Campeonato Centroamericano
Organising body | CCCF–NAFC (1959) CCCF (1961) |
---|---|
Founded | 1959 |
Abolished | 1961 |
Region | Central America/North America (1959) Central America/Caribbean (1961) |
Number of teams | 4 or 5 (from 4 or 5 associations) |
Related competitions | CONCACAF Champions Cup |
Most successful club(s) | Olimpia Alajuelense (1 title each) |
The Campeonato Centroamericano (English: Central American Championship) was the international club competition organized by CCCF and NAFC, the two predecessor confederations of CONCACAF, as its top continental football tournament. It was the first official international competition for clubs from North America, Central America and the Caribbean.[1] The tournament was held in 1959 and 1961.
History
[edit]The first tournament was held in 1959 with 4 participating clubs (3 Central American clubs and one North American club). In the second edition, the tournament changed its name to Campeonato Centroamericano y Caribe (English: Central American and Caribbean Championship), it was held in 1961 with 5 participating clubs (4 Central American clubs and one Caribbean club). In 1961, CCCF and NAFC were dissolved after merging to found CONCACAF. The CONCACAF Champions Cup was created and started in 1962.
Qualification
[edit]1959
[edit]Central America
[edit]North America
[edit]1961
[edit]Central America
[edit] Águila
Alajuelense
Comunicaciones
Olimpia
Caribbean
[edit]Editions
[edit]Only 2 editions of the tournament were held (1959 and 1961).
Edition | Champions | Results | Runners-up |
---|---|---|---|
1959 | Olimpia | Round-Robin | Guadalajara |
1961 | Alajuelense | 1–1 2–1 |
Jong Holland |
Performances
[edit]Club | Titles | Runners-up | Winning editions | Runners-up editions |
---|---|---|---|---|
Olimpia | 1 | 0 | 1959 | – |
Alajuelense | 1 | 0 | 1961 | – |
Guadalajara | 0 | 1 | – | 1959 |
Jong Holland | 0 | 1 | – | 1961 |
Rank | Nation | Best result | Best club (Edition) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Honduras | Champions | Olimpia (1959) |
Costa Rica | Champions | Alajuelense (1961) | |
3 | Mexico | Runners-up | Guadalajara (1959) |
Netherlands Antilles | Runners-up | Jong Holland (1961) | |
5 | El Salvador | Third place | Águila (1961) |
6 | Guatemala | Fourth place | Comunicaciones (1961) |
References
[edit]- ^ Lugo, Erik Francisco (23 December 2015). "Championship of Central America and Mexico". IFHSS. Periódico Esto (Ciudad de México). Retrieved 16 June 2016.