F.C. Porto

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F.C. Porto
FC Porto's emblem
Full name Futebol Clube do Porto
Nickname(s) Dragões (Dragons)
Azuis e brancos (Blue and white)
Short name Porto
Founded September 28, 1893
as Football Club do Porto
Ground Estádio do Dragão
Porto, Portugal
(Capacity 51,000[1])
Chairman Flag of Portugal Pinto da Costa
Head Coach Flag of Portugal Jesualdo Ferreira
League BWINLIGA
2007-08 BWINLIGA, 1st
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours

Futebol Clube do Porto (pron. IPA[futɨ'bɔɫ 'klub(ɨ) du 'poɾtu]) - short: FC Porto or FCP - is a Portuguese sports club best known for its footballing endeavors. It was founded in Porto in 1893. It holds the best International record by a Portuguese team, having won the European Cup and the Intercontinental Cup twice each. In 2003, it brought Portugal's first UEFA Cup and in 1987 it brought Portugal's first UEFA Supercup. Domestically they hold the best record of five titles in a row, having won the league 23 times, the Portuguese Cup 17 times and Portuguese Supercup 15 times. SL Benfica is still the most successful club in Portugal having won the league 31 times and the Portuguese Cup 27 times.

The football home ground is the Estádio do Dragão, which replaced previous home Estádio das Antas in 2003. FC Porto is also a leading force in other sports: the handball and basketball teams are regular contenders for the national titles and the roller hockey section is amongst the best in the sport worldwide. The new multi-sport arena near the stadium will be completed soon; in past years the non-professional home grounds were scattered around neighbouring cities (such as Gondomar, Matosinhos and Santo Tirso). Supporters and players of the club are nicknamed portistas.

It was founded in the northern city of Porto on September 28, 1893, by wine-salesman António Nicolau de Almeida' who had his first contact with the game of foot-ball on one of his trips to England. The club was revived in 1906 by Monteiro da Costa.

Commercially, the club has several stores called Loja Azul (English: Blue Store) scattered around the city, including two used with official supplier Nike. Since 1994, a merchandising goods fair called Portomania is organized during the pre-season. FC Porto publishes one of the older club-related publications in Europe: a monthly 60-page full-colour magazine called Dragões (Dragons) that has existed since the early 1980s.

As for its domestic record, it holds the second best record, after SL Benfica. FC Porto played in the Portuguese championship 74 times, playing 2048 games, winning 1333, drawing 375, losing 340, scoring 4542 goals and conceding 1909, having 3342 points as of the end of the 2007-08 season.

Contents

[edit] The public company

After going public in 1998, FC Porto created several satellite companies around the club to improve its efficiency.

  • FCPorto - Junior football, handball, rink hockey, atletism, magazine, etc.
  • FCPorto - Futebol SAD and FCPorto - Basquetebol SAD (professional football and basketball)
  • PortoEstádio (Estádio do Dragão)
  • PortoMultimédia (official site and multimedia products)
  • PortoComercial (Merchandising)
  • PortoSeguro (Insurances)

The FCPorto SAD is rated in the Euronext Lisbon

[edit] Presidents

Nicolau d`Almeida, Monteiro da Costa, Dummond Villares, Carmo Pacheco, Borges de Avelar, Henrique da Mesquita, Pinto de Faria, Neves Reis, Urgel Horta, Carlos Costa, Angelo César, Ferreira Alves, Júlio Ribeiro, Cesario Bonito, Paulo Pombo, Nascimento Cordeiro, Pinto Magalhães, Américo de Sá, Pinto da Costa.

[edit] History

Its first official trophy, the "Union of the North cup", was won in 1911. In the following years it became one of the biggest clubs in Portugal and went on to win the first national competition in the history of Portuguese football, the Campeonato da Liga 1934/35. Porto were always a struggling team after that championship, so they went to win only 6 championships in 41 years of dictatorship. But after the Carnation Revolution, the history of Portuguese soccer saw a new title contestant, and a new European team. In the following years, Porto won 16 titles,10 Portuguese cups, 1 European Champions Cup and the new Champions League, 1 UEFA Cup, 1 European Super Cup, and 2 Intercontinental Cup. A wonderful rise for a team that was used to, as was said at the time, starting away games 1-0 down.

