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Wikipedia

Sporting CP

Sporting Clube de Portugal (Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈspɔɾtĩɡ ˈkluβɨ ðɨ puɾtuˈɣal]), otherwise referred to as Sporting CP or simply Sporting (particularly within Portugal), or as Sporting Lisbon in other countries,[1][2][3][4][5] is a Portuguese sports club based in Lisbon. Having various sports departments and sporting disciplines,[6][7][8] it is best known for its men's professional football team playing in the Primeira Liga, the top flight of Portuguese football.

Sporting CP
Full nameSporting Clube de Portugal
Nickname(s)
  • Leões (Lions)
  • Verde e brancos (Green and whites)
Short nameSporting (Lisbon)
Founded1 July 1906; 117 years ago (1906-07-01)[a]
GroundEstádio José Alvalade
Capacity50,095
PresidentFrederico Varandas
Head coachRúben Amorim
LeaguePrimeira Liga
2023–24Primeira Liga, 1st of 18
WebsiteClub website
Current season

Founded on 1 July 1906,[a] Sporting is one of the "Big Three" clubs in Portugal that have never been relegated from Primeira Liga, along with rivals Benfica and Porto. Sporting are nicknamed Leões (Lions), for the symbol used in the middle of the club's crest, and Verde e Brancos (Green and Whites), for the shirt colour that are in (horizontal) stripes. The club's anthem is called "A Marcha do Sporting" ("Sporting's March"),[10] its motto is Esforço, Dedicação, Devoção e Glória (Effort, Dedication, Devotion and Glory),[11] its supporters are called sportinguistas[12] and the club's mascot is called Jubas.[13] Sporting is the second largest sports club by membership in Portugal, with about 150,000[14] members, which makes it one of the world's largest.[15] It is also among the top three Portuguese sports clubs in number of non-affiliated fans.[16] Their home ground has been the Estádio José Alvalade, built in 2003, which replaced the previous one, built-in 1956. The club's indoor arena is the Pavilhão João Rocha multi-sports pavilion.[17] Its youth academy has helped produce footballers such as Luís Figo and Cristiano Ronaldo.[18]

Sporting is the third most decorated Portuguese football team, with 55 major trophies. Domestically, they have won 20 League titles, 17 Taças de Portugal, a joint-record of 4 Campeonato de Portugal, 4 Taças da Liga and 9 Supertaças Cândido de Oliveira.[19] In Europe, they won the 1963–64 European Cup Winners' Cup and were runners-up at the UEFA Cup in 2005 and at the Latin Cup in 1949. Sporting played in the first European Champions Cup match on 4 September 1955, by invitation,[20] and has participated in the most editions of UEFA Cup/UEFA Europa League (36), a tournament in which they have the most matches played and the second most matches won,[21] and where they are ranked first in the all-time club ranking.[22]

History edit

Foundation (1902–1906) edit

Sporting Clube de Portugal has its origins in June 1902, when a group of young men including Francisco da Ponte, Horta Gavazzo and his brother José Maria decided to create Sport Club de Belas. This club, the first ancestor of Sporting, played just one match and at the end of the year's summer, disbanded. Two years later, the idea of creating a football club was revived, and this time, with the Gavazzo brothers joined by José Alvalade (José Holtreman Roquette) and José Stromp; a new club, the Campo Grande Football Club, was founded. They played their matches on the estate of the Viscount of Alvalade (Alfredo Holtreman), José Alvalade's grandfather, with the club's headquarters located in Francisco Gavazzo's home. For two years, the club developed an intense activity on several sports, namely football, tennis and fencing.

 
José Alvalade founded Sporting with the backing of his grandfather.

The club also organized parties and picnics. Eventually, during one picnic, on 12 April 1906, discussions erupted, as some members defended that the club should only be focused on organizing picnics and social events, with another group defending that the club should be focused on the practising of sports instead. Some time later, José Gavazzo, José Alvalade and 17 other members left the club, with José Alvalade saying: "I'll go to my grandad and he'll give me money to make another club."[7][23][24] As such, a new club, without a name, was founded on 8 May 1906, and on 26 May,[25] it was named "Campo Grande Sporting Clube".[a] The Viscount of Alvalade, whose money and land helped found the club, was the first president of Sporting.[26][27] José Alvalade, as one of the main founders and first club member (sócio), uttered on behalf of himself and his fellow co-founders: "We want this club to be a great club, as great as the greatest in Europe."[26] Beyond José Holtreman Roquette (José Alvalade) and his grandfather Alfredo das Neves Holtreman (Viscount of Alvalade), among the founders were also the brothers António, José and Francisco Stromp, the Gavazzo brothers, José Maria do Couto Valente da Ponte and José Ferreira Roquette.[28][29] Two months later, on 1 July 1906,[a] António Félix da Costa Júnior suggested the name Sporting Clube de Portugal, and since 1920 that is the club's foundation date.[30][a]

Early years (1907–1946) edit

 
Alfredo Holtreman, Viscount of Alvalade was the first president, sponsor and protector of Sporting.

The year 1907 marked some "firsts" for the club, as Sporting played the first football match of their history on 3 February, ending in a 5–1 defeat against third division club Cruz Negra; inaugurated their first ground, known as "Sítio das Mouras" (the most advanced in Portugal at the time, equipped with showers, two tennis courts, an athletics track and a football field) on 4 July; and played the first derby of all time against local rivals S.L. Benfica (then known as Grupo Sport Lisboa) on 1 December.[31] As early as 1909, the following sports were practised at the sports club: football, running and jumping (athletics), physical exercise (gymnastics), rope-wrestling, tennis, cricket and field hockey.[32]

The club also released their first report card on 31 March 1922, titled "Boletim do Sporting" (Sporting's Report), lending the foundation for the later called "Jornal do Sporting", the official newspaper of the club, that still exists today.[33]

Sporting played their first Primeira Liga game (the 1st Division of Portuguese football) ever on 20 January 1935, winning 0–6 against Académica de Coimbra. A year later, in 1936, the club had their heaviest ever defeat against Porto, losing 10–1. Sporting, however, got their revenge a year later, when they humbled the same team with a 9–1 result. In 1941, under the guidance of Hungarian manager József Szabó, the club celebrated the first league title of their history.[34]

Golden years and fading (1946–1982) edit

 
The 1963-64 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup won by Sporting at Museum Mundo Sporting

The football team had their height during the 1940s and 1950s. It was spearheaded by Fernando Peyroteo, José Travassos, Albano Pereira, Jesus Correia and Manuel Vasques, in a quintet nicknamed "The Five Violins".[35] With the violins' help, Sporting won seven league titles in eight seasons between 1947 and 1954, including a then unprecedented four in a row from 1950 to 1951 onwards. Fernando Peyroteo, the most known of "the violins", is considered one of the greatest Portuguese players of all time.[36]

Sporting and the Yugoslavian team Partizan both made history on 4 September 1955, as they played the first-ever UEFA Champion Clubs' Cup match. Sporting player João Martins scored the first-ever goal of the competition, on the 14th minute. The match ended in a 3–3 draw.[37] Sporting also inaugurated their new venue, José Alvalade Stadium, on 10 June 1956, which would be their home ground until 2003.[38]

