Ecuadorian Serie A






















































Liga PRO Ecuador
Ligaproecuatoriana.jpg
Founded 1957; 62 years ago (1957)
Country Ecuador
Confederation CONMEBOL
Number of teams 16
Level on pyramid 1

Relegation to
Serie B
International cup(s)
Copa Libertadores
Copa Sudamericana
Current champions
LDU Quito (11th title)
Most championships
Barcelona (15 titles)
Top goalscorer
Ermen Benítez (191)
Website Official webpage

2019 Serie A season

The Primera Categoría Serie A, simply known as the Serie A or the Primera A, is a professional football league in Ecuador. At the top of the Ecuadorian football league system, it is the country's premier football competition. Contested by twelve clubs, it operates a system of promotion and relegation with the Serie B, the lower level of the Primera Categoría. The season runs from February to December and is usually contested in multiple stages. It is sponsored by beer company Pilsener and is officially known as the Copa Pilsener Serie A.


While initially not a league, the Serie A has its roots in the national championship between the top teams of Ecuador's two regional leagues. For the first nine editions, teams from Guayaquil and Quito qualified to the competition through their professional regional leagues. It abandoned the qualification format to form a proper league in 1967. Since the first edition in 1957, the tournament has been held annually (except 1958 and 1959); the 2005 season had two champions. It was ranked by IFFHS as the 13th strongest football league in the world for 2011, and the 5th strongest in South America.[1]


Eight different teams have been crowned Ecuadorian champions, but four teams have a combined total of 46 championships. The most successful club is Barcelona with fifteen titles. The defending champion is LDU Quito.




Contents






  • 1 Format


  • 2 History


  • 3 Clubs


  • 4 Champions by year


  • 5 Titles by club


    • 5.1 Titles by city




  • 6 All-time top goalscorers


  • 7 See also


  • 8 References


  • 9 External links





Format


The format for the Serie A national championship changes consistently. The most common format is a two-stage tournament, in which teams qualify to a mini-league (Spanish: Liguilla) to determine the champion. The current format was introduced for the 2010 season and consists of three stages. The First and Second Stages each follow the double round-robin format. The winners of each stage play against each other in the Third Stage for the championship. A third-place match also takes place in the Third Stage between the next two-best teams in the aggregate table. If the same team wins both the First and Second Stage, they are automatically the champion. In this case, the second and third best teams in the aggregate table play against each other for runner-up.


Relegation takes place after the Second Stage and is determined using an aggregate table of the first two stages. As well as playing to win the championship and avoid relegation teams also compete for places in the following season's Copa Libertadores and Copa Sudamericana.



History


All football in Ecuador was played at amateur level until 1950 when the Guayas Football Association (Spanish: Asociación de Fútbol del Guayas [AFG]) turned professional and held its first professional tournament for affiliated clubs (for clubs in Guayaquil). The Professional Football Championship of Guayaquil (Spanish: Campeonato Professional de Fútbol de Guayaquil) was first held in 1951 and was won by Río Guayas. In 1954, the football association in Pichincha (current the Asociación de Fútbol No Amatur de Pichincha [AFNA]) decided to turn professional and hold a professional tournament of their own for their affiliated clubs (for clubs in Quito & Ambato). The first Inter-Andean Professional Championship (Spanish: Campeonato Professional Interandino) was held in 1954 and was won by LDU Quito.


The two tournaments were the top-level football leagues in Ecuador, but the champion of each could not claim to be the national champion. That changed in 1957 when a national football tournament was organized for the winners the two leagues. The first Ecuadorian Football Championship was contested between the champion and runner-up of the 1957 Campeonato Professional de Fútbol de Guayaquil of (Emelec & Barcelona, respectively) and the champion and runner-up of the 1957 Campeonato Professional Interandino (Deportivo Quito and Aucas, respectively). Emelec won the tournament and became the first national champions of football in Ecuador.


