Most popular team sports in Mexico:
Association football in Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico, is one of the country's largest and most historic football stadiums, serving as a venue for club matches and international fixtures. Mexico's most popular team sport is association football. Football is widely followed and practiced all over the country and it is considered the most popular sport in most states. It is believed that football was introduced in Mexico by English
Cornish miners at the end of the 19th century. By 1902 a five-team league emerged with a strong English influence. Football became a professional sport in 1943. The main football clubs are
América,
Guadalajara,
Cruz Azul and
UNAM, known collectively as the
Big Four. Mexico has hosted two World Cup tournaments (
1970 and
1986). Many of the stadiums in use in the league have a World Cup history. Sites such as
Estadio Jalisco in Guadalajara, and
Estadio Azteca in Mexico City are renowned for their national and international history. The legendary Estadio Azteca, for example, is one of the only two stadiums in the world to have hosted two men's World Cup finals (the other being the
Maracana) and is one of the
highest capacity stadiums in the world. Mexican's biggest stadiums are
Estadio Azteca,
Estadio Jalisco,
Estadio BBVA Bancomer,
Estadio Olímpico Universitario and
Estadio Cuauhtémoc. The
1986 FIFA World Cup in Mexico was broadcast to a global audience, and
the wave or the Mexican wave was popularized worldwide after featuring during the tournament.
Men's national team , Mexico City's iconic venue and one of the largest stadiums in the world, home to the Mexican men's national football team The
Mexico national football team (Spanish: Selección de fútbol de México) represents Mexico in association football and is governed by the
Mexican Football Federation (FMF, from the native name of
Federación Mexicana de Fútbol Asociación), the governing body for football in Mexico. Mexico's home stadium is the
Estadio Azteca and their head coach is
Jaime Lozano. The team is currently ranked 20th in the
World Football Elo Ratings. Mexico has qualified for seventeen
FIFA World Cup tournaments and is among six countries to have qualified consecutively since 1994. Mexico played France at the
first World Cup on 13 July 1930. Mexico's best progression was reaching the quarter-finals in the 1970 and 1986 World Cups, both of which were staged on Mexican soil, and will host once again in
2026 sharing with Canada and United States. Mexico won the
1999 FIFA Confederations Cup and the gold medal at the
London 2012 Olympics, finished twice as runners-up at the
Copa América, won the
2005 FIFA U-17 World Championship, and have reached the quarter-finals twice at the World Cup. Recently, some players from Mexico have moved on to European clubs, including
Rafael Márquez,
Carlos Salcido,
Ricardo Osorio,
Pável Pardo,
Andrés Guardado,
Guillermo Franco,
Carlos Vela,
Giovani dos Santos,
Omar Bravo,
Aaron Galindo,
Héctor Moreno,
Francisco Javier Rodríguez and others. Mexico is historically the most successful national team in the
CONCACAF region, holding thirteen CONCACAF championships, including ten
CONCACAF Gold Cups, one
CONCACAF Nations League, one
North American Nations Cup and three NAFC Championships. Mexico is the only team from CONCACAF to have won an official FIFA competition, the
1999 FIFA Confederations Cup. Although Mexico is under the jurisdiction of CONCACAF, the national football team has been regularly invited to compete in the
Copa América since 1993 finishing as runner-up twice and obtaining the third place medal on three occasions.
