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Club Necaxa

Impulsora del Deportivo Necaxa SA de CV ( pronunciado [ne.ˈkaɣ.sa] ); a menudo conocido simplemente como Club Necaxa , es un club de fútbol profesional mexicano con sede en la ciudad de Aguascalientes . Compite en la Liga MX , la máxima categoría del fútbol mexicano . Fue fundado el 21 de agosto de 1923 en la Ciudad de México por el ingeniero de origen escocés William H. Frasser. En 2003, cambió su sede a la ciudad de Aguascalientes, en el estado del mismo nombre . El equipo juega sus partidos de local en el Estadio Victoria .

El club cuenta en su palmarés con 12 títulos (tres de Liga, cuatro de Copa México , dos de Campeón de Campeones , uno de Supercopa de México , uno de Copa de Campeones de la CONCACAF y uno de Recopa de la CONCACAF ), así como cuatro títulos de Liga de Ascenso y dos como vencedor de la serie de ascenso. Fue el primer equipo en conseguir el doblete en México, al ganar Liga y Copa en una misma temporada, esto en 1932-33, tomando así el apodo de Campeonísimo, convirtiéndose en el primer equipo del fútbol mexicano en llevar dicho sobrenombre.

A nivel internacional y más allá de sus títulos confederales, la actuación más destacada del club fue la obtención del tercer puesto en el Campeonato Mundial de Clubes de la FIFA 2000 celebrado en Brasil. [2]

Ocupa el 7° lugar en la lista de la Federación Internacional de Historia y Estadísticas de Fútbol de Clubes del Siglo de Norteamérica y Centroamérica (1901-2000), siendo el club mexicano mejor ubicado. [3]

Historia

Fundación (Compañía de Luz y Fuerza,Luz y fuerza) (1899–1920)

Necaxa fue fundado el 21 de agosto de 1923 por el escocés William H. Fraser , ingeniero y propietario de la Compañía de Luz y Fuerza en el estado de Puebla. Como estudiante en Escocia, Fraser jugó fútbol y fue un gran defensor de este deporte. Fraser consolidó los equipos de la Compañía de Luz y Fuerza y ​​los operadores de tranvías Compañía de Luz y Fuerza y ​​Tranvías en uno solo.

Fraser apoyó al equipo recién fusionado con ingresos y fondos de la empresa. Además, la Light and Power Company ofreció empleo estable a los jugadores en una época en la que la mitad de los jugadores jugaban a nivel amateur. [4] Sin embargo, la Federación Mexicana de Fútbol no permitía que los equipos llevaran el nombre de empresas privadas, por lo que el equipo cambió su nombre a Necaxa, en honor al río Necaxa que estaba cerca de la planta eléctrica.

Los historiadores afirman que los colores y el escudo de Necaxa provienen de la llegada de la comunidad de Cornualles a México, [5] la comunidad de Cornualles floreció y permaneció en el centro de México hasta la Revolución Mexicana en 1910. Aunque la comunidad de Cornualles en México regresó en gran medida a Cornualles, dejó un legado cultural; las empanadas de Cornualles , los museos de minería de Cornualles, una Sociedad Cultural Mexicana de Cornualles y el fútbol, ​​son parte del patrimonio y la tradición local en Mineral del Monte y sus alrededores. [6] En 1923, se decidió que el equipo Necaxa presentaría jugadores independientemente de su raza y nacionalidad.

En esa época, el equipo se llamaba "Los Electricistas" . El equipo adoptó los colores rojo y blanco como sus colores de equipo, lo que les valió el apodo de "Los rojiblancos". Durante este período, comenzó a formarse la rivalidad más antigua del fútbol mexicano, entre Necaxa y Atlante FC.

El 14 de septiembre de 1930, ya siendo bicampeón de la Copa Eliminatoria amateur , el Necaxa inauguró su estadio denominado Parque Necaxa , ubicado a orillas del Río La Piedad en un terreno donado por la Familia Fraser. El estadio tenía una capacidad máxima para 15,000 aficionados, y era conocido por su torre del reloj que mostraba el escudo del equipo.

