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Club Jaiba Brava

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Mexican football club

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Football club
Jaiba Brava
Full nameClub Jaiba Brava[1]
Nickname(s)La Jaiba Brava (The Brave Crab)
Los Jaibos (The Blue Crabs)
FoundedSeptember 5, 1982; 42 years ago (September 5, 1982),as Deportivo Social Tampico Madero
2024; 1 year ago (2024),as Club Jaiba Brava
GroundEstadio Tamaulipas
Tampico &Ciudad Madero,Tamaulipas, Mexico
Capacity19,668
Owner
List
  • Andrés Arriaga, Luis Alberto Mora, Fernando Tremari,Diego Caballero, Francisco Fernández, Jesús Nader, Juan Nader, Juan Sarmiento, Gerardo Tamayo, José Luis Terán, Erik Abrahamson, Rodrigo Rodriguez, Jorge Elizondo, José Ángel García Elizondo, José Ángel García Hernández, Camilo Kuri, Trinidad Maximoto
ChairmanÁlvaro de la Torre[2]
ManagerMarco Antonio Ruiz
LeagueLiga de Expansión MX
Apertura 202410th
Websitecdstampicomadero.com

Club Jaiba Brava, formerly known asTampico Madero,[1] is aMexican professionalfootball club based inTampico andCiudad Madero,Tamaulipas, that plays in theLiga de Expansión MX, the second level division of Mexican football.[2]Founded in 1982 asDeportivo Social Tampico Madero, after the acquisition ofAtletas Campesinos by the"Union of Oil Workers of the Mexican Republic", to replaceClub Deportivo Tampico, which was relegated and dissolved that same year.The club changed its name toTM Fútbol Club in 2016, then asClub Deportivo y Social Tampico Madero in 2022, and finally changed to its current name in 2024.

History

[edit]
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C.D. Tampico A.C. (precursor)

[edit]

Club Deportivo Tampico A.C. was founded on July 8, 1945, soon after the club played a promotion match that would determine the club's acceptance in theMexican Primera División againstLeón match that ended in a 3–2 victory for the club. The first squad was made up by Goalkeeper,Eduardo Delgado,Humberto Escamilla,Florencio Carranza,Ernesto Olivares, Víctor Cardín,Teódulo Azuara,Fidel Menéndez,Carlos Pego and the ArgentiniansJuan José Sosa,Teodolindo Mourin nicknamePibe andErnesto Candia, withJosé Castro el viejo noy, been the first manager in the club's history The first board of directors was made out by PresidentCarlos González Avin and vice-presidentAlejandro Luna

On August 8, 1945, the club officially joined theMexican Primera División, and in the same year, theParque España was built where the club stands now. The club's first official game was played in the 1945–46 tournament againstAtlante, where the club suffered its first loss with an outrageous score of 10–3. The club won its first game on September 30 the same year againstAtlas 3–2, with the first goals scored by Ernesto Olivares. The club finished that year 11th out of 16 teams. In the following years, the club played smaller tournaments, finishing last in the 1948–49 tournament and 9th in the 1949–50 tournament.

The club continued its performance in the 1950s much like it had in the 1940s, securing 9th and 6th-place finishes in the tournaments from 1950 to 1952. However, it was in the 1952–53 tournament that the team truly excelled, coming together to finish first and secure its first league title. The victory was achieved with 14 wins, 6 draws, and only 2 losses, totaling 34 points, which set a league record at that time. The club would go on to win the titleCampeón de Campeones after defeatingPuebla, who had won that year'sCopa México with a score of 3–0.Roster from the 1952–53 championship club were.

Mexico

  • Mexico Elpidio Padilla
  • Mexico Benito Ayan
  • Mexico Raúl "Tarzan" Landeros
  • Mexico Salvador "Médico" Ayala
  • Mexico Jorge Danilo López
  • MexicoCarlos Septién
  • Mexico Pipo Téllez
  • Mexico Roberto "Chango" Zárate
  • Mexico Rafael Estrada
 

Foreign

The club's last notable achievement from 1954 to 1957 was when they finished 4th in 1954, 7th in 1955, 6th in 1956, 10th in 1957. In 1958, they finished last and were relegated to Segundo División. They played 1 year and were returned toMexican Primera División.

