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Atlas F.C.

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Atlas
Full nameAtlas Fútbol Club
Nickname(s)Los Zorros (The Foxes)
Los Rojinegros (The Red-and-Blacks)
La Academia (The Academy)
Founded15 August 1916; 108 years ago (1916-08-15)
GroundEstadio Jalisco,
Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico
Capacity54,500[1]
OwnerGrupo Salinas
ChairmanGustavo Guzmán
ManagerJosé Guadalupe Cruz
LeagueLiga MX
Clausura 201615th

Atlas Fútbol Club (Spanish pronunciation: [kluβ ˈatɬas]) is a Mexican football club. Atlas plays in Guadalajara, Mexico, in the Liga MX. The club's home stadium is Estadio Jalisco in Guadalajara.

History

Club Atlas was founded in a bar of Guadalajara, Mexico, where a few friends recalled their football experience at English college squads where they had spent the last few years. Alfonso and Juan José "Lico" Cortina, Pedro "Perico" and Carlos Fernández del Valle, the three Orendain brothers and Federico Collignon (who had studied in Berlin) finally decided in the summer of 1910 to set up a football team called "Club Atlas" [citation needed] and founded it in Tlaquepaque, outside the city of Guadalajara.

The technical ability that the "Atlistas" employed – triangular passing and skillful dribbling to avoid opponents' tackles – was impressive and they quickly joined the elite in Mexican football. As a result, Atlas and Chivas, a fellow Guadalajara team, have a long history in the first division and the game between them is called the 'Clásico Tapatío'.

Youth Academy

Atlas are renowned for having successful youth academies. In the last decade Atlas has been a true gold mine in the development of many players who have gone on to have successful careers domestically and internationally. Many young players enter the Atlas youth academy knowing that they'll have a strong possibility to play with the first team due to the club philosophy of allowing much opportunity to the youth. Although Atlas has only won the league championship once, their academy has been famous for developing national idols who have played with the Mexico national football team in the past decade like Jared Borgetti, Daniel Osorno, José de Jesús Corona, Pável Pardo, Oswaldo Sánchez, Rafael Márquez, Juan Carlos Medina, Jorge Hernández, Mario Méndez, Miguel Zepeda, Juan Pablo Rodriguez, Juan Pablo Garcia, Hugo Ayala, Jorge Torres Nilo, Edgar Ivan Pacheco, Andrés Guardado and many more. The club's lower youth divisions have achieved many titles domestically as well as internationally.

Club Atlas had a golden age in the late 90's under the management of Ricardo La Volpe, with promising players such as Rafael Márquez, Daniel Osorno, Juan Pablo Rodriguez, Pavel Pardo, Mario Méndez, Omar Briceño, Miguel Zepeda, and Cesar Andrade.

International competitions

Atlas has participated twice in Copa Libertadores. The first appearance was in 2000 after qualifying through a preliminary round-robin stage where they faced Club America, Deportivo Tachira and Deportivo Italchacao. They got off to a bad start losing 2–0 to America then drawing with Deportivo Tachira 2–2 and 3–3 with Deportivo Italchacao. However they would recover and finish first of the group after defeating Club America 6–3, Deportivo Tachira 2–0 and drawing 2–2 with Deportivo Italchacao on the second legs.

Atlas would then be drawn into Group 4 alongside River Plate, Universidad de Chile and Atletico Nacional. At home they would draw 1–1 with River Plate, draw 0–0 with Universidad de Chile and defeat Atletico Nacional 5–1. In the second legs they would defeat Atletico Nacional by a score of 3–2 but lose to both River Plate and Universidad de Chile by the same score. Atlas would go on to finish 2nd in the group with just a point behind River Plate and leveled in points with Universidad de Chile but a better goal difference would see them go through. After having impressed in the group stage they would eliminate Junior of Barranquilla in the Round of 16 with scores of 2–0 and 3–1. However, in the quarterfinals their run would come to an end after losing twice to Palmeiras with scores of 2–0 and 3–2.