El Necaxa, en los inicios del fútbol mexicano, era miembro de la Liga Mexicana de Fútbol Amateur , compuesta por el Atlante FC , el Club España , el Germania FV y el experimentado y disciplinado equipo Asturias . El Necaxa ganó campeonatos durante las temporadas 1932-33, 1934-35, 1936-37 y 1937-38. [7]

The following season after the stadium's opening, players such as Hilario López and Luis Pérez contributed to the team's success, leading Necaxa to the League final against Atlante, losing 3–2.

But Necaxa would rebound the next season, smashing Atlante by a 9–0 score. The line-up Necaxa used on that day was the following:

During this decade, Necaxa became one of the most popular teams in Mexico. Under the direction of the Ernst Pauler, Necaxa, in one season of play (1935–36), the team dominated and won titles ranging from Champion of Champions, Champion of the Liga Mayor De La Ciudad, National Champion of League, National Champion and Central American Champions. Their last title was the Central American Championship in El Salvador.

1935 Caribbean games lineup

Mexico

"Paco" Martinez de la Vega, an aficionado, would coin the surname for the very first time "Campeonismo" or "Championshipism", which Necaxa would later use to justify their achievements and titles.[4]

Late 1930s: Once Hermanos

Following the Mexican Revolution, the late 1930s represented Necaxa's most successful all-Mexican team. The Once Hermanos or "Eleven Brothers" period was coined in that era due to that team's ability to work as a team. The Necaxa team, in 1936, won the Copa México.

In that same year, a talented striker gained popularity within Necaxa's benches. Even though he was not one of the original "once hermano" or "eleventh brother" Horacio Casarìn, was a great player in the Mexican league national ranks. His success took him to the big screen in Mexican Cinema.[4]

Necaxa's "Once Hermanos" lineup

1940s brief hiatus

Necaxa disappears from competitive play within the Mexican League in 1943[9] altogether due to the professionalization of Mexican Football. It would be half a decade before the Necaxa emblem and uniform would be represented on the field again.[4]

1950-60s resurgence

Seven years later, Club Necaxa returned to play under the conditions of the commercialization of the Mexican league. Under the new ownership of the Union of Electricians and Juan Jose Rivas Rojas, Club Necaxa played their first game on 25 September 1950 in the old district of Oblatos, in a stadium called Parque Oblatos or "Oblatos Stadium" otherwise called the Municipal Stadium of Felipe Martinez Sandoval in Guadalajara, Mexico. This park inaugurated Necaxa's comeback to football. In the fifties, Necaxa were tenants and played in the Federal District of Mexico City in present-day Estadio Azul (1950–55).

In the late sixties, Necaxa played football in Estadio Azteca in Mexico City. A modern lighting system in Estadio Azteca was inaugurated on 5 June 1966 with the first night game between Valencia CF and Necaxa. The first goal of the game was scored by Honduran José Cardona. In this game Roberto Martínez o Caña Brava scored the first goal made by a Mexican. Estadio Azteca was the largest stadium in Latin America, and the fifth largest stadium in the world. It is known throughout North America and South America as the home stadium for the Mexico national football team.

Throughout the 1950s Necaxa struggled financially to keep afloat. In 1955, large debts obliged Necaxa to sell the majority of its star players. Miguel Ramierz Vazquez a new owner, contracted the services of the Uruguayan coach Donald Ross, who eventually took Guadalajara to a championship 1957, beginning a road to stability, yet not winning championships.

The electricians won the Title cup in 1960 and the following year, in the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico Olympic stadium, "the electricians" defeated Rey Pele and the club and team of the Santos of Brazil 4–3 in an official match of that year's "Exagonal" tournament. "Morocho" Dante Juarez assisted in two victorious goals in Necaxa's win over the Santos de Brazil.

Through the early 1960s, Necaxa struggled financially until it was sold. New owners, Julio Orvañanos, brought a championship in 1965–66.[4]

Mexico 68 and Carlos Albert vs Necaxa

In this decade, the organization was in financial trouble. The team had poor attendance in Mexico City due to the population unrest.

