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Club Tijuana

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Association football club in Mexico
This article is about the men's football club. For the women's football club, seeClub Tijuana (women).
Football club
Tijuana
Full nameClub Tijuana Xoloitzcuintles de Caliente
NicknamesLos Xolos[1]
El Xolaje (The Xolos-Crowd inMexican Spanish)
La Jauría[2] (The Pack)
Short nameTIJ
FoundedJanuary 14, 2007; 18 years ago (2007-01-14)
GroundEstadio Caliente
Tijuana,Baja California
Capacity27,333
OwnerGrupo Caliente
ChairmanJorge Hank Inzunsa
ManagerSebastián Abreu
LeagueLiga MX
Clausura 2025Regular phase: 13th
Final phase: Did not qualify
Websitexolos.com.mx
Current season

Club Tijuana Xoloitzcuintles de Caliente, simply known asXolos de Tijuana orXolos, is a Mexican professionalfootball club based inTijuana,Baja California, that competes inLiga MX, the top division ofMexican football. The club was founded in 2007, which plays its home games at theEstadio Caliente.[3][4] Its badge is the founder's (Jorge Hank) hairlessXoloitzcuintle, Hermoso.[5]

On May 21, 2011, the club earned promotion to Mexico's top division after winning theCampeón de Ascenso 2011 by defeatingIrapuato. Just a year and a half later, they made history after winning their first and onlyLiga MX title, finished as the champions of theApertura 2012.[6][7]

History

[edit]

The club is the 2nd latest in a long line of league teams in the city of Tijuana. Gallos Caliente was instituted in the summer of 2006 but it disappeared that same year. Then some businessmen from Tijuana bought the Guerreros de Tabasco and moved it to Tijuana, becoming Club Tijuana Xoloitzcuintles de Caliente. The team and owner announced the construction ofEstadio Caliente, a new stadium with a capacity for 33,333 people near Grupo Caliente'sAgua Caliente Racetrack. Jorge Alberto Hank, the son ofJorge Hank Rhon, is the president of the team. They became the Apertura 2012 champions after defeating Toluca 4–2 in a two-legged series.

The team advanced to the Primera División de México with a win at home overIrapuato, 2–1 on May 21, 2011.[8]

Jorge Alberto Hank and Gog Murguia Fernandez, the vice president, became the youngest executives in the history of Mexican professional football to be at the head of a club in the Primera División de México.

The First Title

[edit]
Joaquín del Olmo promoted the club toPrimera División de México in 2011.

The team obtained its first title in the Apertura 2010 tournament, after having finished as general leader during the regular tournament, which gave them a direct pass to the semi-finals. In the semi-finals the Xolos facedAlbinegros de Orizaba. In both semifinal legs, the Xolos and Albinegros finished 0–0, with the aggregate score 0–0 too. The position that the Xolos had during the regular tournament permitted them to pass to the final against theTiburones Rojos de Veracruz.In the first leg the "Xolos" had a surprise win 0–2 in theEstadio Luis "Pirata" Fuente in Veracruz, while in their field they won again 1–0 and this way Tijuana obtained half a ticket towards the Mexican football maximum circuit, the Primera División Mexicana.[9][10]

The Tijuana Xoloitzcuintles played their first game in Mexico's Primera Division "We've just started".
Estadio Caliente's capacity was increased after the team's promotion.

Promotion to Liga MX

[edit]

The final of the Clausura 2011 of theLiga de Ascenso was between Tijuana andIrapuato. The first leg was played on Wednesday May 11 in Tijuana's stadium. The game finished 1–1. The second leg played was in Irapuato, in theEstadio Sergio León Chavez. Irapuato won the game 1–0, being crowned champion of the Clausura 2011 afterwards. With the Tijuana having won the Apertura 2010 title, the Promotion Final was going to be, yet again, Tijuana vs Irapuato. The first leg was played in Irapuato on Wednesday May 18 and it remained 0–0, with the second leg deciding what team was going to be promoted to thePrimera División de la Federación Mexicana de Fútbol (now known as Liga MX).[11] Played in Tijuana'sEstadio Caliente, the second leg saw the Club Tijuana being crowned champion of the Promotion Final with a result of 2–1. Thus Tijuana replaced theNecaxa as the new Primera Division Team in Mexico.[12]

Liga MX Debut

[edit]

Kicking off their inaugural season in the Primera Division, Tijuana signedJosé Sand,[13]Leandro Augusto,Fernando Arce,Egidio Arévalo[14] andDayro Moreno would move to Tijuana for a fee of US$3.5 m.[15] during summer 2011.

Tijuana opened the 2011–12 season with a 2–1 home loss toMorelia. AmericanJoe Corona scored the club's first top-flight goal in the defeat. They would earn their first victory as a top-flight club in a 3–1 victory atSantos Laguna on August 6; however, after five consecutive home matches without a victory managerJoaquin del Olmo was sacked and replaced byAntonio Mohamed.