In the 1960s, Sporting achieved continental success, winning the 1963–64 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, defeating MTK Budapest of Hungary in the final. It was the only time a Portuguese team side won a UEFA Cup Winners' Cup title.[39] The team entered the competition defeating Atalanta in the qualifying round, then past Cypriot club APOEL in what was the biggest win in a single UEFA competitions game to date: 16–1, a record that still stands today. On the next round, they lost 4–1 to Manchester United at Old Trafford in the first hand, but made a remarkable comeback at home, winning 5–0. In the semi-finals, Sporting eliminated Lyon, and in the end MTK Budapest, in a two-round final to win their first European title. The winning goal was scored by João Morais from a direct corner kick.[40]

Under the leadership of president João Rocha, the first project of club-company in Portugal was approved by Sporting CP's affiliated partners (sócios) in November 1973, and denominated "Society of Constructions and Planning" (SCP, Sociedade de Construções e Planeamento). The Portuguese government authorised the establishment of the company and the issue of 2.5 million shares, with a nominal value of 100 escudos each.[41][42] The club-company project with issuance of stock was hampered shortly after due to the events of the Carnation Revolution of 1974 and the subsequent Processo Revolucionário em Curso of 1975 (the creation of Sociedades Anónimas Desportivas ("Public limited sports companies") would be later available in Portugal through a new legal status only introduced in the 1990s).[43][44]

The club reached the semi-finals of the Cup Winners' Cup in 1974, but lost to eventual winners 1. FC Magdeburg of East Germany.[45]

First league title drought (1982–2000) edit

 
Club emblem used from 1945 to 2001

English manager Malcolm Allison arrived at Sporting in 1981, and under his guidance the club won the domestic double (league title and Portuguese cup), in 1982.[46] In the years between 1982 and 2000, Sporting suffered from a drought of titles. Despite defeating rivals Benfica 4–0 on aggregate to win the Portuguese Super Cup in 1987, Sporting fans had to wait until 1995 to see their team win some silverware after beating Marítimo 2–0 in the final of the 1995 Portuguese Cup. That victory granted Sporting a place in the following season's Portuguese Super Cup. After drawing 0–0 at the José Alvalade Stadium and securing a 2–2 draw at the Estádio das Antas, a replay match was held on 30 April 1996 at the Parc de Princes in Paris. Sporting won 3–0 with Sá Pinto scoring twice and Carlos Xavier scoring a stoppage time penalty. In the same 1995–96 season, Sporting also reached the Portuguese Cup Final but lost 3–1 to Benfica.

Highlights of this period of time also include a 7–1 victory over arch-rivals Benfica at the old José Alvalade Stadium on 14 December 1986. Sporting also reached the UEFA Cup semi-final in 1991, losing against Internazionale.[47] Also, Barcelona and Real Madrid were both tied and defeated in Lisbon when playing against Sporting in the old UEFA Cup, in the 1986–87 and 1994–95 seasons, respectively.[48][49]

In 1998, Sporting Clube de Portugal had created the Sporting Clube de Portugal – Futebol, SAD, a public limited sports company for its football department, which went public on the Lisbon Stock Exchange in that year at a price of 1,000 escudos (the equivalent of about five euros at the time) per share.[50]

The turn of the millennium (2000–2002) edit

 
Sporting CP's manager and former player Augusto Inácio won the Primeira Liga title in 2000[51]

In 2000, Sporting, led by manager Augusto Inácio (a former Sporting player, who replaced Giuseppe Materazzi at the beginning of the season), won the league title on the last match day, with a 4–0 victory over Salgueiros, ending an 18-year drought.[34] In the following season, Sporting conquered the 2000 Super Cup but came third in the league. In the 2001–02 season, led by coach László Bölöni, Sporting conquered their 18th league title, the Portuguese Cup and the 2002 Portuguese Super Cup. On 21 June 2002, the club had opened its training facility, located in Alcochete, 30 km east of Lisbon.

On 14 August 2002,[52] Cristiano Ronaldo, then 17, played his first official match for a Sporting CP's senior team, in a UEFA Champions League qualifying round at home against Inter Milan.[53][54] On 1 September 2002, in the Azores, Cristiano Ronaldo debuted as a senior player in official domestic competitions playing for Sporting CP B in a 2–1 away loss against Sport Clube Lusitânia[55] and on 29 September he made his debut in the Primeira Liga, playing for Sporting CP's main team in a way match against SC Braga.[56]

Second league title drought (2002–2021) edit

2002–2009 edit

 
A new stadium, Estádio José Alvalade, was inaugurated in 2003.

Sporting have failed to win Primeira Liga again since 2002. On 6 August 2003, the new Sporting CP's stadium, the Estádio José Alvalade, was inaugurated.[57] In the 2004–05 season, José Peseiro-led Sporting was leading the Primeira Liga and was trailing a remarkable journey in UEFA Cup. However, at the end of the season, the team eventually lost all the chances of winning any trophy that season: the first set-back had already happened on 26 January 2005 when Sporting was eliminated from Taça de Portugal after losing 7–6 on penalties against Benfica. Nevertheless, Sporting was able to reach the leadership of Primeira Liga, and on 5 May the team booked their second European final, after defeating Dutch team AZ in UEFA Cup. While awaiting the Final, on 14 May, Sporting lost its penultimate match in Primeira Liga against Benfica and dropped to third place. By the end of the season, the team eventually finished 2004–05 Primeira Liga in that place. Lastly, playing the 2005 UEFA Cup Final at their home ground, on 18 May, Sporting lost 1–3 against Russian side CSKA Moscow, after being 1–0 up at halftime.[58]

Domestically, Sporting had back-to-back wins in the Portuguese Cup in 2007 and 2008 (led by coach Paulo Bento). Sporting also reached, for the first time, the knockout phase of UEFA Champions League, in the 2008–09 season, but were roundly defeated by Bayern Munich, with an aggregate loss of 12–1. This is widely regarded as one of the lowest points in the history of the club.[59] The club almost reached another European final in 2012, but were dropped out of the competition by Athletic Bilbao, in the semi-finals of the 2011–12 Europa League.[60]

Financial mismanagement and 2013 election edit

After years of financial mismanagement, Sporting had amassed debts exceeding €276 million by 2011.[61] The results on the pitch were also negative, with Sporting finishing seventh in the 2012–13 Primeira Liga, their lowest ever finish.[62][63] Managerial changes occurred within months or weeks apart: from November 2009 to May 2013, nine managers were contracted, with none of them lasting an entire season. In 2013, after pressure from club members, president Godinho Lopes resigned,[64][65] and shortly afterwards, Bruno de Carvalho was elected president in a snap election.[66][67] Carvalho intended to return success to the football team, while threatening to take Godinho Lopes to court,[68][69][70] as well as to renegotiate the club's debt payment schedule with the banks involved,[71] which eventually renegotiated the debt in very favourable conditions for Sporting CP in the following years as part of the club's financial restructuring started by Carvalho and finalized by Frederico Varandas ten years later.[72][73] This allowed Sporting CP to get a multimillion-euro debt relief – in contrast to their rivals.[74][75] Carvalho's election brought Angolan investors to the club, most notably Álvaro Sobrinho, through Holdimo, which ultimately took possession of 20 million shares of Sporting's SAD through conversion of convertible debt.[76][77]

