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Deportivo Toluca F.C.

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Toluca
File:Deportivo Toluca F.C.svg
Full nameDeportivo Toluca Fútbol Club
S.A. de C.V.
Nickname(s)Los Diablos Rojos (The Red Devils)
Los Choriceros (The Sausagers)
Los Escarlatas (The Scarlets)
Founded12 February 1917; 107 years ago (1917-02-12)
GroundEstadio Nemesio Díez
Toluca, Mexico, Mexico
Capacity30,000
OwnerValentín Díez Morodo
ManagerHernán Cristante
LeagueLiga MX
2015–1611th

Deportivo Toluca Fútbol Club S.A. de C.V. [deporˈtiβo toˈluka ˈfutβol ˈkluβ] is a professional Mexican football club. Toluca's stadium Nemesio Díez Riega is located in Toluca, State of Mexico in Mexico. Toluca plays in the Liga MX, has been champion ten times and is one of the most successful clubs of Mexico.

History

On 12 February 1917, the brothers Román Alday and Gerardo Ferrat alongside Filiberto Navas and Manuel Henkel created Deportivo Toluca Futbol Club. In 1950, the team joined the recently formed Segunda División, advancing to Mexican Primera División in 1953 by having tied with Irapuato by three goals, two by Rubén Pichardo and one by that tournament's goal scorer Mateo de la Tijera having left one more match to play.

The Teams first official First Division game was against Atlante, in which Toluca won 2 goals by one

The team won three consecutive championships in 1966 and 1967 under coach Ignacio Trelles. In 1975 Toluca won the championship one more time. Coached by Uruguayan Ricardo de León, Toluca played a style of game that was consistently criticized as ultra-defensive but won the championship by defeating León in the final-four mini-tournament 1-0, with the lone goal being scored by Ecuadorian Ítalo Estupiñan. This is the only time the Mexican Championship has been decided by a round-robin, two-legged, mini-tournament.

In 1997 Enrique "Ojitos" Meza became the coach of the team, after reaching the finals of the Mexican league with Toros Neza. Toluca resurged, its tactical scheme was very offensive, which was very characteristic of its coach. It was not atypical to see scores like 5-3. The offensive idea suited perfectly the Paraguayan José Saturnino Cardozo, who became the best scorer of the league in four occasions.

Toluca won the championship in 1998, the first one in twenty years. With Enrique Meza as coach, Toluca won the championship three times in a period of three years.

In the Invierno 2001 tournament Ricardo La Volpe became the coach of Toluca. He, along with Cardozo and Vicente Sánchez had one of the most successful and exciting teams in years. However, La Volpe left Toluca with a few weeks left in the season, but without him, they still won their 7th title.

At the end of the Apertura 2005 tournament, the team became champions again, beating Monterrey by an aggregate of 6-3, after the questionable decisions of Mexican referee Marco Rodriguez "El Chiquidracula", who expelled three players from Monterrey on their first foul committed.

In Apertura 2006, they tied in the first leg (1-1) but suffered a loss in the Estadio Nemesio Díez (2-1) against Guadalajara.

In the Clausura 2007 tournament, Toluca had one of their worst seasons, finishing in last place. In the Copa Libertadores 2007, they made it to the round of 16, where they were subsequently eliminated by Cúcuta Deportivo from Colombia. Following the elimination from both tournaments, Gallego resigned from his position stating the need for a year off as his reason for resigning from Club Toluca. José Pekerman, former coach of the Argentine national team, was appointed as head coach of Club Toluca on May 30, 2007. In the Apertura 2007, Toluca had a much better finish than the previous tournament, placing 2nd place out of 18 only behind league leader Santos Laguna. They were ultimately eliminated by league runner-up Pumas in the quarter-finals of the Apertura 2007 playoffs.

Club Toluca failed to qualify for the 2008 Copa Libertadores. On the Apertura 2008, Toluca had a weak start under their new coach, Jose Manuel "El Chepo" De La Torre, on one point going on a four-game streak of only draws. On the last five games of the regular season, they reversed the tying streak, making 13 points out of a possible 15, ending the regular season in 2nd place overall with 27 points and thus advancing to the playoffs. Their goalkeeper Hernan Cristante set a record by not allowing any goals for 773 minutes. Toluca would go on to win the Bicentenario 2010 tournament by beating Santos Laguna in a dramatic penalty shoot-out, earning them the tenth cup win, the same amount as Club América. Besides winning the domestic title ten times, Toluca has also been the Runner-Up of the Mexican domestic tournament six times. On the Apertura 2012, Toluca finished first place and therefore earned a place for the Copa Libertadores. On the Ligullia of the Apertura 2012, Toluca went all the way to the final and lose to Club Tijuana 4-1 aggregate. On the Cluasura 2013, Toluca finished 13th and did not qualify for the Ligullia. At the end of that season then coach Enrique Meza resigned his job. The next day Toluca contacted its top scorer former player Jose Cardozo as its new head coach.

In the new era of Jose Cardozo as head coach, Toluca went to be the most offensive club in the Apertura 2013 with 33 goals and receiving 17 goals. In the Apertura 2013 Pablo Velázquez became the league's goal scorer with 12 goals. In that season Club Toluca ended in the semifinals losing to Club America in away goals. In the next season being the Clausura 2014, Club Toluca became the most defensive club in the league with 14 goals scored against and scoring 25 goals and came second in the league and lost to Club León in the semifinals.