Their second appearance was in the year 2008 after first having to earn a ticket by participating in the qualifying tournament known as the Interliga where they faced Toluca, Morelia and Club America. After a goalless draw to Toluca, a 2–0 victory over Morelia and a 3–2 defeat to Club America, they would find themselves second of the group and statistically leveled with Toluca in every possible way. Given the circumstances a coin toss was issued in which Atlas ended up winning. Having finished second they lost their opportunity to automatically qualify for the Copa Libertadores and had to play San Luis for a ticket to the Copa Libertadores First Stage. They would defeat San Luis easily by a score of 3–0.

In the preliminary First Stage Atlas faced the Bolivian team La Paz and defeated them 2–0 at the Jalisco then they lost 1–0 in La Paz and so with a 2–1 aggregate they would finally earn their ticket and be drawn in group 3 with Boca Juniors, Colo-Colo and Maracaibo. Atlas were impressive and finished first in the group with 11 points. At home they defeated Boca Juniors 3–1 and defeated both Colo-Colo as well as Maracaibo with a score of 3–0. Away from home they drew 1–1 with Maracaibo and Colo-Colo but lost 3–0 to Boca Juniors. In the Round of 16 they would eliminate Lanus with scores of 1–0 and 2–2 at home. In the quarterfinals they would face Boca Juniors once again. The first match was played at the Jose Amalfitani stadium due to the sanction that was imposed on Boca Juniors. The game was spectacular, undoubtedly one of the best of the tournament. Atlas went ahead early on by a headed goal from Omar Flores then Boca Juniors would tie after an own goal from Hugo Ayala. Both teams would have several goal scoring chances throughout the game and 15 minutes before the end of the match, Caceres would put Boca up 2–1. However, in the 88th minute Atlas would equalize from a set piece from a sensational header from Jorge Torres. So with much optimism the team would head home to receive the Argentines at the Jalisco. In the second game Atlas were not so fortunate. They suffered early inuries but the worst was yet to come for them as Palermo would have a memorable hat-trick before half time. The game ultimately ended 3–0 and Atlas once again find themselves knocked out in the quarterfinals.

In their 3rd appearance they lost at Home against Santa Fe 1–0. They were obligated to get a win in their next visit against Atletico Mineiro which they defeated with a goal scored by Christian Suarez in the 86th minute which gave them the Victory 1–0 and ended a 37-year undefeated streak at Home in Copa Libertadores for Atletico Mineiro.

Estadio Jalisco

Atlas currently plays in the Estadio Jalisco, which is the third largest stadium in Mexico and was constructed on 31 January 1960. It is a venue that has played host to historic matches and teams including Pelé's Brazil in 1970. In total, It was host for 8 games in the 1970 FIFA World Cup, 6 of which were from group stage matches, and two were quarter and semi-finals. Subsequently, the stadium was again host for 9 games in the 1986 FIFA World Cup, 6 of which were group stage matches, 1 was round of sixteen and the last 2 were quarter and semi-finals.

Fans

Atlas fans are as a whole collectively known as La Fiel (The Faithful), while La Barra 51 is the main organized supporter group. La Barra 51's name recalls Atlas' last and only championship in the Primera División de México in 1951. Through the team's struggling performance La Fiel has earned its name, supporting the team for 60 years without any major accomplishments.

Players

First-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
1 GK Argentina ARG Óscar Ustari
2 DF Colombia COL Jaine Barreiro
3 DF Colombia COL Leiton Jiménez
4 MF Mexico MEX Rafael Márquez (captain)
5 DF Mexico MEX Gaddi Aguirre
6 MF Mexico MEX Carlos Treviño
7 FW Mexico MEX Édson Rivera
8 MF Mexico MEX Daniel Álvarez
9 FW Colombia COL Jefferson Duque (on loan from Atlético Nacional)
10 FW Mexico MEX Jahir Barraza
11 FW Paraguay PAR Luis Nery Caballero
12 DF Mexico MEX Daniel Arreola (on loan from Pachuca)
13 MF Mexico MEX Javier Salas (on loan from Sinaloa)
14 DF Mexico MEX Ricardo Reyes
No. Pos. Nation Player
15 MF Mexico MEX Bryan Garnica
17 MF Mexico MEX Rodolfo Salinas (on loan from Santos Laguna)
18 MF Mexico MEX Luis Robles
19 MF Mexico MEX Flavio Santos
20 MF Mexico MEX Santiago San Román (on loan from Oaxaca)
21 MF Mexico MEX Cándido Ramírez (on loan from Monterrey)
22 DF Mexico MEX Diego Cruz (on loan from Puebla)
23 MF Uruguay URU Christian Tabó
24 FW Mexico MEX Sergio Rodríguez
27 DF Mexico MEX José Madueña (on loan from Tijuana)
28 FW Mexico MEX Martín Barragán
29 DF Mexico MEX Rodrigo Salinas (on loan from Tijuana)
30 GK Mexico MEX Miguel Fraga
MF Colombia COL Aldo Leão Ramírez

