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jugadores de chivas 2017

jugadores de chivas 2017 - win

[OC] The story of Veracruz: The team that ALMOST broke biggest winless record in the history of professional football. A reflection of mexican football

500 years have passed since Hernán Cortés, the man who conquered Mexico, arrived to the “country” and founded Veracruz. The fact that the “conquistador” first set foot in Veracruz feels like an ominous augury of the future. The history of Veracruz in the 21st century has been stained by violence and corruption. Just in 2019, 1,429 have been officially murdered in Veracruz, while it's not uncommon for authorities to find clandestine graves with up to 300 people buried. The state was also in the eye of the hurricane when former governor, Javier Duarte, allegedly siphoned at least 1,508,605,770 dollars of public money into a series of shell companies. English readers, if you ever see this woman, PLEASE, at least, spit at her. She’s currently living in London with public money, while hospitals in Veracruz gave water as a treatment to children with cancer, because her husband stole the funds for medical care. The current state governor was also accused for being part of a pedophile ring by a reputable journalist.
What’s the point of all this political talk when this should be about a football club? In my opinion, the disastrous state of the football club is just a reflection of the society that surrounds it.
Back to football. Club Deportivo Veracruz was founded in 1943. In the 1945-1946 and 1949-1950 seasons they won their only league titles, commanded by their star player Luis “Pirata” Fuente”, the team’s stadium is now named after him. Following the championships, the team was dismantled by Tampico Madero and got relegated. Just two years after the championship, in 1952, the club was disbanded. In 1960 the club got revived by a group of supporters and that is pretty much the history of Veracruz. A yo-yo team that constantly got promoted-relegated, disappeared-reappeared. The brightest moment in Veracruz’s history since Luis “Pirata” Fuente, was probably when mexican football idol, Cuauhtémoc Blanco, took the club to the top of the league in 2004 during his brief six month stint at Veracruz, the “Red Sharks” were eventually eliminated in the first playoff match against U.N.A.M.
The history of C.D. Veracruz kept repeating itself. The club was relegated for the fourth time in 2008 and disaffiliated from the league in 2011. Despite being disaffiliated, Veracruz was back in the competition the next tournament in second division, because they “fused” with Albinegros de Orizaba (considered by some the first football club in Mexico), however, they played in Veracruz’s stadium, kept the Veracruz logo and jerseys.
In the 2012-2013 season Veracruz failed to gain promotion, after losing in the quarter finals against Necaxa in the Torneo Clausura 2013. However Veracruz actually got promoted. How could that happen? Well, the owners of Veracruz bought La Piedad, the team that rightfully won promotion. The 2012-2013 season was actually very strange season because the team that got relegated, Queretaro, bought Jaguares. While Jaguares bought San Luis. That way, the team that was meant to be relegated stayed in first division, while the team that got promoted, got relegated to third division. And San Luis, a team that was free from relegation, disappeared. Mexican football in a nutshell.
From 2013 to 2017 Veracruz managed to stay in the top flight with mediocre performances, thanks to an experienced manager (Carlos Reinoso), a couple of great players (Melitón Hernández and Julio Furch) and, mostly, teams that proved to be worse than Veracruz. In those four years, Veracruz only achieved two qualifications to the playoffs (that means they finished in the top 8). While the “Tiburones Rojos” managed to get in the bottom two positions four times (mexican league has two tournaments each season).
After the 2016-2017 season, Veracruz was a disaster and the favourite to get relegated. Goalscorer Julio Furch was sold, while goalkeeper Melitón lost all his confidence and manager Carlos Reinoso had to step down because of health problems. The team finished the first tournament in the penultimate position of the league but were glimpsed for relegation in the next tournament.
However, Veracruz hired experienced manager Memo Vazquez, who won had previously won a championship with a VERY mediocre U.N.A.M. team, to save the season. And it worked, in part thanks to manager Vázquez but mostly because Lobos BUAP achieved one of the worst performances in the history of the league in that tournament.
For the 2018-2019 season rumors said the club owed the manager, players and staff months of worth of salary. The rumors also claimed coach Vazquez was resigning, Veracruz was going to be unable to register new players and that the squad was unwilling to take part of the preseason without payments. Despite everything, owner Fidel Kuri seemed to reach some sort of agreement with everyone and Veracruz brought in 28 players and let go 35 players. Mostly loans and free transfers. This is common business for mexican clubs that don’t have huge companies backing them (like America-Televisa, Tigres-Cemex, Monterrey-Femsa, Cruz Azul-Cruz Azul, to name a few). Bringing in a whole new team is a terrible idea but it’s an even worse idea when you do it with players other teams consider disposable.
In the first three games Veracruz lost two and tied one. The game against Puebla was crucial for their aspirations to stay in the top flight because Puebla was also a weak team fighting to avoid relegation. It still seemed like a miracle if Veracruz could win. But the miracle actually happened, a goal in the 83rd minute to tie the game and the winning goal in the 84th minute gave Veracruz 3 points no one could believe. Veracruz actually seemed to have a mild chance of staying in first division despite the terrible squad. However, just a few days after the win, coach Vázquez was surprisingly fired.
Unemployed coach Vazquez then declared to the press that he signed a “fake contract” with Veracruz that stated he earned much less than he did (this is common practice for most mexican companies in order to pay less taxes). The problem with the fake contract was that owner Fidel Kuri was then unwilling to pay what he had he owed Vazquez as a settlement. How did Fidel Kuri answer this? First he hired Juvenal Olmos, a chilean pundit-“manager” who hadn’t managed a team in 11 years. Then he took a drunkenly interview where he declared “the boys coached themselves, we won because we got lucky, because of the players, not the coach” and said “Juvenal will change the face of the team, he’s going to get out of this, you’ll see”, he then proceeded to attack Vázquez directly by calling him a “mandilón” -that means a man that is dominated by his wife-. To top his drunken interview, he later declared he was going to travel to Italy “with Memo Vázquez’s money”.
You would think Fidel Kuri is just some sort of corrupt businessman, but that guy is actually a politician in Veracruz, who supposedly also owns some sort of businesses. In 2016 Fidel Kuri tried to beat up Edgardo Codesal, the president of the referees association. He was suspended from all football activities for one year. He embodies everything wrong in mexican football and culture.