Men's Professional leagues , The stadium hosted its first major international event with the first leg of the
2010 Finals of the
Copa Libertadores, and hosted the
2011 Pan American Games opening and
closing ceremonies. The first Mexican club,
C.F. Pachuca, survives. Since 1996, the country has played two split seasons instead of a traditional long season. There are two separate playoff and league divisions. This system is common throughout Latin America. After many years of calling the regular seasons as "Verano" (Summer) and "Invierno" (Winter); the top-level
Liga MX, formerly the
Primera División, has changed the names of the competition, and has opted for a traditional name of "Apertura" (opening) and "Clausura" (closing) events. The Apertura division begins in the middle of Mexico's summer and ends before the official start of winter. The Clausura division begins during the New Year, and concludes in the spring season. during a Clásico Regiomontano derby game. Mexican football is divided into four divisions, beginning with Liga MX and followed by
Liga de Expansión MX, the
Liga Premier, and
Tercera División. The bottom two leagues translate literally as "Second Division" and "Third Division"; their names reflect their former positions in the league hierarchy before the Segunda División was split into two leagues, with the league now known as Ascenso MX becoming the new second level. The teams are
promoted and relegated by the FMF based on percentage calculations. Relegation is a common practice in Mexican football. There is a club exchange of each tier with the adjacent tiers so that a division's least successful team is relegated (transferred) to the next lower tier and the most successful club of the lower tier is promoted to the tier above. By the placement of each, the top tier cannot promote and the bottom tier cannot relegate. The relegation system does not punish clubs for producing a single poor season. Mexican clubs are assessed on their previous five campaigns. Points are accumulated for five seasons, and are divided by the number of matches played. The club with the lowest percentage in the Apertura is relegated to a lower division. Each team must earn their promotions. Since 1943, Mexico's five most successful clubs in
Mexican football league system matches have been
América (13 championships),
Chivas (12),
Toluca (10),
Cruz Azul (8) and
Pumas (7). America is the historical
arch-nemesis of Chivas, so a match between the two is the
Clásico Nacional derby that the entire country awaits. Another noted derby in Mexico is the
Clásico Regiomontano between crosstown rival teams
Monterrey and
Tigres. Whereas the Clásico Nacional involves two teams from cities in different states the Clásico Regiomontano game involves two neighboring cities. Chivas are renowned for using only Mexican players in their squad. Consequently, they have long fed players to the
Mexico national football team.
Women's football in Mexico The
Mexico women's national football team boasts one silver (1971) and one bronze (1970) in the
Women's World Cup, though these accomplishments are not officially recognized, as they took place prior to
FIFA's recognition of the women's game. Mexico stopped allocating players to the
NWSL management of the United States, having established its own women's league the
Liga MX Femenil in 2017, and the numbers of allocated players and international players on each team vary each year due to trades.
Maribel Domínguez was a noted captain and leading scorer of the Mexico women's national football team. She is known internationally as
"Marigol" for her record of 46 goals scored in 49 matches for the Mexico women's national team.
Variants of association football Beach football is a
variant of the sport of association football which was invented in Brazil. It is played on beaches, and emphasizes skill, agility and goal scoring. The FIFA Beach Football World Cup has been held annually since 2005. Mexico finished as runners up to Brazil in its first appearance at the 2007 Beach Football World Cup. Recently indoor association football has become a popular sport in Mexico, being included as part of the
Universiada (University National Games) and the "CONADEIP" (Private School Tournament), which match University school teams from all over Mexico. In Mexico, "indoor" football fields are commonly built outdoors, and the sport is known as "fútbol rápido" (fast football). The Mexican team
Monterrey La Raza joined the Major Indoor football League in 2007 and finished the season in second place during its inaugural year. A previous version of
Monterrey La Raza won three championships in the now defunct organizations
Continental Indoor Soccer League and
World Indoor Soccer League.
American football American football (gridiron) has been played in Mexico since the early 1920s, and is a strong sport at Mexican colleges and universities, mainly in
Monterrey. American football is the second most popular team sport in Mexico and the third most popular sport overall (behind only
association football and
boxing). The maximum competition is the
Liga de Fútbol Americano Profesional (LFA). The Liga de Fútbol Americano Profesional was founded in 2016 with 4 initial teams (
Raptors,
Eagles,
Condors and
Mayas), all based in Mexico City. On February 21 it held the first game and the championship game was held on April 10, leaving the Mayas as champions and the Raptors as runners-up. The LFA has since expanded to eight members as of 2019. There are plans to expand the league and increase the number of teams and the number of participating states. Funded in 2018, the Fútbol Americano de México (FAM) is considered as a rival to the LFA given they compete for television spaces, players, coaches and in general for the same market segment. The team that became champion of the first season are the Pioneros de Querétaro (
Pioneers of Querétaro). Before this professional league was founded, the maximum competition of American football in Mexico was at the college level. American football has been played in Mexico since the early 1920s in different colleges and universities, mainly in Mexico City. In 1928 the first college championship was played, organized by Jorge Braniff. Over successive decades, more universities and colleges joined the championship, and four categories, called "Fuerzas", were created. The First Fuerza became the
National League in 1970. In 1978, this was reorganized under the name "Organización Nacional Estudiantil de Fútbol Americano" (ONEFA). In 2010 a breakaway league,
CONADEIP, was formed by the
Monterrey Tech system,
UDLAP and additional private universities. The
Aztec Bowl is an
NCAA sanctioned college division post-season bowl in which American Division III college All-stars face off against a team of Mexican all-stars. The
Mexico national American football team has competed in the
IFAF World Cup, which has been held every four years since 1999. Mexico participated in 1999 and 2003, finishing second in both competitions.
