Campeonato Centroamericano

Campeonato Centroamericano/Campeonato Centroamericano y Caribe
Organising bodyCCCFNAFC (1959)
CCCF (1961)
Founded1959 (1959)
Abolished1961 (1961)
RegionCentral America/North America (1959)
Central America/Caribbean (1961)
Number of teams4 or 5 (from 4 or 5 associations)
Related competitionsCONCACAF Champions Cup
Most successful club(s) Olimpia
Alajuelense
(1 title each)

The Campeonato Centroamericano (English: Central American Championship) was an international club competition organized by CCCF and NAFC, the two predecessor confederations of CONCACAF, as its top regional 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

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

1959

Central America

FAS
Alajuelense
Olimpia

North America

Guadalajara

1961

Central America

Águila
Alajuelense
Comunicaciones
Olimpia

Caribbean

Jong Holland

Results

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

Performance by club
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
Performance by nation
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)

See also

References

  1. ^ Lugo, Erik Francisco (23 December 2015). "Championship of Central America and Mexico". IFHSS. Periódico Esto (Ciudad de México). Retrieved 16 June 2016.