No championship was held in 1958 and 1959. The tournament returned in 1960 using the same format as in 1957. This time the field grew from four teams to eight teams. This format continued until 1967 when a number of changes occurred: 1) the regional tournaments were discontinued after the 1967 season; 2) teams contesting the national championship from 1968 onwards were now part of the Primera Categoría; and 3) a second level of Ecuadorian football (Segunda Categoría) was put into play and a system of relegation and promotion began in 1967.


In 1971, the Primera Categoría was divided into two Series: Serie A & Serie B. Serie A was to be the top level of club football, while Serie B was the second, and Segunda the third. Between, 1983–1988, Serie B was merged into the Segunda, but the Serie A continued. Serie B was brought back in 1989, and has stayed as the second level since.


In 2005, the Campeonato Ecuatoriano was divided into two tournaments to crown two champions in one year. The two tournaments were called Apertura and Clausura. The tournament returned to its year-long format in 2006.



Clubs


A total of 55 clubs have competed in the Serie A since the first season in 1957. Although Barcelona is the only club to have never been relegated, no club has ever played in every season. This anomaly is due to the fact that for the 1964 competition, teams from Guayaquil (including Barcelona and Emelec) declined to participate in the national championship.


The following sixteen clubs will compete in the Serie A during the 2019 season.




Ecuadorian Serie A is located in Ecuador

Ambato

Ambato



Barcelona

Barcelona



Delfín

Delfín



Deportivo Cuenca

Deportivo Cuenca



Emelec

Emelec



Fuerza Amarilla

Fuerza Amarilla



Guayaquil City

Guayaquil City



Independiente del Valle

Independiente del Valle



Olmedo

Olmedo



Quito

Quito



Quito teams: América Aucas El Nacional LDU Quito Universidad Católica Ambato teams: Macará Mushuc Runa Técnico Universitario

Quito teams:
América
Aucas
El Nacional
LDU Quito
Universidad Católica
Ambato teams:
Macará
Mushuc Runa
Técnico Universitario




Locations of the 2019 Serie A teams.









































































































Club
City
Stadium
Capacity

América de Quito

Quito

Olímpico Atahualpa
35,258

Aucas

Quito

Estadio Gonzalo Pozo Ripalda
21,689

Barcelona

Guayaquil

Monumental Banco Pichincha
57,267

Delfín

Manta

Jocay
17,834

Deportivo Cuenca

Cuenca

Alejandro Serrano Aguilar Banco del Austro
18,549

El Nacional

Quito

Olímpico Atahualpa
35,258

Emelec

Guayaquil

Arena Banco del Pacífico
38,963

Fuerza Amarilla

Machala

9 de Mayo
16,456

Guayaquil City

Guayaquil

Christian Benítez Betancourt
10,152

Independiente del Valle

Sangolquí

Rumiñahui
7,233

LDU Quito

Quito

Rodrigo Paz Delgado
41,575

Macará

Ambato

Bellavista
16,467

Mushuc Runa

Ambato

Mushuc Runa
6,000

Olmedo

Riobamba

Olímpico
7,233

Técnico Universitario

Ambato

Bellavista
18,000

Universidad Católica

Quito

Olímpico Atahualpa
35,258


Champions by year


Barcelona has 15 championships, followed by Emelec with 14 titles, El Nacional with 13, LDU Quito with 11 titles, Deportivo Quito with 5 titles, and Deportivo Cuenca, Olmedo, and Everest with one title each. All the clubs that have won multiple titles have won back-to-back titles at least once. El Nacional and Emelec are the only two clubs to have won three titles in a row, El Nacional has done twice from 1976–1978 and 1982–1984, and C.S. Emelec from 2013-2015.






























































































































































































































































































































































































































































Season
Champion (Title count)
Runner-up
Third place
Leading goalscorer(s)[2]

1957

Emelec (1)

Barcelona

Deportivo Quito

Ecuador Simón Cañarte (Barcelona; 4 goals)
1958

No championship held
1959

No championship held

1960

Barcelona (1)

