List of Toluca FC records and statistics

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José Saturnino Cardozo, Toluca's all-time leading scorer with 258 goals.[1]

Toluca FC is a Mexican professional football club based in Toluca, State of Mexico, competing in Liga MX, Mexico's top division. The club is one of the most successful in Mexican football, having won twelve Liga MX titles, the second highest total in the competition's history, along with two Copa MX titles, five Campeón de Campeones, and three CONCACAF Champions Cup titles. Nine Toluca players have finished as the Liga MX top scorer on sixteen occasions, more than any other club in Liga MX history, with José Saturnino Cardozo leading the distinction with four top scorer titles in the league and also holding the club record of 258 goals. Toluca players have also claimed top scorer titles in the Liga MX playoffs, the Copa MX, and the CONCACAF Champions Cup.

Honours

Toluca FC is a professional football club competing in Liga MX, Mexico's top division, and one of the most successful clubs in Mexican football with 22 official titles across multiple domestic and international competitions.[2][3]

Domestic

In domestic football, Toluca has twelve Liga MX titles, ranking second among all Mexican clubs behind América and level with Guadalajara,[4] along with two Copa MX titles, and five Campeón de Campeones.[5] In the second division, the club finished as runners-up in the Copa MX equivalent before winning the title that secured their promotion to the top flight in 1953,[6][7] from which they have never been relegated.[8]

The club has experienced three dominant periods in domestic football: the mid-to-late 1960s, when Toluca won back-to-back league and cup titles under Ignacio Trelles;[9] the late 1990s and early 2000s, when the club claimed four league titles under Enrique Meza and subsequent coaches;[10][11] and the mid-2020s, when Toluca again won consecutive league titles and multiple cups under Antonio Mohamed.[12]

Type Competition Titles Winning years Runners-up Source
Top-tier division Primera División/Liga MX 12 1966–67, 1967–68, 1974–75, Verano 1998, Verano 1999, Verano 2000, Apertura 2002, Apertura 2005, Apertura 2008, Bicentenario 2010, Clausura 2025, Apertura 2025 1956–57, 1957–58, 1970–71, Invierno 2000, Apertura 2006, Apertura 2012, Clausura 2018, Apertura 2022 [13]
Copa México/Copa MX 2 1955–56, 1988–89 1960–61, Clausura 2018 [14]
Campeón de Campeones 5 1967, 1968, 2003, 2006, 2025 1956, 1975, 1989 [15]
Second-tier division Segunda División 1 1952–53 [16]
Copa México de la Segunda División 0 1951–52 [6]
Campeón de Campeones de la Segunda División 1 1953 [17]

International

Toluca won their first international title with the 1968 CONCACAF Champions' Cup, claimed without playing a final after the other two semi-finalists were disqualified from the competition, leaving Toluca to be declared champions by default.[18] The title earned them qualification to the Copa Interamericana, a former tournament contested between the winners of the CONCACAF Champions' Cup and the Copa Libertadores.[19][20]

In the 1969 Copa Interamericana, the cup's first edition, Toluca faced the 1968 Copa Libertadores champions Estudiantes de La Plata of Argentina.[21][22] After losing the first leg and winning the second one, both teams tied on aggregate before going to a third leg where where Estudiantes defeated Toluca to claim the title.[23] Toluca has also won the CONCACAF Champions' Cup in 2003 and 2026, and have finished runners-up on four occasions.[24]

Type Competition Titles Winning years Runners-up Source
Intercontinental CONCACAFCONMEBOL Copa Interamericana 0 1969 [23]

Continental CONCACAF

CONCACAF Champions Cup/Champions League 3 1968, 2003, 2026 1998, 2006, 2013–14 [24]

Subregional

The Campeones Cup is an exhibition match contested between the MLS Cup champion and the winner of the Campeón de Campeones,[25] an annual match between that season's two Liga MX tournament champions.[26] Toluca competed in its 2025 edition, having won the 2025 Campeón de Campeones. In the 2025 Campeones Cup, they faced the LA Galaxy, winners of the 2024 MLS Cup,[27] whom they defeated 2–3.[28]

Type Competition Titles Winning years Runners-up Source
North America MLS

Liga MX

Campeones Cup 1 2025 [29]