After having finished the 2011 Apertura with just three wins against nine draws and five losses, Tijuana would have more success in the 2012 Clausura. Behind theleague's top defense (allowing just eleven goals in 17 matches), Tijuana finished with seven wins and seven draws against just three defeats and earned their first playoff berth in the top flight, where they would fall toMonterrey.

Apertura 2012 Champions

[edit]

Xolos would continue their strong defense in the 2012–13 Liga MX season. In the 2012 Apertura, Xolos allowed joint-fewest goals with 15 while finishing tied atop the table withToluca. Seeded #2 in the La liguilla, they would avenge the previous season's defeat to Monterrey before rallying from a 2–0 deficit againstLeón in the semi-finals. They would win the Liguilla over Toluca with a 4–1 aggregate victory, achieving the title in the shortest time after promotion to the top flight in Mexican history.[16]

Xolos would falter in the Clausura, finishing in 10th place, two points outside of Liguilla qualification. However, invited toCopa Libertadores, Tijuana would make a run to the quarter-finals before falling toAtlético Mineiro.

Stadium

[edit]
Main article:Estadio Caliente

The Estadio Caliente, a multi-use stadium in Tijuana, Baja California, was officially inaugurated on November 11, 2007, in a game between Club Tijuana andPumas Morelos. The attendance was 13,333, then the stadium capacity. In July 2009, the capacity was increased to 16,000.Stadium owner Jorge Hank Rhon's main reason for constructing the stadium was his wish to have a professional football club in the city.Because the Mexican Football Federation says that teams participating in the First Division must have a stadium with a capacity over 15,000, Club Tijuana officially became qualified for promotion to the Primera División de México when the capacity was increased.The construction of the stadium was planned in two parts. The first part finished the ground and lower sections of the stadium. In the second phase, the stadium's capacity was increased.[17]Club Xoloitzcuintles added 4,000 seats to its home field of Estadio Caliente, pushing its capacity to 20,000, according to the team's management.The team also remodeled the players’ dressing rooms and resurfaced the dirt parking lot with a stone surface.Among the construction projects is the installation of stadium lights, which should not be an issue.[18]

A view insideCaliente Stadium in 2009.

Institutional vision

[edit]

What first seemed to be a hobby to the football aficionadoJorge Hank Rhon, has now been projected as a business and institution with many ambitions by his son Jorge Alberto Hank Inzunza, President of Club Tijuana, and co-ownerAlberto Murguia Orozco. The president has announced several times in press conferences that the project is far bigger than a stadium and a First Division team.The institutional plan involves football schools and clinics throughout the region, including San Diego and Los Angeles, professional football training, talent recruitment squads; 1st, 2nd, and 3rd division affiliates; foundations and green campaigns, and a heavily invested commercial complex.

Finances and ownership

[edit]

Controversy surrounded the lease, because the team would have ties to a company whose major business is that of betting on sports events, includingfootball. The case was presented to high authorities in the Mexican Football Federation, where it was ruled that no action would be taken against Xoloitzcuintles De Caliente or its parent company.

Personnel

[edit]

Current technical staff

[edit]
PositionStaff
Head coachUruguaySebastián Abreu
Assistant coachesUruguayBruno Silva
MexicoCarlos Pinto
Mexico Roberto Cornejo
Goalkeeper coachMexicoÓscar Dautt
Fitness coachMexico Raziel Alba
Team DoctorsMexico Daniel Saldivar
Mexico Marian Cruz
Assistant DoctorsArgentina Christian Delgado
Mexico Jesús Soto
Mexico Raúl López

Management

[edit]
PositionStaff
ChairmanMexico Jorge Alberto Hank Inzunza
Vice-chairmanMexico Gog Murguia Fernandez
Sporting chairmanMexico José Antonio Núñez
Director of footballMexicoJuan Pablo Santiago
Director of academyMexico Ignacio Ruvalcaba
Director of strategic planningMexico Jeronimo Vera
Director of marketing and commercializationMexico Esteban de Anda
Sports adviserMexico Ignacio Palou

Source:Liga MX

Players

[edit]

First-team squad

[edit]
As of 11 September 2025[19]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined underFIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
2GK MEXJosé Antonio Rodríguez
3DF MEXRafael Fernández
4DF ESPUnai Bilbao
5MF MEXKevin Escamilla
6DF MEXAlejandro Gómez
7FW BRAVitinho
8MF MEXIván Tona
9FW JAMShamar Nicholson
10MF MEXKevin Castañeda
11FW ECUAdonis Preciado(on loan fromQuerétaro)
12DF ECUJackson Porozo(on loan fromTroyes)
13DF MEXJosué Reyes
15MF USAJoe Corona(captain)
No.Pos.NationPlayer
16DF MEXJesús Vega
17MF MEXRamiro Árciga
18DF MEXAarón Mejía
19MF MEXGilberto Mora
20MF ARGEzequiel Bullaude(on loan fromFeyenoord)
21FW MARMourad El Ghezouani
24DF MEXDavid Osuna
25DF MEXRamiro Franco
27FW ARGDomingo Blanco
29GK MEXSalim Hernández
33DF MEXPablo Ortíz
34MF CMRFrank Boya
For recent transfers, seeList of Mexican football transfers summer 2025.

