1989–90 Primeira Divisão

Primeira Divisão
Season 1989–90
Champions Porto
11th title
Relegated Portimonense
Feirense
European Cup Porto (First round)
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup Estrela da Amadora (first round)
UEFA Cup Benfica (first round)
Sporting CP (first round)
Vitória de Guimarães (first round)
Matches played 306
Goals scored 666 (2.18 per match)
Top goalscorer Magnusson (33 goals)
Biggest home win Benfica 7–0 Penafiel
(14 October 1989)
Porto 7–0 Tirsense
(26 November 1989)
Biggest away win Braga 0–4 Benfica
(3 December 1989)
Highest scoring Benfica 7–0 Penafiel
(14 October 1989)
Porto 7–0 Tirsense
(26 November 1989)

The 1989–90 Primeira Divisão was the 56th edition of top flight of Portuguese football. It started on 20 August 1989 with a match between Chaves and Penafiel, and ended on 20 May 1990. The league was contested by 18 clubs with Benfica as the defending champions.

Porto qualified for the 1990–91 European Cup first round, Estrela da Amadora qualified for the 1990–91 European Cup Winners' Cup first round, and Benfica, Sporting CP and Vitória de Guimarães qualified for the 1990–91 UEFA Cup first round; in opposite, Portimonense and Feirense were relegated to the Liga de Honra. Magnusson was the top scorer with 33 goals.

Promotion and relegation

Teams relegated to Liga de Honra

Espinho, Fafe, Farense, Leixões and Académico de Viseu were consigned to the Liga de Honra following their final classification in 1988-89 season.

Teams promoted from Liga de Honra

The other five teams were replaced by União da Madeira, Feirense and Tirsense from the Liga de Honra, as the league dropped from 20 to 18 teams.

Teams

[1]

Stadia and locations

Location of teams in Primeira Divisão 1989-90 (Madeira)
Team Head Coach City Stadium 1988–89 finish
Beira-Mar Belgium Jean Thissen Aveiro Estádio Mário Duarte 15th
Belenenses Bulgaria Hristo Mladenov Lisbon Estádio do Restelo 7th
Benfica Sweden Sven-Göran Eriksson Lisbon Estádio da Luz 1st
Boavista Portugal Raul Águas Porto Estádio do Bessa 3rd
Braga Portugal Vítor Manuel Braga Estádio Primeiro de Maio 6th
Chaves Portugal José Romão Chaves Estádio Municipal de Chaves 13th
Estrela da Amadora Portugal João Alves Amadora Estádio José Gomes 8th
Feirense Portugal Henrique Nunes Santa Maria da Feira Estádio Marcolino de Castro 2nd in Segunda Divisão
Marítimo Portugal Quinito Funchal Estádio dos Barreiros 12th
Nacional Portugal Fernando Pires Funchal Estádio dos Barreiros 10th
Penafiel Portugal Carlos Alhinho Penafiel Estádio Municipal 25 de Abril 14th
Portimonense Portugal José Torres Portimão Estádio Municipal de Portimão 11th
Porto Portugal Artur Jorge Porto Estádio das Antas 2nd
Sporting Portugal Manuel José Lisbon Estádio José Alvalade 4th
Tirsense Portugal Prof. Neca Santo Tirso Estádio Abel Alves de Figueiredo 3rd in Segunda Divisão
União da Madeira Portugal Rui Mâncio Funchal Estádio dos Barreiros 1st in Segunda Divisão
Vitória de Guimarães Brazil Paulo Autuori Guimarães Estádio D. Afonso Henriques 9th
Vitória de Setúbal Portugal Manuel Fernandes Setúbal Estádio do Bonfim 5th

Managerial changes

Team Outgoing manager Date of vacancy Position in table Incoming manager Date of appointment
Penafiel Portugal Carlos Alhinho 22 October 1989 18th Portugal José Augusto 23 October 1989
Belenenses Bulgaria Hristo Mladenov 29 October 1989 11th Brazil Moisés Andrade 5 November 1989
Boavista Portugal Raul Águas 5 November 1989 10th Portugal Manuel Barbosa 6 November 1989
Marítimo Portugal Quinito 5 November 1989 13th Portugal Ferreira da Costa 3 December 1989
Portimonense Portugal José Torres 19 November 1989 17th Portugal Quinito 20 November 1989
Nacional Portugal Fernando Pires 26 November 1989 18th Brazil Jair Picerni 4 December 1989
Sporting Portugal Manuel José 10 December 1989 4th Portugal Vítor Damas 11 December 1989
Sporting Portugal Vítor Damas 23 December 1989 4th Portugal Raul Águas 24 December 1989
Beira-Mar Belgium Jean Thissen 28 January 1990 12th Portugal Vítor Urbano 29 January 1990
Portimonense Portugal Quinito 4 March 1990 18th Portugal Manuel de Oliveira 5 March 1990
Penafiel Portugal José Augusto 14 April 1990 16th Portugal Joaquim Teixeira 15 April 1990
Vitória de Setúbal Portugal Manuel Fernandes 21 April 1990 5th Portugal Conhé 25 April 1990

