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List of foreign Liga MX players

This is a list of foreign players in Liga MX during the professional era which began in 1943. The following players:

  1. have played at least one Primera División game for the respective club;
  2. have not been capped for the Mexico national team at any level; or
  3. have been born in Mexico and were capped by a foreign national team. This includes players who have dual citizenship with Mexico.

Players are sorted by the State:

  1. they played for in a national team at any level. For footballers that played for two or more national teams, they are listed with:
  2. the one he played for at A level;
  3. the national team representing his state of birth; or
  4. If they never played for any national team at any level, the state of birth. For footballers born in dissolved states, they are listed in the state which now represents their place of birth (e.g.,: Yugoslavia -> Serbia, Montenegro, Croatia, etc...).

Stateless people are marked with an asterisk.

In bold: players that played at least one Primera División game in the current season.

Clubs are not allowed to play more than five foreign players in a Liga MX match. In March 2011, PRI lawmakers introduced a proposal to reduce the limit to three foreign players. FMF President Justino Compeán did not support the failed proposal because he believed it would not improve the quality of Mexican football players.

As of 1 January 2009, Club América had employed the most foreign players of any club in the history of the Primera División, with more than 150 in the professional era. A total of 88 foreign players participated in the 2012 Apertura tournament, 29 originating from Argentina and 14 from Colombia.

Africa (CAF)

Algeria

Cameroon

Cape Verde

Gambia

Ghana

Ivory Coast

Morocco

Nigeria

São Tomé and Príncipe

Senegal

Sierra Leone

Zambia

Asia (AFC)

Japan

Lebanon

Palestine

Europe (UEFA)

Armenia

Austria

Bosnia-Herzegovina

Bulgaria

Croatia

Czech Republic

England

France

Germany

Greece

Hungary

Italy

Lithuania

Montenegro

Netherlands

North Macedonia

Poland

Portugal

Romania

Russia

Scotland

Serbia

Slovakia

Slovenia

Spain

Switzerland

Turkey

Wales

North and Central America, Caribbean (CONCACAF)

Canada

Costa Rica

Cuba

Curaçao

El Salvador

Guatemala

Honduras

Jamaica

Panama

Trinidad and Tobago

United States

South America (CONMEBOL)

Argentina

Bolivia

Brazil

Chile

Colombia

Ecuador

Paraguay

Peru

Uruguay

Venezuela

Notes

References

External links