year manager led the Red-and-White to a 15–7–8 record and first place in Major League Soccer's Western Conference. In January 2008, Preki signed a multi-year contract with Chivas USA securing his position as head coach for the 2008 season. Chivas finished the 2007 MLS season atop of the Western Conference. However, they lost in the Conference Semifinals of the MLS Cup 2007 playoffs to the Kansas City Wizards, who were the conference's No. 4 seed under new MLS seeding rules despite being in the Eastern Conference.

In 2008 Chivas USA competed in their first official international tournament, playing Pachuca in the 2008 SuperLiga. Jonathan Bornstein and Sacha Kljestan were named to the MLS All-Star team. Goalie Brad Guzan became the first Goat to transfer to a European first division club. The Red-and-White clinched a playoff berth for the third consecutive season, losing to Real Salt Lake in the first round. Kljestan scored the U.S. Soccer Goal of the Year while playing in the 2008 Beijing Olympics. He was also named to the MLS Best XI, and was selected as U.S. Soccer's Young Male Athlete of the Year.

Jonathan Bornstein and Sacha Kljestan competed with the U.S. National Team in the 2009 FIFA Confederations Cup in South Africa. Chivas USA goalkeeper Zach Thornton was named to the 2009 MLS All-Star Team. Chivas USA announced the Team Award Winners, naming Thornton the team's Most Valuable Player. Thornton was also named the MLS Goalkeeper of the Year and MLS Comeback Player of the Year, and he was nominated to the MLS Best 11.

Club struggles (2010–2013)

Martín Vásquez was named the team's head coach after serving as an assistant coach from 2005 to 2007. Kljestan and Bornstein were named co-captains for the 2010 season. During the World Cup break Kljestan signed a deal with Belgian club Anderlecht, leaving Chivas USA after parts of five seasons. Bornstein played in the 2010 FIFA World Cup, starting in two matches for the United States as they made it to the Round of 16. On October 27, the team released Vásquez from his contract. On November 2, president and CEO Shawn Hunter announced he was stepping down. On December 14 the club's vice president of soccer operations, Stephen Hamilton revealed he too, was leaving his post. After Hamilton stepped down, Jose L Domene was named Interim General Manager. On January 4, 2011, Robin Fraser became head coach of Chivas USA.

On August 29, 2012, Vergara and his wife, Angélica Fuentes, became sole owners of the club, buying out former partners Antonio and Lorenzo Cué. On May 29, 2013, two Chivas USA youth coaches, Dan Calichman and Ted Chronopoulos, filed a discrimination lawsuit against the club, on the grounds they had been dismissed because they were not Latino. Shortly after the acquisition of the club, Vergara is alleged to have told his staff that those who did not speak Spanish would be fired. Chronopoulos claimed that Jose David, the team's new president and chief business officer, asked Chronopoulos for a list of youth players and coaches who were Mexican or Mexican American and of those that weren't.

Following the release of Preki, Chivas USA failed to stay consistent on and off the field, just like its parent club, CD Guadalajara, Chivas USA had four coaches after the start of the 2010 season; all four coaches failed to impress Jorge Vergara, and were let go. Their last coach was Colombian-born Wílmer Cabrera.

Final season (2014)

On February 20, 2014, Major League Soccer purchased Chivas USA from Vergara. They announced plans to sell to a buyer dedicated to keeping the club in Los Angeles, as well as a plan to rebrand the club in time for the 2015 MLS season. However, by September 29, 2014 ESPN reported that the club would suspend operations at the end of the MLS regular season, according to multiple sources.

On September 30, 2014, Grant Wahl of Sports Illustrated reported that a group of investors headed by Henry Nguyen, Los Angeles Dodgers investor Peter Guber and Cardiff City owner Vincent Tan agreed to purchase the club for a fee over $100 million. The sale would mean that Chivas USA would fold completely, with the second Los Angeles team to take the field as a new expansion team with a new stadium in Downtown Los Angeles.

