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FC Porto

Futebol Clube do Porto, MHIH, OM[4][5] (Portuguese pronunciation: [futɨˈβɔl ˈkluβɨ ðu ˈpoɾtu]), commonly known as FC Porto or simply Porto, is a Portuguese professional sports club based in Porto. It is best known for the professional football team playing in the Primeira Liga, the top flight of Portuguese football.

Porto
Full nameFutebol Clube do Porto
Nickname(s)Dragões (Dragons)
Azuis e brancos (Blue and whites)
Short namePorto
Founded28 September 1893; 129 years ago (1893-09-28) (disputed) as Foot-Ball Club do Porto [1][2][3]
GroundEstádio do Dragão
Capacity50,033
PresidentJorge Nuno Pinto da Costa
Head coachSérgio Conceição
LeaguePrimeira Liga
2021–22Primeira Liga, 1st of 18 (champions)
WebsiteClub website
Current season

Founded on 28 September 1893,[a] Porto is one of the "Big Three" (Portuguese: Os Três Grandes) teams in Portugal – together with Lisbon-based rivals Benfica and Sporting CP, that have appeared in every season of the Primeira Liga since its establishment in 1934. They are nicknamed Dragões (Dragons), for the mythical creature atop the club's crest, and Azuis e brancos (Blue-and-whites), for the shirt colours. Those colours are in stripes with blue shorts. The club supporters are called portistas. Since 2003, Porto have played their home matches at the Estádio do Dragão, which replaced the previous 51-year-old ground, the Estádio das Antas.

Porto is the second most decorated team in Portuguese football, with 83 major trophies.[7] Domestically, these comprise 30 Portuguese league titles (five of which won consecutively between 1994–95 and 1998–99, a Portuguese football record), 18 Taça de Portugal, 4 Campeonato de Portugal, 1 Taça da Liga and a record 23 Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira. Porto is one of two teams to have won the league title without defeats, in the 2010–11 and 2012–13 seasons.[8] In the former, Porto achieved the largest-ever difference of points between champion and runner-up in a three-points-per-win system (21 points), on their way to a second quadruple.

In international competitions, Porto is the most decorated Portuguese team, with seven trophies. They won the European Cup/UEFA Champions League in 1987 and 2004, the UEFA Cup/Europa League in 2003 and 2011, the UEFA Super Cup in 1987, and the Intercontinental Cup in 1987 and 2004. In addition, they were runners-up in the 1983–84 European Cup Winners' Cup, plus the 2003, 2004 and 2011 editions of the UEFA Super Cup. Porto is the only Portuguese club to have won the UEFA Cup/Europa League, the UEFA Super Cup, the Intercontinental Cup, and to have achieved a continental treble of domestic league, domestic cup and European titles (2002–03 and 2010–11). Porto have the third-most appearances in the UEFA Champions League group stage (23), behind Barcelona and Real Madrid (24). In UEFA, Porto ranks 9th in the all-time club ranking and was 16th in the club coefficient rankings at the end of the 2021–22 season.[9]

History

Early years (1893–1921)

 
António Nicolau de Almeida, club founder

The club was founded on 28 September 1893 as Foot-Ball Club do Porto by António Nicolau de Almeida, a local port wine merchant and avid sportsman, who became fascinated with football during his trips to England.[10][11][12][13] Porto played its first matches with other Portuguese clubs, including one against Lisbon's Foot-Ball Club Lisbonense on 2 March 1894. This match had the patronage of King Carlos I and Queen Amélie of Orléans, who travelled to Porto to witness the event and present a trophy to the winners.[10][14]

Almeida's enthusiasm and involvement with the club waned due to family pressure, and by the turn of the century, Porto had entered a period of inactivity.[10] In 1906, José Monteiro da Costa returned to Porto after finishing his studies in England. Like Almeida, thirteen years before, he was also captivated by the English game, and together with some associates, decided to reintroduce the practice of football in the city, outside of the British circles. On 2 August 1906, Porto was revived and Monteiro da Costa appointed its president. Although football was the driving force, the club also promoted other sports, including gymnastics, weightlifting and wrestling, athletics and swimming.[15] Shortly after, Porto rented its first ground and recruited a French coach named Adolphe Cassaigne,[16] who would stay in the club until 1925.[17]

On 15 December 1907, Porto played its first match against a foreign team, hosting Spain's Real Fortuna.[18] In the following month, Porto returned the visit and played its first match abroad.[19] Four years later, the club won the inaugural staging of the Taça José Monteiro da Costa,[20] securing its first-ever major title.[21] In 1912, Porto joined efforts with Leixões to establish the Porto Football Association, which began organising the regional championship in the following year.[22] Porto finished the first season as runners-up, behind local rivals Boavista, but in the following season the club won its first championship. By the end of the 1920–21 season, Porto had been regional champions six times in seven years,[23] and outright winners of the Taça José Monteiro da Costa, after claiming a third consecutive victory in 1916.[20]

First national titles and drought years (1921–1977)

The 1921–22 season was marked by the creation of the first nationwide football competition – the Campeonato de Portugal.[24] Organised by the national federation, this knockout tournament gathered the winners of the regional championships to determine the Portuguese champion.[25] After clinching its fourth consecutive regional title, Porto defeated Sporting CP in the inaugural edition and became the first national champions.[24][26] While a dominant regional force,[b] the club faced stronger opposition in the national championship, winning it only three more times in a span of sixteen years (1925, 1932 and 1937).[26] In 1933–34, Porto was denied participation in the Campeonato de Portugal by its football association for refusing to release players for a match between the Porto and Lisbon regional teams.[27]

In the following season, a second nationwide competition named "Campeonato da Primeira Liga" (English: Premier League Championship), or simply Primeira Liga, was provisionally established by the national federation to increase the number of matches per season and improve the competitiveness of Portuguese football.[28] As the regional champion, Porto qualified for the first edition of the new round-robin competition, winning it with 10 victories in 14 matches.[29][30] Due to the success of its format, the Primeira Liga was made an official championship competition for the 1938–39 season – its name changed to "Campeonato Nacional da Primeira Divisão" (English: First Division National Championship) or simply Primeira Divisão – and replaced the Campeonato de Portugal, which in turn was converted into the Taça de Portugal, the main domestic cup competition.[25][26] Porto won the inaugural edition of the new league championship and successfully defended the title in the next season, despite almost failing to take part.[c] The club failed to secure a third consecutive title, and after nearly missing again a place in the Primeira Divisão in 1941–42,[d] it would only return to a top-three finish in the 1946–47 season. In 1948, Porto defeated English champions Arsenal 3–2 in a friendly match. To commemorate this victory, the associates offered the club a massive trophy made of 250 kg (550 lb) of silver and wood – the Arsenal Cup.[34]

Having endured a 16-year title drought period, Porto returned to winning ways by taking the 1955–56 Primeira Divisão on head-to-head advantage over runners-up Benfica. Later that season, Porto beat Torreense to win its first Taça de Portugal and achieved its first double.[35][36] As the Portuguese league winner, Porto made its debut in European competitions by qualifying for the 1956–57 European Cup. The club's first participation was short-lived, ending in the preliminary round with two defeats against Spanish champions Athletic Bilbao.[37][38]

A year later, Porto lifted its second Taça de Portugal by beating Benfica 1–0 in the final.[36] In 1958, Béla Guttmann took charge as coach of Porto and helped them overhaul a five-point lead enjoyed by Benfica to win the Portuguese League title in 1959.[39] The two clubs met in the season's final, but this time Benfica took the trophy and denied a second double for Porto that had won the 1958–59 Primeira Divisão three months before.[40]

Shortly after, the club entered another lacklustre period of its history, the highest point of which was a victory in the 1968 Taça de Portugal final. During this time, Porto had its worst-ever league classification, a ninth place in 1969–70,[41] while its best league record in that period consisted of six runner-up finishes (four consecutive between 1961–62 and 1964–65).[42] In European competitions, the club participated for the first time in the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup (and its successor, the UEFA Cup) and in the Cup Winners' Cup, without getting past the third round.[43] One of the club's most tragic moments occurred on 16 December 1973, when during a league match against Vitória de Setúbal, the 26-year-old captain Pavão fell unconscious on the pitch and died later at the hospital.[44][45] The following month, Porto presented Peruvian international Teófilo Cubillas, who became one of the club's most successful players, scoring 65 goals in 108 games.[46]

International affirmation (1977–1988)

 
Rabah Madjer was a key figure in Porto's 1987 European Cup Final victory.

The return of José Maria Pedroto – a former Porto player and head coach in the late 1960s – in the 1976–77 season started a new chapter in the club's history. Responsible for the previous cup triumph in 1968, Pedroto guided Porto to its fourth title in the competition.[47] In the following season, he put an end to Porto's league title drought, winning the championship 19 years after having played in the team that took the last title.[48] Internationally, Porto reached the quarter-finals of the 1977–78 Cup Winners' Cup, beating Manchester United along the way,[49] but suffered its heaviest defeat (6–1) against AEK Athens in the subsequent season's European Cup.[11] A poor run of performances in the latter part of the season – resulting in the loss of the league and cup titles – sparked a conflict between the technical staff and president Américo de Sá, which ended with the resignation of Pedroto and his replacement by Hermann Stessl.[50] In December 1981, Porto overcame Benfica to win the inaugural staging of the Portuguese Super Cup, the Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira.[51]

Pedroto returned in April 1982 by the hand of the club's newly elected president Jorge Nuno Pinto da Costa, who had resigned as director of football, two years before, in solidarity with the coach.[52] The previous month, Porto fell again in the Cup Winners' Cup quarter-finals against one of the eventual finalists,[53] but needed only two years to finally reach the competition's final. On 16 May 1984, Porto played its first major European final in Basel's St. Jakob Stadium, losing 2–1 to Michel Platini's Juventus.[54] Already without Pedroto, who stepped down due to illness, Porto won that season's Taça and Supertaça but lost the championship to Benfica.[55] Under the steering of Pedroto's apprentice, Artur Jorge, the following season brought the Primeira Divisão title back to the club and crowned homegrown striker Fernando Gomes as Europe's top goalscorer for the second time, after first taking the award in 1983.[56][57]

Porto retained the league title in 1986, securing an entry to the 1986–87 European Cup. In the first game, the club recorded its biggest win in European competitions: 9–0 against Maltese side Rabat Ajax.[11] Vítkovice of Czechoslovakia, Brøndby of Denmark, and Dynamo Kyiv of the Soviet Union were successively eliminated as Porto advanced to its first European Cup final, against Bayern Munich. Trailing the Germans 1–0 until the 79th minute, Porto scored twice in two minutes – the first goal through a famous backheel from former Algerian international Rabah Madjer,[58] who assisted Juary for the second – to secure a surprising win and the European Cup title.[59] The following season, under new coach Tomislav Ivic, the club completed a treble of international trophies by beating Ajax for the 1987 European Super Cup and Uruguay's Peñarol for the 1987 Intercontinental Cup.[60][61] The 1987–88 season was one of the most successful for the club, who also won the Taça de Portugal and an expanded 20-team Primeira Divisão with a record number of goals scored (88) and distance in points to the runners-up (15).[e][62]

Tri, Tetra, Penta (1988–2001)

In contrast to the previous season, Porto failed to win a trophy in 1988–89, with many of its players struck down with injuries, such as Madjer and Gomes.[63] Fifteen years after his first-team debut, Gomes made his last season for Porto, where he became the all-time top goalscorer with 352 goals in 455 matches.[64] The club brought back Artur Jorge, who recovered the Primeira Divisão title in the following season and added the Taça and Supertaça trophies in 1991.[65] His successor, Brazilian Carlos Alberto Silva, won back-to-back league titles in two seasons and qualified Porto for the first UEFA Champions League.[66][67]

 
Bobby Robson won the first two of Porto's record five consecutive league titles.