On 5 June 2015, it was released an audit that analyzed the management of Sporting in the past 20 years: it concluded that in 1994 the club had €55 million worth of real estate assets and an almost nonexistent debt; by 2013, real estate assets were almost nonexistent, and the club had amassed a €331 million debt.[78] Their new stadium (completed in 2003) cost 74% more than what was expected when its construction started (€184 million against the planned €106 million), while their training facility cost 24% more, and the costs of Alvalade XXI neighbourhood, a real estate complex located around the stadium, overshot its estimate by 60%; such complex was almost entirely sold in the following years, many estates of which were sold below market prices.[79]

From 1995 to 2013, the club invested €261 million in the football team, however, with few sports and financial results.[78] The audit criticized many football transfers in the 2000s, in which the club paid commissions well above market prices to player agents, and discovered that Sporting even had paid commissions without evidence of written contracts.[78][80] The audit also concluded that the administrations from 1995 to 2013 intended to convert Sporting, a multi-sports club, exclusively into a football club – although they did not openly admitted so – which was being done gradually through the closure of other sport modalities.[81] Moreover, the audit also pointed out evidence of mismanagement and conflicts of interest by several administrators.[78] Considering the audit's results, club members approved the expulsion of Godinho Lopes as an associate of the club in June 2015.[82]

2013–2020 edit

Led by coach Leonardo Jardim in the 2013–14 season, Sporting finished second in the league, thus gaining direct access to the 2014–15 UEFA Champions League, their first Champions League presence in five years.[83][84]

 
Sporting playing a home match against German club Schalke 04 for the 2014–15 UEFA Champions League group stage

In the 2014–15 season, Sporting won their 16th Portuguese Cup in dramatic fashion. The Lisbon side, led by Marco Silva, played the final against Braga, and after a disastrous start, found themselves losing 0–2 at half-time and playing with ten men after the sending-off of Cédric Soares. With the final seemingly lost, Islam Slimani gave some hope to the fans as he scored the 1–2 on the 83-minute. In stoppage time, Fredy Montero managed to equalize, forcing extra-time. Sporting ultimately won the match 3–1 on penalties.[85] Celebrations ended in a pacific pitch invasion of Estádio José Alvalade by the fans, as the club touched silverware for the first time in seven years.[86][87]

In June 2015, Jorge Jesus joined Sporting after Benfica opted not to renew his contract as coach of the club, signing a three-year contract. Presented as the new manager of the club on 1 July, the managerial change took the rivalry of both Lisbon clubs to new heights.[88] Under Jesus' tenure, Sporting won the Portuguese Super Cup for the eighth time, against back-to-back champions Benfica.[89] Despite a positive start, Sporting did not win any other trophy, finishing second in the Primeira Liga with 86 points, two points behind Benfica, despite breaking their own points record in the league.

Following a trophyless season, Sporting won their first Taça da Liga on a penalty shoot-out against Vitória de Setúbal. However, on 15 May 2018, days after finishing third in the league, several players and coaches were attacked by around 50 ultra supporters of Sporting at the club's training ground (9 of them would be sentenced to at least a specified term of actual imprisonment[90] after trial).[91][92][93] Five days later, Sporting lost the Portuguese Cup final to Aves. About a month later, Bruno de Carvalho was dismissed by club members after a general assembly on 23 June.[94] This followed the rescissions of nine players: Bruno Fernandes, Daniel Podence, Rui Patricio, Rodrigo Battaglia, Rafael Leão, Rúben Ribeiro, Bas Dost, Gelson Martins and William Carvalho.[95] Sporting would be later eligible for court-awarded compensation when the rescissions were declared illegal for those players who did not return to the club or were not sold by Sporting.[96][97]

 
Rúben Amorim during a training session in 2021, the year he led Sporting CP to its first Primeira Liga title under his leadership as manager of the team[98]

In the period before scheduled elections, a management committee, headed by former President Sousa Cintra as acting president of the sports club,[99] succeeded in returning some of the players who had left the club following the incident, namely Bruno Fernandes, Bas Dost and Rodrigo Battaglia.[100][101] Frederico Varandas was elected president on 8 September 2018.[102] Having replaced Jorge Jesus at the beginning of the 2018–19 season, José Peseiro was sacked after a poor performance on the Primeira Liga.[103]

In March 2019, Sporting CP announced a loan negotiated with Apollo Global Management, based on the securitization of NOS' television rights revenues.[104]

In March 2020, Rúben Amorim was appointed manager of Sporting CP for a managerial transfer worth €10 million (£8.65 million), becoming the third-most expensive manager ever.[105]

2020–present edit

In the 2020–21 season, with no spectators allowed in Portugal due to COVID-19 restrictions, and after being eliminated from European competition by LASK Linz, Sporting won their third league cup and ended their 19-year period without winning the Portuguese league, with only one loss (against Benfica in the penultimate round and already as champions), securing their 19th Primeira Liga title after a 1–0 home win against Boavista.[106] At the 2021–22 UEFA Champions League group stage, Sporting made a comeback by finishing second on Group C after a 5–1 home loss to Ajax and 1–0 away loss to Borussia Dortmund, thereby reaching the knockout phase for only the second time since the 2008–09 season. Domestically, both the 2021 Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira[107] and the 2021–22 Taça da Liga[108] were won by the Lions, securing the trophies against Braga and Benfica, respectively. In the 2021–22 Primeira Liga, Sporting finished second with the same 85 points as in the previous league campaign. In the 2023-24 league season, Sporting record signing Viktor Gyökeres helped propel the club to their 20th Primeira liga title, won on the fifth of May after Benfica's 2-0 loss to Famalicão.[109]

 
New José Alvalade's image at the Estádio José Alvalade in Lisbon, Portugal, during the execution of a work of building renovation in 2023[110]

For the 2022–2026 quadrennium, Frederico Varandas' administration started works of building renovation and modernization of the club's facilities.[111][112] In December 2023, Sporting Clube de Portugal and Sporting Clube de Portugal – Futebol, SAD had gone ahead with a financial restructuring started in 2019 on the grounds of earlier agreements with creditors jump-started by Bruno de Carvalho[74] which included the renegotiation of bank debt, "extinguishing the debt originally belonging to Novo Banco, S.A. (with outstanding capital of 35,403,508.62 euros), with the exception of finance leases", the company announced in a statement sent to the Portuguese Securities Market Commission (CMVM). A debt belonging to Millennium BCP was also settled.[113][114][115] In addition, Sporting Clube de Portugal announced it would own 88 per cent of Sporting Clube de Portugal – Futebol, SAD from 15 February 2024 onwards,[116] instead of the 83.90% it owned at the time.[117][118][119] With the completion of the restructuring, the club said it intended to start a new strategic financial planning and secure the entry of a minority investor in its Futebol, SAD.[120][121][122]

Motto, crests, kits, mascot and names edit

Motto edit

Since its formation, Sporting CP's motto is: "Effort, Dedication, Devotion and Glory" (Esforço, Dedicação, Devoção e Glória).[123][124]

Crests edit

The stylized rampant lion of the crest was taken by the Viscount of Alvalade from the heraldry of Dom Fernando de Castello-Branco, Mayor of Cascais and the main promoter of football at Sporting Club de Cascais (widely known at the time as Sporting Club da Parada). However, Castello-Branco demanded that the color used by the new sports club should not be blue, since that was already a color adopted by Sporting Club da Parada.[125] To keep up with times, the club's emblem has been modernized throughout history and this led to the development of various crests consistent with the history of the club: in all of them, the rampant lion and the color green have always been present in prominence.[126] Since its founding on the 1st July 1906, Sporting has already had five emblems, in addition to two commemorating crests for the fiftieth (1956) and the one hundredth years of existence (2006) of the club.

