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1954 Copa México final

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1954 Copa México final
Event1953–54 Copa México
After extra time
América won 3–2 on penalties
Date12 May 1954
VenueEstadio Ciudad de los Deportes, Mexico City
RefereeGeoffrey Sunderland
Attendance30,000[1]
1953
1955

The 1954 Copa México final was the final match of the 1953–54 Copa México. It was played at Estadio Ciudad de los Deportes in Mexico City, Mexico, on May 12 1954. América beat Guadalajara 3–2 on penalties after the match finished 1–1 after extra time.

This was the first cup title for América in the professional era of Mexican football. The match is considered as a very important moment in the history of the América-Guadalajara rivalry, since it was the first cup final contested by both sides.[2]

Route to the final

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América Round Guadalajara
Opponents Result Group stage Opponents Result
Atlas 1–1 (A) Match 1 Tampico Madero 2–1 (A)
León 2–2 (H) Match 2 Zacatepec 1–0 (H)
Toluca 3–2 (H) Match 3 Necaxa 5–2 (A)
Atlas 3–2 (H) Match 4 Zacatepec 1–1 (A)
Toluca 2–1 (A) Match 5 Tampico Madero 0–0 (H)
León 0–3 (A) Match 6 Necaxa 1–6 (A)
Group B winners
Team Pld Pts
América 6 8
León 6 7
Atlas 6 6
Toluca 5 3
Source: RSSSF
Final standings Group C winners
Team Pld Pts
Guadalajara 6 8
Zacatepec 6 7
Necaxa 6 5
Tampico Madero 6 4
Source: RSSSF
Opponents Result Final stage Opponents Result
Atlante 2–0 Match 1 América 1–1
Guadalajara 1–1 Match 2 Atlante 3–1

Background

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The 1953–54 Copa México was played in two stages: the group stage with three groups of four teams each, each group winner would qualify to the final stage, where the three group winners would play one match against each other to define the champion.[3]

Atlante, América and Guadalajara won their groups and advanced to the final stage, played at the Estadio Ciudad de los Deportes in Mexico City. América and Guadalajara defeated Atlante in their respective matches. The game between América and Guadalajara was a tie, therefore, both teams ended with three points each (one win and one draw), and since the two squads had the same goal difference, it was decided that a playoff match would take place to define the champion.[3]

Match

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Summary

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The game ended in a tie after 90 minutes of regular time with no goals for any side. The most relevant incident was a brawl between América's goalkeeper Manuel Camacho and Guadalajara's midfielder Javier de la Torre that resulted in Camacho being sent off. Since rules did not observe substitutions at the time, America's striker Eduardo González Palmer replaced Camacho.[4]

At the end of regulation, two periods of overtime, each one of 15 minutes, where played. Just two minutes in overtime, Guadalajara's Arellano scored the first goal for his team. With 10 minutes remaining, José Santiago tied the game for América after scoring a penalty provoked by defender Pedro Nuño, who touched the ball with his hands inside the penalty area.[4]

With the game tied again, two more periods of overtime, each one of 10 minutes, were played. No squad was able to score and with the score still tied, a series of penalties was kicked.[1]

Each team had to choose only one player to kick three penalties. América picked Argentine striker Emilio Fizel and Juan Jasso was the striker for Guadalajara. Fizel scored all the three penalties. Jasso scored his first and third shots, but missed the second penalty, that was stopped by the game's hero, Eduardo González Palmer.[4][2]

Details

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América1–1Guadalajara
  • Santiago 110' (pen.)
Penalties
3–2
Attendance: 30,000
Referee: Geoffrey Sunderland
América
Guadalajara
GK 1 Mexico Manuel Camacho
RB 2 Argentina Norberto Yácono
LB 3 Mexico Esqueda
HB 4 Mexico Manuel Gutiérrez
CB 5 Argentina Héctor Ferrari
HB 6 Mexico Pedro Nájera
OF 7 Mexico Pepín González
IF 8 Argentina José Santiago
CF 9 Mexico Eduardo González Palmer
IF 10 Argentina Emilio Fizel
OF 11 Mexico José Luis Buendía
Manager:
Mexico Octavio Vial
GK 1 Mexico Jaime Gómez
RB 2 Mexico Pedro Nuño
CB 3 Mexico Guillermo Sepúlveda
LB 4 Mexico José Villegas
CH 5 Mexico Juan Jasso
LH 6 Mexico Rafael Rivera
OR 7 Mexico Javier de la Torre
IR 8 Mexico Salvador Reyes
CF 9 Mexico Adalberto López
IL 10 Mexico Tomás Balcázar
OL 11 Mexico Raúl Arellano
Manager:
Argentina José María Casullo

References

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  1. ^ a b "América Campeón de Copa 1953-1954" (in Spanish). Club América. 12 May 2017. Retrieved 10 September 2019.
  2. ^ a b "América campeón Copa México 53-54" (in Spanish). Club América. 26 March 2013. Retrieved 10 September 2019.
  3. ^ a b Guerrero, Mario (13 March 2019). "La final de Copa que le ganó América a Chivas en penales". AS.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 10 September 2019.
  4. ^ a b c "Por penales, América es campeón de la Copa México". El Informador (in Spanish). 13 May 1954. Retrieved 10 September 2019.