Midway through the 1993–94 season, Porto hired former England manager Bobby Robson, who had been sacked by Sporting CP. The club closed the gap to league winners Benfica, reached the 1993–94 UEFA Champions League semi-finals, and ended the season with a victory over Sporting CP in the Taça de Portugal final.[68] In Robson's first full season, Porto claimed the 1994–95 Primeira Divisão title with a win at Sporting CP's ground and played Benfica four times to secure both the 1993 and 1994 stagings of the Supertaça.[69][51] The beginning of the season had been clouded by the death of 26-year-old midfielder Rui Filipe, who had scored the club's first league goal.[69] Robson's increasing health problems barred him from leading Porto in the first months of the 1995–96 season, but he returned in time to revalidate the league title. Striker Domingos Paciência became the club's top goalscorer for the second consecutive time and won that season's Bola de Prata, the last win by a Portuguese player.[70]

To fill the void left by the departure of Robson for Barcelona, Porto hired former club captain and Portugal national team manager António Oliveira. Under his command, Porto made history by winning a third consecutive league title (the Tri) for the first time, leaving the runners-up at a distance of 13 points. The club's eighth Supertaça win over Benfica was achieved with a solid performance at the Estádio da Luz that resulted in a 5–0 scoreline.[51][71] The arrival of Brazilian players Artur and Mário Jardel proved highly productive in the 1996–97 UEFA Champions League, as their goals helped Porto beat Milan in Italy and win its group without defeats.[72] In addition, Jardel would win the first of four consecutive Bola de Prata awards while at Porto.[71] In Oliveira's second and last season at the club, Porto won the Primeira Divisão for the fourth straight season (the Tetra), matching Sporting CP's achievement in the early 1950s, and secured its third double after beating Braga in the 1998 Taça de Portugal Final.[36][73]

For the 1998–99 season, Porto tasked Portuguese coach Fernando Santos with winning the club's fifth successive Primeira Divisão title (the Penta) – a Portuguese football record. He accomplished this feat, becoming thereafter known as the "Penta engineer" (a pun to his academic degree),[74] and saw Jardel's 36 goals win him the European Golden Shoe.[75][57] Porto lost the chance to win its sixth straight league title, after finishing four points behind 1999–2000 Primeira Liga champions Sporting, but overcame them to lift its tenth Taça de Portugal trophy.[76][36] Despite winning the Portuguese cup for the second time in two years, continued failure to retake the league title led to the resignation of Santos at the end of the 2000–01 season.[77]

Mourinho's golden years (2001–2004)

 
José Mourinho led Porto to consecutive UEFA Cup and UEFA Champions League titles.

The appointment of former club player and assistant coach Octávio Machado to head Porto back to the league title appeared to pay off as the team began the season with a Supertaça win against the 2000–01 Primeira Liga winners, Boavista.[51] However, this would be the only major achievement in a lacklustre season that would culminate with a third place in the league classification – the lowest in 20 years. The elimination from the 2001–02 Taça de Portugal, four days after losing away for the Primeira Liga, precipitated the sacking of Machado after 36 matches in charge.[78]

Two days later, Porto signed União de Leiria's coach, José Mourinho, who had previously worked for the club alongside Robson.[79] In his presentation, Mourinho promptly showcased his personality by stating unequivocally that the club would win next season's league title.[78] He kept true to his promise and delivered one of the club's most successful seasons. Fielding the likes of Deco, Ricardo Carvalho, Maniche, and less known players hired from other Portuguese clubs, such as Paulo Ferreira, Pedro Emanuel, Nuno Valente and Derlei, Porto won the 2002–03 Primeira Liga with relative comfort, finishing 11 points ahead of second-placed Benfica.[80] The club also won the UEFA Cup, defeating Celtic in a dramatic extra-time final, to win its second major European title.[81] Mourinho then secured an unprecedented treble for Porto by winning the Taça de Portugal final against his previous club.[36]

The 2003–04 season began with another 1–0 win over União de Leiria, which gave the club its 13th Supertaça.[51] Weeks later, Porto failed to repeat this success in the 2003 UEFA Super Cup, losing 1–0 to Milan.[82] The departure of striker Hélder Postiga was compensated by the signing of South Africa's Benni McCarthy, whose 20 league goals helped Porto in its league title defense and crowned him the competition's top scorer.[83]

Porto entered the 2003–04 UEFA Champions League directly into the group stage. Porto finished second in its group, losing only once to Real Madrid, and advanced to the round-of-16 where they met Manchester United. After narrowly winning at home (2–1), Porto was on the verge of elimination, being behind by 1–0 till the last minute of official playtime at the second leg at Old Trafford. However, Porto scored the equalizer in the 90th minute of the second leg to draw 1–1 and to advance to the quarter-finals with a 3–2 aggregate win. The team then overcame Lyon and Deportivo La Coruña to reach the Champions League final. Porto defeated Monaco 3–0 to lift the club's second European Champion Clubs' Cup.[84] A 2–1 loss to Benfica in the Taça de Portugal final, held 10 days before, prevented another treble-winning season.[36]

Life after Mourinho (2004–2010)

The successful European performances of Mourinho's Porto enhanced the reputations of the coach and players like Carvalho, Ferreira and Deco, all of whom left the club in the aftermath of the Champions League victory.[85][86][87][88] The following season was an atypical one, as the club had three coaches: Luigi Delneri,[f] Víctor Fernández and José Couceiro. Under Férnandez, Porto won the 2004 Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira and the 2004 Intercontinental Cup, but lost the 2004 UEFA Super Cup to Valencia and was eliminated prematurely in the 2004–05 Taça de Portugal. Recording only 17 wins in 34 matches, Porto lost the Primeira Liga title to Benfica by three points.[90] During this period, Porto was directly involved in the corruption scandal Apito Dourado.[91]

In 2005–06, Dutch coach Co Adriaanse was picked to reorganise the team and return the club to the top of Portuguese football. His tactical discipline and the contribution of new signings Lucho González and Lisandro López led the club to not only retake the Primeira Liga title but also secure its fifth domestic double, after beating holders Vitória de Setúbal in the Taça de Portugal final.[92] Adriaanse's domestic success did not transfer to the Champions League, as Porto finished in the bottom of its group.[93]

The club began the 2006–07 season with a new coach, Jesualdo Ferreira, signed from neighbours Boavista. Before Ferreira assumed his role, Porto won the season-opening Supertaça, with former club player Rui Barros acting as interim coach.[94] An experienced head coach, Ferreira had never achieved major club level success, but in his first season in Porto he became national champion for the first time.[95] The 2006–07 Primeira Liga title was only secured in a frantic final day, as Porto finished one point above Sporting and two above Benfica.[96] In the following season, the club achieved the Tri for the second time in its history – with López clinching the top goalscorer award –, but lost the Taça and Supertaça finals to Sporting CP.[97] As result of a legal investigation on match fixing in Portuguese football, Porto was punished with the loss of six points, which did not affect its final league classification.[98]

Having claimed a sixth league and cup double in the 2008–09 season,[99] Porto was on course to emulate the Penta of the late 1990s, but the series was broken by Benfica in the following season.[100] Although Ferreira won his first Supertaça and defended the Taça de Portugal title, the team's failure to claim a fifth consecutive league – finishing third, outside the Champions League-qualifying places – and a 3–0 defeat against Benfica in the final of the Taça da Liga contributed to his resignation at the end of the season. A home win against Benfica prevented the rivals from celebrating the league title at the Estádio do Dragão.[100] Under Ferreira's steering, Porto always qualified for the Champions League knockout stage, reaching the quarter-finals in 2008–09, where it was eliminated by holders Manchester United.[101]

Villas-Boas, Pereira and subsequent years (2010–2017)

 
André Villas-Boas won four trophies in one season with Porto, including the UEFA Europa League.

The arrival of Mourinho's former assistant André Villas-Boas, in the spring of 2010, set the stage for a highly successful 2010–11 season, which began with a 2–0 victory over Benfica for the Supertaça.[51] Spearheaded by João Moutinho, Silvestre Varela, Falcao and Hulk (the Bola de Prata winner), Porto performed strongly in the Primeira Liga and assured its 25th title with five matches to play, after beating Benfica in its stadium.[102] In addition, the club broke a number of records: biggest distance between champions and runners-up (21 points), the most consecutive league wins (16), and the highest percentage of points in a 30-game season (93.33%), dropping only six points and finishing the league without defeats, for the first time in its history.[103] Eight years after the 2003 triumph, Porto returned to the UEFA Cup (renamed UEFA Europa League) and reached the final in Dublin's Aviva Stadium. In an all-Portuguese affair, Porto beat Braga with a goal from the competition's top goalscorer Falcao and lifted the trophy for the second time,[104] as Villas-Boas became the youngest UEFA competition-winning coach.[105] Four days later, Porto won its third consecutive Taça de Portugal with a convincing 6–2 scoreline,[36] securing their fourth trophy of the season.[102]

As Villas-Boas left for Chelsea, Porto recruited the services of his assistant, Vítor Pereira. For the third straight year, the club began the season with another Supertaça title,[51] which was followed by a 2–0 loss to Barcelona for the 2011 UEFA Super Cup.[106] Although lacking the goalscoring prolificacy of Falcao (sold to Atlético Madrid), Porto was able to revalidate the Primeira Liga title,[107] but was eliminated prematurely from the Taça and Champions League competitions. Transferred to the Europa League, Porto failed to defend its title after being knocked out by Manchester City.[108] In the following season, the club went a stage further in both domestic cup competitions and in the Champions League, where it fell to Málaga in the last-16 round.[109] In the 2012–13 Primeira Liga, Porto reduced the distance to leaders Benfica to two points, before hosting them in the penultimate matchday. In a dramatic turn of events, Porto won with a goal in stoppage time and moved to the top of the league table.[110] An away victory in the last game confirmed the Tri and Porto's 27th league title – the second without defeats.[111]

Porto entered the 2013–14 season with a new head coach – Paulo Fonseca, signed from 2012 to 2013 Primeira Liga third-placed Paços de Ferreira[112] – but continued the trend of the previous four seasons by winning the Supertaça.[51] This title would be the highlight of the season, as the club underperformed in every other competition it was involved. In the league, Porto led with five points over its pursuers, but a series of compromising results pushed the club down to third place, resulting in the sacking of Fonseca.[113] Failing to overcome the Champions League group stage, Porto reached the Europa League quarter-finals, where they lost 4–1 to the eventual winners Sevilla.[114] In the following weeks, two semi-final losses against Benfica closed the doors to the finals of the Taça de Portugal and Taça da Liga, the latter at home on penalties.[36][115]

Porto started the 2014–15 season with their biggest budget ever,[116] hiring Spanish head coach Julen Lopetegui. Despite the signing of many new players, they failed to win any silverware, contributing to the biggest hiatus during Pinto da Costa's presidency.[117] They also equalized, in terms of goals conceded, their biggest defeat in European competitions (6–1 against AEK Athens) and suffered their biggest defeat in the UEFA Champions League (6–1 against Bayern Munich, after the 5–0 loss against Arsenal in 2010).[118][119] Porto continued their losing trend in the 2015–16 season, making it the second consecutive trophyless season, with the contribution of José Peseiro, who had replaced Julen Lopetegui in January 2016. After the season was over, Peseiro was replaced by Nuno Espírito Santo.

Conceição era (2017–present)

 
Former Porto player Sérgio Conceição has won eight honours as the club's manager, including three league titles

In the 2017–18 season, after almost five years without winning any trophy, Porto won their 28th league title with the contribution of coach Sérgio Conceição, a former player of the club.[120] The following year, in the 2018–19 UEFA Champions League, Porto managed to reach the quarter-finals of the competition, but were defeated by 6–1 on aggregate against the eventual winners Liverpool.[121]

In the 2019–20 season, Porto managed to recapture the league title, winning it for the 29th time and added for the first time in eleven years the Portuguese cup along with it. However, despite their national success, FC Porto did not reach the group phase of the Champions League and did poorly in their Europa League campaign.

In the 2020–21 UEFA Champions League round of 16, Porto won on away goals rule (4–4 on aggregate) against Juventus, to reach the quarter-finals.[122] The season would, however, end with only one national trophy, the Supertaça.

After having lost the national title to Sporting in the previous season, Porto's 2021–22 season saw them reach various successes at domestic level: with Conceição at the helm for the 5th season in a row, the team recaptured the Primeira Liga, achieving a record 91 points. During the season, the Dragons also set a new record for longest unbeaten run in the league, with 58 matches, a sequence that had been started during the first half of the 2020–21 edition. One week after the league's conclusion, they added the domestic cup, thus securing the second double in Conceição's reign.