 
Previous Sporting's crests

Sporting CP radically changed its emblem in 2001 to convey a message of modernity, more geared towards the new technologies at the time.[127] The current emblem presents an image with simplified framing while maintaining the green color in the shield and adding three horizontal white stripes that symbolize the club's shirt. Complemented with the words 'Sporting' and 'Portugal', now written in full, they emphasize the national dimension of the club and clarify its name internationally.[128] A stylized rampant lion appears in golden color and the acronym "SCP", which stands for the club's name (Sporting Clube de Portugal), is shown like a crown on top of the shield.[129][126]

Kits edit

When the club was founded in 1906, its players wore white jerseys. On 25 October 1908, Sporting Clube de Portugal presented the first ten football shirts that would come to be known as the Stromp kit. The initiative came from founder Eduardo Quintela de Mendonça. The Stromp kit is split at the top, with the right half white and the left half painted green. It was named in honour of one of the club's main founders, Francisco Stromp, and it had white shorts, with the shorts changing to black in 1915. It stopped being used as the main jersey in 1928.[130] On 6 November 1927, the striped jerseys were worn by the football team for the first time in a friendly match against Casa Pia, but after that the split jerseys continued to be used. When Sporting's football team travelled to Brazil in July 1928, and after considering the weather conditions in that country, it was decided to wear the horizontal striped jerseys that Salazar Carreira had chosen for the club's rugby team a year earlier, which were lighter and tighter to the body. On their return, the Sporting team once again wore the traditional split jerseys known as the Stromp kit. However, on 5 October 1928, in a match against Benfica, whether it was because of the heavy rain that made them too heavy, or for some other reason, at half-time the players swapped their usual jerseys for the striped ones, thus establishing what is still the club's main kit today: green and white horizontally stripped jersey with black shorts.[131]

Mascot edit

The club's mascot is called Jubas, plural of the Portuguese word for mane, and is an anthropomorphic version of a lion wearing customized standard equipment and attire worn by the players of Sporting CP's main team.[13][132] It also wears official Loja Verde (Sporting CP's official store) garment in both charity and promotional marketing initiatives.[133]

Names edit

Founded on 1 July 1906, after two months during which the newly-created sports club project was temporarily called Campo Grande Sporting Club[25] (after Campo Grande), instead of its final official name of Sporting Clube de Portugal, which could be literally translated as “Sporting Club of Portugal”, the club is currently officially referred to by UEFA and FIFA as written in its official full name or as "Sporting CP", a shortened form of the name.[134] The designation "Sporting Lisbon", a common way some foreign media and non-Portuguese speaking people use to refer to Sporting CP outside Portugal,[1] has been a source of contention and controversy for some sportinguistas[135][2] because it does not conform with the official name of the sports club and its brand value.[136] Regarding this issue, club supporters and officials have promoted awareness campaigns to raise people's awareness nationwide and internationally, and the club changed its official crest in 2001[137] with a focus on the name of the club and its words "Sporting" and "Portugal" in mind.[4][138][139][5]

Support edit

 
Sporting CP supporters at the old José Alvalade Stadium (1956–2003).

Sporting CP's supporters or fans are called sportinguistas.[140] The club has about 150,000[14] affiliated members (called sócios) and research studies have suggested it has a number of fans ranging from 1,100,000 to 2,700,000 in Portugal alone – which makes it the second or third most supported sports club in Portugal, depending on the study.[141][142][143][144] Like the other two Portuguese Big Three sports clubs, Sporting CP has also a sizable number of foreign fans in other Portuguese-speaking countries beyond Portugal itself and supporters among the Portuguese expatriate community.[145][146][147]

The club's anthem is the "Sporting's March" (original official name: "A Marcha do Sporting"). It was written in 1955 by songwriters Eduardo Damas and Manuel Paião and originally sung by Portuguese singer Maria José Valério.[148][149][150] Sporting CP created and uses its own 'You'll Never Walk Alone'-style song, through a Portuguese version of the classic song popularised by Frank Sinatra 'My Way' called "O Mundo Sabe Que" that is performed by a massed chorus of supporters on match day.[151] Other popular songs include "Só Eu Sei" and "Curva Belíssima" popularized by organized Sporting CP's supporter's group Juventude Leonina, as well as "Dia de Jogo", "Força Brutal" and "Voto Solene" sung by Sporting CP's-themed rock band Supporting.[152][153][154]

Throughout its history the club and its supporters established centres, branches and delegations (núcleos, filiais e delegações) of Sporting CP across Portugal and abroad. Among them, branches such as Sporting Clube de Tomar (branch number 1), Farense (branch number 2), Olhanense (branch number 4), Covilhã (branch number 8) and Campomaiorense (branch number 27), as well as delegations such as Lusitânia (delegation number 14), became noted autonomous sports clubs that reached the top level of Portuguese league systems in sports like football, rink hockey or basketball.[155][156] Founded in 1920, Sporting Clube de Lourenço Marques (branch number 6[157] until 1975 and later renamed as CD Maxaquene) was also a branch of Sporting CP in Mozambique, East Africa, and under this original name, Portuguese footballer Eusébio graduated as a footballer and played for the Mozambican club at both youth level and the main squad between the ages of 15 and 18.[158][159] The centres[160] were created and institutionalised in Sporting Clube de Portugal's 10th Club Statutes of 1984 and are characterised as being a group of sportinguistas who get together and organise themselves to promote, support, celebrate and publicise Sporting CP. Many of them are also involved in important recreational, social and sporting activities. The branches, more than 100 were founded around the world, are sports clubs that have associated themselves with Sporting CP's core values, are managed as autonomous sports clubs and contribute to the expansion of Sporting CP. The delegations are sporting, recreational and cultural institutions that represent the interests of Sporting CP in the places where they are based and mobilise the ideals of the club in those same regions.[161]

Rivalries edit

Lisbon derby edit

 
Sporting fans at the Estádio da Luz during the Lisbon derby (2013)

Sporting's main rivals are Benfica, with both teams contesting the Lisbon derby, also known as "the eternal derby", among other names. The local rivalry started in 1907 when eight Benfica players left for Sporting looking for better training conditions. The first derby was contested that year and ended with a 2–1 win for Sporting. One of Sporting's biggest defeats to Benfica, 7–2, happened at the original Estádio da Luz on 28 April 1948,[162] as well as three 5–0 losses, in 1939,[163] 1978[164] and 1986.[165] The biggest Sporting win over Benfica, 7–1, occurred at the original Estádio José Alvalade on 14 December 1986. Manuel Fernandes was particularly inspired and scored four goals; Mário Jorge two and Ralph Meade one; Wando scored for Benfica.[166][167]

