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The Liga Mexicana de Football Amateur Association, later known as the Campeonato de Primera Fuerza, was an amateur football league founded in Mexico in 1902 with five clubs: Orizaba AC, Pachuca AC, Reforma AC, Mexico Cricket Club and British Club. Orizaba won the league in its inaugural year. A total of 35 teams took part in this league from 1902 until 1943, when the Mexican league went professional.

Liga Mexicana de Football Amateur Association
Founded1902; 122 years ago (1902)
1922; 102 years ago (1922) (as Campeonato de Primera Fuerza)
Folded1943; 81 years ago (1943) (as Liga Mayor)
CountryMexico
Number of teams35
Level on pyramid1
Domestic cup(s)Copa Tower
(1907-1922)
Copa Eliminatoria
(1920-1928)
Copa México
(1932-1942)
Most championshipsReal España
(11 titles)

History

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Prior to the Liga MX (at that time called Liga Mayor), there was no national football league in Mexico and football competitions were held within relatively small geographical regions. The winners of the Liga Mexicana de Football Amateur Association, a local league consisting of teams in and around Mexico City, was considered the first "national football league" in Mexico. There were other regional leagues such as the Liga Amateur de Veracruz, Liga Occidental De Jalisco and Liga del Bajío that also had notable clubs. Many club owners were not keen on the idea of establishing a professional league, despite paying players under the table. With the increasing demand for football, there was a sense of urgency to unite all the local amateur leagues in Mexico to progress as a football nation. The professional national league was finally established in 1943.[1]

The people who pushed football in Mexico were Percy C. Clifford and Robert J. Blackmoore. This brought the rules of play and the first regulatory balls. English Alfred Crowle, who played for Pachuca since 1908, also had considerable influence on the sport.

In 1910, Club México is founded, the first team formed by Alfredo B. Cuellar headed Mexican, Jorge Alberto Gomez de Parada and Sierra, then promoted by other foreign colonies: L'Amicale Française in 1911, Rovers FC and Real Club España in 1912, Centro Deportivo Español in 1914, Germania FV in 1915, Catalonia in 1917, Asturias FC in 1918, and CF Aurrerá in 1919.

Club América (at that time called Centro Unión), founded on the union of two Marist College in 1916, was the first important team composed of Mexicans in the capital city and achieved to win four consecutive championships between 1924 and 1928.

In 1918, Sinaloa was founded and changed several times its name, first to Lusitania in 1919, then to U-53 in 1920, then to Atlántico in 1921 but due to the colloquial use of that word it was derived to Atlante, whose components were proletarian extraction; their leaders were the Trinidad and Refugio Martinez brothers.

While between 1918 and 1920 the teams Cuenta y Administración, Guerra y Marina y Son-Sin resulted in the Club Esparta, which was then rebranded as CD Marte, brilliant team that never became popular, and even in the professional era and would move to Cuernavaca.

Regularly attended clubs outside the Mexico City as Pachuca AC, Puebla AC, Veracruz SC, Iberia de Córdoba, Moctezuma de Orizaba, Orizaba AC, Tigres México, España Veracruz, these being the most successful of them, Pachuca was crowned in seasons 1904–05, 1917–18 and 1919–20.

In 1920 there was a split in the Mexican amateur league, shortly before the start of the season. Real España and España Veracruz in solidarity with the expulsion of Tigres México, withdrew from the league and founded its own league called the Liga Nacional. As this idea went nowhere, Orizaba scheduled a series of friendly matches to remain active, with so many rivals like España Veracruz who was defeated 9–0 on 20 October 1919, or their wins 4-0 and 2–0 against Tigres, 2–0 on the Río Blanco and the achievements of Copa Alfonso XIII in a three-game series against Reforma and the Copa Elche in two games against Asturias.

The power and influence of the Hispanic teams was such that the press of the time chose to cover their sports facilities to those meetings. Spain interference on means, suitable to be published little news about the Liga Mexicana.

