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The Primera División () is a professional football league in Argentina. It is the country's premier football and is at the top of the Argentine football league system. Contested by twenty clubs, it operates on a system of promotion and relegation with the Primera B Nacional. The season runs from August to May of the following year. Each season is divided into two tournaments, the Apertura and Clausura, each with its own champion.
The Primera División was founded in 1893 and turned professional in 1931 when 18 clubs broke away from the amateur leagues to form a professional league. Since then, the season has been contested annually in four different formats and calendars. The league has been under its current format since the 1991–92 season. IFFHS ranks the Primera as the seventh strongest league in the world.
Since the start of professionalism, sixteen clubs have been the Argentine champion, although only four clubs have won ten or more titles. The most successful club is River Plate, who has won 33 titles. The current champion is Vélez Sársfield, who won their 8th title in the 2011 Clausura.
Averaging was instituted in 1983, two years after San Lorenzo de Almagro were relegated in 1981. That year, River Plate finished 18th out of 19 teams and would have been relegated under the old system. Racing and Nueva Chicago were the first teams to be relegated on average. Boca Juniors was also struggling at that time and had a dismal 1984 season. These facts have led some to speculate that the averaging system was instituted to minimize the chance of large clubs being relegated, and indeed none of the five clubs considered to be the largest has been relegated again after 1983.
Owing to the outstanding performance of Argentine clubs in international competitions, like having won the Copa Libertadores, Copa Sudamericana and now defunct Intercontinental Cup for the largest number of times, Primera División is often considered one of the strongest leagues in the world. For example, it is consistently included in the top five or top ten strongest leagues in the world by International Federation of Football History and Statistics.
For Copa Libertadores 2009, the qualification criteria are changed. The champions of previous season's Apertura and Clausura, and the Apertura of the same season are also eligible to play in Copa Libertadores. The remaining two places are filled by the best two teams in the combined table of these three tournaments. For example, Copa Libertadores 2009 would be represented by the Apertura 2007 champion, Clausura 2008 champion and also Apertura 2008 champion. The remaining places are allocated to the two teams having the highest points in the combined table of these three tournaments. The Argentine Football Association has not announced the qualification arrangement beyond 2009. However, it is believed that teams will qualify to the tournament according to the results of Clausura and Apertura of the year before. For example, those five teams having the most points in the combined table of Clausura 2009 and Apertura 2009 would qualify to Copa Libertadores 2010.
The Copa Libertadores remains the most prestigious competition in South America, and the Primera División Argentina was the most successful league in the cup's history, having won the competition for 22 times ; Independiente has a record seven wins, followed by Boca with six, Estudiantes with four, River Plate with two, and Racing Club, Argentinos Juniors and Vélez Sársfield with one apiece.
As three of five places of Copa Libertadores are also allocated according to the combined table, teams can qualify to both Copa Libertadores and Copa Sudamericana through the same mechanism and Argentina teams in these two tournament are usually highly overlapped. For example, Gimnasia y Esgrima La Plata, Banfield and Vélez Sársfield qualified to both Copa Libertadores and Copa Sudamericana owing to their results in the aggregate table in season 2005/06.
The Primera División Argentina is the most successful league in this competition, having won the trophy five times since its inception in 2002.
A single double round-robin tournament was played each year, and the team with the most points was crowned as champion, except for 1936, during that year the winners of Copa de Honor and the Campeonato played a match for the championship title. The single tournament arrangement lasted until 1966.
During this period, the traditional "big five" clubs, namely, Boca Juniors, River Plate, Independiente, Racing and San Lorenzo dominated Argentine football. No any team besides them had won the league championship in these 36 years. The most serious title challenge came from Banfield in 1951, when they gained the same points with Racing Club in the league table. However, they lost 1-0 in the two-legged first place playoffs and gave the title to Racing.
Despite the format change in 1970, teams still entered the Nacional championship, Petit tournament and Reclasificatorio tournament according to their rankings in the Metropolitano in that year. However, in 1971, the tournaments were separated. Teams did not enter the Nacional by finishing at the top ranks of Metropolitano. On the other hand, the Petit tournament and Reclasificatorio tournament were abandoned. The Metropolitano and Nacional became two truly individual tournaments. Although the old system was reused in 1972, the separation was instituted again in 1973 and was adopted throughout the remaining Metropolitano and Nacional era.