Two of the biggest reasons for this change of fortunes were Pinto da Costa who took control of Porto in 1982 and José Maria Pedroto whom he had brought back with him to manage the team. The duo quickly caused the team damage, with Pinto da Costa as football director and Pedroto as manager, winning two titles previously, and making controversial remarks about the centralization of Portuguese football, which caused them problems with the directing board, and consequently they left. After quitting, in 1982 Pinto da Costa ran for presidency and won bringing back Pedroto. The following decades turned what was the third team in the overall history of Portuguese football into the biggest title winner of the past 20 years. Since 1982, Porto has won 15 titles, achieving the record Penta (five leagues in a row) in 1999 and since 1976 never finished below 3rd place, nine Portuguese cups, and has a majority of Supercups, having won 15 out of a possible 27.

[edit] International titles

[edit] 1987 - European Champions Cup

When Pinto da Costa joined as president, Porto was the only club from the "big three" without European honours, but that quickly changed. The first final was played against Juventus F.C. for the 1984 Cup Winners' Cup, but Porto lost. Three years later, the team led by Artur Jorge, the name hand-picked by Pedroto, won its first European honour, in a thrilling 2-1 victory over Bayern Munich in the European Cup 1986-87.

Stage Opponent Home Away
1/16 Rabat Ajax 1-0 9-0
1/8 TJ Vitkovice 0-1 3-0
1/4 Brøndby IF 1-0 1-1
1/2 Dinamo Kiev 2-1 2-1
Final FC Bayern Munich 2-1

The following year Porto won the European Super Cup, against Ajax Amsterdam, and the Intercontinental Cup, against Peñarol, making them the first Portuguese winners of the two cups.

[edit] 1988-2002

The following 16 years saw Porto as a midrange team - often in the final 16, but not progressing much further. The exception was in 1994, when Porto reached the semi-finals of the UEFA Champions League. The semi-final, decided on a single game, resulted in a heavy loss (3-0) at the hands of Johann Cruyff's FC Barcelona, in the Nou Camp.

[edit] 2003 - UEFA Cup

In 2003, under the guidance of José Mourinho, Porto made a thrilling UEFA Cup run, topped with a victory in a fantastic final against Celtic in Seville.

Stage Opponent Home Away
1/64 KS Polonia Warszawa 6-0 0-2
1/32 FK Austria Wien 2-0 1-0
1/16 RC Lens 3-0 0-1
1/8 Denizlispor K. 6-1 2-2
1/4 Panathinaikos FC 0-1 2-0
1/2 SS Lazio 4-1 0-0
Final Celtic FC 3-2

[edit] 2004 - Champions League

FC Porto supporters at the Gelsenkirchen Arena AufSchalke.
FC Porto supporters at the Gelsenkirchen Arena AufSchalke.

The following season set a greater challenge, but despite a slow start which included a 1-3 loss against Real Madrid, Porto never lost again in the Champions League, relegating O. Marseille to the UEFA Cup (where they reached the final), beating Manchester United at Old Trafford in the dying minutes of play, O. Lyon and Deportivo. Porto beat Monaco 3-0 in the Final played in Arena AufSchalke. Porto's UEFA Champions League winning line-up: Vitor Baia, Nuno Valente, Ricardo Carvalho, Jorge Costa(c), Paulo Ferreira, Costinha, Nuno Maniche, Pedro Mendes, Deco (Pedro Emanuel), Derlei (Benni McCarthy), Carlos Alberto Gomes (Dmitri Alenichev)

Stage Opponent Home Away
Group stage FK Partizan Belgrade 2-1 1-1
Group stage Real Madrid CF 1-3 1-1
Group stage Olympique de Marseille 1-0 3-2
1/8 Manchester United FC 2-1 1-1
1/4 Olympique Lyonnais 2-0 2-2
1/2 RC Deportivo La Coruña 0-0 1-0
Final AS Monaco FC 3-0

After the victory, Porto became the Portuguese side with the most European cups won - 2 CL/ECC, UEFA Super Cup plus a UEFA Cup, compared with the two ECC by Benfica and the one CWC by Sporting.

Even after the departure of José Mourinho to Chelsea FC, the club kept winning at the international level. On December 12, 2004, FC Porto won the last-held Intercontinental Cup, by beating Once Caldas from Colombia at an impressive 8-7 after penalty shoot-out.

Porto is also one of the founding members of G-14. In 2008, the club was legally penalised for its role in the Apito Dourado corruption scandal.

