Primera División de Republica Dominicana
Primera División de Republica Dominicana was the former top division of the Federación Dominicana de Fútbol. Established in 1970, since 2002 this competition serves as second level to the Liga Mayor (see below). The 2005 edition also was played without clubs from the 2004–05 Liga Mayor - apart from the relegated teams Jarabacoa and Santo Domingo Savio (La Vega). In 2015 the league was replaced by Liga Dominicana de Fútbol, the first professional football league in Dominican Republic.
Founded | 1970 |
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Folded | 2015 |
Confederation | CONCACAF |
Number of teams | 8 |
Level on pyramid | 1 |
International cup(s) | CONCACAF Champions League |
Last champions | Moca FC (11th title) |
Most championships | Moca FC (11 titles) |
2012-13 standings
1.Moca FC 14 11 2 1 35- 5 35 Champions 2.Jarabacoa FC 14 9 3 2 29- 7 30 3.Bauger FC 14 8 3 3 27-14 27 4.Club Deportivo Pantoja 14 6 4 4 27-15 22 5.San Cristóbal FC 14 5 4 5 23-21 19 6.Bayaguana FC 14 4 2 8 15-35 14 7.Club Barcelona Atlético (Sporting Santo Domingo) 14 2 1 11 17-38 7 8.Universidad O&M FC 14 1 1 12 12-50 4
Liga Mayor - 2016 Teams
- Atlántico FC (Puerto Plata)
- Atlético San Cristóbal (San Cristóbal)
- Atlético Vega Real (La Vega)
- Bauger FC (Santo Domingo)
- Cibao FC (Santiago de los Caballeros)
- Club Atlético Pantoja (Santo Domingo)
- Club Barcelona Atlético (Santo Domingo)
- Delfines del Este FC (La Romana)
- Moca FC (Moca)
- O&M FC (Santo Domingo)
Previous winners
Primera División
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Liga Mayor
- 2001–02 : Baninter (Jarabacoa)
- 2002–03 : Baninter (Jarabacoa)
- 2004–05 : CD Pantoja
- 2007 : Club Barcelona Atlético (Santo Domingo)
- 2009 : CD Pantoja
- 2010 : Moca FC[1]
- 2011–12 : CD Pantoja[2]
- 2012–13 : Moca FC[3]
- 2014 : Moca FC
Best scorers
Year | Best scorers | Team | Goals |
1992 | Dinardo Rodríguez[4] | UNPHU | |
1993 | Dinardo Rodríguez | CA Dominguito | |
2001–02 | Oscar Mejía | Baninter | 11 |
2004–05 | Jonathan Faña | Don Bosco Moca | 20 |
2007 | Wilson Sarilú | San Cristóbal FC | 18 |
2011–12 | Kens Germán[2] | Club Barcelona Atletico | 9 |
2012–13 | César García[5] | Don Bosco Jarabacoa | 10 |
References
- "Equipo de Moca Campeones de la Liga Mayor de Fútbol realizará caravana". El Nuevo Diario (in Spanish). 2010-10-30. Retrieved 2014-01-02.
- "Deportivo Pantoja, campeón Liga Mayor de Fútbol". El Nuevo Diario (in Spanish). 2012-03-26. Retrieved 2014-01-02.
- Rodriguez, Gustavo (2013-03-18). "Resaltan labor equipo Moca campeón de Liga Mayor Fútbol". Hoy (in Spanish). Retrieved 2014-01-02.
- Entrevista a Dinardo “LALO” Rodríguez - La Media Canca (in Spanish)
- "Liga Mayor Coca Cola 2012/2013". FIFA. 2013. Retrieved 2014-01-02.
External links
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