Before the start of the 1993–94 season, Sousa Cintra, then president of Sporting, took advantage of Benfica's financial crisis by signing Paulo Sousa and Pacheco, who had terminated their contracts with the latter club. This event became known as "Verão Quente" (Hot Summer).[168] Later, on 14 May 1994, a memorable derby was played at the old José Alvalade Stadium, crowded to the top, as winning the derby could be a decisive step for Sporting in trying to regain the title, which by that time they had not won for 12 years. Sporting were considered the favourites, with a squad composed by Luís Figo, Paulo Sousa, Krasimir Balakov, Ivaylo Yordanov, Emílio Peixe, Stan Valckx and others; therefore, Benfica were seen as the underdogs. However, Benfica defied the odds and won the match 6–3 and went on securing the league title weeks later, leaving Sporting empty-handed in one of the most dramatic seasons in their history.[169][170] Two years later, the rivalry continued intense with a dramatic incident in the 1996 Portuguese Cup final, which Benfica won 3–1. After the latter scored the first goal, a supporter of the club lit a flare which eventually struck a Sporting fan in the chest, killing him instantly.[171]

Eight years later, on 3 May 2004, Geovanni's winning goal for Benfica in the 87th minute at Alvalade caused a pitch invasion by Sporting fans.[172] In November 2011, after a 1–0 loss to Benfica at the Estádio da Luz, Sporting supporters set fire to one of the stands of the stadium.[173] Four years later, on 7 February 2015, during a futsal[174] derby, members of No Name Boys, one of Benfica's unofficial supporters' groups, showed a banner saying "Very Light 96", in reference to the 1996 incident.[175] The next day, during a football derby at Estádio José Alvalade, an official supporters' group of Sporting, Juve Leo, showed a banner with the inscription "Sigam o King" ("Follow the King"), in reference to Eusébio's death a month before.[176][177]

Sporting vs Porto edit

Sporting has also a rivalry with Porto. Outside of the sports environment itself, the confrontation between Lions and Dragons represents a form of expression in sport, and in football in particular, of the political and regional differentiation between Lisbon and the North of Portugal. The confrontation captured the national imagination, having been remembered in the film O Leão da Estrela (1947) starring António Silva and Artur Agostinho, a classic of the Portuguese cinema,[178] and in its remake of 2015 starring Miguel Guilherme.[179]

Sporting and Porto have decided a competition 13 times. The first final won by Sporting took place only in 1978, at the Estádio Nacional, for the Taça de Portugal. The dispute was decided in two matches, a 1–1 draw and a 2–1 victory in the tie-breaker. There would be three more finals in the same location. In 1994, Porto also won the tiebreaker 2–1. In 2000, Porto won the tiebreaker again 2-0. And, in the 2007–08 Taça de Portugal Sporting won in extra time 2–0. In the 2019, after eleven years, Sporting won once again, with a 2–2 draw after extra time, with Sporting winning the penalty shootout 4-3.

Another four decisions between Porto and Sporting were for the Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira. In 1996, in a tie-breaker valid for the 1994/95 edition; in 2001, valid for the 1999/00 edition; and in 2007 and 2008. In the first two finals, the matches were held over two legs in the fields of rivals, with tiebreakers in Paris (1996) and Coimbra (2001). In 2007 and 2008, under the format in force since 2001, the decisions took place in a single match held in Leiria and in the Algarve.

Another decision between the two clubs took place in 2019, counting for the 2018–19 Taça da Liga. The match took place in Braga, ending with a 3–1 victory on penalties, after a 1–1 draw in regular time.[180]

Despite the rivalry, both clubs formed an alliance against Benfica in 2017, when Bruno de Carvalho was the president of Sporting.[181][182][183]

Finances and ownership edit

Results edit

In the 2022–2023 season, Sporting Clube de Portugal – Futebol, SAD's (Euronext Lisbon: SCP ) net income was €25.2 million for a record-breaking revenue of €222 million. The net debt stood at €141.796 million, a reduction in debt of €27 million comparing to the previous accounting period.[184]

Ownership edit

By 2022, Sporting Clube de Portugal held 83.90% of Sporting Clube de Portugal – Futebol, SAD's capital (67.32% in category A shares and 16.58% in category B shares), which is listed on Euronext Lisbon, corresponding to 126,322,554 shares, and Álvaro Sobrinho, by keeping 20,000,000 shares in his possession, had a stake of 13.28%. The remaining shareholders had 2.82% of the stock.[185] By December 2023, after a debt restructuring deal agreed with Portuguese banks Millennium bcp and Novobanco, Sporting Clube de Portugal announced it will consequently own 88 per cent of Sporting Clube de Portugal – Futebol, SAD.[117][118]

Facilities edit

Stadium edit

 
Estádio José Alvalade (inside view).

Throughout its history, Sporting has had several grounds. The first one was inaugurated on 4 July 1907, and was called "Sítio das Mouras". It was a state-of-the-art facility at the time and included changing rooms with individual lockers and changing rooms with showers and baths. It included a grass playing field for football and two tennis courts. It was considered luxurious and had also an athletics track.[186] This was followed by the Estádio do Campo Grande (1917–1937) and the Estádio do Lumiar (1937–1956). In 1956, the first Estádio José Alvalade was inaugurated. Sporting played their matches there until 2003, when the stadium was demolished.

A new stadium, Estádio José Alvalade, was built for the UEFA Euro 2004, hosted by Portugal. Designed by Tomás Taveira, it was inaugurated on 6 August 2003 and the wider complex called Alvalade XXI included a shopping mall, cinemas, health center, office space, residential areas, club's museum, official club store and other infrastructure.[187] The opening match was a 3–1 victory over Manchester United in a friendly game that marked the departure of Cristiano Ronaldo from Sporting CP.[188] The stadium was awarded a 'five-star' certificate at 2005 UEFA Cup Final by then UEFA president Lennart Johansson. The stadium has a capacity of 50,095 spectators.[189] The Multidesportivo Sporting, is a multi-sports arena located in a five-floor semi-detached building next to the stadium proper.[190]

The stadium hosted quarter-finals and semi-finals matches during the 2019–20 UEFA Champions League.[191]

Academia Cristiano Ronaldo and youth academy edit

The Cristiano Ronaldo Academy is the center of all Sporting CP's football activity. It is the place where the Sporting CP professional football team has all its daily preparation and also serves as a hub for carrying out internships. It is at the Sporting Professional Academy of Football that Sporting hosts its support staff, which includes the directive, clinical and administrative components. On the other hand, the Academy is also Sporting CP's Sports Training School.[192]

Sporting's youth academy system helped develop Ballon d'Or recipients Luís Figo and Cristiano Ronaldo.[193]

In the victorious campaign of Portuguese National Team in the Euro 2016 10 out of the 14 players who played the final against France were players "made in Sporting".[194][195] Moreover, at the 2018 FIFA World Cup Sporting CP had 14 players that came through their youth system, making it the most represented youth academy system in the tournament, followed by Barcelona with eleven.[196]