On January 28 2023, still under Conceição, and on their fifth try, Porto won their first ever Taça da Liga title, defeating Sporting CP in the final, thus winning every national trophy available.[123]

Crest and kit

Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor[g]
1975–1983 Adidas[124]
1983–1997 Revigrés[125]
1997–2000 Kappa[124]
2000–2003 Nike[124]
2003–2008 PT
2008–2011 TMN[126]
2011–2014 MEO
2014–2015 Warrior[127]
2015–2016 New Balance[128]  —
2016–2018 MEO
2018–2019 Altice
2019–2022 MEO
2022– Betano

The club's first crest was created in 1910 and consisted of an old blue football with white seams bearing the club name's initials in white. On 26 October 1922, the crest was changed to its present-day appearance after the club approved a design by Augusto Baptista Ferreira (nicknamed "Simplício"), a graphical artist and one of the club's players.[129] In his proposal, the city's coat of arms – consisting at the time of a quartered shield (first and fourth quadrants: national arms; second and third quadrants: image of Our Lady holding baby Jesus and flanked by two towers holding above a banner with the Latin words "Civitas Virginis") surrounded by the collar of the Order of the Tower and Sword and topped by a crown supporting a green dragon with a red banner inscribed with "Invicta" (Undefeated [city]) – was added on top of the old crest, pushing the white letters down.[130]

In 1906, the club's first official team wore kits with a variety of colors and patterns, which included white shirts with red collars or vertical blue stripes, and even red shirts.[131] This indefinition in the equipment was only solved in 1909, when through the initiative of Monteiro da Costa, Porto stipulated in its first statutes that the players had to use "a shirt with blue vertical stripes, black shorts, and personal footwear" as the club's uniform, at every training and match.[132] Some argued that the kit should have included the city colours, green and white.[131] Monteiro da Costa, however, defended the blue-and-white combination because he believed the colors "should be those of the country's flag, and not of the city's flag", hoping that the club would "not only defend the good name of the city, but also that of Portugal, in sporting feuds against foreigners."[15]

In 1975, Adidas became the first sports apparel manufacturers to provide kits for the club.[124] Eight years later, Porto became the first Portuguese team to have a shirt sponsor, after signing a deal with Revigrés worth 10 million escudos per year.[125] This deal lasted for 20 years, with successive renovations, after which the national communications corporation Portugal Telecom (PT) became the new shirt sponsors. Still, Revigrés remain as one of the club's main and longest-serving collaborators.[133]

Home stadiums

 
The old Campo da Constituição ground houses the Vitalis Park, the club's youth training camp.

The club's first ground was the Campo da Rainha (Queen's Field), inaugurated in 1906 with an exhibition game against Boavista. The site was located near the residence of Monteiro da Costa and was the property of the city's horticultural society. Aided by his father, a horticultor by profession, Monteiro da Costa rented a portion (30 by 50 meters) of uncultivated terrain to create the first dedicated football pitch in the country. Later that year, the society's vivaria were transferred to another location, allowing Porto to increase the pitch area to match the sport's official dimensions.[134] The ground had capacity for 600 people, including a VIP tribune, and possessed a changing room equipped with showers and sinks, a bar and a gym. The first match between Porto and a foreign team took place at the Campo da Raínha, on 15 December 1907, when the hosts played Spanish side Real Fortuna.[135]

By 1911, the Campo da Raínha was becoming too small for the growing attendances. After being notified about the sale of the ground for construction of a factory, the club searched for a new ground and rented a terrain near the Constituição street for an annual fee of 350$00.[136] The Campo da Constituição (Constitution Field) was opened in January 1913 with a match against Oporto Cricket and Lawn Tennis Club and hosted Porto's home matches for the regional championship. Eventually, the larger capacity of this ground also became insufficient for the ever-increasing crowds attending the games, particularly against high-profile opponents.[137] On several occasions, between the 1920s and 1940s, Porto played host to matches at the Campo do Ameal (Ameal Field) or the Estádio do Lima (Lima Stadium), home of local rivals Sport Progresso and Académico, respectively.[138] It was in the latter ground that the club achieved their most important victory at the time, as they beat English champions Arsenal 3–2 in a friendly match on 7 May 1948.[34][139]

 
Estádio do Dragão during a UEFA Champions League match

In 1933, Porto approved a plan to build a new stadium to accommodate and meet the demands of larger attendances, but the project only moved forward with the purchase of 48,000 square metres (12 acres) of land in the eastern side of the city in 1947.[140] Designed by Portuguese architects Oldemiro Carneiro and Aires de Sá,[141] the construction of the Estádio do Futebol Clube do Porto – better known as Estádio das Antas (Antas Stadium) for the neighbourhood where it was built – began in January 1950, one month after the first stone was symbolically laid. Two years later, on 28 May 1952, the stadium was inaugurated with a ceremony, featuring the presence of the President of the Republic Francisco Craveiro Lopes,[140] and a match against Benfica, which Porto lost 2–8.[142] The stadium's initial layout had an open east sector (Marathon Door), which was closed in 1976 with the construction of a two-tier stand that raised the capacity to 70,000.[143] In 1986, works to lower the pitch and build an additional tier in the place of the athletics and cycling track were concluded, setting the capacity to a new maximum of 95,000. As stadium safety regulations became stricter during the following decade, the placing of individual seats brought the capacity of the Estádio das Antas down to 55,000 by 1997.[144]

The awarding of the UEFA Euro 2004 hosting rights to Portugal in 1999 was the perfect opportunity for Porto to move into a more modern, functional and comfortable stadium, in line with the demands of high-level international football. The club decided to build an entirely new ground and chose a site located a few hundreds of meters southeast of the Estádio das Antas. The project was commissioned to Portuguese architect Manuel Salgado,[145] and construction took two years to complete at a cost of 98 million. Baptised Estádio do Dragão (Dragon Stadium) by president Pinto da Costa, for the mythological creature placed atop the club's crest, it was officially inaugurated on 16 November 2003 with a match against Barcelona. Porto won 2–0 in front of a record 52,000 spectators, which also witnessed the professional debut of Lionel Messi. In June 2004, the venue hosted the opening ceremony and match of the UEFA Euro 2004, and four other tournament matches.[146] The highest attendance in an official match was registered on 21 April 2004, when 50,818 people saw Porto draw Deportivo La Coruña without goals, for the first leg of the 2003–04 UEFA Champions League semi-finals.[147] For safety reasons, its current capacity is limited to 50,431.[145]

Museum

The FC Porto Museum was inaugurated on 28 September 2013, on occasion of the club's 120th anniversary. The museum includes an auditorium, a club store, a coffeehouse, and spaces for educational services and temporary exhibitions.

Rivalries

Porto's biggest rivalries are with the other Big Three members and regular league title contenders, Benfica and Sporting CP. They stem from the historical, political, economical and cultural clash between the cities of Porto and Lisbon, where the other two clubs are based.[148][149] These rivalries became more intense in the past decades, particularly since Pinto da Costa assumed Porto's presidency in 1982 and adopted a regionalistic and confrontational speech towards Lisbon.[150] In the following years, the club began establishing its dominance in Portuguese football, at the expense of Benfica and Sporting, who had been the traditional powers since the 1940s.[148]

To Porto, the rivalry with Benfica is the strongest and most passionate, and it opposes the most representative football emblems from each city as well as the current most titled Portuguese clubs. The first match between Porto and Benfica – traditionally referred to as O Clássico (The Classic)[151][152] – took place on 28 April 1912, and ended with a 2–8 win for Benfica; Porto's first victory (3–2) came only in 1920.[148] As of the end of the 2014–15 season, the clubs have faced each other in 232 competitive matches, which have resulted in 89 wins for Porto, 86 for Benfica and 57 draws.[153]

The first meeting between Porto and Sporting CP occurred on 30 November 1919, during a friendly tournament organised by Porto.[154] Their first official encounter was in the first leg of the final of the inaugural Campeonato de Portugal in 1922, which Porto won 2–1 en route to its first national title.[149] Since then, the clubs have met in 221 official matches, with 80 wins for Porto, 78 for Sporting CP and 63 draws.[155] Despite the rivalry, both clubs formed an alliance against Benfica in 2017.[156][157][158]

The club also has a strong rivalry with city rivals Boavista,[159][160][161] sometimes called O Dérbi da Invicta.[162]

Records and statistics

 
Radamel Falcao holds the club record for top goalscorer in European competitions.

Former defender João Pinto holds the record for most matches played in all competitions (587) and in the Primeira Liga (408), while former goalkeeper Vítor Baía has the most appearances in international competitions (99).[163][11] Baía is also the most titled player, having won 25 trophies during his career in Porto.[164] Portuguese striker Fernando Gomes is the all-time club goalscorer in all competitions (352), having also scored the most league goals (288).[165] In European competitions, Porto's record goalscorer is Radamel Falcao, with 22 goals.[11]

José Maria Pedroto is the longest-serving coach, having taken charge of the team for 327 matches in nine seasons,[166][167] while Jesualdo Ferreira became the first Portuguese coach to win three consecutive league titles (2006–2009).[168] André Villas-Boas's victorious campaign in the 2010–11 UEFA Europa League made him the youngest coach ever to win a European competition.[169]

The 2010–11 season was particularly strong in record achievements. Porto played the most matches (58) and secured the most wins (49) and highest winning percentage (84.4%).[170] For the league, it had the most consecutive wins (16) and suffered the fewest defeats (none).[171] In Europe, the club won the most matches (14 in 17) and scored the most goals (44) en route to the UEFA Europa League title – one of a record-matching four.[172]

In April 2022, Porto set a national record of 58 matches without defeats in the Primeira Liga after losing 1–0 to Braga for the first time since the end of October 2020. The team also matched the same unbeaten league run (58) as AC Milan and Olympiacos achieved in their respective domestic leagues.[173]

Recent seasons

Below are listed the club's performances in the past ten seasons:

Season Pos Pld W D L GF GA Pts Top league scorer(s) Goals Top overall scorer(s) Goals TP TL ST UCL UEL Other competitions
2012–13 1st 30 24 6 0 70 14 78 Jackson Martínez 26 Jackson Martínez 31 R16 RU W R16
2013–14 3rd 30 19 4 7 57 25 61 Jackson Martínez 20 Jackson Martínez 29 SF SF W GS QF
2014–15 2nd 34 25 7 2 74 13 82 Jackson Martínez 21 Jackson Martínez 32 R64 SF QF
2015–16 3rd 34 23 4 7 67 30 73 Vincent Aboubakar 13 Vincent Aboubakar 18 RU 3R GS R32
2016–17 2nd 34 22 10 2 71 19 76 André Silva 16 André Silva 21 4R 3R R16
2017–18 1st 34 28 4 2 82 18 88 Moussa Marega 22 Vincent Aboubakar 26 SF SF R16
2018–19 2nd 34 27 4 3 74 20 85 Francisco Soares 15 Francisco Soares 22 RU RU W QF
2019–20 1st 34 26 4 4 74 22 82 Moussa Marega 12 Francisco Soares 19 W RU PO R32
2020–21 2nd 34 24 8 2 74 29 80 Mehdi Taremi 16 Mehdi Taremi 23 SF SF W QF
2021–22 1st 34 29 4 1 86 22 91 Mehdi Taremi 20 Mehdi Taremi 26 W 3R GS R16
  • Last updated: 23 May 2022
  • 3R = Third Round; 4R = Fourth Round; GS = Group stage; QF = Quarter-finals; PO = Play-off Round; R16 = Round of 16; R32 = Round of 32; R64 = Round of 64; RU = Runners-up; SF = Semi-finals; W = Winners

UEFA club coefficient ranking

As of 26 August 2022[174]
Rank Team Points
13   CSKA Sofia 83.000
14   Tottenham 83.000
15   Ajax 82.500
16   Porto 80.000
17   Arsenal 80.000
18   Villarreal 78.000
19   Dortmund 78.000

Honours

As of 28 January 2023, Porto have 83 major trophies in senior football. Domestically, they have won 30 Portuguese league titles, 18 Taça de Portugal, 1 Taça da Liga, 4 Campeonato de Portugal (a record shared with Sporting CP), and a record 23 Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira. Porto is the most decorated Portuguese team in international competitions, having won two European Cup/UEFA Champions League, two UEFA Cup/UEFA Europa League, one UEFA Super Cup and two Intercontinental Cup trophies. In addition, it is the only Portuguese team to have won either the UEFA Cup/UEFA Europa League, the UEFA Super Cup or the Intercontinental Cup.[175]

Porto have achieved four titles in a single season on two occasions: in 1987–88 (UEFA Super Cup, Intercontinental Cup, Primeira Liga and Taça de Portugal) and in 2010–11 (Supertaça, Primeira Liga, UEFA Europa League and Taça de Portugal). The latter also included the club's second continental treble, after the one achieved in 2002–03 (Primeira Liga, Taça de Portugal and UEFA Cup). The club also reached the Cup Winners' Cup final in 1983–84 (losing to Juventus) and made three more appearances in the UEFA Super Cup (2003, 2004 and 2011).

