Ir al contenido principal

Stadiums where Cruz Azul has played

 10 de Diciembre (1964-1971)
Main article: 10 de Diciembre Stadium

Located in Ciudad Cooperativa Cruz Azul, Hidalgo State, it is a multipurpose stadium built in 1964,35 which currently hosts Cruz Azul's subsidiary teams. The stadium has a capacity of 17,000 fans. This building was the first stadium the team used in the First Division, from 1964 to 1971. It was here that they won their first two league titles (1968-69 and Mexico 1970) and one Mexican Cup title in 1996-97. Despite abandoning the stadium, the team kept it as an alternate venue, playing multiple official matches there, especially in the Copa México, the Concacaf Champions Cup and some league matches in extraordinary situations, such as vetoes, schedule changes or matches that were scheduled to coincide with other events, and even played several home matches here in the 1985 Prode and 1986 Mexico 1986 tournaments, alternating with the Estadio Corregidora.

Azteca (1971-1996 and 2018-2023)

Main article: Azteca Stadium

The move was part of the institutional planning for the growth and development of the club. In fact, the moments of success at the stadium began before the aforementioned move, as a neutral field. On March 2, 1969, the club won the 1968-69 Mexico Cup there by beating Monterrey 2-1 in the final. In the same way (neutral venue), on September 30 of the same year, they won their first international title with a 1-0 victory over Comunicaciones in the final of the 1969 CONCACAF Champions Cup. On this occasion, the Azteca hosted the match at the club's request, as the 10 de diciembre stadium lacked the conditions to stage an international final.3738

Their formal home debut match took place on November 6, 1971, on match day two of the 1971-72 campaign. They lost 3-1 to Monterrey; Octavio Muciño scored the team's first goal in their new home.39

Considering only the finals played in this scenario, Cruz Azul won 5 league championships, 1 Mexican Cup, 1 Champion of Champions and 2 CONCACAF Champions Cups. He also lost two league finals, in 1994-95 against Necaxa and Apertura 2018 against América, another one as an administrative visitor in the 1988-89 league against América and against the same rival in the 1973-74 Mexican Cup; he also lost in the 1972-73 Champion of Champions duel with León.

After not renewing his contract, he moved to the renamed Estadio Azul in Winter 1996, taking the place of Atlante, which had also returned to the Azteca. The last match of its first stage was on April 17, 1996, in the first leg of the quarterfinals of the 1995-96 season, losing 0-3 against América. However, he would again play at home in three matches in the 2001 Copa Libertadores (quarterfinals, semifinals and final) and one in the 2003 Copa Libertadores (quarterfinals). In the first tournament, it played the first leg of the final against Boca Juniors and lost the match 1-0.

Due to the termination and non-renewal of the contract with the owners of the Estadio Azul, the team returned to the stadium to play in the Apertura 2018, with its first match on July 21, 2018, a 3-0 win over Puebla. As in the first campaign of its first stage, it would play in the league final on its return, however, unlike on that occasion, this time it lost to América with a 2-0 aggregate and being local in the second leg.

It would be precisely at the Azteca Stadium where the team would break its 23-year streak without a league title, when on May 30, 2021 it played the second leg of the Clausura 2021 final. Santos, the rival team, (with the need to equalize the aggregate) in the 37th minute, the visitors opened the scoring through Diego Valdés, equaling the aggregate at 1:1. Subsequently, at 51', a counter-attack by the Cementero culminated with Yoshimar Yotún assisting Jonathan Rodríguez, who tied the game 1-1 and gave the advantage back to La Máquina (2-1); thus obtaining the ninth league title for the Cementero team.

Ciudad de los Deportes (1996-2018 and 2024-Present)

Main article: Estadio Azul

The stadium is located in Colonia Nápoles in the Benito Juárez district of Mexico City and has a capacity for 36,681 people. It was designed by the architect Modesto C. Rollan, and its construction began in 1944 as part of the urban project called Ciudad de los Deportes (Sports City) conceived by Neguib Simón. It was inaugurated on October 6, 1946 under the name of Olympic Stadium of the City of Sports. In 1983 it adopted the name of Estadio Azulgrana, when it became the home of Atlante, since this team wears those colors. In 1996 it was renamed Estadio Azul, since the Cruz Azul club made it its headquarters. Between 2000 and 2001 the stadium was used jointly by Cruz Azul and Atlante, until the latter moved to Estadio Neza in 2002.





Comentarios

Entradas populares de este blog

Amateur and About names

 The light blue ones The club has its official cheerleaders club, which were included as part of the institution since 2004, since then, they act as cheerleaders in the club's performances at home games, before and at halftime. “Las Celestes” are part of the club. And they are the only Mexican team that has official cheerleaders as part of their squad. Nicknames La Liebre is the animal used to represent the team.Based on the multi-champion team of the 1970s, it was baptized as La Máquina, comparing it to a locomotive.Cruz Azul has a rich variety of nicknames throughout its history, listed chronologically: Cementeros: as a result of its affiliation to Cementera Cruz Azul, the first nickname refers directly to the company's workers, since the team was originally formed with them. Over the years, the concept was extended not only to those who worked in the cooperative, but to construction workers in general. Liebres: when the team was promoted to the first division in the mid-1960...

The golden age (1970s)

 From the late 1960s and throughout the 1970s, Cruz Azul became the most winning and spectacular club in the country. In that period it won seven league titles (including a tri-championship and a bicampeonato), two Campeón de Campeones titles and three Concacaf Champions Cups. Cruz Azul's great boom came with the decision of the Cementera board of directors to move the team from Ciudad Cooperativa to the then Federal District, in response to the needs required by the team's growing popularity. The Celeste squad became a legendary team with players such as Miguel Marín, Javier “Kalimán” Guzmán, Alberto Quintano, Javier Sánchez Galindo, Ignacio Flores, Cesáreo Victorino Ramírez, Octavio Muciño, Fernando Bustos, Eladio Vera and Horacio López Salgado, among others. At the end of the decade, another group of excellent players would join the team, such as Carlos Jara Saguier, Rodolfo Montoya, Miguel Ángel Cornero, Guillermo Mendizábal, Gerardo Lugo Gómez, José Luis Ceballos and Adriá...