A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | CH | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9
Season | 2018–19 |
---|---|
Champions | Apertura: América (13th title) Clausura: UANL (7th title) |
Relegated | Veracruz |
Champions League | América Cruz Azul UANL León |
Matches played | 306 |
Goals scored | 834 (2.73 per match) Apertura: 408 (2.67 per match) Clausura: 426 (2.78 per match) |
Top goalscorer | Apertura: André-Pierre Gignac (14 goals) Clausura: Ángel Mena (14 goals) |
Biggest home win | Apertura: UANL 6–1 Puebla (10 November 2018) Clausura: Pachuca 9–2 Veracruz (13 April 2019) |
Biggest away win | Apertura: Veracruz 0–4 León (28 September 2018) León 0–4 Puebla (28 October 2018) Clausura: Querétaro 0–4 León (27 January 2019) BUAP 0–4 Puebla (31 March 2019) |
Highest scoring | Apertura: UNAM 5–3 Necaxa (29 July 2018) Pachuca 6–2 Necaxa (3 November 2018) Clausura: Pachuca 9–2 Veracruz (13 April 2019) |
Longest winning run | Apertura: 3 matches List Clausura: 12 matches León |
Longest unbeaten run | Apertura: 11 matches América Clausura: 12 matches León |
Longest winless run | Apertura: 10 matches Atlas Necaxa Clausura: 17 matches Veracruz |
Longest losing run | Apertura: 6 matches Atlas Clausura: 7 matches Querétaro Veracruz |
Highest attendance | Apertura: 69,486 América vs Guadalajara (30 September 2018) Clausura: 51,027 Monterrey vs UANL (9 March 2019) |
Lowest attendance | Apertura: 5,845 BUAP vs Veracruz (29 July 2018) Clausura: 6,350 BUAP vs Santos Laguna (6 January 2019) |
Total attendance | Apertura: 3,503,135 Clausura: 3,470,006 |
Average attendance | Apertura: 22,896 Clausura: 22,680 |
← 2017–18 2019–20 →
Stats are from the regular season onlySource: Liga MX (Apertura) Liga MX (Clausura) |
The 2018–19 Liga MX season (known as the Liga BBVA Bancomer MX for sponsorship reasons) was the 72nd professional season of the top-flight football league in Mexico. The season was split into two championships—the Torneo Apertura and the Torneo Clausura—each in an identical format and each contested by the same eighteen teams.
Teams, stadiums, and personnel
The following eighteen teams competed this season. Lobos BUAP was initially relegated to the Ascenso MX after accumulating the lowest point coefficient last season, but instead they will continue to compete in the Liga MX after the 2017–18 Ascenso MX champion, Cafetaleros de Tapachula, who won promotion after defeating Alebrijes de Oaxaca, was not certified to be promoted. Lobos BUAP paid MXN$120 million to be disbursed to Cafetaleros de Tapachula and remain in Liga MX.[1][2]
Stadiums and locations
América & Cruz Azul | Atlas | BUAP | Guadalajara | León | Monterrey |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Estadio Azteca | Estadio Jalisco | Estadio Universitario BUAP | Estadio Akron | Estadio León | Estadio BBVA Bancomer |
Capacity: 87,000 | Capacity: 55,110 | Capacity: 19,283 | Capacity: 45,364 | Capacity: 31,297 | Capacity: 53,500 |
Morelia | Necaxa | Pachuca | Puebla | Querétaro | Santos Laguna |
Estadio Morelos | Estadio Victoria | Estadio Hidalgo | Estadio Cuauhtémoc | Estadio Corregidora | Estadio Corona |
Capacity: 34,795 | Capacity: 23,851 | Capacity: 27,512 | Capacity: 51,726 | Capacity: 33,162 | Capacity: 29,237 |
Tijuana | Toluca | UANL | UNAM | Veracruz | |
Estadio Caliente | Estadio Nemesio Díez | Estadio Universitario | Estadio Olímpico Universitario | Estadio Luis "Pirata" Fuente | |
Capacity: 27,333 | Capacity: 31,000 | Capacity: 41,886 | Capacity: 48,297 | Capacity: 28,703 | |