Back to the 2018-2019 season, Juvenal was unable to “get them out of that” and was fired at the end of the tournament after five losses and two draws. Kuri and Veracruz were then, somehow, able to sign manager Robert Dante Siboldi, who had just recently won the championship with Santos six months before. Siboldi made the team look better but was still unable to win. After 11 games, Veracruz was officially relegated. With a record of 10 defeats, 4 draws and a 9-2 disaster against Pachuca, Siboldi resigned. The “Red Sharks” were the third team to finish a tournament without a single win, second team to achieve it under the current format.
To make matters even more pathetic, Veracruz was deducted six points because they had a 244,500 dollar debt with Montevideo Wanderers for the transfer of Matías Santos in 2017. Considering the team had only won four points, “los Tiburones Rojos” actually finished the season with a -2 point difference.
The future of the club was uncertain. The league established that teams that got relegated were able to pay a 6 million dollar fee in order to stay in first division, this was supposedly a measure to expand the league to 20 teams. Lobos did it a year before and while it seemed logical for Veracruz to pay, no one thought it would be possible considering the “Red Sharks” owed months of salary to players and staff.
Again Fidel Kuri, somehow, reached an agreement with everyone and apparently payed all the debts he had with players and staff. So he then proceeded to pay the six million dollar fee to keep Veracruz in the top flight of mexican football. Kuri’s magic didn’t end there, because he was also able to convince the extremely experienced manager Enrique Meza to coach the team.
Veracruz added 17 players to the squad and the 2019-2020 season started just as you would expect. Even with someone like Enrique Meza, Veracruz was unable to win. After six matches, two draws and four defeats (one 7-0, another 0-5), Meza resigned for the first time in his career. By that time, Veracruz already held the record for the longest winless streak in the history of mexican football with 33 winless games and a complete calendar year without a victory. They were now competing for the world record with bulgarian side Chernomorets Burgas, a team that achieved a 43 games winless streak.
The club then signed manager Enrique López Zarza, who doesn’t have a great managerial experience, nevertheless, he’s a total man of football, with a very long career inside the pitch. He undoubtedly made the team better, even when the players were, yet again, owed months of salary. Rumors said some of the Veracruz staff was living inside the stadium, while older players had to loan money to younger players just to be able to pay the rent and eat. Guided by López Zarza, Veracruz almost won a game against Toluca, only to be tied in the 90th minute. A week later, Veracruz was also about to win against Leon but the game got tied in the 86th minute. The next game was against the richest and most powerful team in the league, Tigres.
The situation with debts was getting way out of hand and the players finally decided to do something about it. During the whole week before the game, players declared they would not play if the debt wasn’t covered. Some teams declared they would stop the league in support of their companions, while other teams embarrassingly didn’t show any support for the cause. The league declared that if the Veracruz squad didn’t present themselves to the match, they would be automatically be relegated.
D-day arrived and outside of talks and speculations, everything seemed like normal match day. A kid gave the ball to the referee, the league anthem, the handshaking protocol. Did the debt get paid before the match? Veracruz took the kickoff and sent the ball to the goalkeeper. After this, both teams stood still for a minute. After a minute passed, a Tigres player pressured goalkeeper Sebastián Jurado, who kicked the ball away. Tigres began to play the match, while the “Red Sharks” stood still. Tigres defender, Luis “Chaka” Rodríguez, decided to make a cheeky lob shot almost from midfield and scored. Veracruz players again took the kickoff and sent the ball to the goalkeeper, who proceeded to kick the ball away. In the third minute, Andre Pierre Gignac took a shot from a quarter of the field and scored again. After this, the match proceed normally, Veracruz players seemed to be specially fired up by the attitude of Tigres players, who scored when they were standing still. The game ended 1-3 in favour of “the tigers”, in what was considered by most football fans as a disgusting display of companionship. What did Veracruz owner Fidel Kuri think about the protest? He shamelessly said “it would’ve been better if Veracruz was just relegated”.
Another week passed and Veracruz was defeated yet again, this time 2-0 by Tijuana. The “Tiburones Rojos” had four matches ahead of them before finishing another tournament without a single victory. If they didn’t win the next match against Puebla, their chances of winning a match were extremely low because the remaining games were against strong teams (America, Monterrey and Chivas). They were just two matches away from equalling the world record for longest winless streak.
41 games and 430 days after their last victory, Veracruz was able to win again, against the same rival, Puebla. Colin Kazim-Richards scored the only goal of the match and the “red sharks” proceeded to drop back and waste time in order to avoid the dubious record of longest winless streak in professional football history. Promising goalkeeper, Sebastián Jurado, finished in tears after he won his first professional match in 18 league games, he actually got called to the national team before he could win a game. “Los Tiburones Rojos” finished the season with three more defeats.
When the tournament ended, team owners in the league gathered to decide the future of Veracruz in a meeting were Fidel Kuri was banned, they actually put “traps” in the FA’s facilities so he couldn’t go inside with his helicopter. For the first time in probably a decade, the FA made a wise decision and disenrolled Veracruz from the league. The Veracruz squad was apparently paid all their debts with an emergency fund owners have to pay in order to be part of the league.
In my opinion the whole situation is just a reflection of mexican football and society. I think that’s also the reason why the mexican national team has never been able to qualify to the quarter finals of a world cup outside of Mexico, despite having a country with 120 million people, most of which are crazy for football, and being the fifth team with most appearances in the cup, just behind Brazil, Germany, Argentina and Italy. In Mexico football is ONLY seen as entertainment and business, rarely does anyone actually care about the social and cultural benefits football can bring to the country. I was shocked when I learned in 2012 that people in Germany actually attend football matches in the third division, while in Mexico a team that drops to the second division is usually doomed to die.
Tl;dr A mexican football club achieved a winless streak of 41 games and 430 days, while staying in the top flight of mexican football, in a story full of debts, corruption, ridiculous rules and very poor management.
submitted by Zomhuahua to soccer [link] [comments]