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 Mexico MEX Alfredo Talavera
2 DF Mexico MEX Francisco Gamboa
3 DF Mexico MEX Aarón Galindo
4 DF Paraguay PAR Paulo da Silva (captain)
5 DF Chile CHI Osvaldo González
6 DF Mexico MEX Óscar Rojas
7 MF Mexico MEX Moisés Velasco
8 MF Brazil BRA Maikon Leite
9 FW Mexico MEX Alexis Vega
10 MF Mexico MEX Sinha
11 MF Mexico MEX Carlos Esquivel
12 GK Mexico MEX Miguel Centeno
13 DF Mexico MEX Aldo Benítez
14 FW England ENG Antonio Pedroza
15 MF Mexico MEX Antonio Ríos
No. Pos. Nation Player
16 DF Mexico MEX Gerardo Rodríguez
17 FW Mexico MEX Diego Gama
19 MF Mexico MEX Edy Brambila
20 FW Colombia COL Fernando Uribe
21 FW Argentina ARG Enrique Triverio
22 GK Mexico MEX Luis Manuel García (on loan from Querétaro)
23 DF Mexico MEX Jordan Silva
24 MF Argentina ARG Pablo Barrientos
25 MF Argentina ARG Jesús Méndez
26 MF Mexico MEX Erbín Trejo
27 MF Argentina ARG Rodrigo Gómez
28 DF Mexico MEX Jorge Sartiaguin
30 DF United States USA Marco Jaime
33 DF Mexico MEX Gerardo Flores (on loan from Cruz Azul)

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

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 Mexico MEX José Luis López (at UAEM)
DF Mexico MEX Héctor Acosta (at Venados)
DF Mexico MEX Edgar Dueñas (at Puebla)
DF Mexico MEX Carlos Galeana (at Celaya)
DF Mexico MEX Juan Carlos Morales (at UAEM)
DF Mexico MEX Arturo Ruíz (at Murciélagos)
DF Mexico MEX José Trujillo (at UAEM)
MF Argentina ARG Darío Bottinelli (at Gimnasia)
MF Mexico MEX José Calderón (at Venados)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Paraguay PAR Richard Ortiz (at Olimpia)
MF Mexico MEX Renato Román (at Oaxaca)
MF Mexico MEX Arturo Tapia (at UAEM)
FW Mexico MEX Daniel González (at Guadalajara)
FW Colombia COL Wilder Guisao (at Racing Club)
FW Mexico MEX Alexis Ochoa (at UAEM)
FW Mexico MEX Gabriel Velasco (at UAEM)
FW Paraguay PAR Pablo Velázquez (at Cerro Porteño)

Reserve teams

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

Honours

International

National friendly

  • Copa Orgullosamente Marty: 1998
  • Copa Chihuahua-El Heraldo: 2008

International friendly

  • III Torneo Pentagonal Internacional de la Ciudad de México: 1960
  • Singapore International Foursquare: 1999
  • Trofeo Hispanomexicano: 2003
  • México-Yemen: 2008 Sub-15

Club President's list

Name From To
Román Ferrat Alday 1917 1923
Fernando Barreto 1923 1945
Samuel Martínez García 1945 1953
Luis Gutiérrez Dosal 1953 1959
Enrique Enríquez 1953 1953
Alfonso Faure Lopez 1969 1970
Nemesio Díez Riega 1953 1972
Fernando Corona Álvarez 1972 1977
Germán Sánchez Fabela 1977 1980
Ernesto Nemer Naime 1980 1981
Jesús Fernandez del Cojo 1981 1983
Germán Sánchez Fabela 1983 1984
Jesús Fernández del Cojo 1984 1985
Fernando Corona Álvarez 1985 1986
Germán Sánchez Fabela 1986 1987
Kurt Visetti Vogelbach 1987 1989
Antonio Mañón 1989 1992
José Antonio Roca 1992 1993
Jesús Fernández del Cojo 1993 1995
Sergio Peláez Farell 1995 1997
Rafael Lebrija Guiot 1997 2007
Fernando Corona Álvarez 2007

Managers

Records

Top goalscorers in a season

Primera División
Player Tournament Goals
Brazil Amaury Epaminondas Mexican Primera División 1966-67 21
Mexico Vicente Pereda Mexican Primera División 1969-70 20
Paraguay José Cardozo Verano 1998 10
Paraguay José Cardozo Verano 1999 15
Paraguay José Cardozo Apertura 2002 29
Paraguay José Cardozo Clausura 2003 21
Argentina Bruno Marioni Apertura 2006 11
Chile Héctor Mancilla Apertura 2008 11
Chile Héctor Mancilla Clausura 2009 14
Uruguay Iván Alonso Apertura 2011 11
Uruguay Iván Alonso Clausura 2012 14
Paraguay Pablo Velazquez Apertura 2013 12
Copa México
Player Tournament Goals
Mexico Carlos Carús Temporada 1960–61 7
Mexico Vicente Pereda Temporada 1966–67 5
Mexico Francisco Linares Temporada 1967–68 7
Mexico Jesús Romero Temporada 1969–70 4
Paraguay Edgar Benítez Copa México Apertura 2012 5
Segunda División
Player Tournament Goals
Mexico Mateo de la Tijera Liga de Ascenso de México 1952–53 22
Copa Pre Libertadores
Player Tournament Goals
Paraguay José Cardozo 1999 3

Appearances

Position Player Period Games
1 Mexico Sinha 1999–14 515
2 Argentina Hernan Cristante 1993–94
1995–96
1998–10
419[1]
3 Paraguay José Cardozo 1995–05 332
4 Mexico Vicente Pereda 1960–75 322
5 Mexico Edgar Dueñas 2004–14 307
6 Mexico Carlos Esquivel* 2005–Present 339
7 Mexico José Manuel Abundis 1992–00
2004–06
270
8 Paraguay Paulo da Silva* 2003–09
2013–Present
306
9 Uruguay Juan Carlos Paz 1978–85 256
10 Uruguay Vicente Sánchez 2001–07 242
  • Current players

References