The club began the 1960s with three consecutive poor league tournaments but managed to win its onlyCopa México title in 1961 against Toluca. However, the club was eventually relegated once again in the 1962–63 tournament. Throughout the 1960s, the club played in the second division, falling short in the 1964–65 season.

Tournament after[clarification needed] finishing tied for first place withC.F. Jabatos de Nuevo León having played a decisive match that the club would go on to lose the match played in LeónGuanajuato. The city ofTampico did not wait long for the club to be promoted and subsequently foundedPetroleros de Ciudad Madero, which represented the city ofTampico in the first division during the 1960s and early 1970s until the club folded in 1975 following its relegation.

The club spent most of the 1970s in the second division until 1977 when it acquired theSan Luis club. The club that played in the second division was then sold to theUniversidad de Guadalajara and becameBachilleres, a reserve squad. Upon its return to the first division, the club had a strong tournament, reaching the semi-finals against Pumas but ultimately falling short that year. In the following year, the club finished 14th overall and did not qualify for the playoffs. In the 1979–80 tournament, the club finished 7th and made it to the playoff group stage, where they lost, once again.

In the 1980–81 tournament, the club finished 15th in the league and did not qualify for the playoff round. In the 1981–82 season, the club had a challenging year and was relegated for the third time. This relegation came after the club played a promotion-relegation series againstAtlas, with Atlas winning the first game, Tampico winning the second, and Atlas emerging victorious in the third game played on neutral ground. As a result, the club was dissolved.

Tampico Madero

[edit]

The club was founded on September 5, 1982, the city decided to buy out yet another franchise, this time buying the struggling club in order for the club to remain in the top division. This club was made up from players from theAtletas Campesinos and some from the precursor club that had been relegated and dissolved. That year the club struggled once again, finishing 14 in the league. The following year, the club would earn a 9th place.

Due to the1986 FIFA World Cup held inMexico the tournament was split into two short tournaments theProde 85 andMexico 86. In theProde 85 the club finished 1st in group 1 and qualifying to the play-off series. In the quarter-finals the club defeatedCruz Azul 4–2. In Semi-finals the club defeatedPuebla 5–4. In the finals the club went up againstClub América, managing to beat America 4–1 in the first match but following 4–1 in the second. In theMexico 86 the club would once again reach the finals this time after defeatingAtletico Morelia in Quarter-finals,Club América in Semi-finals. The club would go up againstMonterrey in the finals winning the first match 2–1 but once again losing the second match 2–0 and once again finishing runner up. The club would qualify to the play-off again in the 1988–89 tournament. This time a short tournament play-off round was played with clubsCruz Azul,Pumas de la UNAM andAtlante, the club would finish 1 point behindCruz Azul who would go on to final againstClub América. The following year the club finished 19th overall and the club was bought out byQuerétaro F.C. and moved toQuerétaro and so came an end to the 1980s.

In 1991, Antonio Pélaez Pier bought theAtlético Potosino franchise to return Tampico Madero to competitions. The team was registered in the Segunda División.[3] In 1994 this team was promoted to the First Division after defeating Irapuato in the championship final.[4]

In the1994-95 season the team played in the First Division, however, in the middle of the season the club was moved to Querétaro City and renamedGallos Blancos TM, due to problems between the team owner and the oil workers' union, the stadium owners.[5]

After 1995, the team came and went on several occasions, playing mainly in thePrimera División 'A'. Between 1995 and 1998 the team was a reserves team ofClub Puebla. In 2001,Águilas de Tamaulipas was promoted from the Second Division and took the name of Tampico Madero, however, the team only played one year until it was moved toLa Piedad due to lack of support from local businessmen.[3]

In 2005 the team returned to compete in the Primera División 'A', now as part of the sports structure ofAtlante F.C. Tampico Madero served as the team's reserves for a few years and later as an independent club. However, in 2009 it was dissolved due to the reform of the league that established requirements that the club had not met.[3] The club was able to continue playing in thethird level of Mexican football because it kept its reserves squad that took part in that league and became the main team.

In 2010, the team merged with Universidad del Fútbol, and became part of the sports structure ofC.F. Pachuca, for which Tampico Madero received some youth soccer players from this club. In theTorneo Independencia 2010, the team was runner-up in the league after being defeated byCelaya. In 2014 the club became independent from Pachuca.