Domestic

Winners (30): 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, 2008–09, 2010–11, 2011–12, 2012–13, 2017–18, 2019–20, 2021–22
Winners (18): 1955–56, 1957–58, 1967–68, 1976–77, 1983–84, 1987–88, 1990–91, 1993–94, 1997–98, 1999–2000, 2000–01, 2002–03, 2005–06, 2008–09, 2009–10, 2010–11, 2019–20, 2021–22
Winners (1): 2022–23
Winners (23) – record: 1981, 1983, 1984, 1986, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2018, 2020, 2022
Winners (4) – shared record: 1921–22, 1924–25, 1931–32, 1936–37

European

Winners (2): 1986–87, 2003–04
Winners (2): 2002–03, 2010–11
Winners (1): 1987

International

Winners (2): 1987, 2004

Players

Current squad

As of 31 August 2022[176][177]

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

Out on loan

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
6 MF   SEN Mamadou Loum (at Reading until 30 June 2023)
15 MF   POR Carraça (at Gil Vicente until 30 June 2023)
21 MF   POR Romário Baró (at Casa Pia until 30 June 2023)
No. Pos. Nation Player
31 DF   GNB Nanu (at Santa Clara until 30 June 2023)
60 DF   POR Tomás Esteves (at Pisa until 30 June 2023)
DF   POR Diogo Leite (at Union Berlin until 30 June 2023)

Personnel

Technical staff

Position Staff
Head coach   Sérgio Conceição
Assistant coaches   Vítor Bruno
  Siramana Dembélé
Goalkeeper coaches   Diamantino Figueiredo
  Vedran Runje
Exercise Physiologist   Eduardo Oliveira

Last updated: 15 July 2019
Source: FC Porto

Management

Position Staff
President Jorge Nuno Pinto da Costa
Vice-presidents Adelino Caldeira
Alípio Fernandes
Fernando Gomes
José Américo Amorim
Paulo Mendes
Vítor Baía
Section Deputy Directors João Baldaia (roller hockey)
Júlio Matos (basketball)
Manuel Arezes (handball)
Elias Barros (cycling)
Mário Cereja (swimming)
José Carlos Alves (boxing)
Manuela Pinto (billiards)
Chairman of General Meeting Board Lourenço Pinto

Last updated: 7 July 2020
Source: FC Porto

Organisation

After going public in 1997, Porto created several satellite companies:

  • FC Porto – youth football, basketball, handball, roller hockey, athletics, club's magazine, etc.
  • FC Porto – Futebol SAD (professional football company); SAD stands for Sociedade Anónima Desportiva
  • Porto Estádio (stadium management)
  • Porto Multimédia (official site and multimedia products)
  • Porto Comercial (merchandising)
  • Porto Seguro (insurance)

The FCPorto SAD is listed in the Euronext Lisbon stock exchange.

Media

 

Porto Canal is a television channel owned and operated by Porto, which broadcasts generalist, regional, and club-related content through cable, satellite and IPTV. The channel's programming includes live transmission of the home matches of the reserve and youth football teams, as well as of the senior basketball, handball and roller hockey teams. Founded in 2006, the channel began a managing partnership with Porto in 2011,[178] and on 17 July 2015 was fully purchased and integrated into the club.[179][180]

The club also issues Dragões, an official monthly magazine that publishes articles and interviews of the teams, players and other club-related content and a daily newsletter called Dragões Diário.[181][182]

Other sports

Active sections
Sports   Basketball   Billiards   Boxing   Cycling   Handball   Roller hockey   Swimming
Adapted sports[h]   Basketball   Boccia   Futsal   Football 7   Goalball   Swimming   Table tennis
Extinct sections
  Artistic skating   Athletics   Beach soccer   Car racing   Chess   Field hockey   Gymnastics   Karate
  Rugby   Shooting   Sport fishing   Table tennis   Tennis   Volleyball   Water polo   Weightlifting

Footnotes

  1. ^ Before Pinto da Costa became president of the club in 1982, Porto celebrated their anniversary on 2 August 1906, and their original founder was José Monteiro da Costa.[6]
  2. ^ Porto won the regional championship consecutively between 1918 and 1939.[23]
  3. ^ An administrative battle arose between Porto and Académico after a 1939–40 regional championship match between both clubs, which ended prematurely due to numerical inferiority of Porto's team,[31] was repeated by decision of the Porto FA and won by Porto. To solve this situation, the Portuguese Football Federation decided to annul the result from the repetition match – causing Porto to lose the regional title to Leixões and finish in third place, behind Académico. However, the Federation also decided to expand the Primeira Divisão from eight to ten teams, accepting an additional team from the Porto and Setúbal FAs, which resulted in the top-three teams from the Porto regional championship qualifying for the 1939–40 Primeira Divisão.[32]
  4. ^ Before the 1941–42 season, the federation decided to expand the Primeira Divisão to ten teams, to admit the Braga FA and Algarve FA champions, for the first time. That season, Porto finished the regional championship in third place, which did not grant entry into the Primeira Divisão. However, after consulting every district football association and receiving no opposition to the idea, the federation approved a new expansion of the top-tier league, to twelve teams, which enabled the club to participate.[33]
  5. ^ Until the 1995–96 season, league wins were worth two points.
  6. ^ Delneri never took charge of the team in a competitive match; he was sacked before the start of the season, two months after signing for Porto.[89]
  7. ^ Only home shirt partner shown.
  8. ^ The adapted sports indicated above are integrated in one section.

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Bibliography

  • Bandeira, João Pedro (2012). Bíblia do FC Porto (in Portuguese). Lisbon: Prime Books. ISBN 9789896550943.
  • Tovar, Rui (2011). Almanaque do FC Porto 1893–2011 (in Portuguese). Alfragide: Caderno. ISBN 9789892315430.

External links

  • Official website (in Portuguese and English)
  • Club page at Primeira Liga (in Portuguese)
  • Club page at UEFA