Pavilhão João Rocha edit

 
Pavilhão João Rocha during the 2017–18 Portuguese Futsal Championship finals between Sporting CP and Benfica

With a total capacity of 3,000 seats, spread over 4 stands and a corporate area, Sporting CP's indoor arena named after former Sporting CP's president João Rocha is the largest one in Portugal belonging to a sports club. Its dimensions meet the requirements for all indoor team sports, with an automatic table system for roller hockey, and an advanced video and multimedia system. In the roundabout between the pavilion and the stadium, a monument was also inaugurated to evoke the club. Those who follow the path that surrounds the pavilion will find the Passeio da Fama (Walk of Fame) of Sporting CP's former and current athletic glories where the names of famous Sporting CP's players, athletes, coaching staff and executives such as António Livramento, Carlos Lopes, Dionísio Castro, Domingos Castro, Fernando Mamede, Fernando Peyroteo, Francis Obikwelu, Joaquim Agostinho, José Travassos, Manuel Fernandes, Mário Moniz Pereira, Miguel Maia, Naide Gomes, Patrícia Mamona and Teresa Machado, among many others, can be found.[197] Next to the pavilion there is the Sporting CP's youth academy school Escola Academia Aurélio Pereira (named after the club's historical youth development principal Aurélio Pereira) with three 5-a-side football fields, with the aim of complementing the Pólo EUL (Sporting CP's facilities for U13 development footballers at the EUL – Estádio Universitário de Lisboa).[198][199] One of the entrances to the pavilion gives access to a Loja Verde (the club's official store) and to a branch of the Sporting Museum, with a design more focused on virtual realities and the concept of a museum in real time. There is also an auditorium prepared to host conferences, training courses and special events. The Pavilion and all the surrounding space is prepared to host concerts and cultural events.[200]

Club records edit

Honours edit

National edit

League edit

Cups edit

European edit

Players edit

Current squad edit

As of 1 February 2024[202]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
20 FW   POR Paulinho
21 FW   MOZ Geny Catamo
22 DF   ESP Iván Fresneda
23 MF   POR Daniel Bragança (4th captain)
25 DF   POR Gonçalo Inácio (5th captain)
26 DF   CIV Ousmane Diomande
42 MF   DEN Morten Hjulmand
43 DF   POR João Muniz
45 DF   BRA Rafael Pontelo
47 DF   POR Ricardo Esgaio
72 DF   POR Eduardo Quaresma
80 MF   FRA Koba Koindredi

Sporting CP B edit

Sporting CP B is the reserve football team of Sporting CP and it currently plays in the Liga 3.

Sporting CP Youth Academy edit

Sporting CP Youth Academy is the youth development division of the club and hosts U23, U19, U17 and U15 youth teams.

Other players under contract edit

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
FW   POR Rafael Camacho

Out 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 Player
6 MF   GRE Sotiris Alexandropoulos (at Olympiacos until 30 June 2024)
14 MF   POR Dário Essugo (at Chaves until 30 June 2024)
18 FW   GHA Abdul Fatawu Issahaku (at Leicester City until 30 June 2024)
32 MF   ARG Mateo Tanlongo (at Rio Ave until 30 June 2024)
41 GK   BRA Diego Callai (at Feirense until 30 June 2024)
77 FW   CPV Jovane Cabral (at Olympiacos until 30 June 2024)
No. Pos. Nation Player
82 MF   POR Mateus Fernandes (at Estoril until 30 June 2024)
90 FW   POR Afonso Moreira (at Gil Vicente until 30 June 2024)
91 FW   POR Rodrigo Ribeiro (at Nottingham Forest until 30 June 2024)
DF   POR Rúben Vinagre (at Hellas Verona until 30 June 2024)
DF   POR Gonçalo Esteves (at AZ until 30 June 2024)
MF   POR Samuel Justo (at Casa Pia until 30 June 2024)

Player accolades edit

Portuguese Top Goalscorer edit

The Portuguese League top scorer was awarded the Silver Shoe from 1934 to 1935 until 1951–52. Since the 1952–53 season, the sports newspaper A Bola awards the Silver Ball prize.[203]

1Shared award; 2Portuguese record; 3European Golden Shoe

Player of the Year edit

The Player of the Year award is named after former player Francisco Stromp, and was instituted from 1992. The list below is a list of winners of the award.

Award winners edit

Awards received while playing for Sporting CP

European Golden Boot[204]

African Footballer of the Year[205]

Bulgarian Footballer of the Year[206]

Algerian Ballon d'Or[207]

UEFA European Under-21 Championship Golden Player[208][209]

FIFA U-20 World Cup[210]

Golden Ball

Silver Ball

Bronze Ball

UEFA European Under-17 Championship Golden Player Award[211]

Portuguese Golden Ball[212]

Portuguese Footballer of the Year[213]

Primeira Liga Breakthrough Player of the Year:

LPFP Primeira Liga Player of the Year:

LPFP Primeira Liga Goalkeeper of the Year:

LPFP Primeira Liga Best Goal:

Segunda Liga Breakthrough Player of the Year:

FIFA World Cup All-Star Team

The 100 Greatest Players of the 20th Century[214]

Historical records edit

Most appearances for the club edit

Most goals scored for the club edit

Best goals per game ratio for the club edit

Youngest footballer who played in a Primeira Liga game for the club edit

Youngest footballer who played in a UEFA club competitions game for the club edit

Oldest footballer who played in an official game for the club edit

Highest player transfer fee received by the club edit

Highest player transfer fee paid by the club edit

Former coaches edit

For details on former coaches, see List of Sporting CP managers.

Head coaches who won the Primeira Liga while at the helm for Sporting CP:[225]

Head coaches who won UEFA club competitions for Sporting CP:

Media edit

Newspaper edit

Jornal Sporting is a weekly newspaper published by Sporting. Beginning its activity as Sporting Club of Portugal Bulletin on 31 March 1922, it was initially an eight-page calendar, with the optional payment of $2 a semester. Under the direction of Artur da Cunha Rosa, the bulletin became known as a newspaper in June 1952.

Sporting TV edit

Sporting TV is the television channel of Sporting Clube de Portugal. An open channel available on satellite and cable television as well as online, it is offered by telecommunications companies MEO, NOS, Vodafone and Nowo in Portugal,[227][228] and also in other countries like Angola and Mozambique, where it is broadcast by operator ZAP.[229] The channel broadcasts content linked to Sporting CP's universe ranging from documentaries, interviews, talk shows, news and post-match analysis and commentary programs, to live and recorded Sporting CP's ball sport matches and coverage of all the other competitions and sporting events involving the multi-sports club.[230][231]

Museum edit

Inaugurated on 31 August 2004 in Lisbon, the Sporting Museum (Museu Sporting) is divided into several thematic areas that express the wealth of the club's heritage and its sporting achievements over more than a century of existence in thirty-two different modalities. About two thousand trophies are on display, and there are many others in store.[232][233][234][235][236]