Top goalscorers

Club

Toluca's all-time leading scorer is Paraguayan forward José Saturnino Cardozo, who played for the club from 1994 to 2005, scoring 258 goals in total. Of these, 249 came in Liga MX competition, comprising 206 in the regular season and 43 in the liguilla (playoffs). Cardozo ranks among the top five scorers in Liga MX history.[30] Cardozo is followed by Mexican forward Vicente Pereda,[31] who spent his entire career at Toluca from 1960 to 1977,[32] scoring 119 goals.[33]

The third top goalscorer is Uruguayan forward Vicente Sánchez, who played alongside Cardozo.[31][34] Sánchez played from 2001 to 2008 in Toluca and scored 98 goals.[34] Mexican forward José Manuel Abundis, who also played alongside Cardozo,[35] is the fourth top goalscorer with 84 goals.[31] He is tied in fourth place with 84 goals with Uruguayan forward Carlos María Morales.[36]

The fifth all-time leading scorer for Toluca is Mexican forward Carlos Carús, who scored 77 goals for the club between 1953 and 1963.[37][38] He is followed by Sinha, a Brazilian-born Mexican midfielder who served as a playmaker, with 71 goals.[38][39] Sinha joined Toluca in 1999 and spent about 15 years with the club.[40] Next is Chilean forward Héctor Mancilla,[38] who scored 64 goals during his time at the club from 2008 to 2010.[41][42]

The only active player in the top ten is Portuguese forward Paulinho,[43] who joined Toluca in 2024 and has scored 62 goals as of May 2026,[38][44] He is level with Uruguayan midfielder Juan Carlos Paz, who scored 62 goals for the club between 1978 and 1986,[38][45] and Uruguayan forward Héctor Hugo Eugui,[36] who also scored 62 goals after joining the club in 1972.[38][46]

Note: Players in bold are active in Toluca. This list is updated as of May 2026.[36]

Top goalscorers for Toluca
Rank Player Total goals
1 Paraguay José Saturnino Cardozo 258
2 Mexico Vicente Pereda 119[a]
3 Uruguay Vicente Sánchez 98
4 Mexico José Manuel Abundis 84[b]
4 Uruguay Carlos María Morales 84[c]
5 Mexico Carlos Carús 77
6 Mexico Sinha 71
7 Argentina Héctor Mancilla 64
8 Portugal Paulinho 62
9 Uruguay Juan Carlos Paz 62
9 Uruguay Héctor Hugo Eugui 62

Liga MX

Since the team's Liga MX debut in 1953,[52] nine Toluca players have finished as the league's top scorer in a season, some on multiple occasions,[53] giving the club more individual top scorer titles than any other in Liga MX history with sixteen.[54]

Prior to 1996, the Mexican football league season was contested as a single annual tournament known as the torneo largo (long tournament). From 1996, the format was restructured into two shorter seasonal tournaments known as the torneos cortos (short tournaments), each concluded by a liguilla (playoff).[55] Amaury Epaminondas, the top scorer in the 1966–67 season with 21 goals, and Vicente Pereda, the top scorer in the 1969–70 season with 20 goals,[56] both played under the former format.[57]

Cardozo leads this distinction for Toluca, having finished as the league's top scorer on four occasions.[54] He also holds the highest single-season scoring record in Liga MX history since the introduction of the torneos cortos format, with 29 goals in the regular season.[58] Including his seven playoff goals, his total of 36 across the tournament also remains unmatched.[59][60]

Player Nationality Season edition Season goals Playoff goals Total goals Source
Amaury Epaminondas Brazil Brazil1966–672121[61]
Vicente Pereda Mexico Mexico1969–702020[62]
José Saturnino Cardozo Paraguay ParaguayVerano 199813518[63]
José Saturnino Cardozo Paraguay ParaguayVerano 199915520[64]
José Saturnino Cardozo Paraguay ParaguayApertura 200229736[65]
José Saturnino Cardozo Paraguay ParaguayClausura 200321122[66]
Bruno Marioni Argentina ArgentinaApertura 200611415[67]
Héctor Mancilla Chile ChileApertura 200811213[68]
Héctor Mancilla Chile ChileClausura 200914014[69]
Iván Alonso Uruguay UruguayApertura 201111011[70]
Iván Alonso Uruguay UruguayClausura 201214014[71]
Pablo Velázquez Paraguay ParaguayApertura 201312113[72]
Alexis Canelo Argentina ArgentinaGuard1anes 202111314[73]
Paulinho Portugal PortugalApertura 202413013[74]
Paulinho Portugal PortugalClausura 202512214[74]
Paulinho Portugal PortugalApertura 202512315[75]

