C.F. La Piedad
In-game article clicks load inline without leaving the challenge.
Club de Fútbol La Piedad is a Mexican football club based in La Piedad, Michoacán. The club currently plays in the Liga Premier de Ascenso de México in the Liga Premier – Serie A, the third division level of Mexican football. Reboceros was founded in 1951 by football players from "Perros Bravos" neighborhood, most of them were craftsman working with leather and textile.
History
First years of the club
The club was founded in 1951 in La Piedad, Michoacán. In 1952, the team won the Segunda División tournament and was promoted to the Primera División de México, however, the squad was relegated in 1953. After 1953 relegation, the team would spend several years playing in the Segunda División de México and the Primera División 'A' de México. In 2001, the club won the Verano 2001 championship defeating Toros Neza. Later, La Piedad won the promotion to the Primera División by winning against Gallos de Aguascalientes in the promotion playoff.
Return to Primera División and first disappearance of the club
La Piedad returned to the Primera División in the Invierno 2001 tournament, the team finished in 18th place with 19 points. In the Verano 2002 tournament, La Piedad finished the regular season in the first place of the general table. Being eliminated by Pumas UNAM in the quarterfinals, the team was managed by Víctor Manuel Vucetich.
During the season, the team had to face criticism from own players, rival teams and the media, which accused the club and the city of not having the facilities or adequate urban infrastructure for the Primera División. Finally, the team was moved from La Piedad to the city of Querétaro, Querétaro and was renamed as Gallos Blancos de Querétaro.
The original La Piedad franchise disappeared in 2004, after the Federación Mexicana de Fútbol (FMF) decided to reduce the number of participants in the Primera División to 18 clubs. The FMF bought the Gallos Blancos franchise for the lack of transparency regarding the origin of its financial resources and decided to disappear it.
Ascenso MX teams
After original La Piedad team was moved to the city of Querétaro, a new franchise arrived to the city of La Piedad: Tampico Madero adopted the name and colors of Reboceros on Invierno 2002 tournament. The new La Piedad franchise arrived to the tournament final against Irapuato, finally, Irapuato won the championship, and in January 2003, La Piedad was moved to Celaya, Guanajuato and was renamed as Cajeteros del Celaya.
In 2004, Guadalajara decided to move its reserve squad to La Piedad and was named as Chivas La Piedad. However, the team only played for one season in the city, because they did not receive the support of local fans. In July 2005, the franchise was moved to Tepic, Nayarit.
In June 2009, an Ascenso MX football club from the neighboring state of Guanajuato, Petroleros de Salamanca, was relocated to La Piedad. The club changed its name to Club de Fútbol La Piedad, and four years later the club was promoted to the Primera División de México after defeating Neza F.C. in a promotion play-off. The club had asked permission to relocate from La Piedad before the new season began. The club was subsequently renamed when Fidel Kuri Grajales, the owner from Veracruz decided to liquidate the club to use its Primera División license for their Ascenso MX team Tiburones Rojos de Veracruz.
Segunda División teams
La Piedad maintained a reserve team in Silao, Guanajuato, this team played in Liga de Nuevos Talentos, the Reboceritos de La Piedad, this squad was relocated in La Piedad and became the main team in July 2013.
In June 2016, La Piedad bought an expansion place in the Liga Premier de Ascenso. The new team, officially called Club de Fútbol Reboceros was the product of an alliance between the City Council and football players Flavio and Duilio Davino.
In 2017, the Davino brothers sold their participation in the club, which was acquired by José Trinidad Melgoza, a local businessman. In the Clausura 2018, La Piedad was a finalist of the championship, being defeated by Loros UdeC.
In June 2018, new members arrived to the board that administers the club, the brothers Carlos Adrián and Ramón Morales. Melgoza left the direction and took his project to Real Zamora, a team from the same region as La Piedad.
Under the new directive, the team began to suffer several economic and financial problems, and finally in December 2018, Melgoza returned to Reboceros acquiring 90% of the team, the remaining 10% of the shares belong to the city of La Piedad. With the second stage of Melgoza, Reboceros de La Piedad and Real Zamora went to share ownership, for this reason a collaboration between both clubs began, which consists mainly of the exchange of players and staff of the two teams with the aim of creating a project to promote regional football.
