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 Adrián Camacho.
After finishing runner-up in the previous season, Cruz Azul won the title again by winning the final round of this tournament, which was divided into two parts. In the first phase, they qualified in third place in the “Pares” group and then won the final round by defeating Pachuca 2-0 in Ciudad Cooperativa. The light-blue team needed only a draw to secure the crown, but finally won the match to do so in style.


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