Out on loan

[edit]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined underFIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
GK USAGeonathan Barrera(atSinaloa)
GK MEXJonathan Vaal(atSinaloa)
DF COLKevin Balanta(atSantos Laguna)
DF CHINicolás Díaz(atPuebla)
DF MEXAbraham Flores(atSinaloa)
DF MEXFernando Monárrez(atPuebla)
DF MEXRodrigo Parra(atSinaloa)
DF MEXLuis Ruiz(atSinaloa)
DF MEXEmiliano Velazco(atSinaloa)
DF MEXSebastián Yáñez(atSinaloa)
No.Pos.NationPlayer
MF MEXJaime Álvarez(atSinaloa)
MF MEXEduardo Armenta(atQuerétaro)
MF MEXArath Egaña(atSinaloa)
MF MEXCarlos Galicia(atSinaloa)
MF CHIJoaquín Montecinos(atO'Higgins)
MF MEXAldieri Valenzuela(atSinaloa)
FW MEXEmanuel Ley(atSinaloa)
FW MEXLeonardo Vargas(atSinaloa)
FW MEXDaniel Vázquez(atSinaloa)

Reserve teams

[edit]
Main article:Tijuana Reserves
Xolos Hermosillo
Reserve team that plays in theLiga TDP, the fourth level of the Mexican league system.

Kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors

[edit]
PeriodKit manufacturerShirt partnerSponsors
2007ArdexCaliente
2007–08AtleticaCasas GEO/Nissan/TVC Deportes/Mexicana/Burger King
2008Voit
2009–10AtleticaCasas GEO/Nissan
2011KappaCasas GEO/Nissan/TVC Deportes/Volaris
2011–13NikeCasas GEO/ABC/Waldo's/Monte de Baja California
2013–14NikeBoing!/Casas GEO/ABC/Calimax/ARCO/Grupo Eco
2015–2017AdidasBoing!/Carl's Jr./Calimax/Farmacias del Ahorro
2017–CharlyTecate/Afirme/Telcel/Carl's Jr./Nissan/Calimax/Coca-Cola/Powerade/Volaris/FOX Sports/Coppel/SuKarne/ABC/Gonher/Weber's Bread/Evervital RedNtense/Seguros Confie/BH Fitness/Petsa Express/King Xolo Locker Room

Statistics

[edit]

Friendly competitions

[edit]
DateHome TeamResultAway TeamTournamentVenueSpectators
March 26, 2023Club TijuanaMexico1–2MexicoClub AméricaTour AguilaSnapdragon StadiumTBD
February 19, 2022Club TijuanaMexico2–3United StatesSan Diego LoyalClub FriendlyTorero Stadium4,500
July 10, 2021Club TijuanaMexico1–0United StatesSan Diego LoyalClub FriendlyTorero Stadium6,000
January 31, 2018Club TijuanaMexico2–3CanadaToronto FCClub FriendlyTorero Stadium6,000
December 28, 2013Club TijuanaMexico3–3MexicoClub AméricaLos Angeles ClasicoDignity Health Sports Park25,000
October 13, 2013Club TijuanaMexico1–1MexicoSantos LagunaClub FriendlyToyota Field-
July 6, 2013Club TijuanaMexico5–2MexicoClub AméricaSan Diego ClasicoPetco Park29,000
June 30, 2012Club TijuanaMexico1–1MexicoClub AméricaSan Diego ClasicoQualcomm Stadium19,880
February 22, 2012Club TijuanaMexico5–2United StatesChivas USASan Diego ClasicoTorero Stadium6,000
March 2, 2011Club TijuanaMexico2–2United StatesLA GalaxySan Diego ClasicoTorero Stadium6,000

International competitions

[edit]
Copa Libertadores
YearPldWDLGFGAGDPtsStage
201310541138+513Lost quarter-finals
Total10541138+513
CONCACAF Champions League
YearPldWDLGFGAGDPtsStage
2013–149513158+710Lost semi-finals
Total9513158+710

