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Current squad: Added Kay, Duarte Machado, João Meira, João Afonso, Nélson, Eridson, Paulo Roberto & Filipe Mendes' full names (from club website)
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{{Fs player|no=70|nat=POR|name=[[Rodrigo Parreira]]|pos=FW}}
{{Fs player|no=70|nat=POR|name=[[Rodrigo Parreira]]|pos=FW}}
{{Fs player|no=76|nat=POR|name=[[Rafael Veloso]]|pos=GK}}
{{Fs player|no=76|nat=POR|name=[[Rafael Veloso]]|pos=GK}}
{{Fs player|no=77|nat=POR|name=[[Filipe José Lima Mende|Filipe Mendes]]|pos=GK}}
{{Fs player|no=77|nat=POR|name=[[Filipe José Lima Mendes|Filipe Mendes]]|pos=GK}}
{{Fs player|no=80|nat=MLI|name=[[Mourtala Diakité]]|pos=MF}}
{{Fs player|no=80|nat=MLI|name=[[Mourtala Diakité]]|pos=MF}}
{{Fs player|no=94|nat=POR|name=[[Fábio Sturgeon]]|pos=MF}}
{{Fs player|no=94|nat=POR|name=[[Fábio Sturgeon]]|pos=MF}}

Revision as of 14:17, 16 June 2013

Belenenses
Full nameClube de Futebol
Os Belenenses
Nickname(s)O Belém
Azuis do Restelo
(The Blues from Restelo)
Pastéis de Belém
Founded23 September 1919
GroundEstádio do Restelo, Lisbon
(Restelo Stadium)
Capacity25,000[1]
ChairmanPortugal António Soares
ManagerNetherlands Mitchell van der Gaag
LeaguePrimeira Liga
2012–13Segunda Liga, 1st (promoted)

Clube de Futebol Os Belenenses, commonly known simply as Belenenses (Portuguese pronunciation: [bɨlɨˈnẽsɨʃ]), is a Portuguese multi-sports club best known for its football team. Founded in 1919, is one of the oldest Portuguese sports clubs. It is based in the 25,000-seat Estádio do Restelo in the Belém quarter of Lisbon, hence the club name, which translates as "The ones from Belém."

Belenenses won the 1945–46 Primeira Liga, making them the first of two clubs aside from the Big Three to win the league title, the other club being Boavista FC. The club also have 6 Championship of Portugal/Portuguese Cup titles.

The main activities of the club are football, handball, basketball, futsal, athletics, and rugby union. The club has won major national championships in all these sports, but remains best known for its original activity, football.

History

Early years

Founded in 1919, it reached its first Campeonato final in 1926, losing 2–0 to Maritimo, and won the title the next season with a 3–0 win over Vitória de Setúbal and picking up a second championship in 1929. The club lost the 1932 title to Porto 2–1 in a replay after a 4–4 draw. The club won its third and final Campeonato in 1933 by beating Sporting 3–1.[2] With three Campeonato wins, Beleneneses was one of Portugal's "Big Four" from the advent of the Primeira Liga, but have now won significantly fewer honours since then the other three clubs (Benfica, Porto, and Sporting).

The club won its only Primeira Liga title in 1945–46, beating Benfica by a point[3] on the first occasion which a club outside the Big Three won the title. On 14 December 1947, they were the first team to face Real Madrid at their newly inaugurated Santiago Bernabéu Stadium (then called Nuevo Estadio Chamartín), in a friendly match which was won 3–1 by the Spanish club.[4] The club came runner-up in the league for the first time in the 1954–55 season, level on 39 points with Benfica.[5] It was not until 1973 that Belenenses finished runner-up again, 18 points behind Benfica, and they never have since.[6]

Belenenses were the first club to compete in the UEFA Cup in a two-legged 3–3 draw with Hibernian (at the time one of Scotland's biggest teams) at the Estádio do Restelo in Belém.

The club has also played in the European Cup Winners' Cup, as well as the UEFA Cup. In the 1987–88 UEFA Cup season, the club played powerhouse Barcelona; in the first leg, they lost 2–0 in the Camp Nou, winning 1–0 in Lisbon at the Estádio do Restelo with Mapuata scoring. Belenenses won their last Taca de Portugal on 28 May 1989, beating Benfica 2–1.[7] Also that season, they ousted holders Bayer Leverkusen from Cup-Winners' Cup.

21st century

The 2005–06 season saw the football team finishing fourth from bottom, which would mean relegation for the team. However, the team won a subsequent appeal that sent Gil Vicente down instead. With this reprieve, the team played in the top level of Portuguese football once again. On 27 May 2007 Belenenses reached their first Taca de Portugal final since their 1989 triumph, and most recent to date, but were beaten 1–0 by Sporting.[8]

Cabral Ferreira, who served as president of Belenenses from 2005 until 2008, died on 26 February 2008, of a long illness.[9] Belenenses were relegated in 2010 to the Segunda Liga, and secured promotion back to the Primeira Liga in March 2013.