[edit] 2008-09 Champions League

On June 4, 2008, Porto was officially stripped of their place in the 2008-09 Champions League. This was a result of allegations of bribery of referees in the 2003/04 season. The referees were found guilty of accepting the offer of prostitutes after matches, while in one case an official received 2,500 Euros prior to a match. Porto plans to appeal the decision.[2]

[edit] Estádio do Dragão

Estádio do Dragão (English: Dragon's Stadium) is a football stadium in Porto, Portugal that has an all-seated capacity of 50,948.

Estádio do Dragao on opening night (note: the cranes and suspended ropes used by acrobats that night)
Estádio do Dragao on opening night (note: the cranes and suspended ropes used by acrobats that night)


The stadium was built as a replacement for FC Porto's old ground, Estadio das Antas (Dolmens' Stadium), and as a venue for EURO 2004. It was completed in 2003, some months after what was expected since in the February 2001, Porto mayor Rui Rio changed the estate distribution, criticizing the plan because it included high-scale housing and shopping for the area and forcing the chairman of FC Porto Jorge Nuno Pinto da Costa to halt all building operations, which were only resumed after a consensus was agreed. As of today, the stadium, housing and shopping areas have been built but the city hall has apparently let go of its interest to build the school and public gardens which are part of the plan, causing old arguments about the mayor's decision in 2001 to resurface. As requested by UEFA, the old stadium was demolished, and the space used for the media during the Euro 2004, and in the following months, the construction of the buildings that will form the new urban settlement called "Cidade das Antas" (City of Antas) began.

Main Entrance
Main Entrance

Designed by Manuel Salgado and built by the Grupo Amorim, it cost €97.755.318, of which €18.430.956 was supported by the Portuguese taxpayers. To support costs, each stand carries one or two sponsor names, edp for the South (Sul) end, tmn and Sapo adsl in the East (Nascente) stand, PT and TV Cabo for the West (Poente) stand and finally Coca-Cola in the North (Norte) Stand. Away fans are placed in the left corner of the North stand, while FC Porto supporter groups (SuperDragões and Colectivo Ultras 95) are at each end, although initially both groups were in the South stand.

The stadium's name is derived from the presence of a dragon on the crest of FC Porto, which is composed of an old football under the old crest of the City of Porto.

Bronze logo
Bronze logo

It is also the nickname of FC Porto fans. Other alternatives were considered, such as Estádio das Antas (officially, unlike the former stadium) or named after Artur de Sousa Pinga, José Maria Pedroto (former players and managers) or Pinto da Costa (running president for over 20 years).

Inaugurated in 16 November 2003 against FC Barcelona, FC Porto won 2-0 with goals by Derlei and Hugo Almeida. However, due to severe turf problems, FC Porto was forced to play in the Estádio das Antas, until the turf was replanted by mid February 2004.

The stadium further cemented its reputation as an all-round sports and entertainment venue when it secured the Portuguese leg of The Rolling Stones 2006 world tour, fighting off competition from stadia in Lisbon. This represents something of a coup for the city of Porto over the capital.

[edit] Current squad

No. Position Player
1 Flag of Brazil GK Helton
2 Flag of Portugal DF Bruno Alves (Captain) (3rd)
3 Flag of Portugal DF Pedro Emanuel (Captain) (1st)
4 Flag of Serbia DF Milan Stepanov
5 Flag of Slovakia DF Marek Čech
7 Flag of Portugal MF Ricardo Quaresma
8 Flag of Argentina MF Lucho González (Captain) (2nd)
9 Flag of Argentina FW Lisandro López
11 Flag of Argentina FW Mariano González
13 Flag of Uruguay DF Jorge Fucile
14 Flag of Portugal DF João Paulo
15 Flag of Brazil DF Lino
No. Position Player
16 Flag of Portugal MF Raúl Meireles
17 Flag of Morocco FW Tarik Sektioui
18 Flag of Argentina MF Mario Bolatti
19 Flag of Argentina FW Ernesto Farías
20 Flag of Brazil MF Leandro Lima
21 Flag of Portugal FW Hélder Barbosa
24 Flag of Portugal GK Hugo Ventura (from youth team)
25 Flag of Poland MF Przemysław Kaźmierczak
26 Flag of Portugal MF André Castro (from youth team)
28 Flag of Brazil FW Adriano
33 Flag of Portugal GK Nuno
39 Flag of Portugal FW Rabiola


[edit] Squad changes for 2008/09 season

In:

Total spending: 7,400,000 €

Out:

Total income: 23,000,000 €

[edit] Players out on loan

BWIN Liga:

Liga Vitalis:

Other countries:

[edit] Famous players

1930-1979

1980s

1990s


2000s


[edit] Selected former managers

[edit] Honours

[edit] International

This was the first match ever decided under UEFA's new silver goal rule.