Raul Allegre is a former football placekicker in the
National Football League (NFL); he played for the
Baltimore Colts, the
Indianapolis Colts, the
New York Giants, and the
New York Jets. Later eventually leading to his current work as
color commentator for
Monday Night Football with
Álvaro Martín for
ESPN in Latin America. He also appears on NFL32 and contributes to other
ESPN programs.
Isaac Alarcón was signed by the
Dallas Cowboys in 2020 as a part of the league's
International Player Pathway program. Mexico's Estadio Azteca is also notable as being the venue of the NFL-game with the all-time record attendance of 103,467 on October 2, 2005. Mexico defeated the United States in the Women's gold-medal game at the Women's tournament in
Flag football at the 2022 World Games.
Flag football made its international debut at the
World Games 2022.
Basketball Men's basketball Basketball is the third most popular team sport in Mexico. Mexico has a few professional basketball leagues, the top professional league is the
Liga Nacional de Baloncesto Profesional where the
Fuerza Regia de Monterrey are the most successful team of the league, having won the competition five times. The best teams of the LNBP advance to the
FIBA Americas League. In the northwestern states is the
CIBACOPA competition, with professional basketball players from Mexico and U.S. universities. This regional league have a stake in the rest months of the LNBP.
Manuel Raga is the first and only Mexican inducted in the
FIBA Hall of Fame. In 1996
Horacio Llamas made history by becoming the first Mexican to participate in an
NBA game. Since then, several Mexicans followed, including
Eduardo Nájera,
Earl Watson,
Gustavo Ayón and
Jorge Gutiérrez; also, Manuel Raga and Gustavo Ayón had notable triumphs in the European Basket, as the only Mexican champions in the
EuroLeague. The best results of the
National team is the first place in the
2013 Americas Championship, for qualify to the
2014 Basketball World Cup, where it reached the playoffs, the team also won the bronze medal in
Berlin 1936. The nation hosted the
FIBA AmeriCup in
1989 and
2015. Gimnasio Nuevo León Independiente one of the most modern multipurpose venue located in the city of Monterrey, Nuevo León, Mexico. It was inaugurated on October 7, 2013, and is home to
Fuerza Regia de Monterrey. In December 2019, commissioner
Adam Silver of the
National Basketball Association (NBA) announced
Capitanes de la Ciudad de México, a Mexican professional basketball team based in Mexico City, were joining the
NBA G League. The Capitanes join the NBA G League for the 2021–22 season, initial plan was starting from the 2020–21 season, the team would play in the G League for five seasons and be the first team outside the United States and Canada.
Juan Toscano-Anderson became the
2nd Mexican American basketball player to win an NBA title when he won an
NBA championship with the Warriors in
2022. Juan had played for the
Fuerza Regia de Monterrey and the
Soles de Mexicali.
Women's basketball Blanca Burns became the first Mexican-born woman to referee an NBA game in 2021. She officiated her first NBA game in December. Before entering the NBA, she worked as a college basketball referee. Burns began her NBA refereeing career in 2021 at the San Antonio Spurs vs. Utah Jazz game. Previously, she worked as a referee in the NBA G-League. The first Mexican-born player to be drafted into the WNBA was
Lou Lopez Sénéchal. She previously played for the
Fairfield Stags and was named
MAAC Player of the Year as a senior. She was selected 5th overall in the
2023 WNBA draft by the
Dallas Wings. Mexico has two main leagues to support women's basketball. • LNBPF (
Liga Nacional de Baloncesto Profesional Femenil): Founded in April 2022 out of the men's organisation the LNBP. In its inaugural season it had eight teams spread across two zones: • LMBPF (Liga Mexicana de Baloncesto Profesional Femenil) was founded in 2014 out of a dispute within the LMPB surrounding a previous attempt to set up a women's league entitled the "Liga Nacional de Baloncesto Profesional Femenil". The league was formed with ten original teams who had been members of the 2014 version of the LNBPF: Mieleras de Guanajuato, Lobas de Aguascalientes, Mexcaltecas de Nayarit, Tapatias de Jalisco, Rieleras de Aguascalientes, Gamos de la Universidad Marista, Quetzales Sajoma, Nueceras from the State of Mexico, Leonas Cenhies and Bengalis. It operates, in 2022, with two conferences of seven teams each:
Baseball is the largest baseball stadium in Mexico and the third largest in Latin America. It is the home field of the
Sultanes Monterrey. Baseball has been practiced throughout all Mexico across time. It has been traditionally known as the most popular sport in some regions of Mexico, mainly in