Emelec

Patria

Ecuador Enrique Cantos (Barcelona; 8 goals)

1961

Emelec (2)

Patria

Everest

Ecuador Galo Pinto (Everest; 12 goals)

1962

Everest (1)

Barcelona

Emelec

Brazil Iris López (Barcelona; 9 goals)

1963

Barcelona (2)

Emelec

Deportivo Quito

Ecuador Carlos Alberto Raffo (Emelec; 4 goals)

1964

Deportivo Quito (1)

El Nacional

LDU Quito

Ecuador Jorge Valencia (América (M); 8 goals)

1965

Emelec (3)

9 de Octubre

Barcelona

Brazil Helio Cruz (Barcelona; 8 goals)

1966

Barcelona (3)

Emelec

Politécnico

Brazil Pio Coutinho (LDU Quito; 13 goals)

1967

El Nacional (1)

Emelec

Barcelona

Ecuador Tom Rodríguez (El Nacional; 16 goals)

1968

Deportivo Quito (2)

Barcelona

Emelec

Uruguay Víctor Battaini (Deportivo Quito; 19 goals)

1969

LDU Quito (1)

América (Q)

Aucas

Uruguay Francisco Bertocchi (LDU Quito; 26 goals)

1970

Barcelona (4)

Emelec

América (Q)

Ecuador Rómulo Dudar Mina (Macará; 19 goals)

1971

Barcelona (5)

América (Q)

Emelec

Paraguay Alfonso Obregón (LDU Portoviejo; 18 goals)

1972

Emelec (4)

El Nacional

Barcelona

Brazil Nelsinho (Barcelona; 24 goals)

1973

El Nacional (2)

Universidad Católica

Barcelona

Uruguay Ángel Marín (América (Q); 18 goals)

1974

LDU Quito (2)

El Nacional

Deportivo Cuenca

Argentina Ángel Liciardi (Deportivo Cuenca; 19 goals)

1975

LDU Quito (3)

Deportivo Cuenca

Aucas

Argentina Ángel Liciardi (Deportivo Cuenca; 36 goals)

1976

El Nacional (3)

Deportivo Cuenca

Emelec

Argentina Ángel Liciardi (Deportivo Cuenca; 19 goals)

1977

El Nacional (4)

LDU Quito

Universidad Católica

Ecuador Fabián Paz y Miño (El Nacional; 27 goals)

1978

El Nacional (5)

Técnico Universitario

Emelec

Argentina Juan José Pérez (LDU Portoviejo; 24 goals)

1979

Emelec (5)

Universidad Católica

Manta Sport

Argentina Carlos Miori (Emelec; 26 goals)

1980

Barcelona (6)

Técnico Universitario

Universidad Católica

Argentina Miguel Gutíerrez (América (Q); 26 goals)

1981

Barcelona (7)

LDU Quito

El Nacional

Brazil Paulo César (LDU Quito; 25 goals)

1982

El Nacional (6)

Barcelona

LDU Portoviejo

Ecuador José Villafuerte (El Nacional; 25 goals)

1983

El Nacional (7)

9 de Octubre

Barcelona

Brazil Paulo César (Barcelona; 28 goals)

1984

El Nacional (8)

9 de Octubre

LDU Quito

Ecuador Sergio Saucedo (Deportivo Quito; 25 goals)

1985

Barcelona (8)

Deportivo Quito

Filanbanco

Uruguay Juan Carlos de Lima (Universidad Católica; 24 goals)
Brazil Guga (Esmeraldas Petrolero; 24 goals)

1986

El Nacional (9)

Barcelona

Técnico Universitario

Uruguay Juan Carlos de Lima (Deportivo Quito; 23 goals)

1987

Barcelona (9)