[edit] National

  • Portuguese Liga :
    • Winners: 23
    • 1934/35, 1938/39, 1939/40, 1955/56, 1958/59, 1977/78, 1978/79, 1984/85, 1985/86, 1987/88, 1989/90, 1991/92, 1992/93, 1994/95, 1995/96, 1996/97, 1997/98, 1998/99, 2002/03, 2003/04, 2005/06, 2006/07, 2007/08
    • Runners-up: 23
    • 1935/36, 1937/38, 1940/41, 1950/51, 1953/54, 1956/57, 1957/58, 1961/62, 1962/63, 1963/64, 1964/65, 1974/75, 1979/80, 1980/81, 1982/83, 1983/84, 1986/87, 1988/89, 1990/91, 1993/94, 1999/00, 2000/01, 2004/05
  • Portuguese Cup :
    • Winners: 17
    • 1921/22, 1924/25, 1931/32, 1936/37, 1955/56, 1957/58, 1967/68, 1976/77, 1983/84, 1987/88, 1990/91, 1993/94, 1997/98, 1999/00, 2000/01, 2002/03, 2005/06
    • Runners-up: 14
    • 1923/24, 1930/31, 1952/53, 1958/59, 1960/61, 1962/63, 1977/78, 1979/80, 1980/81, 1982/83, 1984/85, 1991/92, 2003/04, 2007/08
  • Portuguese Super Cup "Cândido de Oliveira":
    • Winners: 15
    • 1981, 1983, 1984, 1986, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2006
    • Runners-up: 8
    • 1979, 1985, 1988, 1992, 1995, 1997, 2000, 2007