The case of Carlos Albert begins with a small group of veteran footballers in the spring of 1969. Club Necaxa Veteran players petitioned the organization for better wages and argued that as a team and group, they have always responded to the team's performance. Carlos Albert was the face of the disagreement between the players and management.

Albert was listed by Necaxa Management as transferable and was retained on half his salary. He asked management to void his contract in order, to avoid loss of income and to be able to continue playing in the League with another team. Necaxa Management did not accept his request.

The courts ruled in favour of Albert on Thursday 8 October 1971, and Necaxa was forced to pay MX$77,000 to Carlos Albert. Due to the will of managements unfair psychological abuse and labour malpractice, This case forced a cause to action from several players to request better treatment and more rights for Necaxa football players.

Atlético Español 1971 to 1982

On 19 September 1971, Club Necaxa experienced financial trouble and became in debt with players and management. The owners sold the club to a group of businessmen from Spain. The ownership handled the player contracts, disputes and the franchises debt. The new Spanish ownership restructured contracts and made Club Necaxa solvent. The club played under the name of the Spanish Athletic Bulls or "Toros del Atlético Español".

In 1975, the organization won their only international title in the CONCACAF Champions' Cup, playing the final against Transvaal of Suriname and defeating them 5–1 on aggregate. In 1973–74, they reached the final against Cruz Azul. They played a two-legged tie in which the Atlético Español won the first leg 2–1 but lost the second 3–0, becoming sub champion of the league.

Players who distinguished themselves in Atlético Español were the Brazilian striker Carlos Eloir Perucci, Ricardo Brandón, Salvador Plascencia,'Sabanita' Rivera, Juan Santillán, and Tomás Boy, under the direction of Miguel Marín, 'the Witch' Gutiérrez, Enrique Díaz and 'Chucho' Prado and the Chiliean Prieto.[10]

In 1982, the Spanish ownership within the Federal District of Mexico city sold the franchise. A new group of Mexican businessmen purchased Necaxa in 1982, then telecommunications Giant Grupo Televisa returned the organization's original name from 1971 and opened its training facilities in Cuautitlán Izcalli in the state of Mexico.[11] The ownership renamed the franchise Necaxa by 1982 after the cultural and historical importance of the franchise in Mexican football. While Mexico experienced a crisis called "the Lost Decade" or "La Decada Perdida"[12] in the 1980s and early 1970s, Necaxa in the 1980s struggled against two relegation matches. One at the end of the 1982–83 season against Zacatepec and another by the end of the 1984–85 season against Leones Universidad de Guadalajara.

Atlético Español footballers: Goalkeepers: Julito Aguilar, Jan Gomola, Goyo Cortez, Enrique Vazquez del Mercado, Defense: El Pimienta Rico, Juan Manuel Alvarez, Mario Trejo, Midfielder: Juan Carlos Rodriguez Vega, Manuel Manzo, Benito Buen Hombre Pardo, Tomas Boy. Forwards: Juan Manuel Borbolla, J.J. Muñante, Romano, Carlos Eloir Perucci, El Cachito Ramirez, Ricardo Brandon, Pio Tabaré Gonzalez, Juan Carlos Rossete. Raúl 'El Cora Isiordia", y Alejandro Romanh.

New Owners and return to glory (1990–2000)

In 1988, Futbol Club Necaxa was purchased by Mexican telecommunications giant Grupo Televisa S.A C.V. The now late owner, Emilio Azcárraga Milmo (father of Emilio Azcárraga Jean), and several associates took a new direction with the team.

In the 1989 and 1990 season, director of football operations Anibal Ruiz acquired the services of the Ecuadorian midfielder, Álex Aguinaga, one of the iconic figures of the Necaxa in the 1990s and one of the most talented foreign players who has ever set foot on Mexican soil.