Chivas USA ceased operations on October 27, 2014, with its player development academy continuing to be operated by MLS until June 2015. A dispersal draft took place after the 2014 season, having the remaining players from the club dispersed to other teams in the league. The league added two teams (New York City FC and Orlando City SC) to increase the total number from 19 to 20, with Kansas City and Houston shifting to the Western Conference to keep the conferences balanced.

Colors and badge

Chivas USA's home uniform mirrored that of their parent club, Guadalajara, with a red-and-white striped shirt, blue shorts and blue socks. Chivas USA wore variations throughout its existence (with slight variations in trim, stripe width, number of stripes, and other minor details), and usually complemented this with a dark blue away uniform.

The club badge was also virtually identical to that of Guadalajara, featuring the coat of arms of the city, but omitting the stars around the outside of the logo that represent each league title won by Guadalajara.

In January 2014, the team applied for the trademarks "Los Angeles SC" and "Los Angeles F.C." with logos for both. The filings were leaked prior to the MLS buyout of Chivas USA the following month.

Ownership

  • Jorge Vergara & Antonio Cué Sánchez-Navarro (August 2, 2004 – August 28, 2012)
  • Jorge Vergara (August 29, 2012 – February 19, 2014)
  • Major League Soccer (February 20, 2014 – October 27, 2014)

Stadium

StubHub Center, Chivas USA's home stadium
  • StubHub Center; Carson, California (2005–2014)
  • Harder Stadium; Santa Barbara, California (2006) 1 game in U.S. Open Cup
  • Titan Stadium; Fullerton, California (2008, 2010) 2 games in U.S. Open Cup and North American SuperLiga

Chivas USA played its home games at StubHub Center, on the campus of California State University, Dominguez Hills in Carson, California, approximately 10 miles south of downtown Los Angeles. Built in 2003 as the home stadium for LA Galaxy, the "SHC" is a 27,000-seat soccer-specific stadium, the second of its kind in MLS, but has hosted other sports such as rugby and football. For its entire existence, Los Rojiblancos shared the stadium with the Galaxy, with whom they competed for the Honda SuperClasico. During their tenure, this arrangement and those of the NFL's New York Giants and New York Jets in MetLife Stadium and NBA's Los Angeles Clippers and Los Angeles Lakers in the Staples Center were the only cases in the major professional sports leagues in the United States and Canada of two teams of the same league sharing a venue.

Chivas USA occasionally held home games at Titan Stadium on the campus of California State University, Fullerton, and at Harder Stadium on the campus of UC Santa Barbara, such as in the US Open Cup when both they and the Galaxy had been drawn to play at home on the same day, but this was generally a rare occurrence.

Sponsorship

On May 16, 2007, Comex, Mexico's leading paint company, became Chivas USA's first presenting sponsor, with their name on the front of the jerseys. At the opening of the 2010 season, the team's jerseys were blank. On April 1, 2010, the new presenting sponsor, Extra, was finally unveiled prior to the match against rivals LA Galaxy; Extra is a Mexican convenience store chain owned by Grupo Modelo, the makers of Corona beer. The chain's logo appeared on the front of Chivas USA jerseys and training jerseys for the rest of that year. On February 16, 2011 Corona became the presenting sponsor for Chivas USA.

Broadcasting

For the 2014 season, Chivas USA non nationally televised matches were televised by KDOC in English and Time Warner Cable Deportes in Spanish. KDOC agreed to televise 10 matches while Time Warner Cable Deportes agreed to televise 16 matches. Matches not televised in Spanish on Time Warner Cable Deportes aired on the Univision family of networks (UniMas, Galavision, Univision Deportes Network).

Until 2012, FS West/Prime Ticket and KDOC televised all Chivas USA matches that were not nationally televised. In 2013, Chivas began the year with no local television partner; however, in August a deal was reached with KDOC (English) and MundoFOX22 KWHY-TV (Spanish) for the remainder of the 2013 season.

KWKW-AM (ESPN Deportes Radio) provided Spanish-language radio broadcasts.

Players and staff

Notable former players

Footballers who received international caps while playing for Chivas.