Apertura 2017 Transfer Thread

Since there been already some confirmed movements, as well as some really strong rumors about other movements, it's time to start orginizing it.
Team In Out Rumored In Rumored Out
Miguel Herrera (DT), Alex "Wero" Díaz (Necaxa, End of Loan), Guido Rodríguez, Carlos Vargas, Carlos Emilio Orrantia (Loan), Pedro Arce (Veria FC, Greece), Mateus Uribe (Atl. Nacional, Colombia) Ricardo La Volpe (DT), Micky Arroyo (Gremio, Brazil, Free), Javier Güemes, Christian Pellerano (Renew Loan), Cándido Ramírez (Renew Loan), Brian Lozano (Loan), Alfonso Emilio Sanchez (Loan), Osmar Mares (Loan), Bryan Colula (Loan), Erik Pimentel (Loan), Jose Daniel Chepe Guerrero (Loan), Moi Muñoz (Loan), Francisco Rivera (Alebrijes, Loan), Martin Zuñiga (Alebrijes, Loan), Jonathan Sanchez (Cimarrones, Loan), Diego Pineda (At. San Luis, Loan), Paolo Goltz (Boca Jrs., Argentina)
Cándido Ramírez (Renew Loan), Uvaldo Luna (Loan), Milton Caraglio, Javier Salas (Dorados, Loan or Buy), Juan Pablo Vigon (Cafetaleros, End of Loan), Carlos Nava (Alebrijes, End of Loan), Facundo Erpen (End of Loan), Patrick Soko (Cibao FC, Dominican Republic), Ravel Morrison (Lazio, Italy, Loan) Rodolfo Salinas (Celaya, Loan), Carlos Treviño (Loan), Giovanni León (Murcielagos, Loan), Daniel Hernández (Atlante, Loan), Daniel Fideo Álvarez, Enrique Perez (Renew Loan), Rodrigo Millar(Renew Loan), Martín Barragan (Loan), Franco Arizala (Atlético Bucaramanga, Colombia), Juan Carlos Medina (Loan), Fernando Vázquez (Alebrijes, Loan), Sergio Rodríguez (Alebrijes, Loan), Edson Rivera (Dorados, Loan)
Juan Patiño (End of Loan), Dieter Villalpando (End of Loan), Alonso Escoboza (End of Loan), Moi Muñoz (End of Loan), Franco Arizala (End of Loan), Luis Ángel Quick Mendoza (Loan), Mateus Gonçalves (Check this thread), Julio Nava (Dorados, Loan), Bruno Pires (Dorados, Loan), Christian Hobbit Bermúdez (Cafetaleros, Loan), Félix Araujo (Cafetaleros, Loan), Diego de la Torre (Cafetaleros, Loan), Félix Micolta (Loan), Brayan Angulo (Loan transfered, still owned by Ludogorets, Bulgaria), Luis Miño (Nacional, Paraguay), Luis Leal (End of Loan, Rescinded Contract with Cerro Porteño in Paraguay), Marcelo Estigarribia (Maldonado, Uruguay, End of Loan), William Paredes, Alexis Canelo, Jonathan Fabbro, Hibert Ruíz (End of Loan), Alejandro Durán (Tuxtla F.C., Liga Premier), Federico Crivelli (C.A. Tigre, Argentina), Leonardo Burián (Godoy Cruz, Argentina), Lucas Silva (End of Loan)
Jordan Silva, Gerardo Flores, Felipe Mora (U de Chile, Chile), Edgar Mendez (C.D. Alavés, Spain, 5 million euros), Alejandro Faurlín (Getafe, Spain, Free) Maza Rodríguez, Richard Ruiz (Loan), Joao Rojas (Talleres de Córdoba, Argentina, Loan), Jorge Benítez, Marc Crosas, Enzo Rocco, Lucas Silva (Figueirense FC, Brazil), Jesús García (Loan), Juan Carlos Garcia Sancho (Loan), Joffre Guerron ($30k USD), Yosgarth Gutierrez (Renew Loan), Manuel Madrid (Leones Negro, Loan), Ismael Valdez (Leones Negros, Loan), Jesús Lara (Cimarrones, Loan), Moises Hipolito (Potros UAEM, Loan), Jesús Henestrosa (Potros UAEM, Loan), Allam Bello (Potros UAEM, Loan), Hector Gutierrez (Potros UAEM, Loan), Óscar Conejo Pérez (Renew Loan), Francisco Flores (Atlante, Loan), Jonathan Cristaldo (Vélez, Argentina, Free)
Néstor Calderón (End of Loan), Guillermo Martínez (End of Loan), Miguel Ponce (Loan), Kristian Álvarez (Renew Loan), Giovanni Hernández (Loan), Jose David Toledo (Renew Loan), Alan Cervantes (Loan), Jose Antonio Rodríguez (Loan), Alejandro Zendejas (Zacatepec, Loan), Mauro Contreras (Zacatepec, Loan), Josué Lázaro (Zacatepec, Loan), Julio Gómez (Zacatepec, Loan), Jose David Ramirez (Correcaminos, Loan), Fernando Gonzalez (Zacatepec, Loan), Mauro Contreras (Zacatepec, Loan), Carlos Lugo (Zacatepec, Loan), William Guzmán (Zacatepec, Loan), Carlos Salcedo (Eintracht Frankfurt, Germany, Loan), Gullit Peña (Rangers, Scotland, 3.5 million dollars)