Filanbanco

Audaz Octubrino

Ecuador Ermen Benitez (El Nacional; 24 goals)
Ecuador Hamilton Cuvi (Filanbanco; 24 goals)
Uruguay Waldemar Victorino (LDU Portoviejo; 24 goals)

1988

Emelec (6)

Deportivo Quito

No third-place awarded

Brazil Janio Pinto (LDU Quito; 18 goals)

1989

Barcelona (10)

Emelec

Deportivo Quito

Ecuador Ermen Benítez (El Nacional; 18 goals)

1990

LDU Quito (4)

Barcelona

Emelec

Ecuador Ermen Benítez (El Nacional; 33 goals)

1991

Barcelona (11)

Valdez

El Nacional

Uruguay Pedro Varela (Delfín; 24 goals)

1992

El Nacional (10)

Barcelona

Emelec

Ecuador Carlos Muñoz (Barcelona; 19 goals)

1993

Emelec (7)

Barcelona

El Nacional

Ecuador Diego Herrera (LDU Quito; 21 goals)

1994

Emelec (8)

El Nacional

Barcelona

Ecuador Manuel Uquillas (ESPOLI; 25 goals)

1995

Barcelona (12)

ESPOLI

El Nacional

Ecuador Manuel Uquillas (Barcelona; 24 goals)

1996

El Nacional (11)

Emelec

Barcelona

Ecuador Ariel Graziani (Emelec; 28 goals)

1997

Barcelona (13)

Deportivo Quito

Emelec

Ecuador Ariel Graziani (Emelec; 24 goals)

1998

LDU Quito (5)

Emelec

No third-place awarded

Ecuador Iván Kaviedes (Emelec; 43 goals)

1999

LDU Quito (6)

El Nacional

Emelec

Argentina Christian Botero (Macará; 25 goals)

2000

Olmedo (1)

El Nacional

Emelec

Argentina Alejandro Kenig (Emelec; 25 goals)

2001

Emelec (9)

El Nacional

Olmedo

Ecuador Carlos Juárez (Emelec; 17 goals)

2002

Emelec (10)

Barcelona

El Nacional

Argentina Christian Carnero (Deportivo Quito; 26 goals)

2003

LDU Quito (7)

Barcelona

El Nacional

Ecuador Ariel Graziani (Barcelona; 23 goals)

2004

Deportivo Cuenca (1)

Olmedo

LDU Quito

Ecuador Ebelio Ordóñez (El Nacional; 24 goals)

2005

A

LDU Quito (8)

Barcelona

No third-place awarded

Colombia Wilson Segura (LDU Loja; 21 goals)

C

El Nacional (12)

Deportivo Cuenca

LDU Quito

Colombia Omar Guerra (Aucas; 21 goals)

2006

El Nacional (13)

Emelec

LDU Quito

Argentina Luis Miguel Escalada (Emelec; 29 goals)

2007

LDU Quito (9)

Deportivo Cuenca

Olmedo

Argentina Juan Carlos Ferreyra (Deportivo Cuenca; 17 goals)

2008

Deportivo Quito (3)

LDU Quito

Deportivo Cuenca

Ecuador Pablo Palacios (Barcelona; 20 goals)

2009

Deportivo Quito (4)

Deportivo Cuenca

Emelec

Argentina Claudio Bieler (LDU Quito; 22 goals)

2010

LDU Quito (10)

Emelec

Deportivo Quito

Ecuador Jaime Ayoví (Emelec; 23 goals)

2011

Deportivo Quito (5)

Emelec

El Nacional

Ecuador Narciso Mina (Independiente José Terán; 28 goals)

2012

Barcelona (14)

Emelec

LDU Quito

Ecuador Narciso Mina (Barcelona; 30 goals)

2013

Emelec (11)

Independiente del Valle

Deportivo Quito

Argentina Federico Nieto (Deportivo Quito; 29 goals)

2014

Emelec (12)

Barcelona

Independiente del Valle

Ecuador Armando Wila (Universidad Católica; 20 goals)

2015

Emelec (13)

