Big Four (Mexico)

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In Mexican football, the Big Four (Spanish: Cuatro Grandes) is a group of four clubs: América, Guadalajara, Cruz Azul, and Universidad Nacional. They are considered by the local press to be the most popular and successful sides in Mexico football.[1][2]

During the Guardianes 2021 all four clubs play in Liga MX, top-flight football league in Mexico.[3]

Clubs[]

Location of the Big Four Liga MX football clubs
Greater Mexico City Liga MX football clubs

Mexico City is home to three members of the Liga MX Cuatro Grandes. América, Cruz Azul and the Universidad Nacional have gloried pasts, with 28 Liga MX titles among them. Guadalajara located in Zapopan brings the total count of Liga MX titles between them to 40.[1] [4][2] [5]

Club Founded City Venue Capacity
América 12 October 1916; 105 years ago (1916-10-12) Mexico City Azteca 81,070
Cruz Azul 22 May 1927; 94 years ago (1927-05-22) Mexico City Azteca 81,070
Guadalajara 8 May 1906; 115 years ago (1906-05-08) Zapopan Akron 46,232
Universidad Nacional 2 August 1954; 67 years ago (1954-08-02) Mexico City Olímpico Universitario 58,445

Rivalries[]

El Súper Clásico[]

Chivas has developed two important rivalries over the years. Perhaps its most intense rivalry is with Mexico City-based Club América. Their meetings, which have become known as El Súper Clásico, are played at least twice a year and signal a national derby. Both are the most successful and most popular teams in Mexico. The first confrontation between them ended with a victory for Guadalajara with a score of 3–0.The rivalry began to flourish after the second match when Club América defeated Guadalajara with a score of 7–2. Although the huge defeat sparked embarrassment within Chivas, it was almost two decades before the rivalry became The Clásico. One of the very reasons why these two teams are archrivals is because in 1983 and 1986 they brawled with each other, raising excitement among the fans. Thus, every time they play it is considered a match that everyone will remember. To this day, El Clásico de Clásicos continues to raise huge excitement in the whole country as well as in other parts of the world where there are fans of either team. The intensity of the game is lived so passionately that every time these two teams play a game, regardless of what position they are in on the charts or what level they show throughout the league, it is always considered the most important game of the season. El Súper Clásico was ranked 12th on FourFourTwo's 50 biggest derbies list.[6]

Clásico Capitalino[]

The rivalry between Club América and Club Universidad Nacional is known as the "Clásico Capitalino",[7] due to the fact that both teams are based in Mexico City—the country's capital. The first match between the two clubs took place on 1 July 1962, where América hosted UNAM, who had recently been promoted from the second division. In Mexico the match is often perceived as the representation of a struggle between two antagonistic powers and institutions: Club América is regarded as the club representing the establishment and the wealthy. The fact that the club is owned by the mass media company Televisa has further intensified this image. Club Universidad, representing the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, identifies itself as the club of the intellectuals and middle-class.[8] The rivalry is particularly fierce from UNAM's side: according to surveys the majority of their supporters consider América as their main rival. However, America's fans see it as an important match but deem the match against Chivas as more important.[9]

Clásico Joven[]

Club América's other capital-based rival, and the most important, is Cruz Azul, with whom they compete in the derby known as the "Clásico Joven" (Juvenile Classic in Spanish).[7] Although both teams reside in Mexico City, Cruz Azul was founded in Jasso, Hidalgo. In a similar perspective between América and UNAM's rivalry, the rivalry between América and Cruz Azul is also seen as based on social class differences: América representing the wealthy and powerful while Cruz Azul is said to represent the working class,[10] hence fans of Cruz Azul and the team itself being dubiously referred to by the nickname of "Los Albañiles" (bricklayers in Spanish), a reference to Cruz Azul's , which is one of Mexico's major companies specializing in concrete and construction.

Universidad Nacional vs. Guadalajara[]

In recent years, U.N.A.M. and Guadalajara have increased their rivalry. Most of it is due to the 2004 Final; U.N.A.M. vs. Guadalajara.[11] Also U.N.A.M. went 36 years without winning an away match against Guadalajara.

On October 6, 2018, Pumas faced Guadalajara away in Liga MX. They had won this fixture ten days earlier in the Copa MX Round of 16 by a score of 3-1,[12] though many considered the winless streak still unbroken because it did not occur in Liga MX play. Guadalajara quickly took the lead, Isaác Brizuela opening the scoring. However Guadalajara had little time to celebrate, as Pumas tied the game shortly thereafter. The score remained 1-1 until the 66th minute, when Felipe Mora scored on a header to give Pumas the lead. Pumas then saw out the 2-1 win, officially ending the 36-year record of not winning against Guadalajara in an away match in the Liga MX.[13]

Honours[]

National[]

Liga MX
Club Titles Recent
América 13 Apertura 2018
Guadalajara 12 Clausura 2017
Cruz Azul 9 Guardianes 2021
UNAM 7 Clausura 2011
Copa MX
Club Titles Recent
América 6 Clausura 2019
Guadalajara 4 Clausura 2017
Cruz Azul 4 Apertura 2018
UNAM 1 1974–75
Campeón de Campeones
Club Titles Recent
Guadalajara 7 1970
América 6 2019
Cruz Azul 3 2021
UNAM 2 2004
Supercopa MX
Club Titles Recent
Guadalajara 1 2016
Cruz Azul 1 2019
América
UNAM