Maximiliano Cerato (Everton del Viña del Mar, Chile), Mauro Lainez (Mineros de Zacatecas), Osvaldo Rodríguez, Miguel Herrera Equihua (Loan), Carlos Felipe Rodríguez, Alan Cervantes (Loan), Ivan Piris (Loan), Álvaro Ramos (Deportes Iquique, Chile), Andrés Mosquera (Independiente de Medellín, Colombia), Gustavo Díaz (DT) German Cano (End of Loan), Oscar Eduardo Suarez (Mineros de Zacatecas, Loan), Carlos Gúzman (End of Loan), Aldo Magaña (Guadalupe FC, previously as Belen FC, Costa Rica, Loan¿?), Gullit Peña (End of Loan), Javier Torrente (DT), Rubén Ayala (DT), Aldo Rocha
Jorge Benitez, Cándido Ramírez (Renew Loan), Avilés Hurtado, Stefan Medina (End of Loan), Juan Pablo Carrizo (Inter de Milan, Italy, Free Transfer), Neri Cardozo (End of Loan), Leonel Vangioni (AC Milan, Italy) Alejandro Garcia (FC Juarez, Loan), Walter Gargano (Peñarol, Uruguay, Free), Edwin Cardona (Boca Jrs., Argentina, Loan), Cándido Ramírez (Renew Loan), Othoniel Arce (Loan), Ivan Piris (Loan), Arturo Alvarado (At. San Luis, Loan), Luis Guillermo Madrigal (Alebrijes, Loan), Carlos Gael Acosta (Alebrijes, Loan), Marcelo Gracia Dominguez (Atlante, Loan), Gerardo Moreno (Cimarrones, Loan), Luis Cardenas (Zacatepec, Loan), Luis Lopez (FC Jurez, Loan), Severo Meza (Cafetaleros, Loan), Walter Ayoví (Free), Yimmi Chará (Club Junior S.A., Colombia), Aldo de Nigris (Retire), Pedro Aquíno (Sporting Cristal, Peru, loaned to Lobos BUAP), Jonathan Cristaldo (End of Loan), Alexander Dominguez (C.A. Colón, Argentina, Loan)
Sebastián Vegas (triggered buy option from Audax Italiano, Chile), Enrique Perez (Renew Loan), Rodrigo Millar(Renew Loan), Sebastián Sosa (Bought), Juan Pablo Rodriguez (Loan), Jesus Yair Urbina (Renew Loan), Carlos Gerardo Rodríguez (Renew Loan), Ángel Sepúlveda, Carlos Gúzman (End of Loan), Diego Andrei Mejia (Dorados, Renew Loan), Aldo Rocha David Cabrera (Pumas, End of Loan), Jose Antonio Olvera, Rodrigo Godínez (Renew Loan), Ignacio González (Dorados, Loan), Hibert Ruíz (Leones Negros, Loan), Víctor Guajardo, Oscar Fernández, Santiago Altamira, Ever Gúzman (San Antonio FC, USA), Luis Gabriel Rey, Carlos Adrián Morales (Loan), Daniel Villalva, Christian Valdéz (Loan), Francisco Figeroa (Loan), Carlos Felipe Rodríguez, Joel Huiqui (Potros UAEM, Loan), Ulises Jaimes (Zacatepec, Loan), Genaro Huerta (Alebrijes, Loan), Antonio Olvera (Jaiba TM, Loan), Victor Guajardo (Cimarrones, Loan), Luis Ángel Morales (Mineros, Loan), Facundo Erpen (End of Loan), Cirilo Saucedo (Unknown)
Ignacio Ambriz (DT), Luis Ernesto Pérez (Lobos BUAP, return from loan), Víctor Dávila (Huachipato, Chile), Daniel Alvarez, Roberto Alvarado, Dieter Villalpando (Loan), Carlos González Espínola (Huachipato, Chile), Miguel Ponce (Loan), Othoniel Arce (Loan), Yosgarth Gutierrez (Renew Loan), Áaron Fernández, Bryan Colula (Loan), Martín Barragán (Loan), Igor Lichnovsky (FC Porto B, Portugal), Pablo Velázquez (Toluca, loan, played last season at Cerro Porteño, Paraguay), Facundo Pereyra (C.A. Colón, Argentina, played last season at PAOK, Greece), Matías Fernández (Fiorentina, Italy, Free), Marcelo Allende (Santa Cruz, Chile) Poncho Sosa (DT), Xavier Báez, Marcos González (Free), Nicolás Maturana (Colo Colo, Chile), Michel García, Alberto Padilla, Kevin Chaurand, Jesús Gómez, Nestor Olguín, Carlos Hurtado (Celaya, Loan), Carlos Ramos (At. San Luis, Loan), Jorge Sanchez (At. San Luis, Loan), Edgar Alaffita (At. San Luis, Loan), Roberto Salcedo (At. San Luis, Loan), Emilio McEachen (End of Loan), Edson Puch, Jonás Aguirre (End of Loan), Roberto Prieto (FC Juarez, Loan), Gibrant Garcia (Jaiba Brava, Loan), Severo Meza (End of Loan), Jesús Chavez (End of Loan)
Edson Puch, Óscar Conejo Pérez (Renew Loan), Roberto Herrera, Joaquin Shaggy Martínez (End of Loan), Ángelo Sagal (Huachipato, Chile), German Cano (End of Loan), Keisuke Honda (AC Milan, Italy, Free) Roberto Alvarado, Osvaldo Rodríguez, Dieter Villalpando (Loan), Stefan Medina (End of Loan), Miguel Herrera Equihua (Loan), Francisco Figeroa (Loan), Sebastián Sosa, Miguel Velázquez (Mineros, Loan), Eder Cruz (Mineros, Loan), Abraham Torres (Mineros, Loan), Sebastián Fassi (Mineros, Loan), Victor Mañón (Alebrijes, Loan), Héctor Mascorro (Mineros, Loan), Miguel Tapias (Mineros, Loan), Guillermo Martínez (Mineros, Loan), Hugo Rodíguez (Loan), Alain Rashiv Estrada (Murcielagos, Loan),Francisco Santillan (Correcaminos, Loan), Sergio Vergara (Mineros, Loan), Hirving Lozano (PSV, Neatherlands), Sebastián Palacios (Bought, then loaned for six months to Talleres de Córdoba, Argentina), Steven Almeida (Everton, Chile), Ivan Ochoa (Everton, Chile), Francisco Venegas (Mineros de Zacatecas, Loan)
