C.D. Tapatío

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C.D. Tapatío
C.D. Tapatío logo.png
Full nameClub Deportivo Tapatío
Nickname(s)
  • El Rebaño Sagrado (The Sacred Flock)
  • Los Rojiblancos (The Red-and-Whites)
Founded2 August 1973 (original)
June 2020 (revival)
GroundEstadio Akron[1]
Capacity48,071
OwnerGrupo Omnilife
ChairmanAmaury Vergara
ManagerRicardo Cadena
LeagueLiga de Expansión MX
Grita México 202116th

Club Deportivo Tapatío is the official reserve team of C.D. Guadalajara. It was dissolved in 2009 and has been replaced by Chivas Rayadas de Guadalajara before its own dissolution in 2019. In 2020 the team was reactivated for its participation in the Liga de Expansión MX.[2]

History[]

It was founded as Club Deportivo Tapatío in 1973 when CD Guadalajara purchased a license for the Tercera División. In two seasons Tapatío promoted to the Segunda División. The club mostly competed at the second level. After a relegation Tapatío bought the second level license from Gallos de Aguascalientes in 2001. In 2004 the team moved to La Piedad and competed as Chivas La Piedad. In the 2005/06 season the team was moved to Tepic and competed as Chivas Coras. The team returned to Guadalajara in 2006 and the Tapatío name was restored.

Before the Apertura 2009 tournament Tapatío ceased to exist. The league system was restructured and following new rules of the Mexican Federation of Association Football that teams in the Primera División will not be able to have a filial team in the Ascenso MX, the franchise was sold to Club Universidad de Guadalajara. Chivas Rayadas was then created and it serves as the new reserve team for Club Deportivo Guadalajara.

In 2020 the team was revived due to the creation of the Liga de Expansión MX, a league that replaced Ascenso MX with the aim of functioning as a development for football players.[3]

Honors[]

Primera "A"[]

  • Runner up Primera división 'A' mexicana Verano 2003.

Second Division[]

Second Division "B"[]

  • Second Division "B" (2): 1985-1986, 1993-1994.

Third Division[]

Friendly tournaments[]

  • IV Copa Alianza: 2007

Verizon Wireless Copa Alianza, Winning 6-0 over Atlético Altamirano of Houston

Personnel[]

Coaching staff[]

Position Staff
Manager Mexico Ricardo Cadena
Assistant managers Mexico Mario Ortiz
Mexico Guillermo Hernández
Goalkeeper coach Mexico Víctor Hugo Hernández
Fitness coach Mexico Eduardo Gorgonio
Physiotherapist Mexico Víctor Quezada
Team doctor Mexico José Trejo

Players[]

As of July 27, 2021[4]

Team squad[]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
42 DF Mexico MEX Omar Mireles
43 DF Mexico MEX Rodrigo Reyes
44 MF Mexico MEX Michelle Benítez
45 MF United States USA Christian Pinzón
46 FW Mexico MEX Sebastián Martínez
47 DF Mexico MEX Paul Ortega (on loan from Puebla)
48 DF Mexico MEX Deivoon Magaña
49 MF Mexico MEX Gilberto García
50 MF Mexico MEX Pável Pérez
51 GK Mexico MEX Eduardo García
52 FW Mexico MEX Alejandro Organista
No. Pos. Nation Player
53 DF Mexico MEX Jesús Orozco
54 DF Mexico MEX Miguel Gómez
55 FW Mexico MEX Irving Márquez
56 FW Mexico MEX Benjamín Sánchez
57 MF Mexico MEX Dylan Guajardo
58 MF Mexico MEX Alexis Gutiérrez (on loan from Cruz Azul)
59 FW Mexico MEX Juan Brigido
60 MF Mexico MEX Luis Carrillo
61 GK Mexico MEX César López
62 FW Mexico MEX José González
63 FW United States USA Marck Cruz

References[]

  1. ^ "Tapatío: La filial de Chivas jugará como local en el Estadio Akron". Diario Récord (in Spanish). 29 July 2020. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  2. ^ "El Tapatío, donde jugó Chicharito, Bravo y Salcido disputará la Liga de Expansión". Mediotiempo.com (in Spanish). 26 June 2020. Retrieved 29 June 2020.
  3. ^ "Tapatío: La filial de Chivas jugará como local en el Estadio Akron". Diario Récord (in Spanish). 29 July 2020. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  4. ^ "Tapatío". Liga BBVA Expansión MX. Retrieved 12 January 2021.
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