The separation of the two leagues in the 1920–21 season specific; Liga Nacional included América, Real España, Luz y Fuerza, L'Amicale Française and Reforma. Meanwhile, the Liga Mexicana had the participation of Asturias, Deportivo Internacional, Club México, Club Morelos and Germania. Immediately after the founding of the first football federation, the clubs fought for two years to form a single competition in August 1922 that they called Campeonato de Primera Fuerza. That is, both tournaments were unified and the first direct antecedent of the current Liga MX was born. Serious this league, whose members prompted the creation of the first national team, which would dispute its first match in 1923.[2]

In 1930–31, the season was suspended after 2 days, when Asturias, Atlante, Germania, Club Mexico and Marte requested permission to remodel Campo Asturias (not to be confused with the Parque Asturias, built until 1936) which was in poor condition, to make their home games there; to the disagreement of Real España, Necaxa (both who owned their own parks) and América. This coupled with the conflict arose with the Real Federación Española de Fútbol, which had asked the FMF to disable Gaspar Rubio who had signed for Real España. It got to the point of suspension of the three clubs who unsuccessfully tried to make a parallel tournament and the Federation decided to suspend the season to definitively resolve administrative problems. After months of conflict, smoothed asperities and the competition were refounded under the name Liga Mayor, to organize two competitions: the Campeonato Preferente consisted of six teams, and the Primera Ordinaria, that served as a promotion division. This competition had durability and grew to cluster up to 16 teams.

Club Necaxa, founded by members of Compañía de Luz y Fuerza del Centro, was an unforgettable dynasty in the decade 1930-40 known as the "11 brothers"; the first team to win promotion, won four league titles and the Copa México twice, becoming the first "Campeonísimo" in Mexico. Among the ranks of the "11 brothers" also arises a top Mexican football legends: Horacio Casarín.

In the 1938–39 season, Club Euzkadi was included when it was formed because the Basque Country national football team was refused permission by FIFA to play with affiliated teams. In 1937, during the Spanish Civil War, the first Basque President José Antonio Aguirre, had decided to send a Basque football club abroad in order to raise funds for the civil war that was taking place in Spain. When their homeland was captured by their enemies the players dared not return home. The Basques, under the name Club Deportivo Euzkadi, were allowed into the league and developed a fierce rivalry with traditional all Hispanic teams (Real España and Asturias) and despite winning 13 of the 17 games played, they came out of the tournament as runners-up to Asturias. At the end of the season, the team disbanded and the players became part of the Liga Mayor teams or other leagues.[3]

In 1940-41, Selección Jalisco joined to Liga Mayor, formed by elements of Guadalajara, Atlas, Nacional, y Oro. This team had played a series of friendly matches between 1926 and 1930 as part of promotional tours by Liga Occidental de Jalisco, however that season they integrated indefinitely as a club of Liga Mayor.

Participating clubs

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British Club in 1903
Club Years of activity
América1 1917-1943
Asturias 1919-1943
Atlante 1927-1943
Atlas 1921/22
Aurrerá 1923-1929
British Club2 1902-1913
Club Euzkadi3 1938/39
Club Leonés 1931-1933
Club México 1912-1918, 1919-1930, 1932-1934
Club Morelos 1920-1922
Dep. Español 1915-1917, 1918-1920
Dep. Internacional 1920/21
España Veracruz 1918-1920
Germania 1915-1917, 1918-1933
Guadalajara 1921/22
Iberia de Córdoba 1921/22
L'Amicale Française 1914/15, 1921/22
Luz y Fuerza4 1921-1923
Marina y Guerra/Son-Sin5 1922-1924
Marte 1928-1932, 1937-1943
Mexico Cricket Club 1902-1908
Moctezuma 1940-1943
Necaxa 1923-1943
Orizaba6 1902-1904, 1921-22
Pachuca7 1902-1920
Popo Park 1909-10
Puebla8 1904-05, 1906-07
Real España 1912-1930, 1932-1943
Real España B 1915-1918
Reforma 1902-1915, 1921-22, 1923-24
Rovers 1912-1914
Selección Jalisco 1940-1943
Tigres México9 1917-1920
Tranvias4 1922-23
Veracruz Sporting 1921-22, 1931-1933
Notes
  1. América played its first two season under the name "Centro Unión".
  2. British Club was founded in 1902 and was the successor of Club Britania, founded in 1899.
  3. Club Euzkadi was formed due to the FIFA's ban on the Basque Country national football team from playing with affiliated teams after the Spanish Civil War.
  4. The clubs "Luz y Fuerza" and "Tranvías" were merged in 1923 and created Necaxa.
  5. Founded by the Marines in Mexico under the name "Marina y Guerra", one year later the name was changed to "Son-Sin", a short name for the states of Sonora (Son) and Sinaloa (Sin).
  6. Founded in 1898 as "Orizaba Athletic Club" and changed its name to "Asociación Deportiva Orizabeña" in 1916.
  7. The current Pachuca founded in 1892 as "Pachuca Football Club" and changed its name to "Pachuca Athletic Club" in 1895.
  8. Founded in 1892 as "Puebla Football Club" and changed its name to "Puebla Athletic Club" in 1894. It has no relation with Puebla, which was founded in 1944.
  9. Founded in 1915 as "Junior Club" and changed its name to "Tigres México" in 1918.

