Ascenso MX

Ascenso MX
Confederation CONCACAF
Founded 1994
Number of teams 16
Level on pyramid 2
Promotion to Liga MX
Relegation to Segunda División
Domestic cup(s) Copa MX
Supercopa MX
Current champions FC Juárez (1st Title – Rookie Season)
(Apertura 2015)
Most championships León
Irapuato
(4 titles)
TV partners Televisa[1]
Fox Sports
ESPN Dos
TVC Deportes
TV Azteca
Website Official site
2015–16 season

The Ascenso MX (Promotion MX) is the second professional level of the Mexican football league system.[2] The champion of the competition is promoted to Liga MX (top-flight division). The bottom team gets relegated to Segunda División de México (the third tier). It is currently sponsored by BBVA through its Mexican subsidiary BBVA Bancomer, and thus officially known as Ascenso BBVA Bancomer.

Formerly known as Primera División A (First Division A) the league changed its name and competition format in 2009 to Liga de Ascenso. It was rebranded as Ascenso MX in 2012. The main changes are that clubs now do not need a FMF certification to get promoted and that the competition doesn't use group stages.

History

In 1994, in order to create a premier league, the Mexican Football Federation decided to upgrade the Second Division to "Primera División A" (First Division A) to bring closer together the level of play in the two tiers, Primera and Primera A. The project was under the direction of José Antonio García Rodríguez, president of the top-tier Primera Division at the time. He envisioned the new division to be joined by the best teams of the Segunda and include teams from the United States (Los Angeles Salsa and San Jose Black Hawks expressed desire to join). Upon review, FIFA did not authorize such integration. As a result the new league was created instead with the best Second Division teams. The 1994-1995 season began with 15 teams: Acapulco, Aguascalientes, Atlético Celaya, Irapuato, La Piedad, Marte, Pachuca, Atlético San Francisco, San Luis, Tabasco, Coras, Tijuana, Querétaro, Atlético Yucatán and Zacatepec. Ciudad Juárez, which would have been the sixteenth team, declined to participate due to financial problems.

During the 2006 tournament it was decided to increase the number of teams from 20 to 24 and it was also decided to form two groups, A and B divided by geographical areas.

In 2009 major changes occurred the most prominent being the name change from Primera Division A to Liga de Ascenso. The league was reduced to 17 teams and eliminated the groups. Starting with the Apertura 2010 season 18 teams participated. In 2012 the league was rebranded as Ascenso MX. The Alebrijes de Oaxaca was the 16th team of Ascenso MX starting 2013-2014 season. The Alebrijes was composed of the former Segunda Division team Tecamachalco which had won ascendency into Ascenso MX in 2012, but did not fulfill infrastructural requirements set by Mexican Football Federation. Club Zacatepec was also promoted to the Ascenso MX taking the spot of Pumas Morelos in August 2013. [3]

In the 2014–15 Season, Ascenso MX will not be relegating a team to the Segunda División de México, but it will return in the 2016–17 season and expanded to 18 teams.

Sponsorship

BBVA Bancomer was named the league's official sponsor in 2013.

The league's current sponsor is BBVA Bancomer, thus making the league's official name Ascenso BBVA Bancomer. The official match ball is manufactured by Voit.

Clubs

The following 16 clubs will compete in Ascenso MX during the 2015–16 season.[4]

Club City Stadium Capacity Head coach
Atlante Cancún, Quintana Roo Andrés Quintana Roo 17,289 Mexico Eduardo Fentanes
Atlético San Luis San Luis Potosí City, San Luis Potosí Alfonso Lastras 25,111 Argentina Carlos Bustos
BUAP Puebla City, Puebla Universitario BUAP 20,167 Argentina Ricardo Valiño
Celaya Celaya, Guanajuato Miguel Alemán 23,369 Uruguay Gustavo Díaz
Coras Tepic, Nayarit Arena Cora 12,271 Argentina Hernán Cristante
Juárez Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua Olímpico Benito Juárez 19,765 Mexico Sergio Orduña
Murciélagos Los Mochis, Sinaloa Centenario 8,884 Mexico Jorge Manrique
Necaxa Aguascalientes City, Aguascalientes Victoria 23,933 Mexico Alfonso Sosa
Oaxaca Oaxaca City, Oaxaca Benito Juárez 10,250 Mexico Flavio Davino
Sonora Hermosillo, Sonora Héroe de Nacozari 18,747 Mexico Héctor Medrano
Tapachula Tapachula, Chiapas Olímpico de Tapachula 13,300 Mexico Gabriel Caballero
U. de G. Guadalajara, Jalisco Jalisco 54,500 Mexico Daniel Guzmán
UAT Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas Marte R. Gómez 10,476 Mexico José Treviño
Venados Mérida, Yucatán Carlos Iturralde 15,087 Mexico Marcelo Michel Leaño
Zacatecas Zacatecas City, Zacatecas Francisco Villa 13,820 Mexico Ricardo Rayas
Zacatepec Zacatepec, Morelos Agustín "Coruco" Díaz 22,996 Mexico Carlos Gutiérrez