For recent transfers, see List of Mexican football transfers winter 2016–2017.

Out on loan

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK Mexico MEX Jesús Gallardo (at UAT)
GK Mexico MEX Alan López (at Venados)
DF Mexico MEX Carlos Arreola (at Tampico Madero)
DF Argentina ARG Facundo Erpen (at Morelia)
DF Mexico MEX Giovanni León (at Coras)
DF Mexico MEX Daniel Obledo (at UAT)
DF Mexico MEX Enrique Pérez (at Morelia)
DF Mexico MEX Pedro Terán (at Venados)
DF Mexico MEX Juan Carlos Valenzuela (at Tijuana)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Mexico MEX Lucas Ayala (at UAT)
MF Mexico MEX Ricardo Bocanegra (at UAT)
MF Mexico MEX Ángel Gaspar (at Atlante)
MF Mexico MEX Daniel Hernández (at Sinaloa)
MF Chile CHI Rodrigo Millar (at Morelia)
MF Mexico MEX Carlos Nava (at Oaxaca)
MF Mexico MEX Luis Télles (at U. de G.)
MF Mexico MEX Juan Pablo Vigón (at Tapachula)
MF Mexico MEX Saúl Villalobos (at Venados)

Reserve teams

Atlas Premier
Reserve team that plays in the Segunda División in the third level of the Mexican league system.

Former players

Shirt sponsors and manufacturers

Period Kit manufacturer Shirt partner
1989–90 Pajarito Sport Bing
1990–91 Vicmar Peñafiel
1991–92 Pajarito Sport Peñafiel
1992–93 Vicmar Peñafiel
1993–94 Umbro Tecate
1994–95 ABA Sport Tecate
1995–96 ABA Sport No Sponsors
1996–99 Atletica Corona/Estrella
1999–00 Atletica Corona/Coca-Cola/Estrella
2000–01 Atletica Coca-Cola/Omnilife/Corona
2001–02 Nike Coca-Cola/Omnilife/Corona
2002–03 Nike Coca-Cola/Corona
2003–04 Nike Coca-Cola/Corona/Telcel
2004–05 Kappa Coca-Cola/Bedoyecta/
2005–06 Kappa Coca-Cola/Sky/Corona
2006–07 Kappa Bedoyecta/Coca-Cola/Corona
2007–08 Atletica Bedoyecta/Coca-Cola/Corona/Sky/Megacable
2008–09 Atletica DiversityCapital/Coca-Cola/Corona/Sky/Megacable
2009–10 Atletica Jalisco/Coca-Cola/Corona
2010–11 Atletica Coca-Cola/Lubricantes Akron/Corona
2011–12 Atletica Coca-Cola/Guadalajara 2011/Lubricantes Akron/Corona
Apertura 2012 Atletica Coca-Cola/Lubricantes Akron/Corona
2013–14 Nike Coca-Cola/Casas Javer/Corona/Volaris/Sky
2014– Puma Bridgestone/Coca-Cola/Sky Sports/Azteca (multimedia conglomerate)/Corona/Banco Azteca/Volaris

Former managers

Honours

1950–51
Runner-up (3): 1948–49, 1965–66, Verano 1999
1945–46, 1949–50, 1961–62, 1967–68
Runner-up (1): Apertura 2013
Runner-up (1): 2008
1945–46, 1949–50, 1950–51, 1961–62
Runner-up (1): 1967–68
1954–55, 1971–72, 1978–79
1917–21, 1935–36

Friendly International tournaments

1990
  • Copa Cuadrangular: 3
2010, 2011, 2012

References