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Football in Mexico

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Summary

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FieldValue
boxwidth250
titleFootball in Mexico
imageEstadio Azteca1706p2.jpg
imagesize240px
image_alt
captionEstadio Azteca, the home of América, Cruz Azul and the Mexico national football team
unionFederación Mexicana de Fútbol (FMF)
countryMexico
sportAssociation football
noncountry
teamlabel1
nationalteamMexico
teamlabel2
repteam
nicknameEl Tri
first1923
clubs18 in Liga MX
national_listMen's:
intl_listMen's clubs:
  • Liga MX
  • Campeón de Campeones
  • Liga de Expansión MX
  • Campeón de Campeones de la Liga de Expansión MX
  • Liga Premier
  • Liga TDP
  • Copa Conecta Women's:
  • Liga MX Femenil
  • Campeón de Campeonas
  • Liga TDP Femenil
  • FIFA Club World Cup
  • FIFA Intercontinental Cup
  • CONCACAF Champions Cup
  • Leagues Cup Men's national teams:
  • FIFA World Cup
  • CONCACAF Gold Cup
  • CONCACAF Nations League Women's clubs:
  • FIFA Women's Club World Cup
  • FIFA Women's Champions Cup
  • CONCACAF W Champions Cup
  • Summer Cup Women's national teams:
  • FIFA Women's World Cup
  • CONCACAF W Gold Cup
  • CONCACAF W Championship

The most popular sport in Mexico is association football, known as fútbol in Spanish language, 73% of the Mexican population consider themselves football fans. The top professional football leagues in the country are Liga MX for men and Liga MX Femenil for women.

In 1943, football became a professional men's sport in Mexico. Since then, the most successful men's club is América. In 2016, the first women's professional football league was established in the country, starting with the 2017–18 season. It set new world records for attendances at women's professional football matches. Since then, the most successful women's club is Tigres UANL.

Antonio Carbajal was the first player to appear in five World Cups, and Hugo Sánchez was named best CONCACAF player of the 20th century by IFFHS.

Mexico's largest capacity stadiums are Estadio Azteca, Estadio Olímpico Universitario and Estadio Jalisco. , it was estimated that there were in the nation over 324,000 registered players and approximately 8,155,000 unregistered players.

Professional clubs

Men's football has been played in Mexico since the early 1900s, and professionally since 1943. The first club founded was Pachuca in 1892. Liga MX Femenil was the first women's professional football league, starting in the Apertura 2017. The development of women's football has occurred in waves since the 1950s.

Since 1996, the season is divided into two short tournaments (Apertura and Clausura) with a final knockout phase in each tournament, known as liguilla. This system is common throughout Latin America. From 1996 to 2002, the two short tournaments of the regular phase was named "Verano" and "Invierno".

Liga MX formerly named Liga Mayor and Primera División de México changed the names of the tournaments in 2002, and opted for the names Apertura and Clausura. The Apertura tournament is played from July to December, while the Clausura tournament is played from January to May.

Mexican football system has four divisions in the following order of competition level: Liga MX, Liga de Expansión MX, Liga Premier, and Liga TDP. Since 2020, the promotion and relegation has been suspended until 2026–27.

The most successful clubs in Liga MX are América with 16 titles, Guadalajara and Toluca with 12 titles each, Cruz Azul with 9 titles, León and Tigres UANL with 8 titles each. The most successful clubs in Liga MX Femenil are Tigres UANL with 7 titles, Monterrey with 4 titles, América and Guadalajara with 2 titles each. Both final matches in the first season set new world records for attendance at a women's football league match with 32,466 fans in attendance at the Apertura final and 51,211 at the Clausura final match.

The top three most popular football clubs on social media from North America, as of 25 March 2021, are all Mexican clubs. Note that this was before the arrival of Lionel Messi at Inter Miami, which resulted in 12.5 million Instagram followers for Inter Miami in 2023. !#!!Football club!!Country!!Followers |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || América || Mexico || 36 million |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Guadalajara || Mexico || 13 million |- | style"text-align:center;"| _row_count || Cruz Azul || Mexico || 6.6 million |- |} }}

Association football clubs by city/metro area

Liga MX is the most important and top level division in Mexico. Liga de Expansión MX (formerly Ascenso MX) is the second level division in Mexican football. The following table shows the teams of these leagues and the cities/metro areas they're based in.

;Key to colors and symbols:

Metro areas larger than 500,000 population without a team in these leagues
RegionMetro areaPopulationLiga MX (Top level)Liga de Expansión MX (Second level)
Central SouthGreater Mexico City21,804,515América
Cruz Azul
UNAMAtlante
North EastMonterrey, Nuevo León5,341,177Monterrey
UANL
WestGuadalajara, Jalisco5,268,642Atlas
GuadalajaraUdeG
Tapatío
EastPuebla-Tlaxcala, Puebla/Tlaxcala3,199,530Puebla
Central SouthToluca, State of Mexico2,353,924Toluca
North WestTijuana, Baja California2,157,853Tijuana
North EastLeón, Guanajuato1,924,771León
Central NorthQuerétaro, Querétaro1,594,212Querétaro
North WestJuárez, Chihuahua1,512,450Juárez
North WestLa Laguna, Coahuila/Durango1,434,283Santos Laguna
South EastMérida, Yucatán1,316,088Venados
Central NorthSan Luis Potosí, San Luis Potosí1,271,366Atlético San Luis
Central NorthAguascalientes, Aguascalientes1,140,916Necaxa
North WestMexicali, Baja California1,049,792
North EastSaltillo, Coahuila1,031,779
Central SouthCuernavaca, Morelos1,028,589
North WestCuliacán, Sinaloa1,003,530Sinaloa
WestMorelia, Michoacán988,704Morelia
North WestChihuahua, Chihuahua (state)988,065
EastVeracruz, Veracruz939,046
South EastCancún, Quintana Roo934,189Cancún
North EastTampico, Tamaulipas/Veracruz927,379Jaiba Brava
South WestAcapulco, Guerrero852,622
South WestTuxtla Gutiérrez, Chiapas848,274
North EastReynosa, Tamaulipas837,251
South EastVillahermosa, Tabasco833,907
EastXalapa, Veracruz789,157
Central NorthCelaya, Guanajuato767,104Celaya
South WestOaxaca, Oaxaca713,925Oaxaca
North WestDurango, Durango688,697
EastPachuca, Hidalgo665,929Pachuca
Central NorthIrapuato, Guanajuato592,953
EastTlaxcala–Apizaco, Tlaxcala570,308Tlaxcala
North WestEnsenada, Baja California561,375
North EastMatamoros, Tamaulipas541,979
EastPoza Rica, Veracruz521,530
North WestMazatlán, Sinaloa501,441Mazatlán
Central NorthZacatecas-Guadalupe, Zacatecas405,285Zacatecas
North EastCiudad Victoria, Tamaulipas349,688UAT
North WestLa Paz, Baja California Sur292,241La Paz
WestTepatitlán, Morelos150,190Tepatitlán

National teams

Main article: Mexico national football team, Mexico women's national football team

The Mexico national football team has qualified for the FIFA World Cup seventeen times and has qualified consecutively since 1994, reaching the quarter-finals twice (1970 and 1986) both as hosts, and reaching the round of 16 at seven consecutive editions. Mexico won the 1999 FIFA Confederations Cup as hosts, defeating Brazil 4–3, becoming the only non-European or South American team to have won an official global competition organized by FIFA for senior national teams.

Mexico is the most successful CONCACAF team, winning 15 continental titles (13 CONCACAF Championship/Gold Cup titles, one CONCACAF Nations League and one CONCACAF Cup). The team finished as runners-up twice in the Copa América (1993 and 2001), and also finished in third place three times (1997, 1999 and 2007).

The under-23 has been Olympic medalists twice, winning the gold medal at the 2012 Olympic Games in London, defeating Brazil 2–1, and winning the bronze medal at the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo, defeating the hosts Japan 3–1.

The under-20 team finished as world runners-up in 1977, and also finished in third place in 2011. The under-17 team has been world champions twice (2005 and 2011), and also finished as runners-up twice (2013 and 2019).

Players from Mexico have joined teams in Europe, including Jared Borgetti, Rafael Márquez, Gerardo Torrado, Cuauhtémoc Blanco, Nery Castillo, Carlos Salcido, Ricardo Osorio, Pável Pardo, Andrés Guardado, Guillermo Franco, Carlos Vela, Giovani dos Santos, Omar Bravo, Aaron Galindo, Héctor Moreno, Francisco Javier Rodríguez, Francisco Fonseca, Javier Hernández, Pablo Barrera, Efraín Juárez, Guillermo Ochoa, Jesús Corona, Héctor Herrera, Miguel Layún, Raúl Jiménez, Marco Fabián, Diego Reyes, Hirving Lozano, Edson Álvarez, Alexis Vega, Diego Lainez and Santiago Giménez the most recents.

The Mexico women's national football team was officially formed in 1991 to compete in the 1991 CONCACAF Women's Championship, its first appearance in the World Cup was in 1999. The team finished in third place in the 1970 unofficial World Cup held in Italy, and also finished as runners-up in the 1971 unofficial World Cup as hosts, with an estimated 110,000 people attended the final at Estadio Azteca.

History

Football was introduced to Mexico by emigrant miners from Cornwall, England at the end of the 19th century. In the early 1900s, football was used as a method to "indoctrinate modern labor practices" such as teamwork and competition within a set of rules upon the Mexican workers. In 1902, a five-clubs league emerged with a strong English influence. Many of the early football clubs were affiliated with corporations.

The first amateur league created in Mexico was the Liga Mexicana de Football Amateur Association in 1902, organized by the Asociación de Aficionados de México en la Liga de Football ().

The first football federation in Mexico was founded in 1922, named Federación Mexicana de Football Asociación, and the following year changed its name to Federación Central de Fútbol. The current Federación Mexicana de Fútbol (FMF) was established in 1927 and later affiliated with FIFA in 1929.