Amateur era champions

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  • 1902-1922: Organized by the "Asociación de Aficionados de México en la Liga de Football".
  • 1922-23: Organized by the "Federación de Foot-ball Asociación".
  • 1923-1927: Organized by the "Federación Central de Fútbol".
  • 1927-1943: Organized by the current "Federación Mexicana de Fútbol" (FMF).
Season Champions Runners-up Manager
Liga Mexicana de Football Amateur Association
1902–03 Orizaba Reforma Scotland  Duncan Macomish
1903–04 Mexico Cricket Club Reforma France  Claude M. Butlin
1904–05 Pachuca British Club England  Charles Grenfell
1905–06 Reforma Mexico Cricket Club England  Thomas R. Phillips
1906–07 Reforma British Club England  Thomas R. Phillips
1907–08 British Club Club México England  Percy Clifford
1908–09 Reforma Pachuca England  Thomas R. Phillips
1909–10 Reforma Popo Park England  Thomas R. Phillips
1910–11 Reforma Pachuca England  Thomas R. Phillips
1911–12 Reforma Pachuca England  Thomas R. Phillips
1912–13 Club México Pachuca Mexico  Antonio Sierra
1913–14 Real España Rovers Spain  Francisco G. Ubierta
1914–15 Real España Pachuca Spain  Francisco G. Ubierta
1915–16 Real España Pachuca Spain  Francisco Arias
1916–17 Real España Pachuca Spain  Francisco G. Ubierta
1917–18 Pachuca Dep. Español England  William Penguely
1918–19 Real España Centro Unión Spain  Francisco Arias
1919–20 Pachuca Germania England  Alfred C. Crowle
1920-21
Annuled season due to the separation into Liga Mexicana and Liga Nacional
1921–22
Annuled season due to the separation into Liga Mexicana and Liga Nacional
Campeonato de Primera Fuerza
1922–23 Asturias Germania Scotland  Gerald Brown
1923–24 Real España América Spain  Francisco Arias
1924–25 América Necaxa Mexico  Rafael Garza Gutiérrez
1925–26 América Asturias Mexico  Rafael Garza Gutiérrez
1926–27 América Real España England  Percy Clifford
1927–28 América Asturias England  Percy Clifford
1928–29 Marte Real España Mexico  Servando Vargas
1929–30 Real España América Hungary  Emérico Pozsonyi
1930–31
The tournament was not held
Liga Mayor
1931–32 Atlante Necaxa Spain  Miguel Tovar Mariscal
1932–33 Necaxa Atlante Austria  Ernesto Pauler
1933–34 Real España Asturias Hungary  Jesza Poszony
1934–35 Necaxa América Austria  Ernesto Pauler
1935–36 Real España América Hungary  Jesza Poszony
1936–37 Necaxa Atlante Austria  Ernesto Pauler
1937–38 Necaxa Asturias Austria  Ernesto Pauler
1938–39 Asturias Club Euzkadi Spain  José Ramón Ballina
1939–40 Real España Necaxa Spain  Ramón Torralba
1940–41 Atlante Selección Jalisco Hungary  Luis Grocz
1941–42 Real España Atlante Spain  Nemesio Tamayo
1942–43 Marte Atlante Argentina  José Gómez