[edit] Other trophies

[edit] League and cup performances

Season Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Cup Europe Coach(es)
1934-1935 CL 1 14 10 2 2 43 19 22 semi-final Joseph Szabo
1935-1936 CL 2 14 9 2 3 50 18 20 quarter-final Mihaly 'Miguel' Siska, Maggyar, Janos Biri
1936-1937 CL 4 14 6 2 6 31 31 14 winner François Gutkas
1937-1938 CL 2 14 11 1 2 43 22 23 quarter-final Mihaly 'Miguel' Siska
1938-1939 1D 1 14 10 3 1 57 20 23 semi-final Mihaly 'Miguel' Siska
1939-1940 1D 1 18 17 0 1 76 21 34 semi-final Mihaly 'Miguel' Siska
1940-1941 1D 2 14 8 4 2 47 27 20 quarter-final Mihaly 'Miguel' Siska
1941-1942 1D 4 22 13 2 7 77 48 28 last 16 Mihaly 'Miguel' Siska
1942-1943 1D 7 18 5 4 9 40 56 14 semi-final Lipo Hertza
1943-1944 1D 4 18 10 3 5 46 36 23 quarter-final Lipo Hertza
1944-1945 1D 4 18 9 2 7 64 48 20 last 16 Lipo Hertza
1945-1946 1D 6 22 9 2 11 65 44 20 semi-final Joseph Szabo
1946-1947 1D 3 26 15 3 8 73 45 33 not held Joseph Szabo
1947-1948 1D 5 26 17 2 7 73 42 36 last 16 Carlos Nunes, Eladio Vaschetto
1948-1949 1D 4 26 16 1 9 55 37 33 quarter-final Alejandro Scopelli
1949-1950 1D 5 26 12 2 12 61 52 26 not held Augusto Silva, Artur de Sousa "Pinga", Francisco Reboredo
1950-1951 1D 2 26 15 4 7 67 32 34 2nd round Anton Vogel, Gencsi
1951-1952 1D 3 26 15 6 5 68 33 36 semi-final Eladio Vaschetto, Passarin
1952-1953 1D 4 26 16 4 6 58 35 36 final Lino Taiolli, Fernando Vaz, Cândido de Oliveira
1953-1954 1D 2 26 16 4 6 83 35 36 quarter-final Cândido de Oliveira
1954-1955 1D 4 26 12 6 8 51 34 30 2nd round Fernando Vaz
1955-1956 1D 1 26 18 7 1 77 20 43 winner Dorival Yustrich
1956-1957 1D 2 26 18 4 4 86 23 40 quarter-final ECC prel. round Flávio Costa
1957-1958 1D 2 26 21 1 4 64 25 43 winner Dorival Yustrich, José Vale, Otto Bumbel
1958-1959 1D 1 26 17 7 2 81 22 41 final Béla Guttmann
1959-1960 1D 4 26 13 4 9 48 36 30 semi-final ECC qualifying round Ettore Puricelli, Ferdinand 'Fernando' Daučík
1960-1961 1D 3 26 14 5 7 51 28 33 final Otto Vieira, Gyorgy Orth
1961-1962 1D 2 26 18 5 3 57 16 41 3rd round Gyorgy Orth, Francisco Reboredo
1962-1963 1D 2 26 19 4 3 61 24 42 quarter-final FC 1st round Jenő 'Janos' Kálmár
1963-1964 1D 2 26 16 8 2 51 20 40 final FC 1st round Jenő 'Janos' Kálmár, Artur Baeta, Otto Glória
1964-1965 1D 2 26 17 3 6 47 27 37 2nd round CWC 2nd round Otto Glória
1965-1966 1D 3 26 14 6 6 41 25 34 quarter-final FC 2nd round Flávio Costa, Virgílio Mendes
1966-1967 1D 3 26 17 5 4 56 22 39 semi-final FC 1st round José Maria Pedroto
1967-1968 1D 3 26 16 4 6 60 24 36 winner FC 1st round José Maria Pedroto
1968-1969 1D 2 26 15 7 4 39 23 37 2nd round CWC 2nd round José Maria Pedroto
1969-1970 1D 9 26 8 6 12 30 37 22 1st round FC 2nd round Elek Schwartz
1970-1971 1D 3 26 16 5 5 44 21 37 quarter-final Tommy Docherty, António Teixeira
1971-1972 1D 5 30 13 7 10 51 32 33 semi-final UC 1st round António Teixeira, Artur Baeta, Paulo Amaral, António Feliciano, António Morais
1972-1973 1D 4 30 15 7 8 56 28 37 quarter-final UC 3rd round Fernando Riera, António Feliciano
1973-1974 1D 4 30 18 7 5 43 22 43 quarter-final Béla Guttmann
1974-1975 1D 2 30 19 6 5 62 30 44 3rd round UC 2nd round Aimoré Moreira, Monteiro da Costa
1975-1976 1D 4 30 16 7 7 73 33 39 quarter-final UC 3rd round Branko Stankovic, Monteiro da Costa
1976-1977 1D 3 30 18 5 7 72 27 41 winner UC 1st round José Maria Pedroto
1977-1978 1D 1 30 22 7 1 81 21 51 final CWC quarter-final José Maria Pedroto
1978-1979 1D 1 30 21 8 1 70 19 50 1st round ECC 1st round José Maria Pedroto
1979-1980 1D 2 30 22 6 2 59 9 50 final ECC 2nd round José Maria Pedroto
1980-1981 1D 2 30 21 6 3 53 18 48 final UC 2nd round Hermann Stessl
1981-1982 1D 3 30 17 9 4 46 17 43 quarter-final CWC quarter-final Hermann Stessl
1982-1983 1D 2 30 20 7 3 73 18 47 final UC 2nd round José Maria Pedroto
1983-1984 1D 2 30 22 5 3 65 9 49 winner CWC final José Maria Pedroto
1984-1985 1D 1 30 26 3 1 78 13 55 final CWC 1st round Artur Jorge
1985-1986 1D 1 30 22 5 3 64 20 49 4th round ECC 2nd round Artur Jorge
1986-1987 1D 2 30 20 6 4 67 22 46 3rd round ECC winner Artur Jorge
1987-1988 1D 1 38 29 8 1 88 15 66 winner ECC 2nd round Tomislav Ivić
1988-1989 1D 2 38 21 14 3 52 17 56 final ECC 2nd round Tomislav Ivić
1989-1990 1D 1 34 27 5 2 72 16 59 last 16 UC 3rd round Artur Jorge
1990-1991 1D 2 38 31 5 2 77 22 67 winner ECC quarter-final Artur Jorge
1991-1992 1D 1 34 24 8 2 58 11 56 final CWC 2nd round Carlos Alberto Silva
1992-1993 1D 1 34 24 6 4 59 17 54 last 16 ECL group stage Carlos Alberto Silva
1993-1994 1D 2 34 21 10 3 56 15 52 winner ECL semi-final Bobby Robson
1994-1995 1D 1 34 29 4 1 73 15 62 semi-final CWC quarter-final Bobby Robson
1995-1996 1D 1 34 26 6 2 84 20 84 semi-final ECL group stage Bobby Robson
1996-1997 1D 1 34 27 4 3 80 24 85 semi-final ECL quarter-final António Oliveira
1997-1998 1D 1 34 24 5 5 75 38 77 winner ECL group stage António Oliveira
1998-1999 1D 1 34 24 7 3 85 26 79 last 16 ECL group stage Fernando Santos
1999-2000 1D 2 34 22 7 5 66 26 73 winner ECL quarter-final Fernando Santos
2000-2001 1D 2 34 24 4 6 73 27 76 winner UC quarter-final Fernando Santos
2001-2002 1D 3 34 21 5 8 66 34 68 quarter-final ECL 2nd group stage Octávio Machado, José Mourinho
2002-2003 1D 1 34 27 5 2 73 26 86 winner UC winner José Mourinho
2003-2004 1D 1 34 25 7 2 63 19 82 final ECL winner José Mourinho
2004-2005 1D 2 34 17 11 6 39 26 62 last 32 ECL last 16 Luigi del Neri, Victor Fernandez, José Couceiro
2005-2006 1D 1 34 24 7 3 54 16 79 winner ECL group stage Co Adriaanse
2006-2007 1D 1 30 22 3 5 65 20 69 4th round ECL last 16 Jesualdo Ferreira
2007-2008 1D 1 30 24 3 3 60 13 69* final ECL last 16 Jesualdo Ferreira