In 2015 theGrupo Tecamachalco took charge of the club withJavier San Román as president, in theClausura 2016 tournament the team won the championship of its division and played the promotion play-off againstPotros UAEM, where it was defeated.[6]

In the summer of 2016 Grupo Tecamachalco signed an agreement withGrupo Orlegi, with this document Tampico Madero obtained a franchise inAscenso MX, the second category of Mexican football,[7] however the team was officially renamed asTM Fútbol Club. In 2018 Grupo Tecamachalco abandoned the operation of the club due to the possible elimination of the right of promotion for the clubs of the Ascenso MX to the Liga MX.[8] After this event, Tampico Madero continued in the league, but became a training team forSantos Laguna andAtlas, the Orlegi clubs that participate in theLiga MX.

In the spring of 2020, Ascenso MX was in a financial crisis derived from COVID-19 and the loss of television income and fans suffered by the clubs, therefore, the league became a youth soccer development tournament and promotion to Liga MX was abolished in exchange for member clubs receiving financial aid from teams in the highest category of Mexican football. The league was renamed asLiga de Expansión MX.

In December 2020, Tampico Madero became the first Liga de Expansión champion after defeatingAtlante F.C. in the final.[9] In May 2021 the team lost the champions trophy againstTepatitlán F.C.[10] In December 2021, the team was runner-up in the league after falling to Atlante, in a repeat of the 2020 final.[11]

At the end of 2021, problems began to arise between Grupo Orlegi and the oil workers' union due to the worse state of the Estadio Tamaulipas, since both parties accused each other of not taking charge of the maintenance of the property,[12] this increased after the stadium was closed by the municipal government due to its poor conditions.

OnApril 20, 2022, Grupo Orlegi announced the end of the TM Fútbol Club franchise, which meant a new demise for the club.[13] The next day the purchase of the franchise was announced by businessman Arturo Lomelí, who decided to move the club toLa Paz, Baja California Sur and rename itClub Atlético La Paz.[14]

After the end of the TM Fútbol Club franchise, local businessmen began efforts to bring a new team to the city.[15] On June 22, 2022, the new project was officially presented, the team was renamedClub Deportivo y Social Tampico Madero and played in theLiga Premier de México between 2022 and 2024. The new team emerged after acquiring theAtlético Reynosa franchise, which had been on hiatus since 2020. Enrique Badillo was appointed as the president of the club andGastón Obledo as manager.[2] In thefirst tournament for the new franchise, Tampico Madero dominated their competition and became the favorites to win the championship, however they were defeated in the final byTuzos UAZ with an aggregate score of 2–3.[16]

In theClausura tournament the team once again dominated the competition, so it advanced to the final phase. After eliminatingGavilanes de Matamoros andCafetaleros de Chiapas, Tampico Madero reached the final againstInter Playa del Carmen, in the two games the teams tied at two goals, with an aggregate score of 4-4, for which a penalty shoot-out was necessary. Finally, Tampico Madero won the series 4-2 and won the championship.[17]

Tampico Madero won the 2022–23 season Champions Trophy against Tuzos UAZ, in a series of matches that were impacted by violent incidents in the first leg held in Zacatecas, the series ended with a 1–0 aggregate.[18] Although the team had won its right to promote to the Liga de Expansión through sports merits, this was denied by the Mexican Football Federation, considering that the team did not meet the requirements to participate in that league, so Tampico Madero should have remained in the Liga Premier.[19]

In the 2023–24 season Tampico Madero revalidated its status as champion of the Liga Premier – Serie A by defeatingLos Cabos United in the final in the final with an aggregate score of 4–1,[20] although the team won the right to be examined for promotion to the Liga de Expansión, the board decided to purchase a franchise of a participating team in the higher category, pending approval by the League's regulatory authorities.[21] On July 12, 2024, the assembly of Liga de Expansión owners approved the entry of Tampico Madero as a guest team of the Liga Premier, so the purchase of a franchise was not necessary to have the promotion.[22] After its promotion to the category, the team was officially renamedClub Jaiba Brava due to regulatory issues regarding the team name.[1]