Future clubs

Club Location Stadium Stadium capacity Head coach Joining league
Tampico Madero[5] Tampico Madero, Tamaulipas Tamaulipas 22,500 Mexico Mario García 2016
U. de C. Colima City, Colima Olímpico Universitario de Colima 8,340 Mexico Víctor Hugo Mora 2016

Titles By Club

Club Winners Runner-Up Winning Seasons
León43 Verano 2003, Clausura 2004, Clausura 2008, Clausura 2012
Irapuato ††42 Invierno 1999, Verano 2000, Apertura 2002, Clausura 2011
Sinaloa34 Apertura 2003, Clausura 2007, Clausura 2015
Necaxa32 Apertura 2009, Clausura 2010, Apertura 2014
Querétaro3 0Clausura 2005, Clausura 2006, Apertura 2008
La Piedad ††23 Verano 2001, Apertura 2012
Pachuca2 11995-96, Invierno 1997
San Luis ††††2 1Verano 2002, Apertura 2004
UANL20 Invierno 1996, Verano 1997
Puebla20 Apertura 2005, Apertura 2006
Tijuana12 Apertura 2010
UAT12 Apertura 2011
Tigrillos UANL ††††1 1Verano 1998
Veracruz11 Invierno 2001
UACJ ††1 1Apertura 2007
Neza †††1 1Clausura 2013
Atlético Celaya ††††1 01994-1995
Atlético Yucatán ††††10 Invierno 1998
Unión de Curtidores †††10 Verano 1999
Aguascalientes †††10 Invierno 2000
Venados10 Clausura 2009
U. de G.1 0Apertura 2013
Tecos †††10 Clausura 2013
Juárez1 0Apertura 2015
Cruz Azul Hidalgo ††0 3
Zacatepec 0 2
Hermosillo ††††0 1
Atlético Hidalgo †††0 1
Real Sociedad ††††0 1
Chivas Tijuana ††††0 1
Tapatío ††††0 1
Ciudad Juárez ††††0 1
Atlético Mexiquense ††††0 1
Salamanca †††0 1
BUAP 0 1
Coras 0 1
Atlético San Luis 0 1
Atlante 0 1

† Teams in the First Division
†† Teams in the Second Division
††† Teams in the Third Division

Champions

SeasonChampionRunner-upPromoted
1994-1995Atlético CelayaPachucaAtlético Celaya
1995-1996PachucaHermosilloPachuca
Invierno 1996UANLAtlético Hidalgo
Verano 1997UANLUATUANL
Invierno 1997PachucaReal Sociedad
Verano 1998Tigrillos UANLZacatepecPachuca
Invierno 1998Atlético YucatánChivas Tijuana
Verano 1999Unión de CurtidoresCruz Azul HidalgoUnión de Curtidores
Invierno 1999IrapuatoZacatepec
Verano 2000IrapuatoCruz Azul HidalgoIrapuato
Invierno 2000AguascalientesLa Piedad
Verano 2001La PiedadNezaLa Piedad
Invierno 2001VeracruzSan Luis
Verano 2002San LuisTigrillos UANLSan Luis
Apertura 2002IrapuatoLa Piedad
Clausura 2003LeónTapatíoIrapuato
Apertura 2003SinaloaCiudad Juárez
Clausura 2004LeónSinaloaSinaloa
Apertura 2004San LuisAtlético Mexiquense
Clausura 2005QuerétaroLeónSan Luis
Apertura 2005PueblaCruz Azul Hidalgo
Clausura 2006Querétaro UACJQuerétaro
Apertura 2006Puebla Salamanca
Clausura 2007Sinaloa LeónPuebla
Apertura 2007UACJ Sinaloa
Clausura 2008LeónSinaloaUACJ
Apertura 2008Querétaro Irapuato
Clausura 2009Venados TijuanaQuerétaro
Apertura 2009Necaxa Irapuato
Bicentenario 2010 Necaxa LeónNecaxa
Apertura 2010TijuanaVeracruz
Clausura 2011IrapuatoTijuanaTijuana
Apertura 2011UATLa Piedad
Clausura 2012LeónBUAPLeón
Apertura 2012La PiedadSinaloa
Clausura 2013Toros NezaNecaxaLa Piedad
Apertura 2013U. de G.Necaxa
Clausura 2014Tecos UAT U. de G.
Apertura 2014Necaxa Coras
Clausura 2015Sinaloa Atlético San Luis Sinaloa
Apertura 2015Juárez Atlante

