Campeón de Campeones

Campeón de Campeones
Founded 1942
Region  Mexico
Number of teams 2
Current champions Tigres UANL (1st title)
Most successful club(s) Guadalajara (7 titles)
2016 Campeón de Campeones

Campeón de Campeones (Spanish: Champion of Champions) is an annual Mexican football competition established in 1942. In it its current form, it is contested by the regular Liga MX season winners of the Apertura and Clausura.

History

Traditional tournament

The tournament was established in 1942. The trophy was presented by the president of Mexico at the time, Manuel Ávila Camacho. From 1942 until 1995 the tournament was contested between the champion of the Primera and the winner of the Mexican Cup. Traditionally the single match (with an exception in 1968 and 1988 when two matches were played) to determine the "super champion" was held at the end of the season at a stadium in Mexico City.

If a team won both the league championship and the cup that year, they were awarded the title Campeonísimo with an automatic awarding of the trophy. To date this has only occurred on five occasions (León in 1949, Cruz Azul in 1969, Guadalajara in 1970, Puebla in 1990 and Necaxa in 1995).

New era

After 1995 the league championship was split into two shorter seasons Apertura and Clausura. Then in 1997 the Mexican Football Federation canceled the Mexican Cup. Due to these changes, the Campeón de Campeones tournament was postponed. The competition resumed in 2002-03 season; however, this time it was contested between the champions of Apertura and Clausura of the season. The tournament was held four times and was placed on hiatus again from 2007 to 2011.

In 2012, the rebranded Liga MX restarted the tournament once again. There was a friendly match contested between the champions of Liga MX (first division) and Ascenso MX (second division).[1][2] In 2013-14 season, the Liga MX stipulated that a Campeón de Campeones match could be contested between the champions of the Apertura 2013 and Copa MX Apertura 2013.[3]

Winners by year

Year Liga MX champion Score Copa MX champion
1942 España 4 – 5 Atlante (1/2)
1943 Marte (1/2) 1 – 0 Moctezuma
1944 Asturias 3 – 5 España (1/2)
1945 España (2/2) 3 – 0 Puebla
1946 Veracruz 2 – 3 Atlas (1/4)
1947 Atlante 0 – 3 Moctezuma (1/1)
1948 León (1/5) 1 – 0 Veracruz
1949 León (2/5) – Campeonísimo, trophy awarded automatically
1950 Veracruz 1 – 3 Atlas (2/4)
1951 Atlas (3/4) 1 – 0 Atlante
1952 León 0 – 1 Atlante (2/2)
1953 Tampico Madero (1/1) 3 – 0 Puebla
1954 Marte (2/2) 1 – 0 América
1955 Zacatepec 2 – 3 América (1/5)
1956 León (3/5) 2 – 1 Toluca
1957 Guadalajara (1/7) 2 – 1 Zacatepec
1958 Zacatepec (1/1) 1 – 0 León
1959 Guadalajara (2/7) 2 – 1 Zacatepec
1960 Guadalajara (3/7) 2 – 2
(10–9 pen.)
Necaxa
1961 Guadalajara (4/7) 1 – 0 Tampico Madero
1962 Guadalajara 0 – 2 Atlas (4/4)
1963 Oro (1/1) 3 – 1 Guadalajara
1964 Guadalajara (5/7) 2 – 0 América
1965 Guadalajara (6/7) 2 – 1 América
1966 América 0 – 2 Necaxa (1/2)
1967 Toluca (1/4) 1 – 0 León
1968 Toluca (2/4) 3 – 1
0 – 1
Atlas
1969 Cruz Azul (1/2) – Campeonísimo, trophy awarded automatically
1970 Guadalajara (7/7) – Campeonísimo, trophy awarded automatically
1971 América 0 – 1 León (4/5)
1972 Cruz Azul 0 – 0
(2-3) pen.)
León (5/5)
1973 not held
1974 Cruz Azul (3/3) 2 – 1 América
1975 Toluca 0 – 1 UNAM (1/2)
1976 América (2/5) 2 – 0 UANL
1977–1987 not held
1988 América (3/5) 1 – 2
2 – 0
Puebla
1989 América (4/5) 2 – 1 Toluca
1990 Puebla (1/1) – Campeonísimo, trophy awarded automatically
1991–1994 not held
1995 Necaxa (2/2) – Campeonísimo, trophy awarded automatically
1996–2001 not held
Year Apertura champion Score Clausura champion
2003 Toluca (3/4) 1 – 1
(4–2 pen.)
Monterrey
2004 Pachuca 2 – 1
1 – 6
UNAM (2/2)
2005 UNAM 0 – 0
1 – 2
América (5/5)
2006 Toluca (4/4) 1 – 0
1 – 0
Pachuca
2007–2014 not held
2015 América 0 – 1 Santos Laguna (1/1)
2016 UANL (1/1) 1 – 0 Pachuca

Source: Mexico - List of Super Cup Winners
Campeón de Campeones winner is in bold

Winners by club

Club Wins Seasons
Guadalajara71957, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1964, 1965, 1970
León51948, 1949, 1956, 1971, 1972
América51955, 1976, 1988, 1989, 2005
Atlas41946, 1950, 1951, 1962
Toluca41967, 1968, 2003, 2006
Atlante21942, 1952
Cruz Azul21969, 1974
Marte21943, 1954
Necaxa21966, 1995
Real España21944, 1945
UNAM21975, 2004
Tigres UANL 12016
Santos12015
Moctezuma11947
Oro11963
Puebla11990
Tampico11953
Zacatepec11958

Footnotes

See also

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/27/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.