  • Canada Ante Jazić (2009–12)

  • Canada Chris Pozniak (2008)

  • Costa Rica Darío Delgado (2010)

  • Costa Rica Douglas Sequeira (2005)

  • Costa Rica Michael Umaña (2010–11)

  • Ecuador Oswaldo Minda (2012–14)

  • El Salvador Steve Purdy (2013)

  • El Salvador Osael Romero (2010)

  • Honduras Marvin Chávez (2014)

  • Honduras Amado Guevara (2007–08)

  • Honduras Ramón Núñez (2007)

  • Jamaica Shavar Thomas (2007–09)

  • Mexico Juan Pablo García (2005–06)

  • Mexico Erick Torres (2013–14)

  • Mexico Francisco Palencia (2005–06)

  • Mexico Ramón Ramírez (2005–07)

  • Mexico Claudio Suárez (2006–09)

  • New Zealand Andrew Boyens (2011)

  • New Zealand Simon Elliott (2011)

  • New Zealand Tony Lochhead (2014)

  • Saint Kitts and Nevis Atiba Harris (2008–09)

  • Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Ezra Hendrickson (2005)

  • Switzerland Raphaël Wicky (2008)

  • USA Juan Agudelo (2012–13)

  • USA Jonathan Bornstein (2006–10)

  • USA Brad Guzan (2005–08)

  • USA Sacha Kljestan (2006–10)

  • USA Jesse Marsch (2006–09)

  • USA John O'Brien (2006)

  • USA Heath Pearce (2011–12)

  • USA Ante Razov (2006–09)

  • Venezuela Giancarlo Maldonado (2010)

  • Venezuela Alejandro Moreno (2011–12)

  • See also All-time Chivas USA roster

Head coaches

Main article: List of Chivas USA managers

NameCountryHiredFired
Thomas RongenNetherlandsSeptember 23, 2004May 30, 2005
Javier Ledesma (interim)MexicoMay 30, 2005June 2, 2005
Hans WesterhofNetherlandsJune 3, 2005November 22, 2005
Bob BradleyUSANovember 23, 2005December 8, 2006
PrekiUSAJanuary 17, 2007November 12, 2009
Martín VásquezUSADecember 2, 2009October 27, 2010
Robin FraserUSAJanuary 4, 2011November 9, 2012
José Luis Sánchez SoláMexicoDecember 12, 2012May 29, 2013
Sacha van der Most (interim)NetherlandsMay 30, 2013May 30, 2013
José Luis RealMexicoMay 30, 2013November 29, 2013
Wilmer CabreraColombiaJanuary 9, 2014October 27, 2014

Honors

  • MLS Western Conference (Regular Season)

Record

Year-by-year

Main article: List of Chivas USA seasons

This is a partial list of the last five seasons completed by Chivas. For the full season-by-season history, see List of Chivas USA seasons.

SeasonLeaguePositionPlayoffsUSOCContinental / OtherAverage
attendanceTop goalscorer(s)DivLeaguePldWLDGFGAGDPtsPPGConf.OverallName(s)Goals
20101MLS3081843145−14280.938th15thDNQSFNorth American SuperLigaGS14,576USA Justin Braun11
2011MLS34814124143−2361.068th15thQR1DNQ14,830USA Justin Braun USA Nick LaBrocca8
2012MLS3471892458−34300.889th18thSF13,056COL Juan Pablo Ángel5
2013MLS3462083067−37260.769th18thR48,366MEX Erick Torres Padilla7
2014MLS3491962961−32330.977th16thR47,064MEX Erick Torres Padilla15
  1. Avg. attendance include statistics from league matches only.

  2. Top goalscorer(s) includes all goals scored in League, MLS Cup Playoffs, U.S. Open Cup, CONCACAF Champions League, FIFA Club World Cup, and other competitive continental matches.