Necaxa has a great season, previously in the 1980s they battled twice against México Primera División's regulations of the Mexican League. In that year Necaxa reached the finals losing to Pumas of the University of Mexico. The following season Aníbal Ruiz was replaced with new coach, the Argentine ex-defender, Eduardo Luján Manera who contracted the services of the Chilean Ivo Basay. Under Manera, Necaxa didn't qualify for the finals of the championship. The acquisition of new coach Roberto Saporiti, marked the beginning of a commitment to competition excellence in a period known to Necaxa fans as "La Epoca Necaxista bajo el Capitalismo" or "the new era of Necaxa under Capitalism".[citation needed]

In 1992, the talented footballer of UNAM, ex-Puma player Enrique Borja was put under contract and headed the club's football operations, leaving Saporiti as head coach of Necaxa. Eventually Saporitti was replaced. The team Saporitti, Manera, Ruiz leave was an offensive minded team, that was disciplined, yet lacked great defensive talent. The following season management engaged the services of Manuel Lapuente. Sergio "El Ratón" Zarate, Octavio "Picas" Becerril, the Chilean Eduardo "Lalo" Vilches, José María "El Chema" Higareda were key figures in the defense and offense of the club. Manuel Lapuente managed Club Necaxa to three Championship titles in Mexico's National Football League.[citation needed]

After 56 years, once again Necaxa found itself with the title of "Campeonísimo", contributing talent in the 1990s and late in the millennium, within the Primera División of the Mexican League and in the Mexico national team.[citation needed]

They won the Mexican League Championship in 1994 (beating Cruz Azul), in 1995 (beating Celaya) and 1998 (beating Guadalajara), becoming Champion of CONCACAF,created a huge upset against European Giants Real Madrid CF in 3rd place match of the inaugural FIFA Club World Cup the following season. Champion of champions the legacy of the "Once Hermanos" attempted to be reestablished within the franchise's values and mind set. The Necaxa team of the 1990s had represented the cohesion and ability of working and playing as a team under lucrative financial incentives, forced great communication on the field and execution on the field during advanced Capitalism competition play. Necaxa's Championships were similar, yet different reminder of the spirit of "Los Once Hermanos" or "the Eleven Brothers" in the late 1930s.[citation needed]

Relocation and new home (2000–2009)

After poor attendance numbers during the early 2000s, Necaxa needed to refresh their home and relocate to improve on this issue. Many considered Estadio Victoria in Aguascalientes to be the first modern stadium built in Mexico.

Attendance continued to decline steadily despite the change of city and stadium for Necaxa. This consistent decline would lead to a relegation for Necaxa during the Spring 2009 campaign.

The Hidrorayos would bounce back winning the fall 2009 and Spring 2010 (undefeated) Ascenso MX titles thus earning an automatic promotion back up to the Liga MX.

Necaxa in Primera División and return to Ascenso MX (2011–present)

After winning the 2009–10 promotion, Necaxa returned to the FMF Primera División for the 2010–11 campaign. Omar Arellano began the season with Daniel Brailovsky taking over for the remainder of the tenure. Ultimately the club faced immediate relegation after only one year.

Despite having a good performance in the 2nd division, Necaxa was initially unable to return to the top flight, losing two finals in 2013 against Neza FC and Universidad de Guadalajara.

On 6 December 2014, Necaxa won the Apertura 2014 championship in the final game against Coras de Tepic ultimately losing the promotion play-off against Dorados de Sinaloa.

The Apertura 2015 tournament was not good for Necaxa, finishing in 10th place. However, in Clausura 2016, Necaxa finished the regular season as runner-up, one point behind U. de G. In the playoffs, Necaxa beat Correcaminos 2–1 in the Quarterfinals, Atlante 5–3 in the Semifinals, and Zacatecas 2–0 in the Finals to become champion. Next was a two-legged playoff series against Cd. Juarez, the Apertura 2015 champion. Necaxa won the first leg in Aguascalientes 1–0, and one week later in Cd. Juarez 2–0, thus clinching its return to Primera Division Liga MX for the first time in five years.