Honours

National

  • 1926–27, 1928–29, 1932–33
  • 1925–26, 1928–29, 1929–30, 1931–32, 1943–44, 1945–46
  • 1925–26, 1928–29, 1929–30, 1931–32, 1943–44, 1945–46, 1959–60, 1960–61, 1975–76, 1989–90, 1993–94

International

League and cup history

Season Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Cup Europe Notes
1934–35 CL 4 14 8 2 4 45 20 18
1935–36 CL 4 14 7 3 4 28 22 17
1936–37 CL 2 14 11 1 2 46 17 23
1937–38 CL 5 14 5 0 9 29 28 10
1938–39 1D 4 14 6 1 7 38 29 13 quarter-final
1939–40 1D 3 18 11 3 4 58 21 25 final
1940–41 1D 3 14 9 1 4 59 22 19 final
1941–42 1D 3 22 12 6 4 66 32 30 winner
1942–43 1D 3 18 14 0 4 78 20 28 quarter-final
1943–44 1D 6 18 9 3 6 41 32 21 quarter-final
1944–45 1D 3 18 13 1 4 72 29 27 quarter-final
1945–46 1D 1 22 18 2 2 74 24 38 last 16 Only League title
1946–47 1D 4 26 14 5 7 66 31 33 not held
1947–48 1D 3 26 16 5 5 76 30 37 final
1948–49 1D 3 26 16 3 7 68 36 35 last 16
1949–50 1D 4 26 10 7 9 36 41 27 not held
1950–51 1D 9 26 10 4 12 45 48 24 semi-final
1951–52 1D 4 26 14 8 4 60 28 36
1952–53 1D 3 26 15 6 5 60 29 36
1953–54 1D 4 26 13 5 8 43 39 31 semi-final
1954–55 1D 2 26 17 5 4 63 28 39 LAT 4th place
1955–56 1D 3 26 16 5 5 67 25 37 semi-final
1956–57 1D 3 26 13 7 6 74 50 33
1957–58 1D 4 26 12 4 10 54 42 28
1958–59 1D 3 26 16 6 4 65 27 38
1959–60 1D 3 26 15 6 5 58 25 36 winner
1960–61 1D 5 26 12 4 10 45 37 28 semi-final
1961–62 1D 5 26 12 7 7 51 35 31 semi-final FC 1st round
1962–63 1D 4 26 16 4 6 47 30 36 semi-final FC 1st round
1963–64 1D 6 26 12 6 8 46 36 30 FC 2nd round
1964–65 1D 8 26 12 2 12 39 40 26 FC 1st round
1965–66 1D 7 26 9 7 10 28 29 25
1966–67 1D 11 26 7 6 13 26 34 20
1967–68 1D 7 26 10 5 11 38 40 25
1968–69 1D 8 26 8 10 8 31 33 26
1969–70 1D 7 26 9 5 12 23 34 23 semi-final
1970–71 1D 7 26 7 8 11 20 27 22
1971–72 1D 7 30 11 7 12 35 33 29 semi-final
1972–73 1D 2 30 14 12 4 53 30 40
1973–74 1D 5 30 17 6 7 56 34 40 UC 1st round
1974–75 1D 6 30 14 7 9 45 37 35 semi-final
1975–76 1D 3 30 16 8 6 45 28 40
1976–77 1D 10 30 7 12 11 29 40 26 UC 1st round
1977–78 1D 5 30 14 8 8 25 21 36
1978–79 1D 8 30 10 9 11 47 43 29
1979–80 1D 5 30 13 8 9 33 38 34
1980–81 1D 11 30 8 10 12 24 39 26 semi-final
1981–82 1D 15 30 5 10 15 28 48 20 relegated
1982–83 2D ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
1983–84 2D ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? promoted
1984–85 1D 6 30 11 8 11 40 46 30
1985–86 1D 8 30 7 14 9 27 30 28 final
1986–87 1D 6 30 13 4 13 52 40 30
1987–88 1D 3 38 18 12 8 52 38 48 UC 1st round
1988–89 1D 7 38 13 14 11 44 35 40 winner UC 2nd round
1989–90 1D 6 34 16 4 14 32 33 36 semi-final CWC 1st round
1990–91 1D 19 38 10 9 19 27 38 29 relegated
1991–92 2H 2 34 19 10 5 53 25 48 promoted
1992–93 1D 7 34 11 12 11 42 40 34
1993–94 1D 13 34 12 6 16 39 51 30
1994–95 1D 12 34 10 7 17 30 39 27
1995–96 1D 6 34 14 9 1 53 33 51
1996–97 1D 13 34 10 10 14 37 50 40 last 32
1997–98 1D 18 34 5 9 20 22 52 24 last 64 relegated
1998–99 2H 2 34 17 10 7 55 28 61 promoted
1999–00 1D 12 34 9 13 12 36 38 40 last 64
2000–01 1D 7 34 14 10 10 43 36 52 last 32
2001–02 1D 5 34 17 6 11 54 44 57 last 16
2002–03 1D 9 34 11 10 13 47 48 43 last 32
2003–04 1D 15 34 8 11 15 35 54 35 semi-final
2004–05 1D 9 34 13 7 14 38 34 46 quarter-final
2005–06 1D 15 34 11 6 17 40 42 39 last 64
2006–07 1D 5 30 15 4 11 36 29 49 final
2007–08 1D 8 30 8 12 10 32 41 40 last 64
2008–09 1D 15 30 5 9 16 28 52 24 last 32
2009–10 1D 15 30 4 11 15 23 44 23 last 16 relegated