Continental[]

CONCACAF Champions League
Club Titles Recent
América 7 2015–16
Cruz Azul 6 2013–14
UNAM 3 1989
Guadalajara 2 2018
CONCACAF Giants Cup
Club Titles Recent
América 1 2001
Cruz Azul
Guadalajara
UNAM

International[]

Copa Interamericana
Club Titles Recent
América 2 1990
UNAM 1 1980
Cruz Azul
Guadalajara

Finals against each other[]

Key
* Match was won on a penalty shoot-out
& Match was won after a replay
  • The "Year" or "Season" column refers to the season or year the competition was held, and links to the article about that match.
  • The two-legged finals are listed in the order they were played.
Liga MX Copa MX ^ Campeón de Campeones double-dagger
List of finals between the Big Four
Season/Year Winners Score Runners-up City Attend­ance Ref.
1953–54^ América 1–1*[a] Guadalajara Mexico City 30,000
1954–55^ América 1–0 Guadalajara Mexico City
1964double-dagger Guadalajara 2–0 América Mexico City
1965double-dagger Guadalajara 2–1 América Mexico City
1971–72 Cruz Azul 4–1 América Mexico City 100,000
1973–74^ América 1–1 Cruz Azul Mexico City
2–1 Mexico City 75,000
América won 3–2 on aggregate.
1974double-dagger Cruz Azul 2–1 América Mexico City 110,000
1978–79 Cruz Azul 0–0 UNAM Mexico City
2–0 Mexico City
Cruz Azul won 2–0 on aggregate.
1980–81 UNAM 0–1 Cruz Azul Mexico City
4–1 Mexico City
UNAM won 4–2 on aggregate.
1983–84 América 2–2 Guadalajara Guadalajara 56,713
3–1 Mexico City 110,000
América won 5–3 on aggregate.
1984–85 América 1–1 UNAM Mexico City
0–0 Mexico City
3–1& Querétaro City
América won 4–2 on aggregate.
1986–87 Guadalajara 1–2 Cruz Azul Mexico City 100,000
3–0 Guadalajara 56,713
Guadalajara won 4–2 on aggregate.
1987–88 América 0–1 UNAM Mexico City
4–1 Mexico City
América won 4–2 on aggregate.
1988–89 América 2–3 Cruz Azul Mexico City
2–2 Mexico City
America won 5–4 on aggregate.
1990–91 UNAM 2–3 América Mexico City
1–0 Mexico City
3–3 on aggregate; UNAM won on the away goals rule.
Clausura 2004 UNAM 1–1 Guadalajara Guadalajara
0–0* Mexico City
1–1 on aggregate; UNAM won 5–4 on penalty kicks.
2005double-dagger América 0–0 UNAM Mexico City
2–1 Mexico City
America won 2–1 on aggregate.
Clausura 2013 América 0–1 Cruz Azul Mexico City
2–1* Mexico City
2–2 on aggregate; América won 4–2 on penalty kicks.
Apertura 2018 América 0–0 Cruz Azul Mexico City 59,244
2–0 Mexico City 71,240
América won 2–0 on aggregate.

Notes[]

  1. ^ Score was 1–1 after 110 minutes. América won the penalty shoot-out 3–1.

References[]

  1. ^ a b "How to watch Liga MX: A beginner's guide". ESPN.com. July 18, 2018.
  2. ^ a b "Liga MX's 'Big 3' in capital coming up small". October 26, 2019.
  3. ^ https://newslagoon.com/how-to-stream-liga-mx/252306/
  4. ^ "Liga MX restart under no threat amid COVID rise". ESPN. June 14, 2020.
  5. ^ "Soccer Insider: Liga MX teams make inroads into U.S. Television markets". Star Tribune.
  6. ^ "FourFourTwo's 50 Biggest Derbies in the World: 20-11". FourFourTwo. FourFourTwo. Retrieved 17 July 2016.
  7. ^ a b "Encuesta completa sobre el equipo más popular de México". Univision.com. Grupo Reforma. 2007. Archived from the original on 12 October 2007.
  8. ^ "FIFA Classic Rivalries: CF América VS Pumas UNAM – Mexico City's grudge game". FIFA.com. Archived from the original on June 30, 2013.
  9. ^ Eduardo Hernández Castro (2003). "Para Pumas la vida; para América, no lo es todo". El Economista. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
  10. ^ Archibold, Randal C. (25 October 2013). "Mexican Writer Mines the Soccer Field for Metaphors". The New York Times. Retrieved 26 October 2013. With Cruz Azul and América taking to the field on the television behind him at the cantina, Mr. Villoro sought to put the game, a traditional matchup between dominant teams in the capital, in context. "This is the Mexico City classic," he explained. "The game itself is one thing, who scores, who wins. But Cruz Azul represents the working class here; that is their following. América is the upper class, the rich or wannabe rich. So this condenses into the workers versus the wannabes."
  11. ^ "From the Vault: 15 years ago, UNAM was top of the class (I)". 25 June 2019.
  12. ^ "Pumas gana en Guadalajara después de 36 años".
  13. ^ "No hay maldición: Pumas gana de visita a Chivas en liga".
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