Year by year statistics

[edit]
YearPositionGames playedWonTiedLostGoals ScoredGoals AgainstPointsPostseason place
1982–83G2.53812917496133Didn't qualify
1983–84G3.33816913646141Didn't qualify
1984–85G2.33817813655842Didn't qualify
Prode 85G1.18503211210Finals
Mexico 86G2.2181125452524Finals
1986–87G2.34016915605941Didn't qualify
1987–88G1.43871813506238Didn't qualify
1988–89G3.13820711875653Quarter-finals
1989–90G3.53891118294829Didn't qualify

After this season Querétaro bought the Tampico - Madero franchise.Also after this season the team with the worst point percentage in thelast three seasons will be relegated.

Past kits

[edit]
First kit evolution
1985 Away
1986 Home
1989 Home
Clausura 2015 Home
Clausura 2015 Away

Past kits part 2

[edit]
First kit evolution
Apertura 2015 Home
Apertura 2015 Away
2016–17 Home
2016–17 Away
2017–18 Home
2017–18 Away

Stadium

[edit]
Main article:Estadio Tamaulipas

CDS Tampico Madero play their home matches at theEstadio Tamaulipas inTampico &Ciudad Madero,Tamaulipas. The stadium capacity is 19,369 people. Its owned by STPRM, and its surface is covered by natural grass. The stadium was opened in 1966.

Personnel

[edit]

Coaching staff

[edit]
PositionStaff
ManagerMexicoMarco Antonio Ruiz
Assistant managersMexicoJuan Antonio Torres
Mexico José Cruz
Fitness coachMexico José Cruz
Goalkeeping coachMexico José Torruco
PhysiotherapistMexico Luis Zapata
Team doctorMexico Juan Hermosillo

Players

[edit]

First-team squad

[edit]
As of January 10, 2025[1]

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
1GKMexico MEXJoel García
2DFMexico MEXLuciano Bocco
3DFMexico MEXDiego García
4DFMexico MEXAlberto Ríos(on loan fromAtlético San Luis)
5DFMexico MEXRaúl López
6DFMexico MEXEdson García
7FWMexico MEXDeivoon Magaña
8MFMexico MEXBenjamín Muñoz
9FWMexico MEXAdrián Garza
10MFMexico MEXOmar Soto
11MFMexico MEXChristopher Engelhart
12GKMexico MEXAlan Flores
13GKMexico MEXGerardo Ruiz
14MFMexico MEXNéstor Corona
No.Pos.NationPlayer
16MFMexico MEXRubén Domínguez
17MFMexico MEXJosé Treviño
19MFMexico MEXFrancisco Martínez
20MFParaguay PARDanilo Santacruz
21DFMexico MEXDavid Oteo
23MFMexico MEXAlonso Escoboza
24DFMexico MEXJesús Hernández
26FWMexico MEXEduardo Pérez
27FWColombia COLJuan David Angulo
28MFMexico MEXSergio Flores
29FWMexico MEXJosé Ángel López
30DFMexico MEXSantiago Ramos
31FWColombia COLVictor Minottta
33DFMexico MEXRolando González

Honours

[edit]

National

[edit]
Club Jaiba Brava honours
TypeCompetitionTitlesWinning editionsRunners-up

Top division
Primera División0Prode 1985,México 1986
Promotion divisionsLiga de Expansión MX1Guardianes 2020Apertura 2021
Campeón de Campeones de la Liga de Expansión MX02021
Segunda División/Liga Premier41993–94,Clausura 2016,Clausura 2023,2023–241992–93, Independencia 2010,Apertura 2022
Campeón de Campeones de la Segunda División/Liga Premier120232016

Notable former players

[edit]