Records

[edit]
Raúl Enríquez, the Xolos top scorer of all time.
Most goals scored
RankNameGoals
1MexicoRaul Enriquez81
2ColombiaDayro Moreno47
3ColombiaDuvier Riascos23
4ArgentinaDario Benedetto21
5EcuadorFidel Martínez21
Most Appearances
RankNameMatches
1ArgentinaJavier Gandolfi243
2MexicoJuan Carlos Núñez221
3MexicoRichard Ruiz191
4MexicoRaul Enriquez190
5United StatesJoe Corona180

Honours

[edit]

National

[edit]
Club Tijuana honours
TypeCompetitionTitlesWinning editionsRunners-up

Top division
Liga MX1Apertura 2012
Copa MX02019–20
Promotion divisionsPrimera División A/Liga de Ascenso1Apertura 2010Clausura 2009,Clausura 2011
Campeón de Ascenso12011

Managers

[edit]

Women's section

[edit]

Club Tijuana (Women), founded in 2014, that participated in the US-basedWomen's Premier Soccer League[20] in the summer and in theLiga Mayor Femenil in the winter. In their first year, they finished in the middle of the competitive Pac-South division of WPSL before becoming Mexican national champions.[21]Since 2017 participates in theLiga MX Femenil.

In pop culture

[edit]

The 2016 documentary filmClub Frontera byChris Cashman focuses on the Xolos and the positive perspective of Tijuana.[22]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Liga MX: Know the Teams". 2 July 2021.
  2. ^"Liga MX 101: The terms you need to know". 17 January 2018.
  3. ^"Tijuana".Archived from the original on 2021-02-25. Retrieved2020-09-02.
  4. ^"LIGA MX - Página Oficial de la Liga Mexicana del Fútbol Profesional".
  5. ^"The Legend Behind the Badge: Xolos de Tijuana".Alfalfa Studio. 2019-07-17. Retrieved2022-04-25.
  6. ^"Xolos, campeones del Apertura 2012". 12 February 2012.
  7. ^"¡Historia de Éxitos!".Archived from the original on 2022-04-07. Retrieved2020-09-02.
  8. ^Zamora, David (May 21, 2011)."Tijuana ya está en Primera División".Azteca Deportes. Archived fromthe original on July 23, 2011. RetrievedMay 21, 2011.
  9. ^"Xolos vence 2-0 a Veracruz y tiene la mitad del campeonato - Terra México". Terra.com.mx. Archived fromthe original on February 19, 2013. Retrieved2013-07-10.
  10. ^"No se encontró la página | Futbol Total". Archived fromthe original on 21 February 2013.
  11. ^"Terra México - Noticias, Deportes, Entretenimiento y Estilo de Vida". Terra.com.mx. Archived fromthe original on 2012-09-17. Retrieved2013-07-10.
  12. ^"FUTBOL-Tijuana sube por primera vez a máxima categoría en México".Reuters. May 21, 2011. Archived fromthe original on July 15, 2014.
  13. ^"Jose Sand Close To Join Tijuana".Club-Tijuana.com. 2011-06-30.Archived from the original on 2011-07-05. Retrieved2011-06-30.
  14. ^"Egidio Arevalo Close To Join Tijuana".Club-Tijuana.com. 2011-07-25. Retrieved2011-06-25.
  15. ^"Dayro Moreno se va con sus goles a México". El Colombiano. 2 June 2011.Archived from the original on 2012-10-18. Retrieved2013-07-10.
  16. ^"Believe it: Tijuana Xolos are Mexican champs". UTSanDiego.com. 2012-12-02. Archived fromthe original on 2012-12-27. Retrieved2013-07-10.
  17. ^"SÍNTESIS SEMANAL: México, en alerta epidemiológica por brote de influenza porcina :: El Informador".EL INFORMADOR. Informador.com.mx.Archived from the original on 2009-08-04. Retrieved2013-07-10.
  18. ^http://www.noticiasmvs.com/noticias/deportes/FIFA-rechaza-a-Tijuana-como-sede-del-Sub-17.html[permanent dead link]
  19. ^MX, LIGA MX / ASCENSO."LIGA MX - Página Oficial de la Liga del Fútbol Profesional en México .: Bienvenido".www.ligabancomer.mx.Archived from the original on 2018-07-22. Retrieved2018-07-22.
  20. ^"WPSL WELCOMES NEW TEAM FROM SOUTH OF THE BORDER".WPSL. October 7, 2014. Archived fromthe original on October 15, 2014. RetrievedOctober 7, 2014.
  21. ^"XOLOS USA WIN NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP IN MEXICO".WPSL. December 29, 2015. Archived fromthe original on 2016-01-17. RetrievedJanuary 1, 2016.
  22. ^Abnos, Alexander (2016-09-19)."In new documentary, the astounding rise of Club Tijuana explored in full".Sports Illustrated. Retrieved2025-03-13.

External links

[edit]
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