Rafael “Chiquis” García (DT), Erik Pimentel (Loan), Jose Daniel Chepe Guerrero (Loan), Moi Muñoz (Loan), Israel Villaseñor (Renew Loan), Jose David Toledo (Renew Loan), Jonás Aguirre (Rosario Central Argentina, Loan), Jesús Alonso Escoboza (Loan), Alonso Zamora (Loan), Francisco Acuña (Chiapas, Renew Loan or Buy), Luis Gerardo Venegas (Chiapas, Renew Loan), Hugo Rodíguez (Loan), Felix Micolta (Chiapas, Loan), Francisco Torres, Carlos Antonio Salom (Unión Española, Chile), Brayan Angulo (Loan transfered, still owned by Ludogorets, Bulgaria), Christian Marrugo (Indep. Medellín, Colombia), Lucas Cavalini (Peñarol, Uruguay, Loan), Jhon Steven Mondragon (Free, last played at C.A. Osasuna B, Spain) José Cardozo (DT), Carlos Emilio Orrantia (End of Loan), Roberto Herrera, Eduardo Pérez (Cafetaleros, Loan), Edgar Dueñas (Potros UAEM, Loan), Alexis Canelo (End of Loan), Cristian Campestrini (Chacarita Juniors, Argentina, Free), Juan de Dios Ibarra (Retire), Alvaro Navarro (Fired), Federico Gonzalez (Fired)
Rodrigo González (Venados de Mérida, End of loan), David Cabrera (Monarcas, End of loan), Joffre Guerron ($30k USD), Mauro Formica (Newell's Old Boys, Argentina), Néstor Calderón, Alejandro Arana (Zacatepec), Rodrigo Gonzalez (Venados), Alfonso Nieto (Herediano, Costa Rica, End of Loan), Marcelo Díaz (Celta de Vigo, Spain, Free) Darío Verón (Club Olimpia, Paraguay, Free), Alejandro Pikolín Palacios (At. San Luis, Loan), Alejandro Castro (At. San Luis, Loan), Marcelo Alatorre (Venados), Javier Cortés, Santiago Palacios (At. San Luis, Loan), Andrés Iniestra (Venados FC, Loan), Franco Faria (Venados FC, Loan), Omar Isla (Venados FC, Loan), Jose Medina (Venados FC, Loan), Jorge Escamilla (Venados FC, Loan), Erik Vera (At. San Luis, Loan), Gustavo Rodríguez (At. San Luis, Loan), David Martinez (Venados, Loan), Eduardo Herrera (Rangers, Scotland, 1.5 million dollars), Matías Britos (Al-Hilal Saudi Club, Saudi Arabia)
Javier Güemes, Erbin Trejo, Alexis Pérez (Junior de Barranquilla, Colombia), Everaldo Stum (Atl. Goianiense, Brazil) Amaury Escoto (Loan), Luis Manuel Garcia, Ángel Sepúlveda, Darío Romo (Correcaminos UAT), Kevin Gutierrez (Dorados, Loan), Édgar Hernández (Alebrijes, Loan), Neri Cardozo (End of Loan), Joel Gutiérrez (Cimarrones, Loan), Martín Orozco (Cimarrones, Loan), Betsiel Hernández (Cimarrones, Loan), Jesús Saavedra (Cimarrones, Loan), Josué Soto (Cimarrones, Loan), Diego Andrade (Cimarrones, Loan), Luis Romo (Cimarrones, Loan), Alan Zamora (Atlante, Loan), Luis Loroña (Correcaminos, Loan), Andres Renteria (Atl. Nacional, Colombia, Loan), Liborio Sánchez (Alianza Petrolera - Colombia), Juan Forlín (Real Oviedo, Spain)
Brian Lozano (Loan), Javier Cortés Julio González (Jaiba Brava TM, Loan), César Ibáñez (At. San Luis, Loan), Ulises Dávila, Carlos Emilio Orrantia (Loan), Javier Chuletita Orozco (Jaiba Brava TM, Loan), Francisco Torres, Juan Caicedo (Jaiba Brava TM, Loan), Mauricio Cuero (Loan), Juan Pablo Rodriguez (Loan), Néstor Calderón, David Andrade (Jaiba Brava TM, Loan), Eduardo Aguirre (Jaiba Brava TM, Loan), Kevin Lara (Jaiba Brava TM, Loan), Joao Maleck (Porto B, Portugal, Loan), Uriel Antuna (City Football Group)
Enner Valencia (West Ham United, England), Rafael Carioca (Atl. Mineiro, Brazil), Timothée Kolodziejczak (Borussia Mönchengladbach, Germany), Eduardo Fernández (Real Salt Lake City, USA), Larry Vásquez (Patriotas, Colombia) Jose Palmera Rivas (I am severly pissed right now, btw it's just a loan), Alfonso Tamay (Loan), Uvaldo Luna (Loan), Áaron Fernández, Antonio Pollo Briseño (CD Feirense, Portugal), William Treviño (Loan), Julian Quiñones (Loan), Luis Advincula (Loan), Jesus Yair Urbina (Renew Loan), Luis Quiñones (Loan), Alonso Zamora (Loan), J. Espiricueta (At. San Luis, Loan), Ricardo Chavez (Cimarrones, Loan), Emmanuel Segura (FC Juarez, Loan), Gerardo Escobedo (At. San Luis, Loan), Guido Pizarro (Sevilla, Spain, $6mdd), Richard Sanchez (Chicago Fire, MLS), William Palacios (FBC Melgar, Peru, it appears to be a loan)