porto, futebol, clube, porto, mhih, portuguese, pronunciation, futɨˈβɔl, ˈkluβɨ, ˈpoɾtu, commonly, known, simply, porto, portuguese, professional, sports, club, based, porto, best, known, professional, football, team, playing, primeira, liga, flight, portugues. Futebol Clube do Porto MHIH OM 4 5 Portuguese pronunciation futɨˈbɔl ˈklubɨ du ˈpoɾtu commonly known as FC Porto or simply Porto is a Portuguese professional sports club based in Porto It is best known for the professional football team playing in the Primeira Liga the top flight of Portuguese football PortoFull nameFutebol Clube do PortoNickname s Dragoes Dragons Azuis e brancos Blue and whites Short namePortoFounded28 September 1893 129 years ago 1893 09 28 disputed as Foot Ball Club do Porto 1 2 3 GroundEstadio do DragaoCapacity50 033PresidentJorge Nuno Pinto da CostaHead coachSergio ConceicaoLeaguePrimeira Liga2021 22Primeira Liga 1st of 18 champions WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursThird coloursCurrent seasonFounded on 28 September 1893 a Porto is one of the Big Three Portuguese Os Tres Grandes teams in Portugal together with Lisbon based rivals Benfica and Sporting CP that have appeared in every season of the Primeira Liga since its establishment in 1934 They are nicknamed Dragoes Dragons for the mythical creature atop the club s crest and Azuis e brancos Blue and whites for the shirt colours Those colours are in stripes with blue shorts The club supporters are called portistas Since 2003 Porto have played their home matches at the Estadio do Dragao which replaced the previous 51 year old ground the Estadio das Antas Porto is the second most decorated team in Portuguese football with 83 major trophies 7 Domestically these comprise 30 Portuguese league titles five of which won consecutively between 1994 95 and 1998 99 a Portuguese football record 18 Taca de Portugal 4 Campeonato de Portugal 1 Taca da Liga and a record 23 Supertaca Candido de Oliveira Porto is one of two teams to have won the league title without defeats in the 2010 11 and 2012 13 seasons 8 In the former Porto achieved the largest ever difference of points between champion and runner up in a three points per win system 21 points on their way to a second quadruple In international competitions Porto is the most decorated Portuguese team with seven trophies They won the European Cup UEFA Champions League in 1987 and 2004 the UEFA Cup Europa League in 2003 and 2011 the UEFA Super Cup in 1987 and the Intercontinental Cup in 1987 and 2004 In addition they were runners up in the 1983 84 European Cup Winners Cup plus the 2003 2004 and 2011 editions of the UEFA Super Cup Porto is the only Portuguese club to have won the UEFA Cup Europa League the UEFA Super Cup the Intercontinental Cup and to have achieved a continental treble of domestic league domestic cup and European titles 2002 03 and 2010 11 Porto have the third most appearances in the UEFA Champions League group stage 23 behind Barcelona and Real Madrid 24 In UEFA Porto ranks 9th in the all time club ranking and was 16th in the club coefficient rankings at the end of the 2021 22 season 9 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1893 1921 1 2 First national titles and drought years 1921 1977 1 3 International affirmation 1977 1988 1 4 Tri Tetra Penta 1988 2001 1 5 Mourinho s golden years 2001 2004 1 6 Life after Mourinho 2004 2010 1 7 Villas Boas Pereira and subsequent years 2010 2017 1 8 Conceicao era 2017 present 2 Crest and kit 3 Home stadiums 3 1 Museum 4 Rivalries 5 Records and statistics 5 1 Recent seasons 5 2 UEFA club coefficient ranking 6 Honours 6 1 Domestic 6 2 European 6 3 International 7 Players 7 1 Current squad 7 2 Out on loan 8 Personnel 8 1 Technical staff 8 2 Management 9 Organisation 10 Media 11 Other sports 12 Footnotes 13 References 14 Bibliography 15 External linksHistory EditThis section s factual accuracy is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on Talk FC Porto Please help to ensure that disputed statements are reliably sourced May 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Early years 1893 1921 Edit Antonio Nicolau de Almeida club founder The club was founded on 28 September 1893 as Foot Ball Club do Porto by Antonio Nicolau de Almeida a local port wine merchant and avid sportsman who became fascinated with football during his trips to England 10 11 12 13 Porto played its first matches with other Portuguese clubs including one against Lisbon s Foot Ball Club Lisbonense on 2 March 1894 This match had the patronage of King Carlos I and Queen Amelie of Orleans who travelled to Porto to witness the event and present a trophy to the winners 10 14 Almeida s enthusiasm and involvement with the club waned due to family pressure and by the turn of the century Porto had entered a period of inactivity 10 In 1906 Jose Monteiro da Costa returned to Porto after finishing his studies in England Like Almeida thirteen years before he was also captivated by the English game and together with some associates decided to reintroduce the practice of football in the city outside of the British circles On 2 August 1906 Porto was revived and Monteiro da Costa appointed its president Although football was the driving force the club also promoted other sports including gymnastics weightlifting and wrestling athletics and swimming 15 Shortly after Porto rented its first ground and recruited a French coach named Adolphe Cassaigne 16 who would stay in the club until 1925 17 On 15 December 1907 Porto played its first match against a foreign team hosting Spain s Real Fortuna 18 In the following month Porto returned the visit and played its first match abroad 19 Four years later the club won the inaugural staging of the Taca Jose Monteiro da Costa 20 securing its first ever major title 21 In 1912 Porto joined efforts with Leixoes to establish the Porto Football Association which began organising the regional championship in the following year 22 Porto finished the first season as runners up behind local rivals Boavista but in the following season the club won its first championship By the end of the 1920 21 season Porto had been regional champions six times in seven years 23 and outright winners of the Taca Jose Monteiro da Costa after claiming a third consecutive victory in 1916 20 First national titles and drought years 1921 1977 Edit The 1921 22 season was marked by the creation of the first nationwide football competition the Campeonato de Portugal 24 Organised by the national federation this knockout tournament gathered the winners of the regional championships to determine the Portuguese champion 25 After clinching its fourth consecutive regional title Porto defeated Sporting CP in the inaugural edition and became the first national champions 24 26 While a dominant regional force b the club faced stronger opposition in the national championship winning it only three more times in a span of sixteen years 1925 1932 and 1937 26 In 1933 34 Porto was denied participation in the Campeonato de Portugal by its football association for refusing to release players for a match between the Porto and Lisbon regional teams 27 In the following season a second nationwide competition named Campeonato da Primeira Liga English Premier League Championship or simply Primeira Liga was provisionally established by the national federation to increase the number of matches per season and improve the competitiveness of Portuguese football 28 As the regional champion Porto qualified for the first edition of the new round robin competition winning it with 10 victories in 14 matches 29 30 Due to the success of its format the Primeira Liga was made an official championship competition for the 1938 39 season its name changed to Campeonato Nacional da Primeira Divisao English First Division National Championship or simply Primeira Divisao and replaced the Campeonato de Portugal which in turn was converted into the Taca de Portugal the main domestic cup competition 25 26 Porto won the inaugural edition of the new league championship and successfully defended the title in the next season despite almost failing to take part c The club failed to secure a third consecutive title and after nearly missing again a place in the Primeira Divisao in 1941 42 d it would only return to a top three finish in the 1946 47 season In 1948 Porto defeated English champions Arsenal 3 2 in a friendly match To commemorate this victory the associates offered the club a massive trophy made of 250 kg 550 lb of silver and wood the Arsenal Cup 34 Having endured a 16 year title drought period Porto returned to winning ways by taking the 1955 56 Primeira Divisao on head to head advantage over runners up Benfica Later that season Porto beat Torreense to win its first Taca de Portugal and achieved its first double 35 36 As the Portuguese league winner Porto made its debut in European competitions by qualifying for the 1956 57 European Cup The club s first participation was short lived ending in the preliminary round with two defeats against Spanish champions Athletic Bilbao 37 38 A year later Porto lifted its second Taca de Portugal by beating Benfica 1 0 in the final 36 In 1958 Bela Guttmann took charge as coach of Porto and helped them overhaul a five point lead enjoyed by Benfica to win the Portuguese League title in 1959 39 The two clubs met in the season s final but this time Benfica took the trophy and denied a second double for Porto that had won the 1958 59 Primeira Divisao three months before 40 Shortly after the club entered another lacklustre period of its history the highest point of which was a victory in the 1968 Taca de Portugal final During this time Porto had its worst ever league classification a ninth place in 1969 70 41 while its best league record in that period consisted of six runner up finishes four consecutive between 1961 62 and 1964 65 42 In European competitions the club participated for the first time in the Inter Cities Fairs Cup and its successor the UEFA Cup and in the Cup Winners Cup without getting past the third round 43 One of the club s most tragic moments occurred on 16 December 1973 when during a league match against Vitoria de Setubal the 26 year old captain Pavao fell unconscious on the pitch and died later at the hospital 44 45 The following month Porto presented Peruvian international Teofilo Cubillas who became one of the club s most successful players scoring 65 goals in 108 games 46 International affirmation 1977 1988 Edit Rabah Madjer was a key figure in Porto s 1987 European Cup Final victory The return of Jose Maria Pedroto a former Porto player and head coach in the late 1960s in the 1976 77 season started a new chapter in the club s history Responsible for the previous cup triumph in 1968 Pedroto guided Porto to its fourth title in the competition 47 In the following season he put an end to Porto s league title drought winning the championship 19 years after having played in the team that took the last title 48 Internationally Porto reached the quarter finals of the 1977 78 Cup Winners Cup beating Manchester United along the way 49 but suffered its heaviest defeat 6 1 against AEK Athens in the subsequent season s European Cup 11 A poor run of performances in the latter part of the season resulting in the loss of the league and cup titles sparked a conflict between the technical staff and president Americo de Sa which ended with the resignation of Pedroto and his replacement by Hermann Stessl 50 In December 1981 Porto overcame Benfica to win the inaugural staging of the Portuguese Super Cup the Supertaca Candido de Oliveira 51 Pedroto returned in April 1982 by the hand of the club s newly elected president Jorge Nuno Pinto da Costa who had resigned as director of football two years before in solidarity with the coach 52 The previous month Porto fell again in the Cup Winners Cup quarter finals against one of the eventual finalists 53 but needed only two years to finally reach the competition s final On 16 May 1984 Porto played its first major European final in Basel s St Jakob Stadium losing 2 1 to Michel Platini s Juventus 54 Already without Pedroto who stepped down due to illness Porto won that season s Taca and Supertaca but lost the championship to Benfica 55 Under the steering of Pedroto s apprentice Artur Jorge the following season brought the Primeira Divisao title back to the club and crowned homegrown striker Fernando Gomes as Europe s top goalscorer for the second time after first taking the award in 1983 56 57 Porto retained the league title in 1986 securing an entry to the 1986 87 European Cup In the first game the club recorded its biggest win in European competitions 9 0 against Maltese side Rabat Ajax 11 Vitkovice of Czechoslovakia Brondby of Denmark and Dynamo Kyiv of the Soviet Union were successively eliminated as Porto advanced to its first European Cup final against Bayern Munich Trailing the Germans 1 0 until the 79th minute Porto scored twice in two minutes the first goal through a famous backheel from former Algerian international Rabah Madjer 58 who assisted Juary for the second to secure a surprising win and the European Cup title 59 The following season under new coach Tomislav Ivic the club completed a treble of international trophies by beating Ajax for the 1987 European Super Cup and Uruguay s Penarol for the 1987 Intercontinental Cup 60 61 The 1987 88 season was one of the most successful for the club who also won the Taca de Portugal and an expanded 20 team Primeira Divisao with a record number of goals scored 88 and distance in points to the runners up 15 e 62 Tri Tetra Penta 1988 2001 Edit In contrast to the previous season Porto failed to win a trophy in 1988 89 with many of its players struck down with injuries such as Madjer and Gomes 63 Fifteen years after his first team debut Gomes made his last season for Porto where he became the all time top goalscorer with 352 goals in 455 matches 64 The club brought back Artur Jorge who recovered the Primeira Divisao title in the following season and added the Taca and Supertaca trophies in 1991 65 His successor Brazilian Carlos Alberto Silva won back to back league titles in two seasons and qualified Porto for the first UEFA Champions League 66 67 Bobby Robson won the first two of Porto s record five consecutive league titles Midway through the 1993 94 season Porto hired former England manager Bobby Robson who had been sacked by Sporting CP The club closed the gap to league winners Benfica reached the 1993 94 UEFA Champions League semi finals and ended the season with a victory over Sporting CP in the Taca de Portugal final 68 In Robson s first full season Porto claimed the 1994 95 Primeira Divisao title with a win at Sporting CP s ground and played Benfica four times to secure both the 1993 and 1994 stagings of the Supertaca 69 51 The beginning of the season had been clouded by the death of 26 year old midfielder Rui Filipe who had scored the club s first league goal 69 Robson s increasing health problems barred him from leading Porto in the first months of the 1995 96 season but he returned in time to revalidate the league title Striker Domingos Paciencia became the club s top goalscorer for the second consecutive time and won that season s Bola de Prata the last win by a Portuguese player 70 To fill the void left by the departure of Robson for Barcelona Porto hired former club captain and Portugal national team manager Antonio Oliveira Under his command Porto made history by winning a third consecutive league title the Tri for the