*Porto were deducted 6 points due to bribery of referees in the 2003-04 season[3]

CL = Campeonato da Liga (winners weren't considered Portuguese champions); 1D = First League and predecessors (1st level)

Cup: pre-1938: Campeonato de Portugal (winners were considered Portuguese champions)

ECC / ECL = European Champion's Cup / Champions League; CWC = Cup Winner's Cup; UC = UEFA Cup ; FC = Fairs Cup

[edit] Records

  • Participations in the Portuguese main division: 72
    • Games played: 1988
    • Games won: 1287
    • Games drawn: 369
    • Games lost: 332
    • Goals scored: 4427 (average 2,23 per game)
    • Goals conceded: 1876 (average 0,94 per game)
    • Best position: Champion (22 times)
    • Worst position: 9th (1969/70)
    • Season with more points: 67 in 1990/91 (2 pts per win) and 86 in 2002/03 (3 pts per win)
    • Player with most games: João Pinto with 407
    • Player with most goals: Fernando Gomes with 288
    • Manager with most games: Pedroto with 236

[edit] Rink hockey

Rink hockey, Portugal's second sport, is one of the most important sections in the club. Started in 1955, FCPorto is one of the Portuguese sides who won the European Champions' Cup/League, with their second and last victory in 1990, after having won in 1986. Since then, Porto was a regular contender in the competitions' final-four.
While the new indoor arena is being built, Porto will play in the Pavilhão Municipal de Fânzeres, Gondomar.

[edit] Players and staff

Name Position
Edo Bosch Spanish Goalkeeper
Tiago Sousa Portuguese Goalkeeper
Ricardo Figueira Portuguese Defender
Filipe Santos Portuguese Defender
Reinaldo Ventura Portuguese Forward
Ricardo Oliveira (Caio) Portuguese Forward
Reinaldo Garcia Argentinian Forward
Emanuel Garcia Argentinian Forward
Pedro Gil Spanish Forward
Franklim Pais Portuguese Coach
Ilídio Borges Pinto Portuguese Vice-president in charge of the section

See 2005-06 in Portuguese Rink Hockey

[edit] Famous players

  • Franklim Pais
  • Tó Neves
  • Vítor Hugo
  • Realista
  • António Alves
  • Pedro Alves
  • Paulo Alves
  • António Livramento (manager)
  • Vasco Silva
  • Teofilo Cubillas

