Fixtures

USA - USL Championship 04/20 23:00 1 North Carolina FC vs New Mexico United - View
USA - USL Championship 04/27 23:30 1 Tampa Bay Rowdies vs New Mexico United - View
USA - USL Championship 05/05 02:30 1 Las Vegas Lights FC vs New Mexico United - View
USA - US Open Cup 05/07 23:00 5 New Mexico United vs Real Salt Lake - View
USA - USL Championship 05/12 01:00 1 New Mexico United vs Oakland Roots - View
USA - USL Championship 05/26 01:00 1 New Mexico United vs San Antonio FC - View

Results

USA - US Open Cup 04/17 01:00 9 New Mexico United v Lubbock Matadors SC W 3-1
USA - USL Championship 04/07 01:00 1 [4] New Mexico United v El Paso Locomotive FC [11] W 3-2
USA - USL Championship 03/31 02:30 1 [9] Phoenix Rising FC v New Mexico United [6] W 0-1
USA - USL Championship 03/23 23:30 1 [8] Charleston Battery v New Mexico United [4] L 4-0
USA - USL Championship 03/16 20:00 1 Rhode Island FC v New Mexico United D 1-1
USA - USL Championship 03/09 21:00 1 New Mexico United v Pittsburgh Riverhounds W 1-0
Europa - Venskabskampe 01/27 23:00 - FC Dallas v New Mexico United L 4-1
USA - USL Championship 10/22 02:00 4 [1] Sacramento Republic v New Mexico United [8] L 1-0
USA - USL Championship 10/14 01:00 1 [8] New Mexico United v Memphis 901 FC [4] W 4-1
USA - USL Championship 10/08 02:30 1 [5] Phoenix Rising FC v New Mexico United [10] W 1-2
USA - USL Championship 10/01 01:00 1 [11] New Mexico United v Louisville City FC [5] W 2-0
USA - USL Championship 09/23 23:00 1 [1] Pittsburgh Riverhounds v New Mexico United [10] L 2-1

Statistik

 TotalHjemmeUde
Matches played 41 21 20
Wins 17 13 4
Draws 7 2 5
Losses 17 6 11
Goals for 61 40 21
Goals against 62 29 33
Clean sheets 7 4 3
Failed to score 9 3 6

Wikipedia - New Mexico United

New Mexico United is an American professional soccer team based in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Founded June 6, 2018, the team currently plays in the USL Championship, the second division of American soccer. The team is owned by Peter Trevisani, with head coach Eric Quill, and play their home games at Isotopes Park which has a capacity of around 13,500 people.

History

Former teams

The state of New Mexico gained its first professional soccer team in the 1990s, the New Mexico Chiles of the American Professional Soccer League and later the USISL. The team was runner-up for the league title in 1995 and attracted an average home attendance of 3,854, but was folded by its owners in 1996. The Chiles was replaced the following season by the Albuquerque Geckos, who entered USISL's Division 3 with new owners and played at a new soccer stadium shared with the collegiate New Mexico Lobos. The Geckos won the Division 3 championship and were promoted to the second division A-League in 1998, but struggled to win matches and were unable to pay players and creditors. The team had an average attendance of 1,200 and announced their move to Sacramento, California in October 1998.

A semi-professional team, the Albuquerque Sol, was established in 2014 to capitalize on the area's interest in soccer. The team's owners stated that their goal was to earn a USL expansion team within a few years and eventually move to Major League Soccer (MLS). The Sol commissioned a study in 2016 to analyze a potential downtown soccer-specific stadium with 10,000 seats to support a USL expansion in 2018 and a MLS expansion by 2024. The stadium study identified three potential locations in downtown Albuquerque for a stadium, which would cost $24–45 million.

USL launch and inaugural season

New Mexico United's Chris Wehan takes a corner kick during a USLC match in 2019

On June 6, 2018, the USL announced an expansion club from Albuquerque that would begin play in March 2019. The club announced its name, New Mexico United, and colors on October 9, 2018, following fan suggestions that generated 226 total names.

The team played its opening match on March 9, 2019, with 12,896 fans in attendance at Isotopes Park. Devon Sandoval scored the team's first-ever goal in a 1–1 draw against Fresno FC. New Mexico United enjoyed popular success in its inaugural season, leading the USL Championship in average attendance and selling out Isotopes Park with 15,023 spectators on May 5, 2019. In the 2019 U.S. Open Cup, the team defeated two MLS clubs (the Colorado Rapids and FC Dallas) before losing in the quarterfinals to Minnesota United FC; for the match in Minnesota, the club organized a charter flight from Albuquerque that carried 180 away fans.

2020 season

In March 2020, the USL Championship postponed the 2020 season with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, after New Mexico United had played one game. The season restarted in July 2020 with a modified format, placing teams into eight smaller regional groups. The club was placed in Group C with Four Corners opponents Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC and Real Monarchs, and nearby El Paso Locomotive FC. Due to statewide health orders and quarantine requirements, New Mexico United played all 15 of their regular season matches and both of their playoff matches away from home, earning the local nickname the "Road Warriors." The team ended the regular season with a record of 8 wins, 3 draws, and 4 losses; a sixteenth planned match against Rio Grande Valley FC Toros was postponed, and eventually cancelled, due to cases of COVID-19 in the Rio Grande Valley organization.

The club qualified for the USL Championship Playoffs by coming second in their group. In the Western Conference Quarterfinals, they defeated San Antonio FC in extra time, with Chris Wehan scoring the winning goal in the 101st minute. In the Conference Semifinal, the club lost to El Paso Locomotive 3-5 on penalties, after drawing 1-1 at the end of extra time.

In March 2020, the club launched the Somos Unidos Foundation, a charitable nonprofit arm of the New Mexico United organization.

2021 season

In May 2021, New Mexico United began its competitive season with a 1-0 loss away to Rio Grande Valley FC Toros. On August 21, then 17-year-old Cristian Nava became the first New Mexico United Academy player to sign a professional contract with the club.