Eduardo Coudet (DT, Rosario Central, Argentina), Mauricio Cuero (Loan), Jose Antonio Rodríguez (Loan), Luis Ángel Quick Mendoza (Loan), Alejandro Donatti (Flamengo, Brazil), Enzo Maximiliano Kalinski (U. Católica, Chile), Gustavo Bou (Racing, Argentina), Damián Musto (Rosario Central, Argentina), Matías Aguirregaray (Estudiates de la Plata, Argentina), Juan Manuel Iturbe (AS Roma, Italy, Loan), Miller Bolaños (Gremio, Brazil, Loan), Leonardo da Silva Dreyer (Varzim, Portugal) Miguel Herrera (DT), Avilés Hurtado, Guido Rodríguez, Jesús Alonso Escoboza (Loan), Milton Caraglio, Juan Carlos Medina (End of Loan), Carlos Vargas, Adolfo Dominguez (Cafetaleros, Loan), Amando Moreno (Dorados, Loan), John Requejo (Dorados, Loan), Jose Alberto García (Cafetaleros, Loan), Jesús Chavez (Dorados, Loan), Jorge Ortiz, Matías Pisano, Luis Michel (Dorados, unknown), Paul Arriola (DC United, USA), Jorge Ortiz (Belgrano, Argentina)
Jesus Garcia (Loan), Luis Manuel Garcia, Carlos Calvo (Atlante), Mateus Gonçalves (Zacatepec, Check this thread), Rodrigo López (Celaya, Loan), Santiago García (Wender Bremen, Germany, Free), Maximiliano Perg (Peñarol, Uruguay), Alexis Canelo (Jaguares, was loaned at Puebla), Miguel Ángel Centeno Báez (Recall from Loan) Sinha (Retire), Jordan Silva, Paulo da Silva (Libertad, Paraguay, Free), Erbin Trejo, Israel Villaseñor (Renew Loan), Carlos Gerardo Rodríguez (Renew Loan), Francisco Gamboa (Atlante, Loan), Carlos Calvo (Atlante, Loan), Diego Aguilar (Atlante, Loan), Hector Acosta (At. San Luis, Loan), Diego Gama (Potros UAEM, Loan), Alexis Ochoa (Potros UAEM, Loan), Juan Carlos Morales (Potros UAEM, Loan), Arturo Tapia (Potros UAEM, Loan), Emilio Yamin (Potros UAEM, Loan), Daniel González (Potros UAEM, Loan), Gerardo Flores, Enrique Triverio (Racing, Argentina)
Richard Ruiz (Laon), Christian Pellerano (Renew Loan), Kristian Álvarez (Renew Loan), Giovanni Hernández (Loan), Christian Valdéz (Loan), Manuel Viniegra (Loan), Jose Palmera Rivas (Loan), Osmar Mares (Loan), Cristian Menendez (Atlético Tucumán, Argentina), José Manuel Sema Velázquez (FC Arouca, Portugal), Leandro Nicolás Díaz (San Rafael, Argentina), Matías Santos (Montevideo Wanders, Uruguay), Sergio García (Came out of retirement), Geoffrey Acheampong (SC Bastia, France), Guido Milán (FC Metz, France) Marcelo Alatorre (End of Loan), Eduardo Herrera (End of Loan), Leobardo Lopez (Celaya, Loan), Rodrigo Noya (Alebrijes, Loan), Angel Reyna (Celaya, Loan), Angel Zamora (Atlante, Loan), Egidio Arévalo Ríos (Racing, Argentina, Free), Antonio Pollo Briseño (End of Loan), Juan Ángel Albín (Dinamo Bucarest, Rumania, End of Loan), José David Leudo (Atl. Huila, Colombia), Agustín Vuletich (Rionegro Aguila, Colombia), Felipe Flores (Free)
Carlos Adrián Morales (Loan), Alfonso Tamay (Loan), Juan Carlos Medina (Loan), Carlos Treviño (Loan), Francisco 'Maza' Rodriguez, Juan Carlos Garcia Sancho (Loan), Julian Quiñones (Loan), Luis Advincula (Loan), Amaury Escoto (Loan), Sergio Perez (Loan), Rodrigo Godínez (Renew Loan), Luis Quiñones (Loan), Heriberto Olvera (Mineros de Zacatecas), Lucero Álvarez (Alebrijes, Loan), Pedro Aquíno (Sporting Cristal, Peru, loaned to Lobos BUAP), William Paredes, Jorge Villalpando (came out from retirement), Jonathan Fabbro, Emanuel Herrera (CS Emelec, Ecuador, loaned at FBC Melgar, Peru) Luis Ernesto Pérez (Necaxa, End of Loan), Alfonso Emilio Sanchez (Loan), Omar Marrufo, Antonio Iriarte, Diego Campos, Mario Quezada, Jorge Ocampo, Ricardo Alves, Gullermo Clemens (Celaya, Loan), Antonio Iriarte (FC Juárez, Loan), William Palacios (Fired due to starting a bar fight), Luis Leal (Free, maybe, he is now loaned to Newell's Old Boys in Argentina)
PS: I have no idea how to make the icons work Finally!
Draft is 7th and 8th of June
The Draft is over, no more national transfers, but the foregin transfer windows are still open. Here is a list of them
Paraguay's transfer window ended at Friday, 21rd of July
The transfer window ends the 5th of September at 17:00 hours

