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Supercopa MX

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Supercopa MX
Organising bodyFederación Mexicana de Fútbol (FMF)
Founded2014; 10 years ago (2014)
Abolished2019; 5 years ago (2019)
RegionMexico
Number of teams2
Last championsCruz Azul
(1st title)
Most successful club(s)Cruz Azul
Guadalajara
Morelia
Necaxa
Puebla
Querétaro
(1 title each)
Television broadcastersTDN

Supercopa MX (English: Supercup MX) was an annual Mexican super cup match, between the Copa MX champions of the Apertura and Clausura tournaments. Initially played in a two-legged and later with a single final match. It was launched in 2014 and lasted until 2019.

History

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In June 2013, Liga MX president Decio De María announced the winners of Apertura and Clausura Copa MX will face each other and the winner will qualify to the following year's Copa Libertadores as "Mexico-3".[1]

On June 20, 2014, it was announced the two teams would face each other in a two legged home and away matches called Supercopa MX.[2]

The 2015 Supercopa MX was a single match at a neutral venue, Toyota Stadium in Frisco, Texas, United States, making Mexico the fourth nation (after Italy, France and Turkey) and first North American nation to stage its Super Cup abroad.[3]

On May 20, 2019, it was announced that the Copa MX would be held once a year (July-April), and the Supercopa MX match was abolished.[4]

Editions

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Supercopa MX finals
Edition Copa MX Apertura champion Results Copa MX Clausura champion Venue(s)
2014 Morelia 4–1
1–3
(5–4 agg.)
UANL Estadio Morelos, Morelia
Estadio Universitario, San Nicolás de los Garza
2015 Morelia[note 1] 0–1 Puebla Toyota Stadium, Frisco, Texas
2016 Guadalajara 2–0 Veracruz Dignity Health Sports Park, Carson, California
2017 Querétaro 2–0 América[note 2]
2018 Monterrey 0–1 Necaxa
2019 Cruz Azul 4–0 Necaxa[note 3]

Champions and runners-up

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Club Titles Runners-up Winning editions
Morelia 1 1 2014
Necaxa 1 1 2018
Puebla 1 0 2015
Guadalajara 1 0 2016
Querétaro 1 0 2017
Cruz Azul 1 0 2019
UANL 0 1
Veracruz 0 1
América 0 1
Monterrey 0 1

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Santos Laguna won the Apertura 2014 Copa MX. However, they also won the Clausura 2015 Liga MX, and thus qualified for the 2015 Campeón de Campeones. They were replaced by Morelia, the Supercopa MX title holders.
  2. ^ Guadalajara won the Clausura 2017 Copa MX. However, they also won the Clausura 2017 Liga MX, and thus qualified for the 2017 Campeón de Campeones. Guadalajara were also the Supercopa MX title holders, they were replaced by América, who were the team with most points in the accumulated table in Copa MX.
  3. ^ América won the Clausura 2019 Copa MX. However, they also won the Apertura 2018 Liga MX, and thus qualified for the 2019 Campeón de Campeones. They were replaced by Necaxa, the Supercopa MX title holders.

References

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  1. ^ "Copa MX dará un boleto para Libertadores". record.com.mx. June 3, 2013. Retrieved July 7, 2014.
  2. ^ "Nace la SUPERCOPA MX". LigaMX.net. June 20, 2013. Archived from the original on July 14, 2014. Retrieved July 7, 2014.
  3. ^ "Campeón de Campeones y SuperCopaMX". Liga MX. 5 June 2015. Retrieved 5 June 2015.
  4. ^ "Copa MX tendrá nuevo formato para la siguiente temporada". ESPN Deportes. Retrieved May 21, 2019.