Serie A de México

The Serie A has 33 teams (1 Liga MX Reserve Team, 5 Liga de Expansión MX Reserve Teams and 27 Serie A Teams) divided into three groups. For the 2022–23 season, it will be a return of two short tournaments consisting of 10 total matches played home & away and the liguilla. The top 2 teams & two 3rd-place teams from each group at the end of each Torneo will play in the Liguilla for a spot to play for promotion to Liga de Expansión MX provided that their stadiums meet the requirements to ascend.

Serie A
Founded1950
CountryMexico
Divisions2
Number of teams33 (3 groups of 11 teams)
Level on pyramid3
Promotion toLiga de Expansión MX
Relegation toSerie B
Current championsTuzos UAZ (1st Title)
(Apertura 2022 Season)
TV partnersMegacable[1]
Televisa[2]
TVC Deportes[3]
WebsiteOfficial website
Current: 2022–23 Serie A de México season

The Serie A was created in the second half of 2008, with the participation and approval of the owners of the teams of the Second and Third Division, being next to Serie B part of the Liga Premier.

As of the 2022–23 Season, Pachuca from Liga MX; Celaya, Correcaminos UAT, Mineros de Zacatecas, Cimarrones de Sonora and Leones Negros all from Liga de Expansión MX will join the Liga Premier to give young players professional experience. However, only Correcaminos UAT, Cimarrones de Sonora, Leones Negros UdeG and Pachuca will have a reserve team, while Celaya and Mineros de Zacatecas will have an associated team that will have its own identity.

Teams for 2022–23 season

The member clubs of the Serie A for the 2022–23 season are listed as follows.[4]

Stadium and locations

Club Manager City Stadium Capacity Affiliate
Chihuahua Carlos Kanahan (Interim)Chihuahua City, ChihuahuaOlímpico UACH22,000
Cimarrones de Sonora Paolo SerratoHermosillo, SonoraHéroe de Nacozari18,747Cimarrones de Sonora
Coras José RizoTepic, NayaritNicolás Álvarez Ortega[lower-alpha 1]12,271
Halcones de Zapopan Jesús CotaZapotlanejo, JaliscoMiguel Hidalgo1,700
Leones Negros UdeG Ahuizotl SánchezZapopan, JaliscoInstalaciones Club Deportivo U.de G. Cancha 33,000Leones Negros UdeG
Los Cabos United[5] Rodrigo RuizLos Cabos, Baja California SurComplejo Don Koll3,500
Mexicali[6] Enrique López ZarzaMexicali, Baja CaliforniaCiudad Deportiva Mexicali5,000
Mineros de Fresnillo Luis Ángel MuñozFresnillo, ZacatecasUnidad Deportiva Minera Fresnillo6,000 Mineros de Zacatecas
Tecos Jorge HernándezZapopan, JaliscoTres de Marzo18,779
Tritones Vallarta   Hugo Norberto Castillo  Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco  Ciudad del Deporte San José del Valle[7]   4,000
Tuzos UAZ Rubén HernándezZacatecas City, ZacatecasCarlos Vega Villalba20,068
  1. Although the club registered the Estadio Nicolás Álvarez Ortega as its official field, the team plays its matches at the Estadio Olímpico Santa Teresita.

Stadium and locations

Club Manager City Stadium Capacity Affiliate
Aguacateros CDU Edgar Tolentino (Interim)Uruapan, MichoacánUnidad Deportiva Hermanos López Rayón6,000
Catedráticos Elite Juan Carlos AscensioSalamanca, Guanajuato [lower-alpha 1]Sección XXIV10,000
Colima Usiel AndradeColima City, ColimaOlímpico Universitario de Colima11,812
Gavilanes de Matamoros Julio GarcíaMatamoros, TamaulipasEl Hogar22,000
Inter Querétaro Hugo SerranoQuerétaro City, QuerétaroOlímpico de Querétaro4,600
La Piedad Enrique PérezLa Piedad, MichoacánJuan N. López13,356
Lobos ULMX Rowan VargasCelaya, GuanajuatoMiguel Alemán Valdés23,182Celaya[8]
Saltillo Jair GarcíaSaltillo, CoahuilaOlímpico Francisco I. Madero7,000
Tampico Madero[9] Gastón ObledoTampico and Ciudad Madero, TamaulipasTamaulipas19,667
Tulancingo[10] Luis Alfonso LugoTulancingo, HidalgoPrimero de Mayo2,500
UAT Gandhi Vega  Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas  Marte R. Gómez[lower-alpha 2]10,520 UAT
  1. The club played the Apertura Tournament at Núcleo Deportivo y de Espectáculos Ameca in Ameca, Jalisco.
  2. Although the club registered the Estadio Marte R. Gómez as its official field, the team plays most of its matches at the Estadio Universitario Eugenio Alvizo Porras