CL=Campeonato da Liga (winners weren't considered Portuguese champions); 1D=First Division/League
2D=Second Division/League; 2H=Liga de Honra
CWC=Cup Winners' Cup; UC=UEFA Cup
FC=Fairs Cup; LAT=Latin Cup

UEFA Cup (formerly Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, now Europa League)

Season Team1 Team2 Result1 Result2 Result3
1961–62 Scotland Hibernian Portugal Belenenses 3–3 3–0
1962–63 Portugal Belenenses Spain Barcelona 1–1 1–1 2–3
1963–64 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Trešnjevka Zagreb Portugal Belenenses 0–2 1–2
Italy Roma Portugal Belenenses 2–1 1–0
1964–65 Portugal Belenenses Republic of Ireland Shelbourne 1–1 0–0 1–2
1973–74 Portugal Belenenses England Wolves 0–2 1–2
1976–77 Portugal Belenenses Spain Barcelona 2–2 2–3
1987–88 Spain Barcelona Portugal Belenenses 2–0 0–1
1988–89 Germany Bayer Leverkusen Portugal Belenenses 0–1 0–1
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Velež Mostar Portugal Belenenses 0–0 0–0 4–3 (pen.)
2007–08 Germany Bayern Munich Portugal Belenenses 1–0 2–0

Cup Winners' Cup

Season Team1 Team2 Result1 Result2
1989–90 Portugal Belenenses France Monaco 1–1 0–3

Current squad

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK England ENG Matt Jones
2 DF Portugal POR André Teixeira
3 DF Cape Verde CPV Kay
4 DF Portugal POR Duarte Machado
5 MF Portugal POR Ricardo Alves
6 DF Portugal POR João Meira
7 MF Portugal POR Arsénio
8 MF Portugal POR Ruizinho
9 FW Portugal POR Tiago Caeiro
10 MF Haiti HAI Yves Desmarets
11 FW Portugal POR Fredy
13 DF Portugal POR João Afonso
14 MF Portugal POR Fernando Ferreira
18 MF Algeria ALG Yacine Si Salem
19 FW Cape Verde CPV Rambé
No. Pos. Nation Player
20 MF Portugal POR Filipe Ferreira
21 DF Portugal POR Nélson
23 FW Portugal POR Luís Zambujo
24 DF Guinea-Bissau GNB Eridson
25 FW Brazil BRA Paulo Roberto
26 MF Senegal SEN Zazá
28 MF Portugal POR Tiago Silva
39 FW France FRA Mamadou Diawara
55 DF Portugal POR Daniel Martins
70 FW Portugal POR Rodrigo Parreira
76 GK Portugal POR Rafael Veloso
77 GK Portugal POR Filipe Mendes
80 MF Mali MLI Mourtala Diakité
94 MF Portugal POR Fábio Sturgeon
FW Netherlands NED Jordan Botaka


Notable former players

Former coaches

See also

References

  1. ^ [1]
  2. ^ Portugal – List of Champions
  3. ^ Portugal 1945–46
  4. ^ Real Madrid C.F. – Official Web Site – Real Madrid play 1,500th official clash at the Santiago Bernabeu
  5. ^ Portugal 1954–55
  6. ^ Portugal 1972–73
  7. ^ Portugal Cup Full Results 1938–1990
  8. ^ Portugal Cup 2006/07
  9. ^ "Passings: Morreu Cabral Ferreira". Jornal de Notícias. 28 February 2008. Retrieved 26 March 2008.
  10. ^ From 1922 to 1938, the Portuguese champion was determined in a knock-out competition called Campeonato de Portugal (Portuguese Championship). With the formation of the league, this competition later became the national cup.