International tournaments

Team records

  • Goals: Ante Razov (30)
  • Most Goals in a season: Erick Torres (15)
  • Most consecutive league matches scored in: Erick Torres six matches (six goals)
  • Assists: Sacha Kljestan (33)
  • Most Assists in a season: Sacha Kljestan (13)
  • Games Played: Dan Kennedy (144)
  • Minutes Played: Dan Kennedy (12764)
  • Shots: Ante Razov (234)
  • Shots on Goal: Ante Razov (100)
  • Game-Winning Goals: Ante Razov (10)
  • Penalty Kick Goals: Erick Torres (6)
  • Multi-Goal Games: Ante Razov (5)
  • Saves: Dan Kennedy (451)
  • Shutouts: Dan Kennedy (28)

MLS regular season only, through 2014 season

  • All-Time regular season record: 92–149–79 (Through October 27, 2014)

References

Citations

References

  1. French, Scott. (March 10, 2012). "CHIVAS USA: A more intimate HDC – Soccer Blog – ESPN Los Angeles". Espn.go.com.
  2. Carlisle, Jeff. (September 29, 2014). "Chivas USA to suspend operations after MLS season, sources say".
  3. (October 27, 2020). "The short life and long death of Chivas USA". [[The Athletic]].
  4. Baxter, Kevin. (April 27, 2018). "How LAFC rose from the ashes of Chivas USA and aims to be the team of Los Angeles". Los Angeles Times.
  5. LAFC. "History {{!}} LAFC.com".
  6. LAFC. "Records {{!}} LAFC.com".
  7. Buckheit, Mary. (October 15, 2008). "Chivas USA holding its own in Southern California market". [[ESPN]].
  8. Jones, Grahame L.. (June 24, 2003). "Mexico's Chivas to Play Against MLS All-Stars". [[Los Angeles Times]].
  9. Jones, Grahame L.. (November 22, 2003). "MLS Expansion Is Welcomed". Los Angeles Times.
  10. Zeigler, Mark. (October 9, 2003). "San Diego on short list for MLS expansion in 2005". San Diego Union-Tribune.
  11. Guiterrez, Paul. (August 3, 2004). "On Paper, Chivas Seems Ready to Go". Los Angeles Times.
  12. Martin, Chad. (April 1, 2020). "The History of Chivas USA FC".
  13. "Vergara, Fuentes become sole owners of Chivas USA". MLSsoccer.com.
  14. Baxter, Kevin. (May 30, 2013). "When will MLS save Chivas USA from itself?". [[Los Angeles Times]].
  15. MLS Communications. "Major League Soccer purchases Chivas USA". MLSsoccer.com.
  16. (September 29, 2014). "Chivas USA to suspend operations after MLS season, sources say". [[ESPN.com]].
  17. (September 30, 2014). "Vincent Tan, Peter Guber, Henry Nguyen, Tom Penn included in front-running group to buy Chivas USA — SI.com". SI.com.
  18. (October 27, 2014). "MLS announces new strategy for Los Angeles market, 2015 conference alignment". mlssoccer.com.
  19. Prince-Wright, Joe. (February 17, 2014). "Chivas USA heading for rebrand? Trademarks reportedly filed, new logos leaked". [[NBC Sports]].
  20. Tannenwald, Jonathan. (February 20, 2014). "Major League Soccer purchases Chivas USA, will rebrand team and keep it in Los Angeles". [[The Philadelphia Inquirer]].
  21. "HomeDepot Center | About Us". The Home Depot Center.
  22. "Convenience stores booming - el Universal - Mexico News".
  23. Chivas USA Public Relations. (April 2, 2010). "Notes from April 1 vs. Galaxy | Chivas USA". Cdchivasusa.com.
  24. Chivas USA Communications. (February 22, 2011). "Crossing cultures | Chivas USA". Cdchivasusa.com.
  25. (May 27, 2014). "Time Warner Cable Deportes Added as Official Broadcast Partner of Chivas USA Time Warner Cable Deportes se agrega como socio de emisión de Chivas USA". cdchivasusa.com.
  26. Kennedy, Paul. (August 29, 2013). "Chivas USA, finally, signs TV deal 08/29/2013". SoccerAmerica.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Chivas USA — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report