Stadium and locations

Location of teams in the 2022–23 Serie A Group 3
Club Manager City Stadium Capacity Affiliate
Cafetaleros de Chiapas Jesús PalaciosTuxtla Gutiérrez, ChiapasVíctor Manuel Reyna29,001
Deportiva Venados Arturo EspinozaTamanché, YucatánAlonso Diego Molina2,500
Dongu Marcos FuentesCuautitlán, State of MexicoLos Pinos5,000
Escorpiones Omar RamírezCuernavaca, MorelosCentenario14,800 –
Inter Playa del Carmen Carlos BracamontesPlaya del Carmen, Quintana RooUnidad Deportiva Mario Villanueva Madrid7,500
Leviatán Carlos ValdezMexico CityJesús Martínez "Palillo"6,000
Montañeses Víctor HernándezOrizaba, VeracruzSocum[lower-alpha 1]7,000 –
Pachuca Andrés ChitivaPachuca, HidalgoHidalgo30,000Pachuca
Real de Arteaga[11] Roberto Montes de OcaQuerétaro City, QuerétaroOlímpico de Querétaro4,600
Sporting Canamy Juan Carlos RicoOaxtepec, MorelosOlímpico de Oaxtepec9,000
Yalmakán Mendivi Mis (Interim)Chetumal, Quintana RooJosé López Portillo[lower-alpha 2]6,600
  1. Although the club registered the Estadio Socum as its official field, the team played most of its 2022–23 season matches at the Complejo Deportivo Orizaba Sur, the team was relocated to Estadio Socum on 26 February 2023.
  2. Although the club registered the Estadio José López Portillo as its official field, the team played its Apertura Tournament matches at the Estadio 10 de Abril.

Offseason Changes

Clausura Tournament changes

References

  1. includes Megasports
  2. Includes Adrenalina Sports Network
  3. includes TVC Deportes 2
  4. "¡HAY CLUBES DE ESTRENO!". Liga Premier Magazine (in Spanish). 2 July 2022. Retrieved 2 July 2022.
  5. "Los Cabos United, el nuevo equipo profesional de futbol en BCS, con Jorge Campos como embajador". bcsnoticias (in Spanish). 26 January 2022. Retrieved 2 May 2022.
  6. Mayoral, Ibrahim (23 February 2022). "Mexicali FC continuará proceso de registro". La Voz de la Frontera (in Spanish). Retrieved 2 May 2022.
  7. "Tritones Vallarta Expectantes". Liga Premier Magazine. No. 1189. Liga Premier de México. 13 August 2021. Retrieved 13 August 2021.
  8. "Lobos de la ULM firman convenio con Club Celaya FC; rescatan segunda división". Expresa TV (in Spanish). 12 March 2021. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
  9. Durán, Víctor Hugo (22 June 2022). "Jaiba Brava del Tampico-Madero llegará a Liga Mx en 3 años: directiva". Milenio (in Spanish). Retrieved 22 June 2022.
  10. "Club Deportivo Tulancingo: equipo de segunda división". El Sol de Tulancingo (in Spanish). 1 June 2022. Retrieved 17 June 2022.
  11. "Real de Arteaga F.C." Retrieved 27 May 2022.
  12. Guerra, Frida (2 July 2022). "Se corona Aguacateros de Uruapan por segunda vez". El Sol de Morelia (in Spanish). Retrieved 21 May 2022.
  13. Castro–Lebrija, Raúl (26 May 2022). "Grupo Xoy ingresa al futbol profesional con el Chihuahua FC". revistafortuna.com.mx (in Spanish). Retrieved 27 May 2022.
  14. "Deportiva Venados asciende en La Liga Premier A a Segunda División". Por esto (in Spanish). 2 July 2022. Retrieved 28 May 2022.
  15. "¡Nuevo integrante! Alacranes de Durango será el equipo 18 en la Liga de Expansión". mediotiempo.com (in Spanish). 14 June 2022. Retrieved 15 June 2022.
  16. "¡SERIE B CON NUEVOS INTEGRANTES!". Liga Premier Magazine (in Spanish). 2 July 2022. Retrieved 2 July 2022.
  17. "¡HABRÁ LIGUILLA DE FILIALES!". Liga Premier Magazine (in Spanish). 15 July 2022. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  18. "Vuelve el futbol profesional a Salamanca con Catedráticos Elite FC". El Sol de Salamanca (in Spanish). 27 January 2023. Retrieved 27 January 2023.

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