The Metropolitano was always played first, until the order of the tournaments was reversed in 1982. ||width=100| Apertura || Newell's Old Boys (3) || River Plate || Vélez Sársfield |- | Clausura || Boca Juniors (0) || San Lorenzo || Deportivo Mandiyú |- |rowspan=2 width=50| 1991–92 ||width=100| Apertura || River Plate (22) || Boca Juniors || San Lorenzo |- | Clausura || Newell's Old Boys (4) || Vélez Sársfield || Deportivo Español |- |rowspan=2| 1992–93 || Apertura || Boca Juniors (16) || River Plate || San Lorenzo |- | Clausura || Vélez Sársfield (2) || Independiente || River Plate |- |rowspan=2| 1993–94 || Apertura || River Plate (23) || Vélez Sársfield || Racing |- | Clausura || Independiente (13) || Huracán || Rosario Central |- |rowspan=2| 1994–95 || Apertura || River Plate (24) || San Lorenzo || Vélez Sársfield |- | Clausura || San Lorenzo (8) || Gimnasia (La Plata) || Vélez Sársfield |- |rowspan=2| 1995–96 || Apertura || Vélez Sársfield (3) || Racing || Lanús |- | Clausura || Vélez Sársfield (4) || Gimnasia (La Plata) || Lanús |- |rowspan=2| 1996–97 || Apertura || River Plate (25) || Independiente || Lanús |- | Clausura || River Plate (26) || Colón || Newell's Old Boys |- |rowspan=2| 1997–98 || Apertura || River Plate (27) || Boca Juniors || Rosario Central |- | Clausura || Vélez Sársfield (5) || Lanús || Gimnasia (La Plata) |- |rowspan=2| 1998–99 || Apertura || Boca Juniors (17) || Gimnasia (La Plata) || Racing |- | Clausura || Boca Juniors (18) || River Plate || San Lorenzo |- |rowspan=2| 1999–00 || Apertura || River Plate (28) || Rosario Central || Boca Juniors |- | Clausura || River Plate (29) || Independiente || Colón |- |rowspan=2| 2000–01 || Apertura || Boca Juniors (19) || River Plate || Gimnasia (La Plata) |- | Clausura || San Lorenzo (9) || River Plate || Boca Juniors |- |rowspan=2| 2001–02 || Apertura || Racing (7) || River Plate || Boca Juniors |- | Clausura || River Plate (30) || Gimnasia (La Plata) || Boca Juniors |- |rowspan=2| 2002–03 || Apertura || Independiente (14) || Boca Juniors || River Plate |- | Clausura || River Plate (31) || Boca Juniors || Vélez Sársfield |- |rowspan=2| 2003–04 || Apertura || Boca Juniors (20) || San Lorenzo || Banfield |- | Clausura || River Plate (32) || Boca Juniors || Talleres |- |rowspan=2| 2004–05 || Apertura || Newell's Old Boys (5) || Vélez Sársfield || River Plate |- | Clausura || Vélez Sársfield (6) || Banfield || Racing |- |rowspan=2| 2005–06 || Apertura || Boca Juniors (21) || Gimnasia (La Plata) || Vélez Sársfield |- | Clausura || Boca Juniors (22) || Lanús || River Plate |- |rowspan=2| 2006–07 || Apertura || Estudiantes (4) || Boca Juniors || River Plate |- | Clausura || San Lorenzo (10) || Boca Juniors || Estudiantes |- |rowspan=2| 2007–08 || Apertura || Lanús (1) || Tigre || Banfield |- | Clausura || River Plate (33) || Boca Juniors || Estudiantes |- |rowspan=2| 2008–09 || Apertura || Boca Juniors (23) || Tigre || San Lorenzo |- | Clausura || Vélez Sársfield (7) || Huracán || Lanús |- |rowspan=2| 2009–10 || Apertura || Banfield (1) || Newell's Old Boys || Colón |- | Clausura || Argentinos Juniors (3) || Estudiantes || Godoy Cruz |- |rowspan=2| 2010–11 || Apertura || Estudiantes (5) || Vélez Sársfield || Arsenal |- | Clausura || Vélez Sársfield (8) || Lanús || Godoy Cruz |}
These three competitions are not considered league tournaments, but the competitions are official and the championships are regarded as official titles. For example, there are "two stars" on the jersey of Gimnasia y Esgrima, representing the title of Copa Centenario and their only league title in 1929.
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