Notable former managers

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcd"Club Jaiba Brava".Liga BBVA Expansión MX (in Spanish). RetrievedAugust 4, 2024.
  2. ^abcDurán, Víctor Hugo (June 22, 2022)."Jaiba Brava del Tampico-Madero llegará a Liga Mx en 3 años: directiva".Milenio (in Spanish).Archived from the original on June 22, 2022. RetrievedJune 22, 2022.
  3. ^abcDurán, Víctor Hugo (April 20, 2022)."IP no consolida futbol en Tampico, Ciudad Madero y Altamira en 30 años".MSN.com (in Spanish). Milenio.Archived from the original on April 22, 2022. RetrievedApril 22, 2022.
  4. ^Rivera, Héctor (November 20, 2019)."El último ascenso".El Sol de Tampico (in Spanish).Archived from the original on April 22, 2022. RetrievedApril 22, 2022.
  5. ^"Surreal Liga MX: La mudanza a medio torneo del Tampico Madero".elfutbolito.mx (in Spanish). August 13, 2019. Archived fromthe original on March 24, 2020. RetrievedApril 22, 2022.
  6. ^"Potros de la UAEM lo logró: es campeón y sube a la liga de ascenso MX".Lector 24 (in Spanish). May 15, 2016. RetrievedApril 22, 2022.
  7. ^"¡Tampico Madero, al Ascenso! Irarragorri y San Román anuncian sociedad".esto.com.mx (in Spanish). April 22, 2016.Archived from the original on July 29, 2021. RetrievedMay 27, 2021.
  8. ^"Presidente del Tampico Madero renuncia por posible desaparición del descenso".as.com (in Spanish). February 8, 2018.Archived from the original on January 20, 2022. RetrievedMay 27, 2021.
  9. ^"Tampico Madero es el primer campeón de la Liga de Expansión".as.com (in Spanish). December 20, 2020.Archived from the original on October 21, 2021. RetrievedApril 22, 2022.
  10. ^"Tepatitlán FC, primer Campeón de Campeones de la Liga de Expansión MX".Marca Claro (in Spanish). May 22, 2021.Archived from the original on April 21, 2022. RetrievedApril 22, 2022.
  11. ^"Atlante campeón y se suma a las maldiciones que se rompieron en 2021 en el futbol mexicano".ESPN México (in Spanish). December 18, 2021.Archived from the original on April 21, 2022. RetrievedApril 22, 2022.
  12. ^"Mantenimiento del Estadio Tamaulipas era compromiso de la directiva de la Jaiba Brava: STPRM".El Sol de Tampico (in Spanish). April 20, 2022.Archived from the original on April 21, 2022. RetrievedApril 22, 2022.
  13. ^"Orlegi Sports suspende su participación en la Liga de Expansión con Tampico Madero".Milenio (in Spanish). April 20, 2022.Archived from the original on April 21, 2022. RetrievedApril 22, 2022.
  14. ^"Club Atlético La Paz, nuevo equipo de la Liga de Expansión MX".El Financiero (in Spanish). April 21, 2022.Archived from the original on April 22, 2022. RetrievedApril 22, 2022.
  15. ^"¡Se cocina la Jaiba Brava!".RN Deportes (in Spanish). May 10, 2022.Archived from the original on May 29, 2024. RetrievedMay 21, 2022.
  16. ^Sánchez, Sergio (November 13, 2022)."Universidad de Zacatecas se corona campeón de la Segunda División".milenio.com (in Spanish).Archived from the original on March 31, 2023. RetrievedMarch 31, 2023.
  17. ^Magallán, Ricardo (April 30, 2023)."Tampico Madero acaricia su regreso a Liga Expansión".as.com (in Spanish).Archived from the original on May 2, 2023. RetrievedMay 2, 2023.
  18. ^"Tampico Madero queda campeón de la Liga Premier de la Segunda División".Récord (in Spanish). May 14, 2023.Archived from the original on July 4, 2023. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  19. ^García, Karla (May 18, 2023)."FMF le niega el ascenso a Tampico Madero: "El éxito deportivo no es suficiente"".Marca (in Spanish).Archived from the original on July 4, 2023. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  20. ^"Jaiba Brava es bicampeón: Tampico-Madero conquista la Liga Premier".El Sol de Tampico (in Spanish). May 26, 2024. RetrievedJune 6, 2024.
  21. ^"¿Regresan? Tampico-Madero cerca de volver a la Liga de Expansión".RÉCORD (in Spanish). May 26, 2024. RetrievedJune 6, 2024.
  22. ^"¡OFICIAL! Tampico Madero regresa a la Liga de Expansión".XEU Deportes (in Spanish). July 12, 2024. RetrievedJuly 12, 2024.
2024–25 teams
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