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The Mexico national football team (Spanish: Selección de fútbol de México) represents Mexico in men's international football and is governed by the Federación Mexicana de Fútbol (English: Mexican Football Federation).
Gerardo Daniel Arteaga Zamora (born 7 September 1998) is a Mexican professional footballer who plays as a left-back for Liga MX club Monterrey and the Mexico national team. Club career [ edit ]
On 6 June 2002, while leading Mexico at the World Cup, Aguirre joined La Liga club Osasuna after previous manager Miguel Ángel Lotina quit for Celta de Vigo; he had previously played for the Navarrese club. [10] In his first season in Pamplona, the club reached the semi-finals of the Copa del Rey, losing 4–2 on aggregate to Recreativo de ...
Jesús del Muro: 1985, 1998–1999 Alfonso Portugal: 1991 Juan de Dios Castillo: 1992–1993 Juan Manuel Alvarez 1994 José Luis Real: 1996–1997, 2001 Eduardo Rergis: 2002–2003 Humberto Grondona: 2005 Jesús Ramírez: 2007–2009 Juan Carlos Chávez: 2009–2011 Sergio Almaguer: 2013–2015 Marco Antonio Ruiz: 2016–2020 Raúl Chabrand ...
Alejandro "Alex" Zendejas Saavedra (born February 7, 1998) is a professional soccer player who plays as a winger for Liga MX club América. Born in Mexico, he represents the United States national team.
The Cachirules scandal was a 1988 association football scandal in which the Mexican Football Federation (FEMEXFUT) was found to have knowingly used at least four overage players (Gerardo Jiménez, José de la Fuente, José Luis Mata, and Aurelio Rivera) on the Mexico under-20 team which played at the 1988 CONCACAF U-20 Tournament, a qualification tournament for the 1989 FIFA World Youth ...
With 46 goals, Borgetti is the second all-time leading goal scorer (behind Javier Hernández) of the Selección de fútbol de México. He is the Santos Laguna top goal scorer with 205 goals. He was popularly known by the nickname of El Zorro del Desierto ("The Desert Fox") in reference to his debut team, Atlas, and his birthplace. [5]
As La Tri's first official coach between 1991 and 1998, Monterd took an inexperienced and under-resourced squad to the 1991 CONCACAF Women's Championship in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Sending only one qualifier from the confederation to the 1991 FIFA Women's World Cup , this tournament fielded eight teams divided into two groups.