Gondomar S.C.

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Gondomar
Gondomar SC.png
Full name Gondomar Sport Clube
Founded 1921
Ground São Miguel, Gondomar,
Portugal
Ground Capacity 5,000
Chairman Álvaro Cerqueira
Manager Zé Alberto
League Portuguese Second Division
2010–11 Portuguese Second Division, 4th
Website Club home page

Gondomar Sport Club is a Portuguese football club based in Gondomar, Porto District. Founded on 1 May 1921, it currently plays in the Portuguese third division, holding home games at Estádio de São Miguel, with a capacity of 5,000 spectators.

History

Gondomar's early foundations were established on 1 August 1928, as the club registered in the Porto Football Association. In 1932, however, it ceased all activity, until a group of people dubbed Os Teimosos de Gondomar (Stubborn), ten years later, took it upon themselves to resurrect the club, which return to organized football in 1960, in the third regional division; promotion to the second regional level was achieved five years later.

In 1970, Gondomar moved to the new Estádio de São Miguel. On 27 October 1986, the team participated for the first time in the Portuguese Cup, losing 1–2 at F.C. Marco. In 2003, whilst competing in the third division, it made nationwide headlines after eliminating Benfica in the fourth round, with a 1–0 win at the Estádio da Luz.[1]

One year later, Gondomar reached the second level for the first time in its history. In the 2006–07 season, the club achieved its best-ever classification in the category, finishing fifth.

In 2009, after ranking 16th and last, Gondomar returned to the third level.

Current squad

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

No. Position Player
1 Portugal GK Pedro Martins
23 China GK Yeerjieti Yeerzati
99 Portugal GK Luís Pinto
2 Portugal DF Costinha
3 Portugal DF João Paulo
4 Portugal DF Gil Dias
5 Portugal DF Joel
6 Portugal DF Hugo Baldaia
32 Portugal DF Tiago Gil
10 Portugal MF Júlio
11 Portugal MF Nuno Pereira
14 Portugal MF Pinto
No. Position Player
18 China MF Chengkuai Wang
19 Portugal MF Ivo Lemos
20 Portugal MF Bruninho
23 Portugal MF Pedro Sales
29 France MF Salif Thomas
33 China MF Yi Guo
9 Portugal FW Miguel Pereira
17 Portugal FW Hilário
21 Portugal FW Nélson
31 Senegal FW Djibril Sarr
45 Ecuador FW Jonathan Betancourt

League and cup history

Season I II III IV V Pts. Pl. W L T GS GA Diff.
1994–95 12 32 pts 34 10 12 12 35 35 0
1995–96 2 63 pts 34 19 6 9 68 25 +43
1997–98 8 48 pts 34 14 6 14 50 53 -3
1998–99 18 30 pts 34 7 9 18 32 53 -21
2003–04 1 86 pts 36 27 5 4 69 25 +44
2004–05 16 39 pts 34 11 6 17 38 45 -7
2005–06 6 51 pts 34 14 9 11 56 41 +15
2006–07 5 45 pts 30 13 6 11 33 30 +3
2007–08 12 35 pts 30 9 8 13 31 51 -20
2008–09 16 30 pts 30 7 9 14 29 35 -6
2009–10 4 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...

Honours

Notable former players

Managers

  • Portugal Fernando Pires

Stadium

Logo history

References

  1. Glorious Benfica (Glorious Benfica); Glória Vermelha (Portuguese)

External links