Club Tijuana

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Tijuana
Club Tijuana logo.svg
Full nameClub Tijuana Xoloitzcuintles de Caliente
Nickname(s)Los Xolos[1]
El Xolaje (The Xolos-Crowd in Mexican Spanish)
La Jauría[2] (The Pack)
FoundedJanuary 14, 2007; 15 years ago (2007-01-14)
GroundEstadio Caliente
Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico
Capacity26,158
OwnerGrupo Caliente
ChairmanJorge Hank Inzunsa
ManagerSebastián Méndez
LeagueLiga MX
Apertura 202118th
WebsiteClub website
Away colours
Third colours
Current season

Club Tijuana Xoloitzcuintles de Caliente, commonly known as Tijuana, or simply as Xolos, is a Mexican professional football club based in Tijuana.

Founded on August 2006 as Club Tijuana Xoloitzcuintles de Caliente, the club plays their home games at the Estadio Caliente.[3][4]

Tijuana has won 1 Liga MX and 1 Ascenso MX championship, as well as 1 Promotional Final.[5][6]

History[]

The club is the 2nd latest in a long line of league teams in the city of Tijuana. Gallos Caliente was instituted in the summer of 2006. The team's name was later changed to Club Tijuana Xoloitzcuintles de Caliente. The team and owner announced the construction of the Estadio Caliente, a new stadium with a capacity for 33,333 people near Grupo Caliente's Agua Caliente Racetrack. Jorge Alberto Hank, the son of Jorge Hank Rhon, is the President of the team. They became the Apertura 2012 champions after defeating Toluca 4–2 in a two-legged series.

The team advanced to the Primera División de México with a win at home over Irapuato, 2–1 on May 21, 2011.[7]

Jorge Alberto Hank and Gog Murguia Fernandez, the vice president, became the youngest executives in the history of Mexican professional football to be at the head of a club in the Primera División de México.

The First Title[]

Joaquín del Olmo promoted the club to Primera División de México in 2011.

The team obtained its first title in the Apertura 2010 tournament, after having finished as general leader during the regular tournament, which gave them a direct pass to the semi-finals. In the semi-finals the Xolos faced Albinegros de Orizaba. In both semifinal legs, the Xolos and Albinegros finished 0–0, with the aggregate score 0–0 too. The position that the Xolos had during the regular tournament permitted them to pass to the final against the Tiburones Rojos de Veracruz. In the first leg the "Xolos" had a surprise win 0–2 in the Estadio Luis "Pirata" Fuente in Veracruz, while in their field they won again 1–0 and this way Tijuana obtained half a ticket towards the Mexican football maximum circuit, the Primera División Mexicana.[8][9]

The Tijuana Xoloitzcuintles played their first game in Mexico's Primera Division "We've just started".
Estadio Caliente's capacity was increased after the team's promotion.

Promotion to Liga MX[]

The final of the Clausura 2011 of the Liga de Ascenso was between Tijuana and Irapuato. The first leg was played on Wednesday May 11 in Tijuana's stadium. The game finished 1–1. The second leg played was in Irapuato, in the Estadio Sergio León Chavez. Irapuato won the game 1–0, being crowned champion of the Clausura 2011 afterwards. With the Tijuana having won the Apertura 2010 title, the Promotion Final was going to be, yet again, Tijuana vs Irapuato. The first leg was played in Irapuato on Wednesday May 18 and it remained 0–0, with the second leg deciding what team was going to be promoted to the Primera División de la Federación Mexicana de Fútbol (now known as Liga MX).[10] Played in Tijuana's Estadio Caliente, the second leg saw the Club Tijuana being crowned champion of the Promotion Final with a result of 2–1. Thus Tijuana replaced the Necaxa as the new Primera Division Team in Mexico.[11]

Liga MX Debut[]

Kicking off their inaugural season in the Primera Division, Tijuana signed José Sand,[12] Leandro Augusto, Fernando Arce, Egidio Arévalo[13] and Dayro Moreno would move to Tijuana for a fee of US$3.5 m.[14] during summer 2011.

Tijuana opened the 2011–12 season with a 2–1 home loss to Morelia. American Joe Corona scored the club's first top-flight goal in the defeat. They would earn their first victory as a top-flight club in a 3–1 victory at Santos Laguna on August 6; however, after five consecutive home matches without a victory manager Joaquin del Olmo was sacked and replaced by Antonio Mohamed.

After having finished the 2011 Apertura with just three wins against nine draws and five losses, Tijuana would have more success in the 2012 Clasura. Behind the league's top defense (allowing just eleven goals in 17 matches), Tijuana finished with seven wins and seven draws against just three defeats and earned their first playoff berth in the top flight, where they would fall to Monterrey.