LDU Quito

Independiente del Valle

Ecuador Miller Bolaños (Emelec; 25 goals)

2016

Barcelona (15)

Emelec

El Nacional

Argentina Maximiliano Barreiro (Delfín; 23 goals)

2017

Emelec (14)

Delfín

Independiente del Valle

Argentina Hernán Barcos (LDU Quito; 21 goals)

2018

LDU Quito (11)

Emelec

Barcelona

Ecuador Jhon Cifuente (Universidad Católica; 37 goals)


Titles by club


































































Club
Winners
Runners-up
Winning years
Runners-up years

Barcelona
15
12

1960, 1963, 1966, 1970, 1971, 1980, 1981, 1985, 1987, 1989, 1991, 1995, 1997, 2012, 2016

1957, 1962, 1968, 1982, 1986, 1990, 1992, 1993, 2002, 2003, 2005 Apertura, 2014

Emelec
14
14

1957, 1961, 1965, 1972, 1979, 1988, 1993, 1994, 2001, 2002, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2017

1960, 1963, 1966, 1967, 1970, 1989, 1996, 1998, 2006, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2016, 2018

El Nacional
13
7

1967, 1973, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1986, 1992, 1996, 2005 Clausura, 2006

1964, 1972, 1974, 1994, 1999, 2000, 2001

LDU Quito
11
4

1969, 1974, 1975, 1990, 1998, 1999, 2003, 2005 Apertura, 2007, 2010, 2018

1977, 1981, 2008, 2015

Deportivo Quito
5
3

1964, 1968, 2008, 2009, 2011

1985, 1988, 1997

Deportivo Cuenca
1
5

2004

1975, 1976, 2005 Clausura, 2007, 2009

Olmedo
1
1

2000

2004

Everest
1
0

1962



Titles by city




























City
Nº of titles
Clubs
Guayaquil 30
Barcelona (15), Emelec (14), Everest (1)
Quito 29
El Nacional (13), LDU Quito (11), Deportivo Quito (5)
Cuenca 1
Deportivo Cuenca (1)
Riobamba 1
Olmedo (1)


All-time top goalscorers


Ecuadorian Ermen Benítez is the league's all-time top-scorer, having scored 191 goals over 25 season. He is also holds the record for scoring the most goals for one team. The top active goalscorer is Ebelio Ordóñez.[3]















































































































Rank Player Club(s) Years Goals Total goals
1
Ecuador Ermen Benítez
El Nacional 1980–90 154 191
Barcelona 1991–92 19
LDU Quito 1993 1
Green Cross 1994 12
LDU Portoviejo 1995 5
2
Ecuador Jorge Ron
El Nacional 1972–79 94 181
Universidad Católica 1980–84 73
Macará 1986 6
Aucas 1987 8
3
Ecuador Ebelio Ordóñez
Técnico Universitario 1996 13 159
El Nacional 1997–2004; 2006–07 137
Emelec 2005 0
Deportivo Quito 2008; 2009 9
4
Argentina Ángel Liciardi
Emelec 1970–71 8 154
Deportivo Cuenca 1972; 1974–77 132
Barcelona 1978 14
5
Ecuador Fabián Paz y Miño
El Nacional 1972–88 153 153


See also



  • Ecuadorian Football Federation

  • Ecuadorian football league system

  • Football in Ecuador

  • List of football clubs in Ecuador



References





  1. ^ "The strongest National League in the World 2012". IFFHS. Retrieved January 11, 2011..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ Andrés, Juan Pablo; Espinoza Añazco, Fernando (January 29, 2010). "Ecuador - List of Topscorers". website. RSSSF. Retrieved November 27, 2010.


  3. ^ Espinoza Añazco, Fernando (January 29, 2010). "Ecuador - List of All-Time Topscorers 1957-2009". RSSSF. Retrieved November 6, 2010.




External links




  • Official webpage (in Spanish)

  • Serie A on RSSSF











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