The history of the museum dates back to the trophy room of the old headquarters on Rua do Passadiço, where in 1956, 1850 trophies were already stored. In 1994, President Sousa Cintra inaugurated a new trophy room, where less than half of the club's collections were exhibited.[237] The following year the remodeling and organization of the museum is promoted, and a conservative viewpoint is incorporated. During the construction of the new Estádio José Alvalade a new museum is inaugurated, culminating in four years of investigation. Throughout the years, through donations with several origins, in addition to the trophies the patrimony of the club never stopped growing. In July 2016, there was a new inauguration after a total renovation.[238][232][233][239]

Outside of Lisbon, there is also an official Sporting Museum in the city of Leiria, in the Central Region of Portugal.[240][241][242][243][244][236]

Foundation edit

Sporting CP had already developed social solidarity initiatives throughout its history, but in 2006 it created a section called Sporting Solidário, which until the creation of the Sporting Foundation developed a series of social solidarity actions.[245] Established in 2012,[246][247] the Fundação Sporting (Sporting Foundation), is a humanitarian charity foundation devoted to helping people in need, including children at risk, the homeless and war victims.[248][249][250][251][252] In-kind donations are collected by the Sporting Foundation on match days[253][254][255][256][257] and the proceeds from the sale of tickets of some selected matches at Estádio José Alvalade go to the Sporting Foundation to finance the foundation's charity work.[258][259][260][261]

Club officials edit

As of 26 June 2021[262]

Directive Board edit

  • President: Frederico Varandas
  • Vice-presidents: Carlos Vieira, Vicente Moura, Vítor Silva Ferreira, António Rebelo
  • Board members: Bruno Mascarenhas Garcia, Luís Roque, Rui Caeiro, Alexandre Henriques, José Quintela
  • Substitutes: Rita Matos, Luís Gestas, Jorge Sanches, Luís Loureiro

General Assembly edit

  • President: Rogério Alves
  • Vice-president: Rui Solheiro
  • Secretaries: Miguel de Castro, Luís Pereira, Tiago Abade
  • Substitutes: Diogo Orvalho, Manuel Mendes, Rui Fernandes

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Until 1919, the club's original foundation date was 8 May 1906. In 1920, they changed it to coincide with the date of their name change.[9]