first time leaving the runners up at a distance of 13 points The club s eighth Supertaca win over Benfica was achieved with a solid performance at the Estadio da Luz that resulted in a 5 0 scoreline 51 71 The arrival of Brazilian players Artur and Mario Jardel proved highly productive in the 1996 97 UEFA Champions League as their goals helped Porto beat Milan in Italy and win its group without defeats 72 In addition Jardel would win the first of four consecutive Bola de Prata awards while at Porto 71 In Oliveira s second and last season at the club Porto won the Primeira Divisao for the fourth straight season the Tetra matching Sporting CP s achievement in the early 1950s and secured its third double after beating Braga in the 1998 Taca de Portugal Final 36 73 For the 1998 99 season Porto tasked Portuguese coach Fernando Santos with winning the club s fifth successive Primeira Divisao title the Penta a Portuguese football record He accomplished this feat becoming thereafter known as the Penta engineer a pun to his academic degree 74 and saw Jardel s 36 goals win him the European Golden Shoe 75 57 Porto lost the chance to win its sixth straight league title after finishing four points behind 1999 2000 Primeira Liga champions Sporting but overcame them to lift its tenth Taca de Portugal trophy 76 36 Despite winning the Portuguese cup for the second time in two years continued failure to retake the league title led to the resignation of Santos at the end of the 2000 01 season 77 Mourinho s golden years 2001 2004 Edit Jose Mourinho led Porto to consecutive UEFA Cup and UEFA Champions League titles The appointment of former club player and assistant coach Octavio Machado to head Porto back to the league title appeared to pay off as the team began the season with a Supertaca win against the 2000 01 Primeira Liga winners Boavista 51 However this would be the only major achievement in a lacklustre season that would culminate with a third place in the league classification the lowest in 20 years The elimination from the 2001 02 Taca de Portugal four days after losing away for the Primeira Liga precipitated the sacking of Machado after 36 matches in charge 78 Two days later Porto signed Uniao de Leiria s coach Jose Mourinho who had previously worked for the club alongside Robson 79 In his presentation Mourinho promptly showcased his personality by stating unequivocally that the club would win next season s league title 78 He kept true to his promise and delivered one of the club s most successful seasons Fielding the likes of Deco Ricardo Carvalho Maniche and less known players hired from other Portuguese clubs such as Paulo Ferreira Pedro Emanuel Nuno Valente and Derlei Porto won the 2002 03 Primeira Liga with relative comfort finishing 11 points ahead of second placed Benfica 80 The club also won the UEFA Cup defeating Celtic in a dramatic extra time final to win its second major European title 81 Mourinho then secured an unprecedented treble for Porto by winning the Taca de Portugal final against his previous club 36 The 2003 04 season began with another 1 0 win over Uniao de Leiria which gave the club its 13th Supertaca 51 Weeks later Porto failed to repeat this success in the 2003 UEFA Super Cup losing 1 0 to Milan 82 The departure of striker Helder Postiga was compensated by the signing of South Africa s Benni McCarthy whose 20 league goals helped Porto in its league title defense and crowned him the competition s top scorer 83 Porto entered the 2003 04 UEFA Champions League directly into the group stage Porto finished second in its group losing only once to Real Madrid and advanced to the round of 16 where they met Manchester United After narrowly winning at home 2 1 Porto was on the verge of elimination being behind by 1 0 till the last minute of official playtime at the second leg at Old Trafford However Porto scored the equalizer in the 90th minute of the second leg to draw 1 1 and to advance to the quarter finals with a 3 2 aggregate win The team then overcame Lyon and Deportivo La Coruna to reach the Champions League final Porto defeated Monaco 3 0 to lift the club s second European Champion Clubs Cup 84 A 2 1 loss to Benfica in the Taca de Portugal final held 10 days before prevented another treble winning season 36 Life after Mourinho 2004 2010 Edit The successful European performances of Mourinho s Porto enhanced the reputations of the coach and players like Carvalho Ferreira and Deco all of whom left the club in the aftermath of the Champions League victory 85 86 87 88 The following season was an atypical one as the club had three coaches Luigi Delneri f Victor Fernandez and Jose Couceiro Under Fernandez Porto won the 2004 Supertaca Candido de Oliveira and the 2004 Intercontinental Cup but lost the 2004 UEFA Super Cup to Valencia and was eliminated prematurely in the 2004 05 Taca de Portugal Recording only 17 wins in 34 matches Porto lost the Primeira Liga title to Benfica by three points 90 During this period Porto was directly involved in the corruption scandal Apito Dourado 91 In 2005 06 Dutch coach Co Adriaanse was picked to reorganise the team and return the club to the top of Portuguese football His tactical discipline and the contribution of new signings Lucho Gonzalez and Lisandro Lopez led the club to not only retake the Primeira Liga title but also secure its fifth domestic double after beating holders Vitoria de Setubal in the Taca de Portugal final 92 Adriaanse s domestic success did not transfer to the Champions League as Porto finished in the bottom of its group 93 The club began the 2006 07 season with a new coach Jesualdo Ferreira signed from neighbours Boavista Before Ferreira assumed his role Porto won the season opening Supertaca with former club player Rui Barros acting as interim coach 94 An experienced head coach Ferreira had never achieved major club level success but in his first season in Porto he became national champion for the first time 95 The 2006 07 Primeira Liga title was only secured in a frantic final day as Porto finished one point above Sporting and two above Benfica 96 In the following season the club achieved the Tri for the second time in its history with Lopez clinching the top goalscorer award but lost the Taca and Supertaca finals to Sporting CP 97 As result of a legal investigation on match fixing in Portuguese football Porto was punished with the loss of six points which did not affect its final league classification 98 Having claimed a sixth league and cup double in the 2008 09 season 99 Porto was on course to emulate the Penta of the late 1990s but the series was broken by Benfica in the following season 100 Although Ferreira won his first Supertaca and defended the Taca de Portugal title the team s failure to claim a fifth consecutive league finishing third outside the Champions League qualifying places and a 3 0 defeat against Benfica in the final of the Taca da Liga contributed to his resignation at the end of the season A home win against Benfica prevented the rivals from celebrating the league title at the Estadio do Dragao 100 Under Ferreira s steering Porto always qualified for the Champions League knockout stage reaching the quarter finals in 2008 09 where it was eliminated by holders Manchester United 101 Villas Boas Pereira and subsequent years 2010 2017 Edit Andre Villas Boas won four trophies in one season with Porto including the UEFA Europa League The arrival of Mourinho s former assistant Andre Villas Boas in the spring of 2010 set the stage for a highly successful 2010 11 season which began with a 2 0 victory over Benfica for the Supertaca 51 Spearheaded by Joao Moutinho Silvestre Varela Falcao and Hulk the Bola de Prata winner Porto performed strongly in the Primeira Liga and assured its 25th title with five matches to play after beating Benfica in its stadium 102 In addition the club broke a number of records biggest distance between champions and runners up 21 points the most consecutive league wins 16 and the highest percentage of points in a 30 game season 93 33 dropping only six points and finishing the league without defeats for the first time in its history 103 Eight years after the 2003 triumph Porto returned to the UEFA Cup renamed UEFA Europa League and reached the final in Dublin s Aviva Stadium In an all Portuguese affair Porto beat Braga with a goal from the competition s top goalscorer Falcao and lifted the trophy for the second time 104 as Villas Boas became the youngest UEFA competition winning coach 105 Four days later Porto won its third consecutive Taca de Portugal with a convincing 6 2 scoreline 36 securing their fourth trophy of the season 102 As Villas Boas left for Chelsea Porto recruited the services of his assistant Vitor Pereira For the third straight year the club began the season with another Supertaca title 51 which was followed by a 2 0 loss to Barcelona for the 2011 UEFA Super Cup 106 Although lacking the goalscoring prolificacy of Falcao sold to Atletico Madrid Porto was able to revalidate the Primeira Liga title 107 but was eliminated prematurely from the Taca and Champions League competitions Transferred to the Europa League Porto failed to defend its title after being knocked out by Manchester City 108 In the following season the club went a stage further in both domestic cup competitions and in the Champions League where it fell to Malaga in the last 16 round 109 In the 2012 13 Primeira Liga Porto reduced the distance to leaders Benfica to two points before hosting them in the penultimate matchday In a dramatic turn of events Porto won with a goal in stoppage time and moved to the top of the league table 110 An away victory in the last game confirmed the Tri and Porto s 27th league title the second without defeats 111 Porto entered the 2013 14 season with a new head coach Paulo Fonseca signed from 2012 to 2013 Primeira Liga third placed Pacos de Ferreira 112 but continued the trend of the previous four seasons by winning the Supertaca 51 This title would be the highlight of the season as the club underperformed in every other competition it was involved In the league Porto led with five points over its pursuers but a series of compromising results pushed the club down to third place resulting in the sacking of Fonseca 113 Failing to overcome the Champions League group stage Porto reached the Europa League quarter finals where they lost 4 1 to the eventual winners Sevilla 114 In the following weeks two semi final losses against Benfica closed the doors to the finals of the Taca de Portugal and Taca da Liga the latter at home on penalties 36 115 Porto started the 2014 15 season with their biggest budget ever 116 hiring Spanish head coach Julen Lopetegui Despite the signing of many new players they failed to win any silverware contributing to the biggest hiatus during Pinto da Costa s presidency 117 They also equalized in terms of goals conceded their biggest defeat in European competitions 6 1 against AEK Athens and suffered their biggest defeat in the UEFA Champions League 6 1 against Bayern Munich after the 5 0 loss against Arsenal in 2010 118 119 Porto continued their losing trend in the 2015 16 season making it the second consecutive trophyless season with the contribution of Jose Peseiro who had replaced Julen Lopetegui in January 2016 After the season was over Peseiro was replaced by Nuno Espirito Santo Conceicao era 2017 present Edit Former Porto player Sergio Conceicao has won eight honours as the club s manager including three league titles In the 2017 18 season after almost five years without winning any trophy Porto won their 28th league title with the contribution of coach Sergio Conceicao a former player of the club 120 The following year in the 2018 19 UEFA Champions League Porto managed to reach the quarter finals of the competition but were defeated by 6 1 on aggregate against the eventual winners Liverpool 121 In the 2019 20 season Porto managed to recapture the league title winning it for the 29th time and added for the first time in eleven years the Portuguese cup along with it However despite their national success FC Porto did not reach the group phase of the Champions League and did poorly in their Europa League campaign In the 2020 21 UEFA Champions League round of 16 Porto won on away goals rule 4 4 on aggregate against Juventus to reach the quarter finals 122 The season would however end with only one national trophy the Supertaca After having lost the national title to Sporting in the previous season Porto s 2021 22 season saw them reach various successes at domestic level with Conceicao at the helm for the 5th season in a row the team recaptured the Primeira Liga achieving a record 91 points During the season the Dragons also set a new record for longest unbeaten run in the league with 58 matches a sequence that had been started during the first half of the 2020 21 edition One week after the league s conclusion they added the domestic cup thus securing the second double in Conceicao s reign On January 28 2023 still under Conceicao and on their fifth try Porto won their first ever Taca da Liga title defeating Sporting CP in the final thus winning every national trophy available 123 Crest and kit EditPeriod Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor g 1975 1983 Adidas 124 1983 1997 Revigres 125 1997 2000 Kappa 124 2000 2003 Nike 124 2003 2008 PT2008 2011 TMN 126 2011 2014 MEO2014 2015 Warrior 127 2015 2016 New Balance 128 2016 2018 MEO2018 2019 Altice2019 2022 MEO2022 BetanoThe club s first crest was created in 1910 and consisted of an old blue football with white seams bearing the club name s initials in white On 26 October 1922 the crest was changed to its present day appearance after the club approved a design by Augusto Baptista Ferreira nicknamed Simplicio a graphical artist and one of the club s players 129 In his proposal the city s coat of arms consisting at the time of a quartered shield first and fourth quadrants national arms second and third quadrants image of Our Lady holding baby Jesus and flanked by two towers holding above a banner with the Latin words Civitas Virginis surrounded by the collar of the Order of the Tower and Sword and topped by a crown supporting a green dragon with a red banner inscribed with Invicta Undefeated city was added on top of the old crest pushing the white letters down 130 In 1906 the club s first official team wore kits with a variety of colors and patterns which included white shirts with red collars or vertical blue stripes and even red shirts 131 This indefinition in the equipment was only solved in 1909 when through the initiative of Monteiro da Costa Porto stipulated in its first statutes that the players had to use a shirt with blue vertical stripes black shorts and personal footwear as the club s uniform at every training and match 132 Some argued that the kit should have included the city colours green and white 131 Monteiro da Costa however defended the blue and white combination because he believed the colors should be those of the country s flag and not of the city s flag hoping that the club would not only defend the good name of the city but also that of Portugal in sporting feuds against foreigners 15 In 1975 Adidas became the first sports apparel manufacturers to provide kits for the club 124 Eight years later Porto became the first Portuguese team to have a shirt sponsor after signing a deal with Revigres worth 10 million escudos per year 125 This deal lasted for 20 years with successive renovations after which the national communications