Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Pumas are one of the most popular clubs in Mexico and considered to be one of the Cuatro Grandes of Mexican football, alongside Cruz Azul, Guadalajara, and Club América. [7] [8] Domestically, Pumas UNAM has won 11 trophies: 7 Liga MX, 1 Copa MX, the Campeón de Campeones twice, as well as 1 Segunda División de México.
English: Athletic logo of the UNAM's college football team Pumas CU. ... Logo del equipo de futbol americano de la UNAM Pumas CU. Date: 1998: Source: https://deporte ...
The Pumas CU football program represents the National Autonomous University of Mexico (Spanish: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, UNAM) in college football at the ONEFA level. UNAM has competed in the Liga Mayor since the 2014 season. The team is led by head coach José Luis Canales.
This is a list of football clubs in Mexico.Currently the governing body of football in Mexico is the Federación Mexicana de Fútbol (FMF), which is in charge of the Mexico national football team with all its categories and also all the professional divisions of the Mexican football league system, with the top level being the Liga MX.
The rivalry between Club América and Pumas UNAM is known as the "Clásico Capitalino" (Spanish for "Capital Classic"), [7] due to the fact that both teams are based in Mexico City—the country's capital. The first match between the two clubs took place on 1 July 1962, where América hosted UNAM, who had recently been promoted from the second ...
UNAM's present-day Pumas football team. The team was originally created for alumni. A view of the University Olympic Stadium. UNAM's football club, Club Universidad Nacional, participates in Liga MX, the top division of Mexican football. The club became two-time consecutive champions of the Apertura, and the Clausura in 2004.
Match between the oldest college football team in Mexico, the Pumas CU and the Águilas UACH. Borregos Salvajes Monterrey won the National Championship four times in a row from 2004 to 2007, the second team to achieve this feat after Cóndores UNAM. A player of the Borregos Salvajes CEM. The team won two National Championships, but disappeared ...
The 2012–13 UNAM season was the 66th professional season of Mexico's top-flight football league. The season is split into two tournaments—the Torneo Apertura and the Torneo Clausura—each with identical formats and each contested by the same eighteen teams.