NX Football USA, LLC (2021–present)

Necaxa took in a 50% ownership partner named NX Football USA, LLC in 2021. The ownership group included former owners from Major League Soccer club D.C. United, former managers from Welsh football club Swansea City,[a] and celebrities: Mexican-American actress Eva Longoria, former international football player Mesut Özil, former NBA basketball player Shawn Marion, MLB baseball player Justin Verlander, and Verlander's wife, American model Kate Upton.[13][14] Necaxa´s backers purchased 5% of Wrexham AFC in April 2024 and its owners Rob McElhenney and Ryan Reynolds, in turn, purchased a minority stake in Necaxa.[15]

On July 9th, 2024, a TV series was ordered with filming beginning on the same day. The series will be similar to Welcome to Wrexham.[16]

Sponsorship

First kit evolution

1990–present kit evolution

Honours

Domestic

Confederation

Qualifier

International

International record

1 Tournament played under the club name of Atlético Español.
2 Final never played, tournament tacitly abandoned.

Personnel

Management

Source: Liga MX

Coaching staff

Players

First-team squad

As of 5 July 2024[19]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

Out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

Reserve teams

Necaxa (Liga TDP)
Reserve team that plays in the Liga TDP, the fourth level of the Mexican league system.

Historical championship squads

Top scorers

Interior of Victoria Stadium.

Historical Amateur leading scorers

Historical Leading Season scorers

All-time leading scorers

Managers

This is the list of managers who had the Club Necaxa in short tournaments:

Fan clubs

Footnotes

  1. ^ Swansea City is one of five Welsh clubs that have historically played in the English football system.

References

  1. ^ "Club Necaxa's US investment approved by Mexican FA". Sportico. Archived from the original on 14 October 2023. Retrieved 24 May 2021.
  2. ^ "Campeonato Mundial de Clubes de la FIFA Brasil 2000". Archived from the original on 13 October 2013.
  3. ^ "El Club del Siglo de Norte y Centro América". 10 April 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d e La serie Mexico Nuevo Siglo: Rueda de la Fortuna Los Rayos
  5. ^ Logan James (reprint 1976). The Scottish Gael Or Celtic Manners. John Donald Publishers Ltd. pp. 249–250. ISBN 0-85976-021-9.
  6. ^ "The Cornish in Mexico" Archived 4 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine, bbc.co.uk, 30 September 2008, retrieved 2009-09-07
  7. ^ "Mexico – List of Final Tables". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 3 February 2023.
  8. ^ "Señor Gol – en sida om Mexikansk fotboll". Señor Gol. Archived from the original on 7 November 2003. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  9. ^ "Carlos Calderón: El Necaxa III. Los gloriosos años 30 – mediotiempo.com". 14 June 2009. Archived from the original on 26 June 2015. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  10. ^ "La Vieja Guardia – Pasión Rojiblanca". Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  11. ^ "Necaxa deja Cuautitlán". Archived from the original on 26 June 2015. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  12. ^ "La Década Perdida". Archived from the original on 28 October 2017. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  13. ^ Novy-Williams, Scott Soshnick,Eben (12 April 2021). "Liga MX Draws First Major U.S. Investors to 'NFL of Mexico'". Sportico.com. Archived from the original on 28 September 2022. Retrieved 4 August 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ Testa, Laura (8 June 2021). "NX Football USA LLC's Acquisition of a Stake in Impulsora del Deportivo Necaxa, S.A. de C.V." Archived from the original on 15 June 2023. Retrieved 4 August 2022.
  15. ^ "Wrexham Adds Club Necaxa Backers in Reciprocal Soccer Investment". Sportico. Archived from the original on 12 June 2024. Retrieved 29 April 2024.
  16. ^ "Welcome to Necaxa: FX and Disney+ Latin America Order Docuseries About Mexican Soccer Team with Eva Longoria and 'Wrexham' Duo". 9 July 2024.
  17. ^ a b c d e "Club Necaxa". Archived from the original on 25 February 2010. Retrieved 6 March 2010.
  18. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 31 July 2020. Retrieved 9 August 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  19. ^ Liga Mx / Ascenso Mx. "Página Oficial de la Liga del Fútbol Profesional en México .: Bienvenido". Liga Mx. Archived from the original on 26 December 2016. Retrieved 18 October 2018.

Sources

External links