[edit] Honours

  • European Champions Cup (2): 1985-86, 1989-90
  • European Cup Winners' Cup (2): 1981-82, 1982-83
  • CERS Cup (2): 1993-94, 1995-96
  • European Supercup (1): 1986-1987
  • Portuguese Championships (16): 1982-83, 1983-84, 1984-85, 1985-86, 1986-87, 1988-89, 1989-90, 1990-91, 1998-99, 1999-00, 2001-02, 2002-03, 2003-04, 2004-05, 2005-06, 2006-07
  • Portuguese Cups (11): 1982-83, 1984-85, 1985-86, 1986-87, 1987-88, 1988-89, 1995-96, 1997-98, 1998-99, 2004-05, 2005-06
  • Portuguese Supercup (13): 1983-84, 1984-85, 1985-86, 1986-87, 1987-88, 1988-89, 1989-90, 1990-91, 1991-92, 1995-96, 1997-98, 1999-2000, 2005-06

[edit] Handball

Main article: FC Porto (handball)

While not as popular as football or rink hockey, the celebrations of the 1998-99 titles were only passed by the celebrations of the Penta of the football team, as the previous victory in the championship was in 1968, after dominating the league in much of the 50s. To support costs, like in other clubs, the section also bears the name of a sponsor: FC Porto Vitalis.

[edit] 2005-06 squad

Name Position
Ricardo Candeias Portuguese Goalkeeper
Hugo Laurentino Portuguese Goalkeeper
Ricardo Ribeiro Portuguese Left wing
Carlos Resende Portuguese Center left
Álvaro Rodrigues Portuguese Center left
Tomic Dusan Serbian Center right
Rui Rocha Portuguese Left wing
Manuel Arezes Portuguese Pivot
David Tavares Portuguese Right wing
Tiago Rocha Portuguese Pivot
Ricardo Moreira Portuguese Right wing
Sérgio Lopes Angolan Left wing/center left
Carlos Martingo Portuguese Center

[edit] Honours

  • National championship (11): 1953-54, 1956-57, 1957-58, 1958-59, 1959-60, 1962-63, 1963-64, 1964-65, 1967-68, 1998-99 and 2001-02
  • Professional Championship (2): 2002-03 and 2003-04
  • Portuguese cups (6): 1975-76, 1976-77, 1978-79, 1979-80, 1993-94 and 2005-06
  • Portuguese supercups (4): 1994-95, 1999-00, 2000-01 and 2002-03
  • Portuguese league cups (2):2003-04 and 2004-05

[edit] Basketball

Main article: FC Porto (basketball)

[edit] 2005-06 squad

Name H Position
Augusto Sobrinho Portuguese 1m90 *
Heshimu Evans North American 2m00 *
Paulo Cunha Portuguese 1m99 *
José Costa Portuguese 1m90 *
Rodrigo Mascarenhas Cape Verde - Naturalized Portuguese 1m98 *
Jimmy Mackey North American 1m90 *
Élvis Évora Portuguese 2m05 *
Ian Stanback North American - Naturalized Portuguese 2m00 *
Anastácio Sami Guinea - Naturalized Portuguese 2m07 *
Fábio Fernandes Portuguese 2m00 *
Sérgio Silva Portuguese 1m74 *
Gustavo Mota Portuguese 1m92 *

[edit] Honours

  • Professional league (4): 1995-96, 1996-97, 1998-99; 2003-04
  • First Division (6): 1951-52, 1952-53, 1971-72, 1978-79, 1979-80 and 1982-83;
  • Second Division (2): 1947-48 and 1949-50;

[edit] Billiards

  • National championship - 3 Tabelas (9): 1982/83, 1983/84, 1987/88, 1992/93, 1993/94, 1996/97, 1999/2000, 2001/02, 2002/03
  • National championship - Pool (3): 2000/01, 2001/02, 2002/03

[edit] Athletics

[edit] Notes and references

  1. ^ Estádio (Portuguese). FC Porto.pt.
  2. ^ Porto lose Champions League place. BBC (2008-06-04). Retrieved on 2008-06-04.
  3. ^ Porto docked points, Boavista demoted. uefa.com (9 May 2008). Retrieved on 2008-05-12.

[edit] External links