Promotion and relegation

Relegation and Promotion by Club

Club Promotions Relegations
Zacatepec5 (1950–51, 1962–63, 1969–70, 1977–78, 1983–84)1 (2013-14*)
San Luis ††††4 (1970–71, 1975–76, 2001–02, 2004-05)
Querétaro4 (México 86, 1989–90, 2005–06, 2008–09)
Pachuca4 (1966–67, 1991–92, 1995–96, 1997–98)
Irapuato ††4 (1953–54, 1984–85, 1999-2000*, 2002–03)1 (2005-06)
Atlas3 (1954–55, 1971–72, 1978–79)
Puebla3 (1969–70, 1998–99, 2006–07)
Unión de Curtidores †††3 (1973–74, 1982–83, 1998-99*)
La Piedad ††3 (1951–52, 2000–01, 2012-13*)
Tampico Madero ††3 (1958–59, 1964–65, 1972–73)
Sinaloa2 (2003–04, 2014–15)
U. de G.2 (1973–74, 2013–14)
Veracruz2 (1963–64, 2001–02*)
Real Zamora ††2 (1954–55, 1956–57)
Atlante2 (1976–77, 1990–91)
Monterrey2 (1955–56, 1959–60)
Morelia2 (1956–57, 1980–81)
UANL2 (1973–74, 1996–97)
León2 (1989–90, 2011–12)
Neza †††2 (1988–89, 1992–93)
Ciudad Juárez ††††2 (PRODE 1985, 1987–88)
Atlético Celaya ††††2 (1957–58, 1994–95)
Ciudad Madero †††2 (1964–65, 1972–73)
Atlas2 (1954–55, 1971–72)
Atlético Potosino ††††1 (1973–74)
Correcaminos1 (1986–87)
UACJ ††1 (2007–08)
Tecos †††1 (1974–75)
Atlético Yucatán ††††1 (1998–99)
Necaxa1 (2009–10)
Toluca1 (1952–53)
Cuautla ††1 (1954–55)
Club Deportivo Nacional †††1 (1960–61)
UNAM1 (1961–62)
Cruz Azul1 (1963–64)
Nuevo León ††††1 (1965–66)
Laguna ††††1 (1967–68)
Torreón ††††1 (1968–69)
Oaxtepec ††††1 (1981–82)
Potros Neza ††††1 (1988–89)
Atletas Campesinos ††††1 (1979–80)
Tijuana1 (2010–11)1 (2007-08)
Coras 1 (2013–14)1 (1995–96)
Pumas Morelos †††† 1 (2012–13)
Tabasco †††† 1 (1994–95)
Inter †††† 1 (1996–97)
Marte †††† 1 (1997–98)
Atlético San Francisco ††† 1 (1998–99)
Nuevo Laredo †††† 1 (2002–03)
Trotamundos †††† 1 (2003–04)
Altamira †††† 1 (2004–05)
Dorados de Tijuana †††† 1 (2005–06)
Monarcas Morelia "A" †††† 1 (2006–07)
Halcones †††† 2 (1999–00, 2000–01)
Jaguares de Tapachula †††† 2 (2003–04, 2008–09)