Sonora and
Sinaloa, and arguably in
Campeche,
Yucatán,
Durango,
Chihuahua,
Nayarit and
Tabasco, where it rivals football in popularity. Other states where baseball has had a strong traditional legacy include
Baja California,
Oaxaca,
Coahuila,
Veracruz,
Puebla,
Nuevo León,
Tamaulipas,
Quintana Roo and
Mexico City. Baseball is currently the fourth most popular team sport in Mexico. Historically it was the third in popularity behind football and boxing, and Mexico has had relative success in the sport, probably just behind
boxing and comparable to the success obtained in football. Although there is some dispute about exactly when and where baseball started in Mexico, baseball has a long and colorful history in Mexico, particularly in the north, with historians placing its origin there as early as the 1840s. Today, baseball flourishes in Mexico, where it is played professionally in both summer and winter. Over 100 Mexicans have played in the
major leagues in the United States, including
Cy Young Award winner
Fernando Valenzuela,
top 300 home run hitter Vinny Castilla,
Gold Glove Award winner
Aurelio Rodríguez, and AL batting champion
Bobby Ávila. The first Mexican to play in Major League Baseball in the United States was
Mel Almada, who participated with the Boston Red Sox in 1933. Most recently
Benji Gil,
Esteban Loaiza,
Julio Urías,
José Urquidy, and Cuban defector, now a Cuban-Mexican
Randy Arozarena. The
Mexican Baseball League ("Liga Mexicana de Béisbol" or "LMB") was founded in 1925, establishing six teams, and playing all their matches in Mexico City. In the 1930s and 1940s, African-Americans from the United States – who were still
barred from Major League Baseball until
Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier in 1947 – played alongside Mexicans and Cubans in the Mexican League. In 1937, legendary
Negro leagues' stars
Satchel Paige and "
Cool Papa Bell" left the
Pittsburgh Crawfords to play in Latin America. After playing a year in
Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, Paige and Bell joined the Mexican League. In the 1940s, multi-millionaire
Jorge Pasquel attempted to turn the Mexican League into a first-rate rival to the major leagues in the United States. In 1946, Pasquel traveled north of the border to pursue the top players in the Negro and major leagues. Pasquel signed up close to twenty major leaguers, including such well known names as
Mickey Owen and
Sal Maglie, and a number of Negro league players. Ultimately, Pasquel's dream faded, as financial realities led to decreased salaries and his high-priced foreign stars returned home. Currently, 16 teams divided into North and South Divisions play in the
Mexican Baseball League in a summer season, which ends in a 7-game championship series between the winners of the two divisions. Since 1967, the league has been sanctioned as an
AAA minor league, though no team has an affiliation with any team in the United States. used by the
Mexican Baseball League team
Mariachis de Guadalajara. The stadium hosted Pool D of the first round of the 2017 World Baseball Classic. In the winter, 10 teams play in the
Mexican Pacific League ("Liga Mexicana del Pacífico" or "LMP"), whose winner advances to the
Caribbean Series against other Latin American champions. Although the Mexican League has a longer history, the Mexican Pacific League is the premier baseball league in Mexico today. It is played during the
Major League Baseball (MLB) off-season, so many MLB players also compete in the LMP. The
Mexican Professional Baseball Hall of Fame has inducted 167 players, consisting of 138 Mexicans, 16 Cubans, 12 from the United States, and one Puerto Rican. Distinguished players include MLB stars
Roy Campanella and
Monte Irvin, who played in the Mexican League in the 1940s. Nicknamed "El Bambino Mexicano", or the Mexican Babe Ruth,
Héctor Espino was inducted in the Mexican Hall of Fame in 1988, after playing with
San Luis Potosí, and
Tampico from 1962 to 1984. His 453 home runs remained the record until
Nelson Barrera surpassed him in 2001. Espino still holds the all-time records in many offensive categories. The
Mexico national baseball team represents Mexico in international tournaments, most notably the
World Baseball Classic. In the Bronze Medal Game of the Premier12 tournament in Tokyo, Mexico defeated USA, 3–2, in 10 innings to earn a spot in the 2020 Olympic Games. At the
2023 World Baseball Classic Mexico placed third in the tournament after losing to Japan. The country's
softball team, finished fourth with a 3–2 loss to Canada in the
bronze-medal game at The
Tokyo Olympics. The games were Mexico's first foray into Olympic softball. ==Other team sports==