Apertura 2012 Champions[]

Xolos would continue their strong defense in the 2012–13 Liga MX season. In the 2012 Apertura, Xolos allowed joint-fewest goals with 15 while finishing tied atop the table with Toluca. Seeded #2 in the La liguilla, they would avenge the previous season's defeat to Monterrey before rallying from a 2–0 deficit against León in the semi-finals. They would win the Liguilla over Toluca with a 4–1 aggregate victory, achieving the title in the shortest time after promotion to the top flight in Mexican history.[15]

Xolos would falter in the Clausura, finishing in 10th place, two points outside of Liguilla qualification. However, invited to Copa Libertadores, Tijuana would make a run to the quarter-finals before falling to Atlético Mineiro.

Stadium[]

The Estadio Caliente, a multi-use stadium in Tijuana, Baja California, was officially inaugurated on November 11, 2007, in a game between Club Tijuana and Pumas Morelos. The attendance was 13,333, then the stadium capacity. In July 2009, the capacity was increased to 16,000. Stadium owner Jorge Hank Rhon's main reason for constructing the stadium was his wish to have a professional football club in the city. Because the Mexican Football Federation says that teams participating in the First Division must have a stadium with a capacity over 15,000, Club Tijuana officially became qualified for promotion to the Primera División de México when the capacity was increased. The construction of the stadium was planned in two parts. The first part finished the ground and lower sections of the stadium. In the second phase, the stadium's capacity was increased.[16] Club Xoloitzcuintles added 4,000 seats to its home field of Estadio Caliente, pushing its capacity to 20,000, according to the team's management. The team also remodeled the players’ dressing rooms and resurfaced the dirt parking lot with a stone surface. Among the construction projects is the installation of stadium lights, which should not be an issue.[17]

A view inside Caliente Stadium in 2009.

Institutional vision[]

What first seemed to be a hobby to the football aficionado Jorge Hank Rhon, has now been projected as a business and institution with many ambitions by his son Jorge Alberto Hank Inzunza, President of Club Tijuana, and co-owner Alberto Murguia Orozco. The president has announced several times in press conferences that the project is far bigger than a stadium and a First Division team. The institutional plan involves football schools and clinics throughout the region, including San Diego and Los Angeles, professional football training, talent recruitment squads; 1st, 2nd, and 3rd division affiliates; foundations and green campaigns, and a heavily invested commercial complex.

Finances and ownership[]

Controversy surrounded the lease, because the team would have ties to a company whose major business is that of betting on sports events, including football. The case was presented to high authorities in the Mexican Football Federation, where it was ruled that no action would be taken against Xoloitzcuintles De Caliente or its parent company.

Personnel[]

Current technical staff[]

Position Staff
Head Coach Argentina Sebastián Méndez
Assistant Coaches Argentina Adrián González
Mexico Alejandro Domínguez
Fitness Coach Argentina Hernán Castex
Goalkeeper Coach Mexico Óscar Dautt
Physiotherapists Argentina Gustavo González
Mexico Raúl López
Team Doctor Mexico Carlos Rincón

Management[]

Position Staff
President Jorge Alberto Hank Inzunza
Vice-president Gog Murguia Fernandez
Administration Director Alejandro Serrano
Finance Director Pedro Panama
Operations Director Alejandro Torrontegui
Marketing Director Esteban De Anda
Communication Director Antonio Rodriguez
General Manager Ignacio Palou
Director of Soccer Operations Roberto Cornejo
Sporting Manager Gerardo Jiménez Cantú

Players[]

First-team squad[]

As of 12 January 2020[18]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Mexico MEX Jonathan Orozco (captain)
2 DF Colombia COL Brayan Angulo
3 DF Mexico MEX Eduardo Tercero
4 DF Argentina ARG Lisandro López
5 MF Ecuador ECU Renato Ibarra (on loan from América)
6 MF Mexico MEX Marcel Ruiz
7 DF United States USA Jonathan Suárez
9 FW Colombia COL Mauro Manotas
10 MF Chile CHI Joaquín Montecinos (on loan from Audax Italiano)
11 MF Argentina ARG Lucas Rodríguez
13 GK Mexico MEX Gil Alcalá
No. Pos. Nation Player
14 MF Colombia COL Christian Rivera
15 DF Uruguay URU Yonatthan Rak
17 FW Mexico MEX Gerson Vázquez
19 FW Argentina ARG Facundo Ferreyra
20 MF Mexico MEX Misael Domínguez
22 DF Mexico MEX Vladimir Loroña
23 MF Mexico MEX Luis Gamíz
29 MF Mexico MEX Iván López
30 MF Argentina ARG David Barbona
34 DF Mexico MEX Víctor Guzmán
35 MF Mexico MEX José Juan Vázquez

