- Source: 2004 Torneo Descentralizado
- Club Cultural y Deportivo Universidad Técnica de Cajamarca
- Ayacucho FC
- André Carrillo
- Sport Boys
- 2004 Torneo Descentralizado
- Club Deportivo Universidad de San Martín de Porres
- Atlético Grau
- Peruvian Primera División
- 2000 Torneo Descentralizado
- History of the Torneo Descentralizado
- Universidad Técnica de Cajamarca
- Jorge Cazulo
- 2004 Peruvian Segunda División
- Leao Butrón
The 2004 Torneo Descentralizado (known as the Copa Cable Mágico for sponsorship reasons) was the eighty-eighth season of Peruvian football. A total of 14 teams competed in the tournament, with Alianza Lima as the defending champion. Alianza Lima won its twenty-first Primera División title after beating Sporting Cristal in the final playoff.
Changes from 2003
= Structural changes
=The number of teams for the 2004 season grew from 12 to 14. The relegation system was re-introduced but the system was determined by a points per match average. The qualification for the Copa Sudamericana was determined by the aggregate table instead of the Torneo Apertura playoffs. Due to a structure change in the Copa Libertadores, only two teams will qualify directly to the group stage (the half-year champions) and the best-placed non-champion will have to play in the first stage.
= Promotion and relegation
=No teams were relegated from the 2003 season and thus the number of teams grew from 12 to 14. Segunda División champion Sport Coopsol and Copa Perú 2003 champion Universidad César Vallejo were promoted.
Universidad San Martín bought the promotional place of the 2003 Segunda División winners, Sport Coopsol.
= Team changes
=Teams
Torneo Apertura
= League table
== Results
=Torneo Clausura
= League table
== Results
=Final
Aggregate table
Relegation table
Updated as of games played on December, 2005.
Top scorers
Footnotes
External links
Peru 2004 season Details on RSSSF