Playoffs

In the liguilla (playoffs) of the Mexican seasonal tournaments, several Toluca players have finished as the top scorer on multiple occasions. Cardozo leads this distinction, having finished as the playoff top scorer six times.[48]

Note: This list is updated as of July 2025

Player Nationality Playoff edition Total goals Source
Ricardo Brandon Uruguay Uruguay1978–19794 [48]
José Saturnino Cardozo Paraguay ParaguayVerano 19985 [48]
José Saturnino Cardozo Paraguay ParaguayVerano 19995 [48]
José Saturnino Cardozo Paraguay Paraguay Verano 2000 8 [48]
Carlos María Morales Uruguay Uruguay
José Saturnino Cardozo Paraguay Paraguay Invierno 2000 8 [48]
José Saturnino Cardozo Paraguay Paraguay Apertura 2002 7 [48]
José Saturnino Cardozo Paraguay Paraguay Apertura 2003 5 [48]
Bruno Marioni Argentina Argentina Apertura 2006 4 [48]
Héctor Mancilla Chile Chile Apertura 2008 2 [48]
Édgar Benítez Paraguay Paraguay Apertura 2012 3 [48]
Fernando Uribe Colombia Colombia Clausura 2018 5 [48]
Alexis Vega Mexico Mexico Clausura 2025 4 [48]

Copa MX

In addition to Liga MX, Toluca holds several records in the Copa MX,[5] a domestic cup contested between Liga MX clubs and those of the Ascenso MX, Mexico's second division, which ran from 1907 to 2020 under various names and with several interruptions.[76][77] Listed below are the seven top scorers of each Copa MX edition in which a Toluca player finished as the tournament's leading scorer.[48]

Player Nationality Cup editions Total goals Source
Carlos Carús Mexico Mexico1960–617 [48]
Vicente Pereda Mexico Mexico1966–675 [48]
Francisco Linares Mexico Mexico1967–687 [48]
Jesús Romero Reyes Mexico Mexico1969–704 [48]
Fernando Uribe Colombia ColombiaApertura 20166 [48]
Alexis Canelo Argentina ArgentinaClausura 20187 [48]
Kevin Castañeda Mexico Mexico2019–207 [48]

CONCACAF Champions Cup

In the CONCACAF Champions Cup, an international tournament between clubs in North America, Toluca became the first Mexican club to produce the tournament's top scorer in the 1968 edition,[78] which the club also won.[24] Toluca players have since finished as the tournament's top scorer across multiple editions,[78] including the 2026 edition in which Toluca again claimed the title.[79]

Player Nationality Cup editions Total goals Source
Amaury Epaminondas Brazil Brazil 1968 3 [78]
Raúl Nava Mexico Mexico 2014 7 [80]
Paulinho Portugal Portugal 2026 8 [79]

Segunda División

Toluca was among the founding clubs of the Segunda División, Mexico's second-tier division, when it was established in 1950,[81] and won the title in the 1952–53 season to earn promotion to the top flight.[82] That season, a Toluca player also finished as the division's top scorer.[83]

Player Nationality Playoff edition Total goals Source
Mateo de la Tijera Mexico Mexico1952–5322 [83]

Statistics

By competition

Note: This list covers all-time competition results for each competition, with the information updated of July 2025.

Competition Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Best result Source
Liga MX 2,618 1,057 763 798 3,918 3,205 +713 3,390 Champions [84]
Segunda División 52 25 15 12 124 81 +43 65 Champions [85]
Copa MX 237 112 60 65 386 294 +92 319 Champions [86]
Campeón de Campeones 10 5 1 4 12 9 +3 Champions [87]
Total 2,994 1,240 856 898 4,670 3,670 +1,000 3,930 22 titles

Match and goal records

  • Liga MX all-time record playoff win: 9–0 against Puebla in a two-leg match in the Verano 2000 playoffs[90]
  • Longest winning streak: nine consecutive wins in the Clausura 2018 season[91]
  • Most goals in a calendar year (2025): first and only Liga MX club to score 100 or more goals in a single calendar year[92]

Notes

  1. According to RSSSF, Toluca player Vicente Pereda scored 119 goals for the team in Liga MX,[47] not including five goals scored in the Copa MX.[48] Other sources place his total at 129 goals.[49]
  2. Another source places José Manuel Abundis's goal tally at 82.[50]
  3. Another source places Carlos María Morales's goal tally at 77.[51]

References

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