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FC PORTO
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Futebol
Clube do Porto (short: FC Porto, FCP) is a Portuguese sports club, best
known for its football section. It was founded in 1893 by António Nicolau de
Almeida in Porto.
The football home ground is now the Estádio do Dragão (finished in 2004 as a
venue for Euro 2004) after 51 years playing in the Estádio das Antas. Porto
is currently the second club in the Portuguese overall championship, just
second to SL Benfica. Porto won the Champions League twice (one still as the
ECC) and the UEFA Cup once. It was the first team since the Liverpool FC
75-77 squad to win the Champions League after winning the UEFA Cup.
FC Porto is also a leading force in other sports: the handball and
basketball team are regular contenders to the Portuguese national titles,
and the rink hockey section is amongst the best in the sport. The new arena
near the stadium will be completed soon; in past years the non-professional
home grounds were scattered in northwestern cities of Portugal (such as
Gondomar and Espinho). Commercially, FC Porto has several stores called Loja
Azul (Blue Store) scattered around Porto including two used with official
supplier Nike and edits one of the older club related publications in Europe,
a monthly 60-page full colour magazine called Dragões (Dragons) since the
early 80's.
Porto supporters and players are often called the dragões (the dragons),
though the term the Andrades is also popular after a family with that named
sponsored the club for several years. However, since the eighties, it is
seen as somewhat derogatory.
Football
FC Porto was originally founded in 1893, but was abandoned until 1906 when
Monteiro da Costa revived the club. In the following years it became one of
the most important clubs in Portugal, but lacking to Lisbon rivals SL
Benfica, Sporting and even Belenenses, yet still going on to win the first
two Portuguese championships. Only four titles followed until the beginning
of the 80's.
In 1982 Pinto da Costa took control of Porto. The next decades turned what
was the fourth team in the overall history of Portuguese football into the
biggest title cruncher of the past 20 years. Since 1982, Porto has won 13
titles, achieving the record Penta (five leagues in a row) in 1999, eight
Portuguese cups, and has a majority of Supercups, having won 14 out of a
possible 26.
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 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. The following year Porto won the European Super Cup and the
Intercontinental Cup, making them the first Portuguese winners of the two
cups. The following 16 years saw Porto as a midrange team - often in the
final 16, but not progressing further. The exception was in 1994, when Porto
reached the semi-finals of the Champions League. The semi-final, decided on
a single game, resulted in an heavy loss (3-0) at the hands of Johann
Cruyff's FC Barcelona, in the Nou Camp.
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 Glasgow.
The following season meant a higher 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), Manchester United at the Old Trafford in the dying
minutes of play, O. Lyon and Depor, becoming the first team to win the
competition outside the Big 5 since Ajax in 1995.
After the victory, Porto became the Portuguese side with the most European
cups won - 2 CL/ECC plus a UEFA Cup, compared with the two ECC by Benfica
and the one CWC by Sporting.
Also, 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's importance in the modern football panorama is also widely
acknowledged, being one of the founding members of G-14.
Honours
European Cup/Champions' League: 2
1986/87
Final: FC Porto 2 - 1 Bayern Munich (at Vienna, Austria)
Goals by Madjer, Juary; Kogl
2003/04
Final: FC Porto 3 - 0 AS Monaco (at Arena AufSchalke, Gelsenkirchen,
Germany)
Goals by Carlos Alberto, Deco, Dmitri Alenichev
European Super Cup: 1
1986/87
Ajax 0 - 1 FC Porto Goal by Rui Barros
FC Porto 1 - 0 Ajax Goal by Sousa
2003
AC Milan 1 - FC Porto 0 (at Monaco) Goal by Shevchenko
2004
FC Porto 1 - 2 Valencia, (at Monaco), goals by Quaresma; Baraja, Di Vaio
Intercontinental Cup: 2
1987
FC Porto 2 - 1 Peñarol (aet)
Goals by Gomes, Madjer; Vieira
2004
FC Porto 0 - 0 Once Caldas (8-7 on penalties)
UEFA Cup: 1
2002/03
Final: FC Porto 3 - 2 Celtic (aet) (at Seville, Spain)
Goals by Derlei (2), Alenitchev; Henrik Larsson (2)
This was the first match ever decided under UEFA's new silver goal rule.
Cup Winners' Cup: none
1983/84
Final: FC Porto 1 - 2 Juventus (at Basel, Switzerland)
Goals by Sousa; Vignola, Boniek
Portuguese Championship: 4
1921/22; 1924/25; 1931/32; 1936/37
Portuguese First League Championship: 1
1934/35
Portuguese First Division Championship (Current SuperLiga): 19
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
Portuguese Cup: 12
1955/56; 1957/58; 1967/68; 1976/77; 1983/84; 1987/88; 1990/91; 1993/94;
1997/98; 1999/00; 2000/01; 2002/03
Portuguese Super Cup "Cândido de Oliveira": 14
1980/81; 1982/83; 1983/84; 1985/86; 1989/90; 1990/91; 1992/93; 1993/94;
1995/96; 1997/98; 1998/99; 2000/01; 2002/03; 2003/04.
Other Trophies
Juan Gamper Tournament - Barcelona, Spain
1987
FC Porto 2 - 1 FC Barcelona
FC Porto 2 - 0 Bayern Munich
Viareggio Tournament - Viareggio, Italy
1989
FC Porto 1 - 1 Inter Milan
FC Porto 1 - 1 Fiorentina (Porto won on penalties)
Teresa Herrera Cup - Coruña, Spain
1991
FC Porto 2 - 1 Real Madrid
FC Porto 1 - 0 Deportivo de La Coruña
"Ciudad de Sevilla" Tournament - Seville, Spain
1992
FC Porto 2 - 0 Sevilla FC
FC Porto 2 - 2 Atlético Madrid
FC Porto 2 - 0 Betis(Final)
Centennial Cup - Porto, Portugal
1993
FC Porto 3 - 1 Cruzeiro
Thailand Premier Cup - Bangkok, Thailand
1997
FC Porto 2 - 1 Inter Milan
FC Porto 4 - 2 Boca Juniors (After penalties)
Famous Players
Pinga
Virgílio
Pedroto
Barrigana
Hernâni
Teofilo Cubillas
Seninho
Pavão
António Oliveira
Frasco
Costa
Fernando Gomes
João Pinto
Josef Mlynarczyk
Augusto Inácio
Celso
André
Jaime Pacheco
Jaime Magalhães
Madjer
Futre
Juary
Branco
Geraldão
Rui Barros
Paulinho Santos
Rui Filipe
Emerson
Timofte
Domingos
Kostadinov
Drulovic
Aloísio
Fernando Couto
Jorge Costa
Sérgio Conceição
Zlatko Zahovic
Vítor Baía
Jardel
Paredes
Deco
Alenichev
Derlei
Ricardo Carvalho
Paulo Ferreira
Costinha
Maniche
Diego
Ricardo Quaresma
Giourkas Seitaridis
Luís Fabiano |
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