In July 2020, Melgoza sold the franchise to Promotora Deportiva Valladolid, a group of businessmen headed by Heriberto Morales and José Alfredo Pérez Ferrer. Pérez Ferrer was appointed as President of the club, while Claudio da Silva was elected as Vice President. La Piedad's project was merged with one that intended to bring a team to Morelia after the departure of Monarcas Morelia to Mazatlán, Sinaloa, however, upon winning another offer, it was decided to combine both. For this reason, Marco Antonio Figueroa and Carlos Bustos were chosen as sports advisers for La Piedad.
In May 2022, Martín Gonzáles became the majority shareholder and president of the team. The new project focused on improving the club's financial situation and having a closer relationship with the local population.
Honours
National
- Ascenso MX: (2)
Verano 2001, Apertura 2012
- Campeon de Ascenso: (2)
2001-02, 2012–13
1951-1952
- Segunda División "B": (2)
1984-1985, 1993-1994
Current squad
First-team squad
As of January 10, 2026
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
| No. | Pos. | Nation | Player |
|---|---|---|---|
| No. Pos. Nation Player 1 GK MEX Jonathan Solís 2 DF MEX Ángel Corrales 3 DF USA Axel Alejandre 4 DF MEX Mizael Ponce 5 DF MEX Édgar Hernández 6 DF MEX Axel Díaz 7 MF MEX Néstor Bucio 9 FW MEX Jorge Lumbreras 11 MF MEX Hugo Román 13 DF MEX Érick Ramírez 15 MF MEX César Vega 16 MF MEX Sergio Ochoa 17 MF MEX Édgar Rodríguez 18 GK MEX Andrés Ramírez 19 FW MEX Josué Muñoz | No. Pos. Nation Player 20 FW MEX Ricardo Meléndez 21 DF MEX Isaac Calderón 22 GK MEX Cristian Flores 23 DF MEX César Quiróz 24 FW MEX Christopher Cortés 25 FW MEX Rafael Aranda 26 GK MEX Mario Rodríguez 28 MF MEX Sergio Medel 30 GK MEX Rubén Zavala 31 DF MEX Édgar Zavala 33 DF MEX Jesús Magaña 35 DF USA Axel Casasola 37 FW USA Daniel Fuentes 40 DF USA Izhaid Gámez 44 DF MEX Kevin Pérez | ||
| 1 | GK | MEX | Jonathan Solís |
| 2 | DF | MEX | Ángel Corrales |
| 3 | DF | USA | Axel Alejandre |
| 4 | DF | MEX | Mizael Ponce |
| 5 | DF | MEX | Édgar Hernández |
| 6 | DF | MEX | Axel Díaz |
| 7 | MF | MEX | Néstor Bucio |
| 9 | FW | MEX | Jorge Lumbreras |
| 11 | MF | MEX | Hugo Román |
| 13 | DF | MEX | Érick Ramírez |
| 15 | MF | MEX | César Vega |
| 16 | MF | MEX | Sergio Ochoa |
| 17 | MF | MEX | Édgar Rodríguez |
| 18 | GK | MEX | Andrés Ramírez |
| 19 | FW | MEX | Josué Muñoz |
| No. | Pos. | Nation | Player |
| 20 | FW | MEX | Ricardo Meléndez |
| 21 | DF | MEX | Isaac Calderón |
| 22 | GK | MEX | Cristian Flores |
| 23 | DF | MEX | César Quiróz |
| 24 | FW | MEX | Christopher Cortés |
| 25 | FW | MEX | Rafael Aranda |
| 26 | GK | MEX | Mario Rodríguez |
| 28 | MF | MEX | Sergio Medel |
| 30 | GK | MEX | Rubén Zavala |
| 31 | DF | MEX | Édgar Zavala |
| 33 | DF | MEX | Jesús Magaña |
| 35 | DF | USA | Axel Casasola |
| 37 | FW | USA | Daniel Fuentes |
| 40 | DF | USA | Izhaid Gámez |
| 44 | DF | MEX | Kevin Pérez |
Notable players
- Brazil Claudinho da Silva
- Chile Felipe Flores
- Costa Rica Rolando Fonseca
- Costa Rica Óscar Emilio Rojas
- Ecuador Iván Hurtado
- Mexico Francisco Fonseca
- Mexico Rafael Medina
- Mexico Christian Patiño
- Uruguay Daniel Rosello
- Mexico Ramon Morales
- Mexico Arturo Magaña
Managers
- Uruguay Jorge Enrique Correa (July 2010–Aug 10)
- Mexico Antonio Ascencio Meza (Sept 2010–Dec 10)
- Mexico Marco Trejo (Jan 2011–March 11)
- Mexico Cristóbal Ortega (July 2011–May 13)
External links
- (archived)