Name
Leon
(0 users)


Badge

Next Event


Head Coach
None Found...
Add new Player with 'Manager' position

League Position
11

Recent League Form ➡


Established
1944 (80 years old)

Sport
Soccer

Venue

Estadio León

(0 Capacity)

Equipment Clearart

Archive

Primary Colours

Location
León, Guanajuato, Mexico

Nicknames

Competitions
Mexican Primera League
FIFA Club World Cup
Leagues Cup

Last Edit
AndyIgnacio: 13/Oct/24
Logo


Upcoming
None...

Results
11 Nov Monterrey 2 - 1 Leon
06 Nov Leon 0 - 0 Mazatlán
02 Nov Toluca 2 - 2 Leon
27 Oct Leon 4 - 0 Queretaro FC
24 Oct Leon 0 - 0 Atlas


Description Available in:
Club León, simply known as León, is a Mexican professional football club based in the city of León, Guanajuato, Mexico.

León has won the Liga MX México Primera División (Mexico First Division) title seven times: in 1948, 1949, 1952, 1956, 1992, Apertura 2013, and most recently Clausura 2014. They became the first Mexican "Campeonísimo" (winner of the League and the México Cup in the same year) in 1949. In 1993 León was the CONCACAF Champions' Cup runner-up, losing the final match against Costa Rican team Deportivo Saprissa, in one of the greatest upsets among the defeats in the club's history. They are also only the second Liga MX team to win back-to-back championships in short tournaments.

They also qualified for the Champion's Cup in 1998, but were eliminated in the semi-final. The team has been a consistent contender for the Primera División A title since relegation from the Primera División in 2002; they failed to obtain the promotion due to constant mediocre performances in the play-offs despite good appearances during the regular season until the Clausura 2012 Tournament when León defeated Correcaminos UAT 6–2 and after ten years were finally promoted to the Primera División. In the Apertura 2013 season they became champions after defeating América 5–1, giving them their sixth championship star. The next season, Clausura 2014, they became champions for the second year in a row defeating Pachuca 4–3, giving them their seventh championship star and becoming "bicampeones." In recent years, Club Leon games have even attracted non-Spanish speaking football fans; in addition to new Spanish-language broadcast partnerships with Fox Sports Latinoamérica in Mexico and Telemundo / NBC Deportes in the U.S. Since 2016, Univision Deportes holds the U.S. broadcasting rights to León home games.


Team Members



Ibarra

Pizzi

Boselli

Burdisso

Moralez

Cano
= Player Contract years remaining
Showing 0 to 29 (Total: 29)




Trophies

2023

2021


Fanart


Banner

Other Links

Facebook

Twitter

Website