League standings

Pos
Team
Pld
W
D
L
GF
GA
GD
Pts
Qualification or relegation
1 Porto (C) 34 27 5 2 72 16+56 59 1990–91 European Cup First round
2 Benfica 34 23 9 2 76 18+58 55 1990–91 UEFA Cup First round
3 Sporting CP 34 17 12 5 42 24+18 46
4 Vitória de Guimarães 34 17 11 6 46 28+18 45
5 Chaves 34 12 14 8 38 380 38
6 Belenenses 34 16 4 14 32 331 36
7 Vitória de Setúbal 34 14 8 12 39 34+5 36
8 Boavista 34 13 8 13 49 36+13 34
9 Tirsense 34 7 16 11 21 3211 30
10 Marítimo 34 7 15 12 25 3813 29
11 Beira-Mar 34 10 9 15 22 3917 29
12 Braga 34 8 12 14 32 419 28
13 Estrela da Amadora 34 10 8 16 35 34+1 28 1990–91 European Cup Winners' Cup First round 1
14 Nacional 34 7 14 13 34 4612 28
15 Penafiel 34 9 8 17 24 5026 26
16 União da Madeira 34 5 14 15 24 4521 24
17 Portimonense (R) 34 7 7 20 30 5727 21 Relegation to 1990–91 Segunda Divisão de Honra
18 Feirense (R) 34 5 10 19 25 5732 20

Source: Primeira Divisão
Rules for classification: 1st points, 2nd head-to-head, 3rd goals average
1 Estrela da Amadora qualified for the Cup Winners' Cup as Portuguese Cup winners
(C) = Champion; (R) = Relegated; (P) = Promoted; (E) = Eliminated; (O) = Play-off winner; (A) = Advances to a further round.
Only applicable when the season is not finished:
(Q) = Qualified to the phase of tournament indicated; (TQ) = Qualified to tournament, but not yet to the particular phase indicated; (RQ) = Qualified to the relegation tournament indicated; (DQ) = Disqualified from tournament.

Results

Home ╲ Away BEM BEL BENBOABRACHAESTFEIMARNACPENPTMPORSCPTIRUNIVGUVSE
Beira-Mar 10 02 20 31 00 10 10 00 10 00 00 01 01 10 10 02 00
Belenenses 10 00 10 21 30 21 10 10 10 21 10 10 10 10 20 40 00
Benfica 50 10 11 31 20 20 31 40 11 70 50 00 21 10 42 20 51
Boavista 12 42 10 20 20 20 40 11 41 30 10 01 00 00 51 12 12
Braga 20 30 04 00 11 10 31 30 20 30 31 12 11 11 11 13 03
Chaves 21 11 00 10 11 01 00 21 33 32 42 12 21 30 21 00 20
Estrela da Amadora 31 41 01 32 00 11 30 30 30 01 42 11 00 20 11 12 01
Feirense 12 10 11 12 31 12 11 20 11 21 11 14 12 00 10 00 00
Marítimo 10 00 11 31 11 00 10 20 22 21 11 00 12 00 10 23 00
Nacional 20 30 14 21 00 11 10 30 00 11 11 03 11 00 00 00 31
Penafiel 00 10 04 21 10 00 10 20 01 02 20 02 00 00 00 21 10
Portimonense 22 31 23 02 10 01 10 20 22 21 21 01 02 11 20 13 01
Porto 22 30 10 31 30 41 20 31 41 20 40 40 32 70 10 11 10
Sporting CP 20 10 01 22 00 11 20 32 10 20 21 10 10 10 20 32 20
Tirsense 20 10 11 11 00 01 00 11 10 10 11 10 12 11 30 00 21
União da Madeira 41 10 03 11 00 11 12 11 00 32 21 20 02 00 00 11 11
Vitória de Guimarães 20 21 11 01 20 10 00 40 00 22 20 20 02 11 10 30 21
Vitória de Setúbal 00 02 12 10 10 41 21 20 21 30 31 31 01 11 42 00 01

Source: Foradejogo (in Portuguese)
1 ^ The home team is listed in the left-hand column.
Colours: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.

Top goalscorers

Rank Player Club Goals
1 Sweden Magnusson Benfica 33
2 Portugal Rui Águas Porto 18
3 Bulgaria Getov Portimonense 15
4 Algeria Madjer Porto 13
5 Nigeria Ricky Estrela da Amadora 12
Brazil Isaías Boavista
7 Bulgaria Mladenov Vitória de Setúbal 11
Brazil Jorge Andrade Boavista
Mozambique Chiquinho Conde Belenenses
Belgium Demol Porto

Source: Foradejogo[2]

Footnotes

  1. "Teams". Footballzz.
  2. "Primeira Divisão 1989-90 – Top Scorers". Footballzz. Retrieved 7 June 2015.
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