corporation Portugal Telecom PT became the new shirt sponsors Still Revigres remain as one of the club s main and longest serving collaborators 133 Home stadiums EditMain articles Campo da Rainha Campo da Constituicao Estadio das Antas and Estadio do Dragao For the training centre and youth academy see CTFD PortoGaia The old Campo da Constituicao ground houses the Vitalis Park the club s youth training camp The club s first ground was the Campo da Rainha Queen s Field inaugurated in 1906 with an exhibition game against Boavista The site was located near the residence of Monteiro da Costa and was the property of the city s horticultural society Aided by his father a horticultor by profession Monteiro da Costa rented a portion 30 by 50 meters of uncultivated terrain to create the first dedicated football pitch in the country Later that year the society s vivaria were transferred to another location allowing Porto to increase the pitch area to match the sport s official dimensions 134 The ground had capacity for 600 people including a VIP tribune and possessed a changing room equipped with showers and sinks a bar and a gym The first match between Porto and a foreign team took place at the Campo da Rainha on 15 December 1907 when the hosts played Spanish side Real Fortuna 135 By 1911 the Campo da Rainha was becoming too small for the growing attendances After being notified about the sale of the ground for construction of a factory the club searched for a new ground and rented a terrain near the Constituicao street for an annual fee of 350 00 136 The Campo da Constituicao Constitution Field was opened in January 1913 with a match against Oporto Cricket and Lawn Tennis Club and hosted Porto s home matches for the regional championship Eventually the larger capacity of this ground also became insufficient for the ever increasing crowds attending the games particularly against high profile opponents 137 On several occasions between the 1920s and 1940s Porto played host to matches at the Campo do Ameal Ameal Field or the Estadio do Lima Lima Stadium home of local rivals Sport Progresso and Academico respectively 138 It was in the latter ground that the club achieved their most important victory at the time as they beat English champions Arsenal 3 2 in a friendly match on 7 May 1948 34 139 Estadio do Dragao during a UEFA Champions League match In 1933 Porto approved a plan to build a new stadium to accommodate and meet the demands of larger attendances but the project only moved forward with the purchase of 48 000 square metres 12 acres of land in the eastern side of the city in 1947 140 Designed by Portuguese architects Oldemiro Carneiro and Aires de Sa 141 the construction of the Estadio do Futebol Clube do Porto better known as Estadio das Antas Antas Stadium for the neighbourhood where it was built began in January 1950 one month after the first stone was symbolically laid Two years later on 28 May 1952 the stadium was inaugurated with a ceremony featuring the presence of the President of the Republic Francisco Craveiro Lopes 140 and a match against Benfica which Porto lost 2 8 142 The stadium s initial layout had an open east sector Marathon Door which was closed in 1976 with the construction of a two tier stand that raised the capacity to 70 000 143 In 1986 works to lower the pitch and build an additional tier in the place of the athletics and cycling track were concluded setting the capacity to a new maximum of 95 000 As stadium safety regulations became stricter during the following decade the placing of individual seats brought the capacity of the Estadio das Antas down to 55 000 by 1997 144 The awarding of the UEFA Euro 2004 hosting rights to Portugal in 1999 was the perfect opportunity for Porto to move into a more modern functional and comfortable stadium in line with the demands of high level international football The club decided to build an entirely new ground and chose a site located a few hundreds of meters southeast of the Estadio das Antas The project was commissioned to Portuguese architect Manuel Salgado 145 and construction took two years to complete at a cost of 98 million Baptised Estadio do Dragao Dragon Stadium by president Pinto da Costa for the mythological creature placed atop the club s crest it was officially inaugurated on 16 November 2003 with a match against Barcelona Porto won 2 0 in front of a record 52 000 spectators which also witnessed the professional debut of Lionel Messi In June 2004 the venue hosted the opening ceremony and match of the UEFA Euro 2004 and four other tournament matches 146 The highest attendance in an official match was registered on 21 April 2004 when 50 818 people saw Porto draw Deportivo La Coruna without goals for the first leg of the 2003 04 UEFA Champions League semi finals 147 For safety reasons its current capacity is limited to 50 431 145 Museum Edit Main article FC Porto Museum The FC Porto Museum was inaugurated on 28 September 2013 on occasion of the club s 120th anniversary The museum includes an auditorium a club store a coffeehouse and spaces for educational services and temporary exhibitions Rivalries EditMain articles O Classico and FC Porto Sporting CP rivalry Porto s biggest rivalries are with the other Big Three members and regular league title contenders Benfica and Sporting CP They stem from the historical political economical and cultural clash between the cities of Porto and Lisbon where the other two clubs are based 148 149 These rivalries became more intense in the past decades particularly since Pinto da Costa assumed Porto s presidency in 1982 and adopted a regionalistic and confrontational speech towards Lisbon 150 In the following years the club began establishing its dominance in Portuguese football at the expense of Benfica and Sporting who had been the traditional powers since the 1940s 148 To Porto the rivalry with Benfica is the strongest and most passionate and it opposes the most representative football emblems from each city as well as the current most titled Portuguese clubs The first match between Porto and Benfica traditionally referred to as O Classico The Classic 151 152 took place on 28 April 1912 and ended with a 2 8 win for Benfica Porto s first victory 3 2 came only in 1920 148 As of the end of the 2014 15 season the clubs have faced each other in 232 competitive matches which have resulted in 89 wins for Porto 86 for Benfica and 57 draws 153 The first meeting between Porto and Sporting CP occurred on 30 November 1919 during a friendly tournament organised by Porto 154 Their first official encounter was in the first leg of the final of the inaugural Campeonato de Portugal in 1922 which Porto won 2 1 en route to its first national title 149 Since then the clubs have met in 221 official matches with 80 wins for Porto 78 for Sporting CP and 63 draws 155 Despite the rivalry both clubs formed an alliance against Benfica in 2017 156 157 158 The club also has a strong rivalry with city rivals Boavista 159 160 161 sometimes called O Derbi da Invicta 162 Records and statistics EditFurther information List of FC Porto records and statistics Radamel Falcao holds the club record for top goalscorer in European competitions Former defender Joao Pinto holds the record for most matches played in all competitions 587 and in the Primeira Liga 408 while former goalkeeper Vitor Baia has the most appearances in international competitions 99 163 11 Baia is also the most titled player having won 25 trophies during his career in Porto 164 Portuguese striker Fernando Gomes is the all time club goalscorer in all competitions 352 having also scored the most league goals 288 165 In European competitions Porto s record goalscorer is Radamel Falcao with 22 goals 11 Jose Maria Pedroto is the longest serving coach having taken charge of the team for 327 matches in nine seasons 166 167 while Jesualdo Ferreira became the first Portuguese coach to win three consecutive league titles 2006 2009 168 Andre Villas Boas s victorious campaign in the 2010 11 UEFA Europa League made him the youngest coach ever to win a European competition 169 The 2010 11 season was particularly strong in record achievements Porto played the most matches 58 and secured the most wins 49 and highest winning percentage 84 4 170 For the league it had the most consecutive wins 16 and suffered the fewest defeats none 171 In Europe the club won the most matches 14 in 17 and scored the most goals 44 en route to the UEFA Europa League title one of a record matching four 172 In April 2022 Porto set a national record of 58 matches without defeats in the Primeira Liga after losing 1 0 to Braga for the first time since the end of October 2020 The team also matched the same unbeaten league run 58 as AC Milan and Olympiacos achieved in their respective domestic leagues 173 Recent seasons Edit Further information List of FC Porto seasons Below are listed the club s performances in the past ten seasons Season Pos Pld W D L GF GA Pts Top league scorer s Goals Top overall scorer s Goals TP TL ST UCL UEL Other competitions2012 13 1st 30 24 6 0 70 14 78 Jackson Martinez 26 Jackson Martinez 31 R16 RU W R16 2013 14 3rd 30 19 4 7 57 25 61 Jackson Martinez 20 Jackson Martinez 29 SF SF W GS QF 2014 15 2nd 34 25 7 2 74 13 82 Jackson Martinez 21 Jackson Martinez 32 R64 SF QF 2015 16 3rd 34 23 4 7 67 30 73 Vincent Aboubakar 13 Vincent Aboubakar 18 RU 3R GS R32 2016 17 2nd 34 22 10 2 71 19 76 Andre Silva 16 Andre Silva 21 4R 3R R16 2017 18 1st 34 28 4 2 82 18 88 Moussa Marega 22 Vincent Aboubakar 26 SF SF R16 2018 19 2nd 34 27 4 3 74 20 85 Francisco Soares 15 Francisco Soares 22 RU RU W QF 2019 20 1st 34 26 4 4 74 22 82 Moussa Marega 12 Francisco Soares 19 W RU PO R32 2020 21 2nd 34 24 8 2 74 29 80 Mehdi Taremi 16 Mehdi Taremi 23 SF SF W QF 2021 22 1st 34 29 4 1 86 22 91 Mehdi Taremi 20 Mehdi Taremi 26 W 3R GS R16 Last updated 23 May 2022 3R Third Round 4R Fourth Round GS Group stage QF Quarter finals PO Play off Round R16 Round of 16 R32 Round of 32 R64 Round of 64 RU Runners up SF Semi finals W Winners UEFA club coefficient ranking Edit As of 26 August 2022 174 Rank Team Points13 CSKA Sofia 83 00014 Tottenham 83 00015 Ajax 82 50016 Porto 80 00017 Arsenal 80 00018 Villarreal 78 00019 Dortmund 78 000Honours EditSee also FC Porto in international football As of 28 January 2023 Porto have 83 major trophies in senior football Domestically they have won 30 Portuguese league titles 18 Taca de Portugal 1 Taca da Liga 4 Campeonato de Portugal a record shared with Sporting CP and a record 23 Supertaca Candido de Oliveira Porto is the most decorated Portuguese team in international competitions having won two European Cup UEFA Champions League two UEFA Cup UEFA Europa League one UEFA Super Cup and two Intercontinental Cup trophies In addition it is the only Portuguese team to have won either the UEFA Cup UEFA Europa League the UEFA Super Cup or the Intercontinental Cup 175 Porto have achieved four titles in a single season on two occasions in 1987 88 UEFA Super Cup Intercontinental Cup Primeira Liga and Taca de Portugal and in 2010 11 Supertaca Primeira Liga UEFA Europa League and Taca de Portugal The latter also included the club s second continental treble after the one achieved in 2002 03 Primeira Liga Taca de Portugal and UEFA Cup The club also reached the Cup Winners Cup final in 1983 84 losing to Juventus and made three more appearances in the UEFA Super Cup 2003 2004 and 2011 Domestic Edit Primeira LigaWinners 30 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 2008 09 2010 11 2011 12 2012 13 2017 18 2019 20 2021 22Taca de PortugalWinners 18 1955 56 1957 58 1967 68 1976 77 1983 84 1987 88 1990 91 1993 94 1997 98 1999 2000 2000 01 2002 03 2005 06 2008 09 2009 10 2010 11 2019 20 2021 22Taca da LigaWinners 1 2022 23Supertaca Candido de OliveiraWinners 23 record 1981 1983 1984 1986 1990 1991 1993 1994 1996 1998 1999 2001 2003 2004 2006 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2018 2020 2022Campeonato de PortugalWinners 4 shared record 1921 22 1924 25 1931 32 1936 37European Edit European Cup UEFA Champions LeagueWinners 2 1986 87 2003 04UEFA Cup UEFA Europa LeagueWinners 2 2002 03 2010 11UEFA Super CupWinners 1 1987International Edit Intercontinental CupWinners 2 1987 2004Players EditFor a list of FC Porto players with at least 100 official appearances see List of FC Porto players For reserve team players see FC Porto B For under 19 team players see FC Porto Juniors Current squad Edit As of 31 August 2022 176 177 Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player2 DF POR Fabio Cardoso3 DF POR Pepe captain 4 DF POR David Carmo5 DF ESP Ivan Marcano7 FW BRA Gabriel Veron8 MF COL Mateus Uribe9 FW IRN Mehdi Taremi11 MF BRA Pepe12 DF NGA Zaidu Sanusi13 MF BRA Galeno14 GK POR Claudio Ramos16 MF SRB Marko Grujic17 DF POR Rodrigo Conceicao18 DF POR Wilson Manafa No Pos Nation Player19 FW ENG Danny Loader20 DF POR Andre Franco22 DF BRA Wendell23 DF POR Joao Mario25 MF POR Otavio vice captain 29 FW ESP Toni Martinez30 FW BRA Evanilson46 MF CAN Stephen Eustaquio70 FW POR Goncalo Borges71 GK POR Francisco Meixedo87 MF POR Bernardo Folha94 GK BRA Samuel Portugal99 GK POR Diogo CostaOut on loan Edit Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player6 MF SEN Mamadou Loum at Reading until 30 June 2023 15 MF POR Carraca at Gil Vicente until 30 June 2023 21 MF POR Romario Baro at Casa Pia until 30 June 2023 No Pos Nation Player31 DF GNB Nanu at Santa Clara until 30 June 2023 60 DF POR Tomas Esteves at Pisa until 30 June 2023 DF POR Diogo Leite at Union Berlin until 30 June 2023 Personnel EditTechnical staff Edit See also List of FC Porto coaches Position StaffHead coach Sergio ConceicaoAssistant coaches Vitor Bruno Siramana DembeleGoalkeeper coaches Diamantino Figueiredo Vedran RunjeExercise Physiologist Eduardo OliveiraLast updated 15 July 2019Source FC Porto Management Edit See also List of FC Porto presidents Position StaffPresident Jorge Nuno Pinto da CostaVice presidents Adelino CaldeiraAlipio FernandesFernando GomesJose Americo AmorimPaulo MendesVitor BaiaSection Deputy Directors Joao Baldaia roller hockey Julio Matos basketball Manuel Arezes handball Elias Barros cycling Mario Cereja swimming Jose Carlos Alves boxing Manuela Pinto billiards Chairman of General Meeting Board Lourenco PintoLast updated 7 July 2020Source FC PortoOrganisation EditAfter going public in 1997 Porto created several satellite companies FC Porto youth football basketball handball roller hockey athletics club s magazine etc FC Porto Futebol SAD professional football company SAD stands for Sociedade Anonima Desportiva Porto Estadio stadium management Porto Multimedia official site and multimedia products Porto Comercial merchandising Porto Seguro insurance The FCPorto SAD is listed in the Euronext Lisbon stock exchange Media Edit Porto Canal is a television channel owned and operated by Porto which broadcasts generalist regional and club related content through cable satellite and IPTV The channel s programming includes live transmission of the home matches of the reserve and youth football teams as well as of the senior basketball handball and roller hockey teams Founded in 2006 the channel began a managing partnership with Porto in 2011 178 and on 17 July 2015 was fully purchased and integrated into the club 179 180 The club also issues Dragoes an official monthly magazine that publishes articles and interviews of the teams players and other club related content and a daily newsletter called Dragoes Diario 181 182 Other sports