2009–10 Mexican Primera División season
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The 2009–10 Primera División de México season is the 63rd professional season of Mexico's top-flight football league, and 13th season in which the Apertura and Clausura system is used. The season is split into two tournaments—the Torneo Apertura and the Torneo Bicentenario—each with identical formats and each contested by the same eighteen teams.
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (April 2010) |
Quick Facts Season, Champions ...
Season | 2009–10 |
---|---|
Champions | Apertura: Monterrey (3rd title) Bicentenario: Toluca (10th title) |
Relegated | Ciudad Juárez |
Champions League | Monterrey Toluca Cruz Azul Santos Laguna |
Copa Libertadores | Morelia Monterrey Tecos Guadalajara San Luis |
InterLiga | América Monterrey Santos Laguna Puebla Atlante UANL Estudiantes Tecos Chiapas |
SuperLiga | Pachuca Morelia Puebla UNAM |
Matches played | 176 |
Goals scored | 472 (2.68 per match) |
Top goalscorer | Apertura: Emanuel Villa (17 goals) Bicentenario: Javier Hernández Johan Fano Hérculez Gómez (10 goals) |
Biggest home win | América 7–2 Toluca (August 30, 2009) Morelia 5–0 Ciudad Juárez (August 16, 2009) América 5–0 Estudiantes Tecos (September 13, 2009) Morelia 5–0 Querétaro (September 27, 2009) Toluca 5–0 Estudiantes Tecos (April 4, 2010) |
Biggest away win | Atlas 1–4 Guadalajara(November 7, 2009) |
2010–11 → |
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Seventeen teams returned for this season. Necaxa was relegated the previous season after accumulating the lowest coefficient over the past three seasons. They were replaced by Querétaro, who was promoted from the Liga de Ascenso.
More information Club, Home City ...
Club | Home City | Stadium | Capacity |
---|---|---|---|
América | Mexico City | Azteca | 105,000 |
Atlante | Cancún | Andrés Quintana Roo | 20,000 |
Atlas | Guadalajara | Jalisco | 56,700 |
Chiapas | Tuxtla Gutiérrez | Víctor Manuel Reyna | 31,100 |
Ciudad Juárez | Ciudad Juárez | Olímpico Benito Juárez | 22,300 |
Cruz Azul | Mexico City | Estadio Azul | 35,000 |
Estudiantes Tecos | Guadalajara | 3 de Marzo | 30,000 |
Guadalajara | Guadalajara | Jalisco | 56,700 |
Monterrey | Monterrey | Tecnológico | 38,000 |
Morelia | Morelia | Morelos | 41,500 |
Pachuca | Pachuca | Hidalgo | 30,000 |
Puebla | Puebla | Cuauhtémoc | 42,650 |
Querétaro | Querétaro | La Corregidora | 40,785 |
San Luis | San Luis Potosí | Alfonso Lastras Ramírez | 24,000 |
Santos Laguna | Torreón | Nuevo Corona | 30,000 |
Toluca | Toluca | Nemesio Díez | 27,000 |
UANL | Monterrey | Universitario | 45,000 |
UNAM | Mexico City | Olímpico Universitario | 63,000 |
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Managerial changes
More information Team, Outgoing manager ...
Team | Outgoing manager |
Manner of departure |
Date of vacancy |
Replaced by | Date of appointment |
Position in table |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Querétaro | Héctor Medrano | Resigned | Aug. 23, 2009 | Carlos Reinoso | Aug. 26, 2009 | 16th |
Guadalajara | Francisco Ramírez | Sacked | Sep. 12, 2009 | Raúl Arias | Sep. 15, 2009 | 15th |
Ciudad Juárez | Héctor Hugo Eugui | Sacked | Sep. 28, 2009 | José Treviño | Oct. 11, 2009 | 17th |
San Luis | Juan Antonio Luna | Resigned | Oct. 12, 2009 | Miguel Ángel López | 10th | |
Guadalajara | Raúl Arias | Sacked | Nov. 3, 2009 | José Luis Real | Nov. 3, 2009 | 14th |
Changes during the Bicentenario | ||||||
Ciudad Juárez | José Treviño | Sacked | March 1, 2010 | TBA | TBA | 18th |
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