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Club de Fútbol Indios de Ciudad Juárez , commonly referred as Indios de Ciudad Juárez or simply Indios , was a Mexican football club. Founded in 2005 when CF Pachuca moved its Pachuca Juniors to Ciudad Juárez , it was promoted to the Primera División de México after the 2007–2008 season, with Pachuca divesting its shares upon promotion. However, the team was relegated back to the Liga de Ascenso following the 2010 Clausura and folded in 2016.

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21-1195: [REDACTED] Look up indio , Indio , or índio in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Indio may refer to: Places [ edit ] Indio, Bovey Tracey , an historic estate in Devon, England Indio, California , a city in Riverside County, California, United States People with the name [ edit ] Indio (musician) , Canadian musician Gordon Peterson Índio, Brazilian football players: Índio (footballer, born 1931) , or Aluísio Francisco da Luz Índio (footballer, born 1958) , or Valdevino José da Silva Índio (footballer, born 1972) , or Francisco Anibio da Silva Costa, indoor footballer, see 2004 FIFA Futsal World Championship Índio (footballer, born 1975) , or Marcos Antônio de Lima Índio (footballer, born 1979) , or José Sátiro do Nascimento Índio (footballer, born 1981) , or Antônio Rogério Silva Oliveira Índio (footballer, born 1996) , or Matheus da Cunha Gomes Matheus Índio,

42-585: A 4–3 count. In the Apertura 2009 tournament, Indios failed to win a single match, managing just six draws in seventeen matches while being outscored 26–7. Indios improved in the Torneo Bicentenario, but their four victories left them far short of safety. On April 25, 2010, Indios said goodbye to the Mexican 1st division with a 2-0 victory win at home over Pumas UNAM . During the opening half of

63-399: A Mexican beer brand Indio (coin) , a Portuguese coin minted from 1499 to 1504 See also [ edit ] El Indio (disambiguation) India (disambiguation) Indian (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Indio . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change

84-399: A Mexican beer brand Indio (coin) , a Portuguese coin minted from 1499 to 1504 See also [ edit ] El Indio (disambiguation) India (disambiguation) Indian (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Indio . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change

105-431: A Nicaraguan professional baseball team Indios de Mayagüez , a Puerto Rican professional baseball team Indios de Oriente , a defunct Venezuelan professional baseball team that played from 1956 to 1964 Indios de Cartagena , a defunct Colombian professional baseball team that played from 1948 to 2017 Indios de Ciudad Juárez , a Mexican association football team Other uses [ edit ] Indio (beer) ,

126-431: A Nicaraguan professional baseball team Indios de Mayagüez , a Puerto Rican professional baseball team Indios de Oriente , a defunct Venezuelan professional baseball team that played from 1956 to 1964 Indios de Cartagena , a defunct Colombian professional baseball team that played from 1948 to 2017 Indios de Ciudad Juárez , a Mexican association football team Other uses [ edit ] Indio (beer) ,

147-608: A big save from the goalkeeper, gets this important fact for the Juarez institution. Their major rival was Dorados de la UACH, for which the classic was called "El Clásico del Norte". Indios UACJ played their home matches at the Estadio Olímpico Benito Juárez in Ciudad Juárez , Chihuahua . The stadium capacity is 23,500 people. It is owned by Universidad Autónoma de Ciudad Juárez , and its surface

168-918: A common name for Matheus Pains , born 1999 Ethnicities [ edit ] Indio, a term referring to the indigenous peoples of the Americas Indio, the Spanish Colonial racial term for the native Austronesian peoples of the East Indies and majority of the Philippines. Indio, the Spanish term for Indian people , and/or people from India Arts, entertainment, and media [ edit ] Films and television [ edit ] Indio (1981 film) , Filipino film by Carlo J. Caparas Indio (1989 film) , Italian film by Anthony M. Dawson Indio (TV series) (2013),

189-613: A common name for Matheus Pains , born 1999 Ethnicities [ edit ] Indio, a term referring to the indigenous peoples of the Americas Indio, the Spanish Colonial racial term for the native Austronesian peoples of the East Indies and majority of the Philippines. Indio, the Spanish term for Indian people , and/or people from India Arts, entertainment, and media [ edit ] Films and television [ edit ] Indio (1981 film) , Filipino film by Carlo J. Caparas Indio (1989 film) , Italian film by Anthony M. Dawson Indio (TV series) (2013),

210-542: A fictional epic set upon the start of the Spanish colonization of the Philippines Music [ edit ] Indio (album) by Australian rock-pop band, Indecent Obsession (1992) "Indio" (song) by Indecent Obsession taken from the album of the same name (1992) "Indio", a song by Brant Bjork from the album Jalamanta (1999) " "Índios" ", song by Legião Urbana taken from the album Dois (1986) Sports [ edit ] Indios del Bóer ,