EditSee also Dragao Arena Active sectionsSports Basketball Billiards Boxing Cycling Handball Roller hockey SwimmingAdapted sports h Basketball Boccia Futsal Football 7 Goalball Swimming Table tennisExtinct sections Artistic skating Athletics Beach soccer Car racing Chess Field hockey Gymnastics Karate Rugby Shooting Sport fishing Table tennis Tennis Volleyball Water polo WeightliftingFootnotes Edit Before Pinto da Costa became president of the club in 1982 Porto celebrated their anniversary on 2 August 1906 and their original founder was Jose Monteiro da Costa 6 Porto won the regional championship consecutively between 1918 and 1939 23 An administrative battle arose between Porto and Academico after a 1939 40 regional championship match between both clubs which ended prematurely due to numerical inferiority of Porto s team 31 was repeated by decision of the Porto FA and won by Porto To solve this situation the Portuguese Football Federation decided to annul the result from the repetition match causing Porto to lose the regional title to Leixoes and finish in third place behind Academico However the Federation also decided to expand the Primeira Divisao from eight to ten teams accepting an additional team from the Porto and Setubal FAs which resulted in the top three teams from the Porto regional championship qualifying for the 1939 40 Primeira Divisao 32 Before the 1941 42 season the federation decided to expand the Primeira Divisao to ten teams to admit the Braga FA and Algarve FA champions for the first time That season Porto finished the regional championship in third place which did not grant entry into the Primeira Divisao However after consulting every district football association and receiving no opposition to the idea the federation approved a new expansion of the top tier league to twelve teams which enabled the club to participate 33 Until the 1995 96 season league wins were worth two points Delneri never took charge of the team in a competitive match he was sacked before the start of the season two months after signing for Porto 89 Only home shirt partner shown The adapted sports indicated above are integrated in one section References Edit A data da fundacao dos clubes e mais um pretexto para as polemicas A fundacao e a refundacao do Dragao O capricho da noiva que pode ter levado a extincao do primeiro FC Porto Bandeira 2012 p 147 Cidadaos nacionais agraciados com Ordens Portuguesas in Portuguese Presidency of the Portuguese Republic Retrieved 23 April 2014 A fundacao e a refundacao do Dragao Benfica ultrapassa FC Porto em titulos oficiais Maisfutebol iol pt Maisfutebol Stokkermans Karel 23 December 2013 Unbeaten during a League Season RSSSF Retrieved 31 July 2015 Club coefficients 2021 22 UEFA Retrieved 23 May 2022 a b c Tovar 2011 pp 9 10 a b c d e FC Porto UEFA Retrieved 28 June 2014 Clubs FC Porto FIFA Archived from the original on 30 November 2013 Retrieved 28 June 2014 Simoes Antonio Serpa Homero do Carmo Francisco Jose 1995 Gloria e Vida de Tres Gigantes in Portuguese Vol 1 A Bola Archived from the original on 4 November 2005 Martins Paulo 15 September 2004 Taca D Carlos I 1894 RSSSF Retrieved 21 June 2014 a b Tovar 2011 p 11 Pereira da Silva Joaquim 1 March 1926 O Tripeiro in Portuguese No 5 p 113 Bandeira 2012 pp 40 81 Bandeira 2012 p 164 Bandeira 2012 p 73 a b Martins Paulo Nunes Joao 26 June 2004 Taca Jose Monteiro da Costa RSSSF Retrieved 21 June 2014 Bandeira 2012 p 70 Tovar 2011 p 37 a b Martins Paulo Nunes Joao 26 June 2004 Campeonato do Porto Oporto Championship RSSSF Retrieved 21 June 2014 a b Tovar 2011 pp 49 50 a b Historia FPF pt in Portuguese Portuguese Football Federation Archived from the original on 15 July 2014 Retrieved 22 June 2014 a b c Claro Paulo 15 May 2004 Campeonato de Portugal 1921 1938 RSSSF Retrieved 22 June 2014 Tovar 2011 p 89 Tovar 2011 p 92 Teixeira Jorge Miguel 11 August 1999 Portugal 1934 35 RSSSF Retrieved 23 June 2014 Tovar 2011 p 96 Tovar 2011 p 121 Stadium Newspaper 10 January 1940 Tovar 2011 p 136 a b Bandeira 2012 p 22 Tovar 2011 pp 219 222 a b c d e f g h Claro Paulo 22 May 2014 Portugal List of Cup Winners RSSSF Retrieved 5 July 2014 Tovar 2011 p 224 1956 57 UEFA Champions League UEFA Retrieved 24 June 2014 Revolutionary coach who survived Nazi labour camp to become world s first superstar manager Sportal World Sports News Tovar 2011 p 236 Tovar 2011 p 304 Claro Paulo 15 May 2014 Portugal List of champions RSSSF Retrieved 25 June 2014 FC Porto History UEFA Retrieved 25 June 2014 Tovar 2011 p 330 Marques Simoes Rui 13 September 2009 FC Porto Setubal a jornada 13 e dia de lembrar Pavao FC Porto Setubal on matchday 13 a day to remember Pavao dn pt in Portuguese Diario de Noticias Archived from the original on 27 April 2014 Retrieved 26 June 2014 Tovar 2011 p 655 Tovar 2011 p 349 Tovar 2011 p 355 1977 78 Two out of three for Anderlecht UEFA Archived from the original on 3 May 2010 Retrieved 26 June 2014 Tovar 2011 pp 368 377 a b c d e f g h Claro Paulo 15 August 2013 Portugal List of Super Cup winners RSSSF Retrieved 26 June 2014 Tovar 2011 p 391 1981 82 Home sweet home for Barcelona UEFA Archived from the original on 3 May 2010 Retrieved 26 June 2014 1983 84 Star studded Juventus make their mark UEFA Archived from the original on 3 May 2010 Retrieved 26 June 2014 Tovar 2011 p 398 Tovar 2011 pp 391 406 a b Golden Shoe European Sports Media Retrieved 27 June 2014 Classic Players Madjer the magnificent FIFA Archived from the original on 12 May 2014 Retrieved 27 June 2014 1986 87 Madjer inspires Porto triumph UEFA Retrieved 27 June 2014 1987 Sousa makes sure for Porto UEFA Retrieved 27 June 2014 Madjer lobs Porto to glory in the snow FIFA 13 December 2012 Archived from the original on 25 December 2013 Retrieved 27 June 2014 Tovar 2011 p 428 Tovar 2011 p 436 Bandeira 2012 pp 21 176 Tovar 2011 pp 444 453 Tovar 2011 pp 462 470 UEFA Champions League 1992 93 UEFA Retrieved 29 June 2014 Tovar 2011 p 478 a b Tovar 2011 p 486 Tovar 2011 pp 494 501 502 a b Tovar 2011 pp 503 510 UEFA Champions League 1996 97 History Standings UEFA Retrieved 29 June 2014 Tovar 2011 p 511 Fernando Santos deixa seleccao da Grecia apos o Mundial do Brasil Fernando Santos selected from Greece after the World Cup in Brazil Publico in Portuguese 27 February 2014 Retrieved 29 June 2014 Tovar 2011 p 519 Tovar 2011 p 527 Tovar 2011 p 539 a b Tovar 2011 pp 548 556 Mourinho ready for Porto challenge UEFA 23 January 2002 Retrieved 30 June 2014 Tovar 2011 p 557 2002 03 Mourinho makes his mark UEFA 1 June 2003 Retrieved 1 July 2014 2003 Shevchenko steals the show UEFA Retrieved 2 July 2014 Tovar 2011 p 561 UEFA Champions League 2003 04 History UEFA Retrieved 2 July 2014 Mourinho checks in at Chelsea UEFA 3 June 2004 Retrieved 2 July 2014 Burt Jason 28 July 2004 Chelsea sign Carvalho from Porto in 20m deal The Independent Archived from the original on 8 July 2013 Retrieved 2 July 2014 Chelsea to sign Ferreira BBC Sport 23 June 2004 Retrieved 2 July 2014 Chelsea sign Barca playmaker Deco BBC Sport 30 June 2008 Retrieved 2 July 2014 Porto dump coach Del Neri BBC Sport 7 August 2004 Retrieved 3 July 2014 Tovar 2011 pp 575 582 Goncalves Eduardo Campbell Denis 26 December 2004 Portuguese football champions shaken by corruption charges The Guardian Retrieved 29 September 2015 Tovar 2011 p 583 UEFA Champions League 2005 06 History Standings UEFA Retrieved 2 July 2014 Tovar 2011 p 591 Jesualdo Ferreira UEFA 1 June 2010 Retrieved 3 July 2014 Tovar 2011 p 597 Tovar 2011 p 598 Apito Final FC Porto perde seis pontos Pinto da Costa suspenso por dois anos Boavista despromovido Final Whistle FC Porto lose six points Pinto da Costa suspended for two years Boavista relegated SAPO Noticias in Portuguese SAPO 9 May 2008 Archived from the original on 16 September 2017 Retrieved 4 July 2014 Tovar 2011 p 606 a b Tovar 2011 pp 615 623 UEFA Champions League 2008 09 History UEFA Retrieved 5 July 2014 a b Tovar 2011 p 627 Assuncao Manuel 14 May 2011 FC Porto invicto confirmou na Madeira o seu lugar na historia do campeonato Undefeated FC Porto confirmed in Madeira its place in Portuguese league history Publico in Portuguese Retrieved 6 July 2014 Fifield Dominic 18 May 2011 Falcao strikes to bring Europa League glory to Porto The Guardian Retrieved 6 July 2014 Atkin John 22 June 2011 The rise of new Chelsea manager Villas Boas UEFA Retrieved 6 July 2014 2011 Number four for Barcelona UEFA Retrieved 6 July 2014 Classificacao Liga ZON Sagres 2011 2012 in Portuguese LPFP Retrieved 6 July 2014 Hart Simon 22 February 2012 Slick City end Porto s UEFA Europa League defence UEFA Retrieved 6 July 2014 Smith Jonathan 13 March 2013 Malaga 2 0 FC Porto agg 2 1 BBC Sport Retrieved 6 July 2014 Primeira Liga Porto stun Benfica with late goal to go top of table BBC Sport 11 May 2013 Retrieved 6 July 2014 Sousa Hugo Daniel 19 May 2013 FC Porto e o terceiro campeao sem derrotas Publico in Portuguese Retrieved 6 July 2014 Porto appoint Fonseca FIFA 10 June 2013 Archived from the original on 16 July 2014 Retrieved 6 July 2014 Porto sack coach Paulo Fonseca after nine months in charge BBC Sport 5 March 2014 Retrieved 6 July 2014 Aitken Nick 10 April 2014 Sevilla surge past Porto and into semis UEFA Retrieved 6 July 2014 Assuncao Manuel 27 April 2014 Benfica aguentou com menos um e teve premio nos penaltis Publico in Portuguese Retrieved 6 July 2014 O maior teste do formador Lopetegui The biggest test of former Lopetegui in Portuguese Diario de Noticias 26 April 2015 Archived from the original on 20 May 2015 Retrieved 19 May 2015 O maior jejum da era Pinto da Costa The biggest fasting in Pinto da Costa era Record in Portuguese 17 May 2015 Archived from the original on 13 July 2015 Retrieved 17 July 2015 FC Porto iguala a pior derrota europeia da sua historia FC Porto equals worst European defeat in its history in Portuguese SAPO 21 April 2015 Archived from the original on 20 May 2015 Retrieved 19 May 2015 Sintese FC Porto sofre a sua derrota mais pesada na Champions e e afastado Porto suffer their biggest defeat in the Champions League and are eliminated in Portuguese futebol365 30 July 2015 Retrieved 30 July 2015 Bernardino Augusto 6 May 2018 E o penta vai para Sergio Conceicao And the penta goes to Sergio Conceicao Publico in Portuguese Retrieved 28 May 2018 Porto 1 4 Liverpool UEFA 17 April 2019 Juventus 3 2 FC Porto BBC Sport 9 March 2021 FC Porto vence Taca da Liga pela primeira vez a b c d Bandeira 2012 p 39 a b Bandeira 2012 p 102 PT patrocina camisolas dos tres grandes SAPO Noticias in Portuguese SAPO 8 July 2008 Archived from the original on 2 May 2014 Retrieved 30 April 2014 Ruela Joao 29 May 2014 FC Porto confirma Warrior como sucessora da Nike FC Porto confirms Warrior as the successor of Nike in Portuguese Diario de Noticias Retrieved 30 May 2014 New Balance vai vestir FC Porto New Balance will equip FC Porto in Portuguese Diario de Noticias 4 February 2015 Retrieved 5 February 2015 Bandeira 2012 p 14 Historia in Portuguese FC Porto Retrieved 27 April 2014 a b Bandeira 2012 p 138 Bandeira 2012 p 202 Main Partners in Portuguese FC Porto Retrieved 30 April 2014 Tovar 2011 pp 11 13 Campo da Rainha in Portuguese FC Porto Retrieved 25 April 2014 Tovar 2011 p 13 Campo da Constituicao in Portuguese FC Porto Retrieved 25 April 2014 Campo do Ameal in Portuguese FC Porto Retrieved 25 April 2014 Estadio do Lima in Portuguese FC Porto Retrieved 25 April 2014 a b Tovar 2011 pp 13 14 Estadio das Antas in Portuguese FC Porto Retrieved 26 April 2014 Bandeira 2012 p 159 Bandeira 2012 p 122 Estadio das Antas The Stadium Guide Retrieved 26 April 2014 a b Estadio do Dragao in Portuguese FC Porto Retrieved 26 April 2014 Estadio do Dragao The Stadium Guide Retrieved 26 April 2014 Bandeira 2012 p 41 a b c Benfica vs FC Porto Portugal s great divide FIFA Archived from the original on 9 October 2014 Retrieved 21 July 2014 a b FC Porto vs Sporting CP Portugal s other big city classico FIFA Archived from the original on 26 October 2012 Retrieved 21 July 2014 Pereira Sergio 2 March 2012 Lisboa Porto rivalidade comecou ha exatamente 118 anos Lisbon Porto rivalry started exactly 118 years ago in Portuguese Mais Futebol Retrieved 21 July 2014 Aleixo Mario 2 March 2012 Classico Benfica FC Porto contam se as horas in Portuguese RTP Retrieved 21 July 2014 Ruela Joao 21 March 2014 FC Porto Benfica 6 classicos em dois meses e possivel in Portuguese Diario de Noticias Retrieved 21 July 2014 FC Porto vs Benfica in Portuguese Zerozero pt Retrieved 3 June 2015 Bandeira 2012 p 27 FC Porto vs Sporting in Portuguese Zerozero pt Retrieved 3 June 2015 oca Joao Pedro Pereira Antonio Martins 12 May 2017 Alianca de FC Porto e Sporting para tirar dominio ao Benfica FC Porto and Sporting s alliance to take out Benfica s domination Correio da Manha in Portuguese Retrieved 19 October 2018 FC Porto e Sporting com alianca em risco FC Porto and Sporting with alliance at risk Record in Portuguese 7 November 2017 Retrieved 19 October 2018 Roseiro Bruno Sporting FC Porto Como do clima de guerra aberta nasceu a geringonca contra o partido no poder Sporting FC Porto How the geringonca against the party in power was born from the climate of war Observador in Portuguese Retrieved 19 October 2018 Boavista vs Porto footballderbies com da Cunha Pedro Jorge 8 November 2019 O jogo em que chove sempre viagem aos Boavista FC Porto Maisfutebol in Portuguese Retrieved 4 September 2020 Marques Simoes Rui 27 October 2017 Boavista FC Porto um classico sem a chama de outrora Diario de Noticias in Portuguese Retrieved 4 September 2020 Martins Arnaldo 22 June 2020 Derbi da Invicta com vista para os craques da cantera Jornal de Noticias in Portuguese Retrieved 4 September 2020 Bandeira 2012 p 96 Bandeira 2012 p 140 Bandeira 2012 p 176 Tovar 2011 p 710 Bandeira 2012 p 40 Bandeira 2012 p 25 2010 11 Falcao heads Porto to glory UEFA 6 June 2011 Retrieved 17 July 2014 Bandeira 2012 pp 47 81 116 Bandeira 2012 pp 37 46 Bandeira 2012 pp 15 32 Os 58 jogos sem perder que trouxeram o melhor registo de sempre o percurso sem derrotas do FC Porto que so desmoronou em Braga The 58 unbeaten games that brought the best record ever FC Porto s unbeaten run that only collapsed in Braga in Portuguese Observador 7 May 2022 Retrieved 14 June 2022 UEFA Member associations UEFA Coefficients Club coefficients UEFA Honours FC Porto Retrieved 11 July 2014 Plantel in Portuguese FC Porto Futebol Clube do Porto Futebol SAD Liga Portugal Retrieved 19 September 2020 Margato Dina 30 June 2011 FC Porto assume gestao do Porto Canal em Agosto Jornal de Noticias Retrieved 26 August 2014 FC Porto vai comprar o Porto Canal FC Porto will buy Porto Canal in Portuguese SAPO 27 March 2015 Retrieved 28 March 2015 FC Porto conclui compra do Porto Canal FC Porto completes purchase of Porto Canal in Portuguese FC Porto 17 July 2015 Retrieved 18 July 2015 Revista Dragoes Dragoes Magazine in Portuguese FC Porto Retrieved 28 March 2015 Dragoes Diario Daily Dragons in Portuguese FC Porto Retrieved 13 March 2015 Bibliography EditBandeira Joao Pedro 2012 Biblia do FC Porto in Portuguese Lisbon Prime Books ISBN 9789896550943 Tovar Rui 2011 Almanaque do FC Porto 1893 2011 in Portuguese Alfragide Caderno ISBN 9789892315430 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Futebol Clube do Porto Official website in Portuguese and English Club page at Primeira Liga in Portuguese Club page at UEFA Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title FC Porto amp oldid 1148014204, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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