F.C. Penafiel

Penafiel
Full name Futebol Clube Penafiel
Nickname(s) Rubro-Negros (Red-and-black)
Penafidelenses
Durienses
Founded 8 February 1951; 64 years ago
Ground Estádio Municipal 25 de Abril, Penafiel
Ground Capacity 6,500
Chairman António Gaspar Dias
Manager Carlos Brito
League LigaPro
2014–15 Primeira Liga, 18th (relegated)
Website Club home page

Futebol Clube Penafiel (Portuguese pronunciation: [pɨnɐfiˈɛɫ] or [penɐfiˈɛɫ]) is a Portuguese football club founded in 1951 and based in the city of Penafiel.[1]

Brief history

Estádio 25 Abril during a match in the 2013–14 season.

Penafiel first reached the first division in 1980–81, first lasting two seasons. It also played there from 1983–86, 1987–92 and 2004–06, and will compete from 2014 onwards.

In 2007–08, the club played in the second level, and eventually were relegated to the third after finishing second from bottom.

They made the semifinals of the Taça de Portugal in 1985–86, the furthest they've gone in the competition.

League and cup history

Season Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Cup League Cup Notes
1979–80 2DN 1 3014133 431941 Round 5 Promoted
1980–81 1D 10 3011514 273827 Round 2
1981–82 1D 13 309516 203723 Quarter-final Relegated
1982–83 2DN 1 Round 3 Promoted
1983–84 1D 13 307716 185521 Round 2
1984–85 1D 10 3071112 254225 Round 4
1985–86 1D 15 3041016 163818 Semi-final Relegated
1986–87 2DN 2 3012135 372537 Round 4 Promoted
1987–88 1D 10 38101810 364538 Quarter-final
1988–89 1D 15 38101315 323933 Round 2
1989–90 1D 15 349817 245026 Round 4
1990–91 1D 15 3812917 345133 Round 5
1991–92 1D 17 3471116 304725 Quarter-final Relegated
1992–93 2H 14 3412616 354830 Round 6
1993–94 2H 15 3412418 304528 Round 3
1994–95 2H 10 3413615 414632 Round 4
1995–96 2H 6 3415712 524452 Quarter-final
1996–97 2H 5 3413129 382951 Round 4
1997–98 2H 5 341789 634859 Round 6
1998–99 2H 9 3411149 564947 Round 5
1999–00 2H 6 3414146 523356 Round 4
2000–01 2H 5 3417710 453158 Round 6
2001–02 2H 14 3491114 273838 Round 5
2002–03 2H 14 3412517 384041 Round 4
2003–04 2H 3 342077 433561 Round 5 Promoted
2004–05 1D 11 3413417 395343 Round 6
2005–06 1D 18 342923 216115 Round 4 Relegated
2006–07 2H 8 3010119 232741 Round 4
2007–08 2H 15 307815 283929 Round 5 Group Stage Relegated
2008–09 2DS 1 221552 311350 Round 3 Promoted
2009–10 2H 7 3010119 353441 Round 3 Round 1
2010–11 2H 12 309912 374436 Round 2 Second Group Stage
2011–12 2H 8 3010812 333638 Round 4 Second Group Stage
2012–13 2 9 42161214 484460 Round 3 First Group Stage
2013–14 2 3 4218195 472473 Quarter-final Second Group Stage Promoted

Last updated: 18 June 2013
Div. = Division; 1D = Portuguese League; 2H = Liga de Honra; 2DS/2DN = Portuguese Second Division
Pos. = Position; Pl = Match played; W = Win; D = Draw; L = Lost; GS = Goal Scored; GA = Goal Against; P = Points

Honours

Players

Current squad

As of 4 February, 2016[2][3]

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 Júlio Coelho (vice-captain)
2 Portugal DF Luís Dias
3 Portugal DF Ângelo Meneses
4 Portugal DF Paulo Bessa
5 Portugal DF Pedro Ribeiro
6 Burkina Faso MF Djibril Zidnaba
7 Democratic Republic of the Congo FW David Mbala
9 Brazil FW José Vieira
10 Portugal MF João Martins (captain)
11 Portugal FW Aldaír
15 Portugal DF Daniel Martins
17 Portugal MF César Gomes
20 Brazil FW Kalindi
21 Portugal FW Caetano
No. Position Player
25 Portugal GK Ivo Gonçalves
26 Portugal DF Tiago Rosa
28 Portugal MF Edú Silva
32 Portugal FW Rui Miguel
33 Portugal GK Tiago Rocha
34 Portugal DF João Paulo
50 Brazil MF Diogo Melo
52 Portugal DF Amoreirinha
55 Portugal DF Pedro Araújo
71 Guinea-Bissau FW Bata
86 Portugal MF Gonçalo Abreu
88 Portugal MF Tiago Barros
99 Senegal FW Kalidou Yéro

Managerial history

  • Portugal António Sousa (Oct 3, 2007–08)
  • Portugal Ricardo Lopes (2008)
  • Portugal Rui Quinta (2008–09)
  • Portugal Bruno Cardoso (June 7, 2009 – Sept 22, 2009)
  • Angola Lázaro Oliveira (Sept 23, 2009 – Jan 16, 2011)
  • Portugal José Garrido (Jan 17, 2011 – March 6, 2011)

  • Portugal Francisco Chaló (March 8, 2011 – May 18, 2012)
  • Portugal Miguel Leal (May 28, 2012–14)
  • Portugal Ricardo Chéu (2014)
  • Portugal Rui Quinta (2014–2015)
  • Portugal Carlos Brito (2015–

Notable former players

Many Penafiel players who stood out during their presence at the club went on to achieve some of the highest honours at other clubs, including the UEFA Champions League (Jorge Costa and Pedro Emanuel, both with FC Porto) or a losing finalist in the same competition (Diego Costa with Atletico Madrid).

References

  1. "FC Penafiel". Soccerway. Retrieved 13 November 2015.
  2. "Squad". zerozero.
  3. "Squad". foradejogo.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, March 30, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.