Stadiums

Stadiums with a capacity of 40,000 or higher are included. |- !#!!Stadium!!Capacity!!City!!State!!Team(s)!!Surface!!Year opened!!Owner!!League division!!Image |- |_row_count||Azteca|| 81,070 ||Tlalpan||Mexico City||América, Cruz Azul, Mexico national team||Grass||1966||Grupo Televisa||Liga MX||[[File:Panorámica esquina noreste.jpg|150x150px]] |- |_row_count||Olímpico Universitario||69,000||Coyoacán||Mexico City||UNAM||Grass||1952||UNAM||Liga MX||[[File:Estadio Pumas.jpg|150x150px]] |- |_row_count||Jalisco|| 55,020||Guadalajara||Jalisco||Atlas, UdeG||Grass||1960||Clubes Unidos de Jalisco||Liga MX, Liga de Expansión MX||[[File:Estadio Jalisco 06022022.jpg|150x150px]] |- |_row_count||BBVA|| 51,348||Guadalupe||Nuevo León||Monterrey||Grass||2015||FEMSA||Liga MX||[[File:Estadio BBVA.jpg|150x150px]] |- |_row_count||Cuauhtémoc||47,417 ||Puebla City||Puebla||Puebla||Grass||1968||State of Puebla||Liga MX||[[File:Rampa norte.jpg|150x150px]] |- |_row_count||Akron ||46,232||Zapopan||Jalisco||Guadalajara||Grass||2010||Grupo Omnilife||Liga MX||[[File:Estadio Akron 02-07-2022 cabecera sur lado izquierdo.jpg|150x150px]] |- |_row_count||Universitario||41,886||San Nicolás de los Garza||Nuevo León||UANL||Grass||1967||UANL||Liga MX||[[File:Estadio Universitario UANL.jpg|150x150px]] |- |} }}

Attendances

The average attendance per top-flight football league season and the club with the highest average attendance:

SeasonTournamentLeague averageBest clubBest club average
2024–25Clausura21,548Club América44,821
2024–25Apertura20,105Club América42,702
2023–24Clausura23,342Monterrey43,356
2023–24Apertura20,651Tigres39,904
2022–23Clausura23,160Monterrey43,588
2022–23Apertura20,533Tigres40,831
2018–19Clausura22,680Monterrey42,505
2018–19Apertura22,896Tigres40,995
2017–18Clausura25,368Monterrey42,840
2017–18Apertura23,345Monterrey48,017
2016–17Clausura27,774Monterrey48,960
2016–17Apertura26,600Monterrey48,392
2015–16Clausura27,757Monterrey49,903
2015–16Apertura24,768Monterrey45,134

Source: League page on Wikipedia

References

  • Liga Mx where to watch https://golasazo.com/futbol/liga-mx/donde-ver-los-partidos-en-vivo-jornada-13-de-la-liga-mx/

References

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  4. "Mexico - List of Champions". Rec.Sports.Soccer Statistics Foundation.
  5. "News Roundup: Union lose, Steel in, LAFC fail to impress, and USOC kicks off". The Philly Soccer Page.
  6. "For Liga MX Femenil, an impressive start to an infant league • Copa90". Copa90.
  7. (16 September 2011). "Historical Dictionary of Soccer - Tom Dunmore - Google Books". Scarecrow Press.
  8. MX, LIGA MX / ASCENSO. "LIGA MX - Página Oficial de la Liga del Fútbol Profesional en México .: Bienvenido".
  9. FIFA.com. "New horizons in the development of Mexican football". FIFA.com.
  10. (6 May 2015). "Sports and Nationalism in Latin / o America". Springer.
  11. Fellerath, David. "A thought experiment: What would NASL's split-season plan look like this season?". Indy Week.
  12. "Chivas wins inaugural Liga MX Femenil title". ESPN.com.
  13. "Femenil final shows women's football is thriving in Mexico". ESPN.com.
  14. (25 March 2021). "Digital impact of Latin American football teams". GSIC.
  15. (28 July 2023). "Inter Miami surpasses Brazilian clubs and becomes the MLS team with the most followers on Instagram".
  16. "Irapuato (Municipality, Mexico)".
  17. "MEXICO: Metropolitan Areas".
  18. "Club Atlético La Paz confirma su llegada a la Liga de Expansión MX".
  19. Kessel, Anna. (4 June 2015). "Women's World Cup: from unofficial tournaments to record-breaking event".
  20. "Mundial (Women) 1971".
  21. (2004). "Mexico: An Encyclopedia of Contemporary Culture and History - Don M. Coerver, Suzanne B. Pasztor, Robert Buffington - Google Books". Bloomsbury Academic.
  22. "Introduction". Federacion Mexicana de Futbol.
  23. "Mexico - List of Final Tables". Rec.Sports.Soccer Statistics Foundation.
  24. (2004). "Culture and Customs of Mexico - Peter Standish, Steven M. Bell - Google Books". Bloomsbury Academic.
  25. "Estadio Olímpico Universitario".
  26. "Football stadiums of the world – Stadiums in Mexico | Football stadiums of the world".
  27. "Estadio BBVA (Estadio de Futbol de Monterrey) –". Stadiumdb.com.
Wikipedia Source

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