† Teams in the Liga MX
†† Teams in the Second Division
††† Teams in Amateur Level
†††† Defunct

Notes:

Top scorers

Year Name Team Goals
1994-95BrazilMexico Marco de AlmeidaMarte15
1995-96Argentina Lorenzo SáezPachuca30
Invierno 96Brazil Nílson Esidio MoraTigres UANL11
Verano 97Mexico Ángel Lemus
HondurasCosta Rica Carlos Pavón
Irapuato
Correcaminos
12
Invierno 97Colombia Niver ArboledaZacatepec17
Verano 98Uruguay Daniel Fasciolli
Uruguay Carlos Morales
BrazilMexico Valtencir Gomes
Correcaminos
Pachuca
Tigres B
12
Invierno 98Argentina Cristián Ariel MoralesIrapuato19
Verano 99Mexico Ángel LemusSan Luis16
Invierno 99Argentina Cristián Ariel MoralesIrapuato17
Verano 2000Spain Carlos Muñoz
Emmanuel Sacramento
Lobos BUAP15
Invierno 2000Mexico Christian PatiñoLa Piedad16
Verano 01UruguayMexico Héctor GiménezAguascalientes16
Invierno 01Argentina Héctor ÁlvarezTampico-Madero16
Verano 02ArgentinaMexico Ariel GonzálezQuerétaro15
Apertura 02Argentina Héctor ÁlvarezZacatepec23
Clausura 03Argentina Héctor ÁlvarezZacatepec16
Apertura 03Argentina Héctor ÁlvarezLeón17
Clausura 04ArgentinaMexico Mauro Gerk
Mexico Francisco Bravo
Celaya
Zacatepec
18
Apertura 04ArgentinaMexico Ariel GonzálezSan Luis16
Clausura 05Argentina Rubén Darío GigenaCruz Azul Hidalgo17
Apertura 05Mexico Mauricio RomeroSonora16
Clausura 06ArgentinaMexico Diego OlsinaCoatzacoalcos15
Apertura 06Uruguay Álvaro GonzálezPuebla14
Clausura 07Uruguay Álvaro GonzálezPuebla16
Apertura 07Mexico Mauricio RomeroLeón14
Clausura 08Paraguay Freddy BareiroLeón17
Apertura 08ArgentinaMexico Mauro Gerk
Mexico Raúl Enríquez
Querétaro
Tijuana
14
Clausura 09Uruguay Sebastián MazDorados de Sinaloa15
Apertura 09ArgentinaMexico Ariel GonzálezIrapuato11
Bicentenario 2010ArgentinaMexico Ariel González
Argentina Carlos Casartelli
Irapuato
León
11
Apertura 10BrazilMexico Eder PachecoDurango13
Clausura 2011Panama Blas PérezLeón14
Apertura 11ArgentinaMexico Nicolás SaucedoCorrecaminos11
Clausura 2012Uruguay Sebastián MazLeón13
Apertura 12Mexico Víctor Lojero
Mexico Rodrigo Prieto
Necaxa
Neza
11
Clausura 2013Mexico Víctor LojeroNecaxa12
Apertura 2013Paraguay Gustavo Adrián RamírezAlebrijes11
Clausura 2014PanamaRoberto NurseCorrecaminos12
Apertura 2014Mexico Diego Jiménez
Venezuela Giancarlo Maldonado
Lobos BUAP
Atlante
10
Clausura 2015Panama Roberto Nurse
Brazil Leandro Carrijó
Dorados
Atlético San Luis
10
Apertura 2015Ecuador Carlos Garcés Atlante11

References

  1. includes SKY México and TDN
  2. "Nace la Liga de Ascenso". www.femexfut.org.mx. 2009-06-22. Retrieved 2009-06-22.
  3. http://televisadeportes.esmas.com/futbol/futbolmexico/535339/nacen-guerreros-oaxaca/
  4. Die 18 Mannschaften in der Liga de Ascenso 2010/11 (Spanish; retrieved on May 27, 2010)
  5. Hugo Balderas (January 8, 2016). "‘Ascenso MX’ está asegurado". http://aficionjb.com.mx/home/. La Razón. Retrieved February 14, 2016. External link in |website= (help)

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, February 14, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.