Out on loan[]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK United States USA Benny Díaz (at Oakland Roots)
GK Mexico MEX Carlos Higuera (at Sinaloa)
GK Mexico MEX Julio Valenzuela (at Sinaloa)
DF Mexico MEX Jaime Gómez (at Juárez)
DF Mexico MEX Jordan Silva (at América)
DF Mexico MEX Jesús Vega (at Sinaloa)
DF Argentina ARG Julián Velázquez (at Rosario Central)
MF Panama PAN Yoel Bárcenas (at Leganés)
MF Ecuador ECU Erick Castillo (at Barcelona S.C.)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Mexico MEX Jordi Cortizo (at Puebla)
MF Mexico MEX Antonio Nava (at Sinaloa)
MF Ecuador ECU Jordan Rezabala (at Guayaquil City)
MF United States USA Jared Romero (at Sinaloa)
FW Ecuador ECU José Angulo (at Querétaro)
FW Colombia COL Fabián Castillo (at Juárez)
FW Mexico MEX Samuel López (at Sinaloa)
FW Ecuador ECU Fidel Martínez (at Querétaro)
FW Argentina ARG Christian Ortiz (at Charlotte FC)

Reserve teams[]

Xolos Hermosillo
Reserve team that plays in the Liga TDP, the fourth level of the Mexican league system.

Kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors[]

Period Kit manufacturer Shirt partner Sponsors
2007 Ardex Caliente
2007–08 Atletica Casas GEO/Nissan/TVC Deportes/Mexicana
2008 Voit
2009–10 Atletica Casas GEO/Nissan
2011 Kappa Casas GEO/Nissan/TVC Deportes/Volaris
2011–13 Nike Casas GEO/ABC/Waldos
2013–14 Nike Boing!/Casas GEO/ABC/Calimax
2015–2017 Adidas Boing!/Carls Jr/Calimax/Farmacias del Ahorro
2017– Charly Sport Boing!/Carls Jr/Calimax/Farmacias del Ahorro

Honours[]

Domestic competitions[]

Apertura 2012
  • Liga de Ascenso: 1
Apertura 2010
Campeón de Ascenso 2010–11

Friendly competitions[]

  • San Diego Clasico: 3
2011, 2012, 2013
  • Los Angeles Clasico: 1
2013

International competitions[]

Women's section[]

Club Tijuana (Women), founded in 2014, that participated in the US-based Women's Premier Soccer League[19] in the summer and in the in the winter. In their first year, they finished in the middle of the competitive Pac-South division of WPSL before becoming Mexican national champions.[20] Since 2017 participates in the Liga MX Femenil.

References[]

  1. ^ "Liga MX: Know the Teams". 2 July 2021.
  2. ^ "Liga MX 101: The terms you need to know". 17 January 2018.
  3. ^ "Tijuana".
  4. ^ "LIGA MX - Página Oficial de la Liga Mexicana del Fútbol Profesional".
  5. ^ "Xolos, campeones del Apertura 2012".
  6. ^ "¡Historia de Éxitos!".
  7. ^ Zamora, David (May 21, 2011). "Tijuana ya está en Primera División". Azteca Deportes. Archived from the original on July 23, 2011. Retrieved May 21, 2011.
  8. ^ "Xolos vence 2-0 a Veracruz y tiene la mitad del campeonato - Terra México". Terra.com.mx. Retrieved 2013-07-10.
  9. ^ "No se encontró la página | Futbol Total". Archived from the original on 21 February 2013.
  10. ^ "Terra México - Noticias, Deportes, Entretenimiento y Estilo de Vida". Terra.com.mx. Archived from the original on 2012-09-17. Retrieved 2013-07-10.
  11. ^ "FUTBOL-Tijuana sube por primera vez a máxima categoría en México". Reuters. May 21, 2011. Archived from the original on July 15, 2014.
  12. ^ "Jose Sand Close To Join Tijuana". Club-Tijuana.com. 2011-06-30. Retrieved 2011-06-30.
  13. ^ "Egidio Arevalo Close To Join Tijuana". Club-Tijuana.com. 2011-07-25. Retrieved 2011-06-25.
  14. ^ "Dayro Moreno se va con sus goles a México". El Colombiano. 2 June 2011. Retrieved 2013-07-10.
  15. ^ "Believe it: Tijuana Xolos are Mexican champs". UTSanDiego.com. 2012-12-02. Archived from the original on 2012-12-27. Retrieved 2013-07-10.
  16. ^ "SÍNTESIS SEMANAL: México, en alerta epidemiológica por brote de influenza porcina :: El Informador". Informador.com.mx. Retrieved 2013-07-10.
  17. ^ http://www.noticiasmvs.com/noticias/deportes/FIFA-rechaza-a-Tijuana-como-sede-del-Sub-17.html[permanent dead link]
  18. ^ MX, LIGA MX / ASCENSO. "LIGA MX - Página Oficial de la Liga del Fútbol Profesional en México .: Bienvenido". www.ligabancomer.mx.
  19. ^ "WPSL WELCOMES NEW TEAM FROM SOUTH OF THE BORDER". WPSL. October 7, 2014. Archived from the original on October 15, 2014. Retrieved October 7, 2014.
  20. ^ "XOLOS USA WIN NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP IN MEXICO". WPSL. December 29, 2015. Archived from the original on 2016-01-17. Retrieved January 1, 2016.

External links[]

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