Champions

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Club Champions Runners-up Winning years
Real España 11 2 1913-14, 1914-15, 1915-16, 1916-17, 1918-19, 1923-24, 1929-30, 1933-34, 1935-36, 1939-40, 1941-42
Reforma 6 2 1905-06, 1906-07, 1908-09, 1909-10, 1910-11, 1911-12
América 4 5 1924-25, 1925-26, 1926-27, 1927-28
Necaxa 4 3 1932-33, 1934-35, 1936-37, 1937-38
Pachuca 3 7 1904-05, 1917-18, 1919-20
Asturias 2 4 1922-23, 1938-39
Atlante 2 4 1931-32, 1940-41
Marte 2 0 1928-29, 1942-43
British Club 1 2 1907-08
Mexico Cricket Club 1 1 1903-04
Club México 1 1 1912-13
Orizaba 1 0 1902-03
Germania 0 2
Popo Park 0 1
Rovers 0 1
Dep. Español 0 1
Club Euzkadi 0 1
Selección Jalisco 0 1

Statistics

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Goalscorers

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Season Name Club Goals Matches G/M
1902-03 United Kingdom  John Hogg Orizaba 5 4 1.25
1903-04 France  Julio Lacaud Reforma AC 4 8 0.5
1904-05 England  Percy Clifford British Club 5 8 0.625
1905-06 England  Charles M. Butlin Reforma AC 6 8 0.75
1906-07 England  Percy Clifford British Club 5 8 0.625
1907-08 United Kingdom  John Hogg British Club 4 6 0.67
1908-09 Mexico  Jorge Gómez De Parada
England  William Bray
Reforma AC
Pachuca AC
3
3
4
4
0.75
0.75
1909-10 England  Robert J. Blackmore Reforma AC 4 6 0.67
1910-11 England  Charles M. Butlin
England  Alfred C. Crowle
Reforma AC
Pachuca AC
2
2
4
4
0.5
0.5
1911-12 United Kingdom  John Hogg British Club 3 4 0.75
1912-13 Mexico  Jorge Gómez De Parada México FC 5 10 0.5
1913-14 Spain Bernardo Rodríguez Club España 6 8 0.75
1914-15 England  Alfred C. Crowle Pachuca AC 6 10 0.6
1915-16 Spain  Lázaro Ibarreche Club España 7 10 0.7
1916-17 Spain  Lázaro Ibarreche Club España 6 10 0.6
1917-18 Spain  Lázaro Ibarreche
England  Frederick Williams
Mexico  Horacio Ortiz
Club España
Pachuca AC
Pachuca AC
5
5
5
10
10
10
0.5
0.5
0.5
1918-19 Spain  Lázaro Ibarreche Club España 11 12 0.92
1919-20 Spain  Lázaro Ibarreche Club España 13 16 0.81
1920-21
1921-22
1922-23
1923-24
1924-25 Mexico  Ernesto Sota América 10 - -
1925-26 Switzerland  Kurt Friederich Germania FV 11 - -
1926-27 Mexico  Pedro Arruza
Mexico  Miguel Ruiz
Club España
Necaxa
13
13
-
-
-
-
1927-28 Mexico  Ernesto Sota América 16 - -
1928-29 Mexico  Nicho Mejia Atlante 12 - -
1929-30 Mexico  Jorge Sota América 12 - -
1930-31 No Tournament Held - -
1931-32 Mexico  Juan Carreño
Peru  Julio Lores
Atlante
Necaxa
20
20
-
-
-
-
1932-33 Peru  Julio Lores Necaxa 8 - -
1933-34 Mexico  José Pacheco Asturias 12 - -
1934-35 Mexico  Hilario "Moco" López Necaxa 17 - -
1935-36 Mexico  Hilario "Moco" López Necaxa 14 - -
1936-37 Mexico  Hilario "Moco" López Necaxa 11 - -
1937-38 Mexico  Efraín Ruiz Asturias 13 - -
1938-39 Spain  Miguel Gual Club España 20 - -
1939-40 Mexico  Alberco "Caballo" Mendoza Atlante 15 - -
1940-41 Spain  Marti Ventolra Atlante 17 14 1.21
1941-42 Costa Rica  Rafael "Tico" Meza Moctezuma 20 14 1.43
1942-43 Mexico  Manuel Alonso Marte 17 14 1.21

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Federación Mexicana de Fútbol".
  2. ^ [1] Tablas de la conclusión del Primera Fuerza con RSSSF.com
  3. ^ [2] Lista de los Duenos de México con RSSSF.com