The transfer window is closed

Teams can still finish paperwork of players that where already registered to the FMF, even if their files are not public.
submitted by Ret_Lascuarin to LigaMX [link] [comments]

May, In review.

Teams winning trophies, Players saying their final goodbyes, and a new generation of footballers emerge. This is May 17 in review. For ultimate viewing pleasure, press show all images.
News

Chelsea win the premier league
Monaco win Ligue 1
Juventus win the Italian domestic double
Real Madrid win La Liga
Borussia Dortmund win the German Cup
Manchester United win the Europa League
First Stadium of the 2022 world cup opens
Feyenoord win the Dutch League
SL Benfica win the Portuguese League
Barcelona win Copa Del Rey
Arsenal wins the FA Cup

Thomas Tuchel resigns
David Moyes resigns
Sam Allardyce resigns
Stefano Pioli sacked
Marco Silva becomes new Watford boss

Xabi Alonso retires
Philipp Lahm retires
Francesco Totti retires
Dirk Kyut retires
Transfer window is underway
U20 World Cup is underway
Goals
Emre Can vs Watford
André-Pierre Gignac vs Chivas
Gonzalo Higuain vs Monaco
Gabriel vs Betis
Christen Eriksen vs Crystal Palace
Iuri Medeiros vs Tondela
In memory of Eduard Gutiérrez 1995-2017
In memory of David Bystroň 1982-2017
In memory of Raul Cordoba 1924-2017
In memory of Yanko Daucik 1941-2017
In memory of Rachid Natouri 1946-2017
January, In Review
February, In Review
March, In Review
April, In Review
submitted by alitheboss55 to soccer [link] [comments]

May

Teams winning trophies, Players saying their final goodbyes, and a new generation of footballers emerge. This is May 17 in review. For ultimate viewing pleasure, press show all images.
News

Chelsea win the premier league
Monaco win Ligue 1
Juventus win the Italian domestic double
Real Madrid win La Liga
Manchester United win the Europa League
First Stadium of the 2022 world cup opens
Feyenoord win the Dutch League
SL Benfica win the Portuguese League
Barcelona win Copa Del Rey
Arsenal wins the FA Cup

David Moyes resigns
Sam Allardyce resigns
Stefano Pioli sacked
Marcos Silva becomes new Watford boss

