Estudiantes Tecos

The Club Deportivo Estudiantes Tecos - before 2009 Tecos de la Universidad Autónoma de Guadalajara, also known as Tecos UAG Tecos de la UAG or - is a Mexican football club from Zapopan in Guadalajara.

The club is in connection with the Universidad Autónoma de Guadalajara and played at the Estadio Tres de Marzo, which after the founding date of the university (3 March 1935) is named.

The nickname Tecos to German owls, derives from a student secret society at the university. Its members are said to have special privileges on campus.

History

Football was played early in the already established by aristocratic circles 1935 ultra-Catholic and politically clearly trending right Universidad Autónoma de Guadalajara. However, the actual chronology begins with the founding of the professional team in 1971, which made ​​its triumphant abruptly. The Tecos began their inaugural 1972/73 in the third division and succeeded at the first attempt to march through to the second division, two years later saw him rise to the top division, composed of the Tecos continuously since winning the second division championship in 1975.

In football, the House of Lords arrived, succeeded at once to qualify for the play-offs, where you just ( 0:0 and 0:1) failed against the Super eyelids and later master América.

Five years later, in the 1980/81 season, the Tecos were themselves for the first time Super eyelids, so point the best team in the First Division of Mexico. What would have meant the championship in many other countries, not much goes for the (not only) in this regard at the U.S. oriented country. Then there were two groups of four, in which the finalists were played. Had the Tecos won in the main round still exactly 50 % of all games ( 19 of 38), so they failed in this crucial stage nerves. In six games, they managed only one win so they were group last.

What the Tecos in 1981, was denied, they should do so 13 years later. After they had the 1993/94 season ended once again as Super Lider, they sat down, this time also in the subsequent play-offs through and won for the first and only time the Mexican soccer championship. This season, the team impressed in many ways. She lost only 4 of 38 games and got only 26 goals conceded. This left their goalkeeper Alan Cruz in seven consecutive games and 736 minutes without conceding a goal.

However, the championship did not care for the expected future recovery. Since the season 1995/ 96, the Tecos occupied in the total points score per game year almost regularly only a two-digit table space. The sad climax of their sporting descent was the second round ( Clausura ) of the 2002/03 season, when reach only one win and four draws in 19 games.

Finally, it should be noted that the association area of the Tecos - as well as their stadium and even the represented of them university itself - is not located in Guadalajara, but in the autonomous suburban Zapopan, which is, however, seamlessly fused with Guadalajara and almost the entire west side the neighboring city forms. Even in the times of their greater success the team had always a manageable allegiance and remained well in the shadow of the much more popular neighbor associations Atlas and Chivas Guadalajara.

The champion team

The squad of the champion team of the season 1993/94 consisted of the following players: Carlos Briones and Alan Cruz ( the gate) - Duilio Davino, Héctor Vicente Enríquez, Mauricio Gómez, Marcelo Costa López, Roberto Medina, Carlos Alberto Rizo, José Luis Salgado, Sabino Tinajero ( in defense ) - Mauricio Gallaga, Fernando Guijarro, Armando Iniguez, Porfirio Jimenez, Jaime Ordiales, Juan Gabriel Parra, Guillermo Vázquez ( in the middle ) - Felipe del Ángel, Osmar Donizete, Jorge Luis Gabrich, Armando Javier, Claudio Morena, Eustacio Rizo, Edson Zwaricz, Martín Zúñiga ( in the storm ). Coach Víctor Manuel Vucetich.

Former coach

  • Around 1972 Guillermo Sepúlveda
  • 1974-1975 Eduardo Villaseñor
  • 1975-1976 Timoteo Grigoul
  • 1976-1977 Diego Malta
  • 1977-1978 Árpád Fekete
  • 1978-1979, 1985-1988 Helmut Senekowitsch
  • Sept. - Nov. 1979 Horacio Casarín
  • Nov. 1979-1980, December 1984 - May 1985 Luis Grill
  • 1980-1981 Carlos Miloc
  • Héctor Núñez 1981-1983
  • 1983-1984 Diego Mercado
  • 1984 Javier de la Torre
  • Bora Milutinovic 1988-1989
  • 1989-1990 Juan Manuel Álvarez
  • 1990-1991 Óscar Mario Maldonado
  • 1991-1992 Jorge Castelli
  • 1992-1993 April - June 2003 Alberto Guerra
  • 1993-1995, 1997-1998 Víctor Manuel Vucetich
  • 1995-1996 Jesús Bracamontes
  • Feb. 1996 - Sept. 1996, February - December 2002, April - October 2010 Julio César Uribe
  • October 1996 - June 1997 Luis Fernando Tena
  • Aug. 1998 - March 1999 Jorge Martínez
  • March-June 1999 April - Sept. 2006 Carlos Reinoso
  • July - December 1999 Roberto Saporiti
  • January - February 2000 Rafael Puente
  • March 2000 - June 2000 Oscar Quiroga
  • July 2000 - Nov. 2001 Rubén Omar Romano
  • Nov. 2001 - Jan. 2002 Omar Sandoval
  • 2003-2004, 2005-2006, Sept. - Dec. 2010: Eduardo Acevedo
  • October 2004 - June 2005 Daniel Guzmán
  • Sept. 2006 - Aug. 2007 Darío Franco
  • Sept - December 2007 César Luis Menotti
  • Jan. - March 2008 Jaime Ordiales
  • March - Aug. 2008 José Luis Trejo
  • Sept. 2008 - Aug. 2010 Miguel Herrera
  • Jan. - Aug. 2011 José Luis Sánchez
  • Sept. - Nov. 2011 Raúl Arias
  • January to June 2012 Héctor Hugo Eugui
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