231-474: A fictional epic set upon the start of the Spanish colonization of the Philippines Music [ edit ] Indio (album) by Australian rock-pop band, Indecent Obsession (1992) "Indio" (song) by Indecent Obsession taken from the album of the same name (1992) "Indio", a song by Brant Bjork from the album Jalamanta (1999) " "Índios" ", song by Legião Urbana taken from the album Dois (1986) Sports [ edit ] Indios del Bóer ,

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252-533: A spot in the promotion series. León took the Clausura 2008 title, setting up a two-legged "Final de Ascenso" to decide promotion. Indios won the first leg, 1–0, at home on May 22 and earned a 2–2 draw at León on May 25, giving them a 3–2 aggregate victory and promotion to the first division. The club's first season in the first division began with the Apertura 2008 tournament. Indios de Ciudad Juárez started

273-512: The 2010–11 Liga de Ascenso season , Juárez finished second to Club Tijuana during the classification phase. However, they were upset by Albinegros de Orizaba in the playoffs. In the Clausura season, they finished tenth and outside of playoff contention. Indios finished 13th and eight points out of the playoffs during their final season. At the end of the 2011 season, the club had many financial problems. Femexfut announced in December 2011 that

294-686: The UACJ , announced the integrated to the Segunda División de México of Mexican Soccer as Club de Fútbol Indios de la UACJ. Their official match was on August 18 with a 1–3 loss to Coras de Tepic correspond to Group 1 Liga Premier, which currently plays. On May 10, 2014, Indios UACJ won the Liguilla de Copa Clausura 2014 for the first time and also making history. Indios UACJ defeated Irapuato in Final Clausura 2014 in penalty kicks with

315-565: The Apertura 2008 poorly, losing their first four matches. After manager Sergio Orduna was fired, Hector Eugui took over as manager and tied his first game with Toluca . Due to Mexico's unique system of relegation, Indios were on the brink of being relegated during the Clausura 2009 tournament despite having a winning season and qualifying as 7th place for the playoffs. In the playoffs, Indios stunned 2nd-seeded, defending champion Toluca, 1–0 on aggregate before falling to top-seeded Pachuca by

336-466: The Primera División A Indios enjoyed much success. In Clausura 2006, Indios played in the league final and lost to Querétaro F.C. on penalty kicks, narrowly missing promotion. In Apertura 2006, Indios led a part of the competition with Jair García as the second-best scorer in the league. However, Indios lost in the quarterfinals. Puebla would go on to beat Petroleros de Salamanca for

357-461: The club was being disbanded. After the disaffiliation of Club Indios de Ciudad Juarez, Ciudad Juárez was left without a professional soccer team. After failed attempts to maintain a team of professional soccer for this border was the UACJ , which assumed that leadership, joining other universities that have professional football teams. Therefore, in May 2012, Francisco Javier Sánchez Carlos, rector of

378-1001: The 💕 [REDACTED] Look up indio , Indio , or índio in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Indio may refer to: Places [ edit ] Indio, Bovey Tracey , an historic estate in Devon, England Indio, California , a city in Riverside County, California, United States People with the name [ edit ] Indio (musician) , Canadian musician Gordon Peterson Índio, Brazilian football players: Índio (footballer, born 1931) , or Aluísio Francisco da Luz Índio (footballer, born 1958) , or Valdevino José da Silva Índio (footballer, born 1972) , or Francisco Anibio da Silva Costa, indoor footballer, see 2004 FIFA Futsal World Championship Índio (footballer, born 1975) , or Marcos Antônio de Lima Índio (footballer, born 1979) , or José Sátiro do Nascimento Índio (footballer, born 1981) , or Antônio Rogério Silva Oliveira Índio (footballer, born 1996) , or Matheus da Cunha Gomes Matheus Índio,

399-443: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Indio&oldid=1235704019 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Place name disambiguation pages Human name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages indio From Misplaced Pages,

420-559: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Indio&oldid=1235704019 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Place name disambiguation pages Human name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Indios de Ciudad Ju%C3%A1rez During its time in Mexico's second-tier football league,

441-525: The title and later would win promotion to the first division with a victory over Dorados . On December 12, 2007, the first leg of the Apertura 2007 final took place in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, where Indios defeated Dorados, 3–0. The second leg took place December 15, 2007, in Culiacán, Sinaloa, where Indios defeated Dorados 4-0. This game made Indios league champions for the first time and clinched

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