Xabi Alonso retires
Philipp Lahm retires
Francesco Totti retires
Dirk Kyut retires
Transfer window is underway
U20 World Cup is underway
Goals
Emre Can vs Watford
André-Pierre Gignac vs Chivas
Gonzalo Higuain vs Monaco
Gabriel vs Betis
Christen Eriksen vs Crystal Palace
Iuri Medeiros vs Tondela
In memory of Eduard Gutiérrez 1995-2017
In memory of David Bystroň 1982-2017
In memory of Raul Cordoba 1924-2017
In memory of Yanko Daucik 1941-2017
In memory of Rachid Natouri 1946-2017
January, In Review
February, In Review
March, In Review
April, In Review
submitted by alitheboss55 to soccerdev [link] [comments]

jugadores de chivas 2017 video

Con portero y delantero de Chivas, este es el 11 ideal del Clausura 2017 Chivas campeon de liga 2017 Todos Los Goles Chivas Clausura 2017 (Liga) - YouTube Goles y Jugadores de las Chivas ⚫2016-2017⚫ JUGADORES DE CHIVAS DEFIENDEN A AFICIONADA (IMPRESIONES) GRANDES CHIVAS APERTURA 2017 LIGA MX CHIVAS CAMPEÓN DE LIGA 2017 Premiación y Celebración de ... alineación de chivas vs amierdica 2017 Así Festejó Chivas su Título Número 12 de la liga Mx ... COLOR - Chivas Campeón del Clausura 2017 - YouTube

Pelea con jugadores de Chivas. luego de que Rodolfo Cota llegó casi a los golpes con el jugador argentino durante un duelo ante Toluca en 2017. Sin embargo, uno de los futbolistas que más Diez jugadores de Chivas en nómina de México para la Copa de Oro. By La Voz June 7, 2017 6:31 pm. Print; Alan Pulido, de Chivas, tras marcar un gol ante Tigres en la final de la liga mexicana Chivas suma una larga lista de desencuentros con jugadores que fueron campeones en el 2017 con la institución, el último en sumarse fue Alan Pulido Matías Almeyda fue el gran pastor de La actualidad de los futbolistas de las Chivas que ganaron el título de Liga Para Chivas el panorama es claro: en la Liga se ha fracasado; en la Copa hay vida. El plantel resiente el haber quedado fuera de la Liguilla luego del título en el Clausura 2017. Han manifestado públicamente la vergüenza que sienten con el entrenador. Las Chivas ganaron su último título de liga en el Clausura 2017, pero desde entonces ha cambiado la plantilla de manera considerable por decisiones de la directiva. Aunque con un poco de Este viernes, Chivas arrancará su andar en el Torneo Guard1anes 2021, y en la página oficial de la Liga MX aparece la lista de jugadores con los que buscaría su decimotercer título, aunque primero debe enfocarse en su debut ante Puebla en el Estadio Cuauhtémoc.. El partido de la Jornada 1 podrá verse en televisión abierta, pues la señal estará a cargo de TV Azteca. El 7 de Enero arranca el Clausura 2017 y aquí les dejamos la plantilla de jugadores con la que el Chivas enfrentará este torneo e intentará conquistar el torneo y así Almeyda dará una alegría a la afición Chivas. PORTEROS 34 Miguel Jiménez Ponce, 30 Rodolfo Cota Robles. DEFENSAS José González y Edwin Hernández completan esta lista de jugadores en calidad de transferible para el próximo torneo. El ‘Aris’ Hérnandez, a pesar de haber conformado la plantilla que consiguió el campeonato en el Clausura 2017, perdió protagonismo y ahora dejará las filas jaliscienses.. De igual forma, destaca la ausencia de Oribe Peralta, pues en las últimas semanas se ha Jugadores de la plantilla completa del Chivas de la temporada 2021 en AS.com

jugadores de chivas 2017 top

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Con portero y delantero de Chivas, este es el 11 ideal del Clausura 2017

Esas alegrias y esas lagrimas que salen por levantar un titulo y mas cuando ese alguien lo merece. Carlos Salcido el que mas amor siente por este equipo, mer... Goles de las Chivas del Guadalajara, algunos jugadores no los incluí porque no han anotado gol o porque algunos videos no se descargaron correctamente, y algunos videos los saque de otros canales ... Alineación de Chivas en la final del Clausura 2017 - Duration: 1:13. MrDemonot 14,815 views. ... Los jugadores de Chivas ‘bañaron’ a Karina Herrera para festejar el título - Duration: ... Todos los goles de chivas en liga clausura 2017Solo pongo los goles en liga porque este vídeo lo estoy subiendo antes de la liguilla compartanlo!!!!! Así Festejó Chivas su Título Número 12 de la liga Mx 2017 en lo intimó del vestidor. chivas Campeón del Clausura 2017 Liga Mx. Y un gran y eufórico festejo d... Te traemos este especial del doceavo campeonato del Club Guadalajara. Para más información de la LIGA Bancomer MX visita: http://www.revistaligabancomermx.com futbol picante - mexico ganÒ en panama, jorge vergara reacciones matias almeyda, bravo reynoso orteg - duration: 45:45. futbol picante hoy en vivo 136,324 views. new Desde mi butaca...como siempre. Premiacion donde Salcido levanta la 12...con todo merecimiento. La Liga MX creó una alineación titular con los 11 mejores jugadores del campeonato. Este demoledor equipo le puede pelear a cualquier club del mundo. Y la de...

jugadores de chivas 2017

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