References edit

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sporting, this, article, about, association, football, team, other, teams, disambiguation, sporting, clube, portugal, portuguese, pronunciation, ˈspɔɾtĩɡ, ˈkluβɨ, ðɨ, puɾtuˈɣal, otherwise, referred, simply, sporting, particularly, within, portugal, sporting, l. This article is about the association football team For the other teams see Sporting CP disambiguation Sporting Clube de Portugal Portuguese pronunciation ˈspɔɾtĩɡ ˈklubɨ dɨ puɾtuˈɣal otherwise referred to as Sporting CP or simply Sporting particularly within Portugal or as Sporting Lisbon in other countries 1 2 3 4 5 is a Portuguese sports club based in Lisbon Having various sports departments and sporting disciplines 6 7 8 it is best known for its men s professional football team playing in the Primeira Liga the top flight of Portuguese football Sporting CPFull nameSporting Clube de PortugalNickname s Leoes Lions Verde e brancos Green and whites Short nameSporting Lisbon Founded1 July 1906 117 years ago 1906 07 01 a GroundEstadio Jose AlvaladeCapacity50 095PresidentFrederico VarandasHead coachRuben AmorimLeaguePrimeira Liga2023 24Primeira Liga 1st of 18WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursThird coloursCurrent season Founded on 1 July 1906 a Sporting is one of the Big Three clubs in Portugal that have never been relegated from Primeira Liga along with rivals Benfica and Porto Sporting are nicknamed Leoes Lions for the symbol used in the middle of the club s crest and Verde e Brancos Green and Whites for the shirt colour that are in horizontal stripes The club s anthem is called A Marcha do Sporting Sporting s March 10 its motto is Esforco Dedicacao Devocao e Gloria Effort Dedication Devotion and Glory 11 its supporters are called sportinguistas 12 and the club s mascot is called Jubas 13 Sporting is the second largest sports club by membership in Portugal with about 150 000 14 members which makes it one of the world s largest 15 It is also among the top three Portuguese sports clubs in number of non affiliated fans 16 Their home ground has been the Estadio Jose Alvalade built in 2003 which replaced the previous one built in 1956 The club s indoor arena is the Pavilhao Joao Rocha multi sports pavilion 17 Its youth academy has helped produce footballers such as Luis Figo and Cristiano Ronaldo 18 Sporting is the third most decorated Portuguese football team with 55 major trophies Domestically they have won 20 League titles 17 Tacas de Portugal a joint record of 4 Campeonato de Portugal 4 Tacas da Liga and 9 Supertacas Candido de Oliveira 19 In Europe they won the 1963 64 European Cup Winners Cup and were runners up at the UEFA Cup in 2005 and at the Latin Cup in 1949 Sporting played in the first European Champions Cup match on 4 September 1955 by invitation 20 and has participated in the most editions of UEFA Cup UEFA Europa League 36 a tournament in which they have the most matches played and the second most matches won 21 and where they are ranked first in the all time club ranking 22 Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation 1902 1906 1 2 Early years 1907 1946 1 3 Golden years and fading 1946 1982 1 4 First league title drought 1982 2000 1 5 The turn of the millennium 2000 2002 1 6 Second league title drought 2002 2021 1 6 1 2002 2009 1 6 2 Financial mismanagement and 2013 election 1 6 3 2013 2020 1 7 2020 present 2 Motto crests kits mascot and names 2 1 Motto 2 2 Crests 2 3 Kits 2 4 Mascot 2 5 Names 3 Support 4 Rivalries 4 1 Lisbon derby 4 2 Sporting vs Porto 5 Finances and ownership 5 1 Results 5 2 Ownership 6 Facilities 6 1 Stadium 6 2 Academia Cristiano Ronaldo and youth academy 6 3 Pavilhao Joao Rocha 7 Club records 8 Honours 8 1 National 8 1 1 League 8 1 2 Cups 8 2 European 9 Players 9 1 Current squad 9 2 Sporting CP B 9 3 Sporting CP Youth Academy 9 4 Other players under contract 9 5 Out on loan 10 Player accolades 10 1 Portuguese Top Goalscorer 10 2 Player of the Year 10 3 Award winners 10 4 Historical records 10 4 1 Most appearances for the club 10 4 2 Most goals scored for the club 10 4 3 Best goals per game ratio for the club 10 4 4 Youngest footballer who played in a Primeira Liga game for the club 10 4 5 Youngest footballer who played in a UEFA club competitions game for the club 10 4 6 Oldest footballer who played in an official game for the club 10 4 7 Highest player transfer fee received by the club 10 4 8 Highest player transfer fee paid by the club 11 Former coaches 12 Media 12 1 Newspaper 12 2 Sporting TV 13 Museum 14 Foundation 15 Club officials 15 1 Directive Board 15 2 General Assembly 16 Notes 17 References 18 External linksHistory editFoundation 1902 1906 edit Sporting Clube de Portugal has its origins in June 1902 when a group of young men including Francisco da Ponte Horta Gavazzo and his brother Jose Maria decided to create Sport Club de Belas This club the first ancestor of Sporting played just one match and at the end of the year s summer disbanded Two years later the idea of creating a football club was revived and this time with the Gavazzo brothers joined by Jose Alvalade Jose Holtreman Roquette and Jose Stromp a new club the Campo Grande Football Club was founded They played their matches on the estate of the Viscount of Alvalade Alfredo Holtreman Jose Alvalade s grandfather with the club s headquarters located in Francisco Gavazzo s home For two years the club developed an intense activity on several sports namely football tennis and fencing nbsp Jose Alvalade founded Sporting with the backing of his grandfather The club also organized parties and picnics Eventually during one picnic on 12 April 1906 discussions erupted as some members defended that the club should only be focused on organizing picnics and social events with another group defending that the club should be focused on the practising of sports instead Some time later Jose Gavazzo Jose Alvalade and 17 other members left the club with Jose Alvalade saying I ll go to my grandad and he ll give me money to make another club 7 23 24 As such a new club without a name was founded on 8 May 1906 and on 26 May 25 it was named Campo Grande Sporting Clube a The Viscount of Alvalade whose money and land helped found the club was the first president of Sporting 26 27 Jose Alvalade as one of the main founders and first club member socio uttered on behalf of himself and his fellow co founders We want this club to be a great club as great as the greatest in Europe 26 Beyond Jose Holtreman Roquette Jose Alvalade and his grandfather Alfredo das Neves Holtreman Viscount of Alvalade among the founders were also the brothers Antonio Jose and Francisco Stromp the Gavazzo brothers Jose Maria do Couto Valente da Ponte and Jose Ferreira Roquette 28 29 Two months later on 1 July 1906 a Antonio Felix da Costa Junior suggested the name Sporting Clube de Portugal and since 1920 that is the club s foundation date 30 a Early years 1907 1946 edit nbsp Alfredo Holtreman Viscount of Alvalade was the first president sponsor and protector of Sporting The year 1907 marked some firsts for the club as Sporting played the first football match of their history on 3 February ending in a 5 1 defeat against third division club Cruz Negra inaugurated their first ground known as Sitio das Mouras the most advanced in Portugal at the time equipped with showers two tennis courts an athletics track and a football field on 4 July and played the first derby of all time against local rivals S L Benfica then known as Grupo Sport Lisboa on 1 December 31 As early as 1909 the following sports were practised at the sports club football running and jumping athletics physical exercise gymnastics rope wrestling tennis cricket and field hockey 32 The club also released their first report card on 31 March 1922 titled Boletim do Sporting Sporting s Report lending the foundation for the later called Jornal do Sporting the official newspaper of the club that still exists today 33 Sporting played their first Primeira Liga game the 1st Division of Portuguese football ever on 20 January 1935 winning 0 6 against Academica de Coimbra A year later in 1936 the club had their heaviest ever defeat against Porto losing 10 1 Sporting however got their revenge a year later when they humbled the same team with a 9 1 result In 1941 under the guidance of Hungarian manager Jozsef Szabo the club celebrated the first league title of their history 34 Golden years and fading 1946 1982 edit nbsp The 1963 64 UEFA Cup Winners Cup won by Sporting at Museum Mundo Sporting The football team had their height during the 1940s and 1950s It was spearheaded by Fernando Peyroteo Jose Travassos Albano Pereira Jesus Correia and Manuel Vasques in a quintet nicknamed The Five Violins 35 With the violins help Sporting won seven league titles in eight seasons between 1947 and 1954 including a then unprecedented four in a row from 1950 to 1951 onwards Fernando Peyroteo the most known of the violins is considered one of the greatest Portuguese players of all time 36 Sporting and the Yugoslavian team Partizan both made history on 4 September 1955 as they played the first ever UEFA Champion Clubs Cup match Sporting player Joao Martins scored the first ever goal of the competition on the 14th minute The match ended in a 3 3 draw 37 Sporting also inaugurated their new venue Jose Alvalade Stadium on 10 June 1956 which would be their home ground until 2003 38 In the 1960s Sporting achieved continental success winning the 1963 64 UEFA Cup Winners Cup defeating MTK Budapest of Hungary in the final It was the only time a Portuguese team side won a UEFA Cup Winners Cup title 39 The team entered the competition defeating Atalanta in the qualifying round then past Cypriot club APOEL in what was the biggest win in a single UEFA competitions game to date 16 1 a record that still stands today On the next round they lost 4 1 to Manchester United at Old Trafford in the first hand but made a remarkable comeback at home winning 5 0 In the semi finals Sporting eliminated Lyon and in the end MTK Budapest in a two round final to win their first European title The winning goal was scored by Joao Morais from a direct corner kick 40 Under the leadership of president Joao Rocha the first project of club company in Portugal was approved by Sporting CP s affiliated partners socios in November 1973 and denominated Society of Constructions and Planning SCP Sociedade de Construcoes e Planeamento The Portuguese government authorised the establishment of the company and the issue of 2 5 million shares with a nominal value of 100 escudos each 41 42 The club company project with issuance of stock was hampered shortly after due to the events of the Carnation Revolution of 1974 and the subsequent Processo Revolucionario em Curso of 1975 the creation of Sociedades Anonimas Desportivas Public limited sports companies would be later available in Portugal through a new legal status only introduced in the 1990s 43 44 The club reached the semi finals of the Cup Winners Cup in 1974 but lost to eventual winners 1 FC Magdeburg of East Germany 45 First league title drought 1982 2000 edit nbsp Club emblem used from 1945 to 2001 English manager Malcolm Allison arrived at Sporting in 1981 and under his guidance the club won the domestic double league title and Portuguese cup in 1982 46 In the years between 1982 and 2000 Sporting suffered from a drought of titles Despite defeating rivals Benfica 4 0 on aggregate to win the Portuguese Super Cup in 1987 Sporting fans had to wait until 1995 to see their team win some silverware after beating Maritimo 2 0 in the final of the 1995 Portuguese Cup That victory granted Sporting a place in the following season s Portuguese Super Cup After drawing 0 0 at the Jose Alvalade Stadium and securing a 2 2 draw at the Estadio das Antas a replay match was held on 30 April 1996 at the Parc de Princes in Paris Sporting won 3 0 with Sa Pinto scoring twice and Carlos Xavier scoring a stoppage time penalty In the same 1995 96 season Sporting also reached the Portuguese Cup Final but lost 3 1 to Benfica Highlights of this period of time also include a 7 1 victory over arch rivals Benfica at the old Jose Alvalade Stadium on 14 December 1986 Sporting also reached the UEFA Cup semi final in 1991 losing against Internazionale 47 Also Barcelona and Real Madrid were both tied and defeated in Lisbon when playing against Sporting in the old UEFA Cup in the 1986 87 and 1994 95 seasons respectively 48 49 In 1998 Sporting Clube de Portugal had created the Sporting Clube de Portugal Futebol SAD a public limited sports company for its football department which went public on the Lisbon Stock Exchange in that year at a price of 1 000 escudos the equivalent of about five euros at the time per share 50 The turn of the millennium 2000 2002 edit nbsp Sporting CP s manager and former player Augusto Inacio won the Primeira Liga title in 2000 51 In 2000 Sporting led by manager Augusto Inacio a former Sporting player who replaced Giuseppe Materazzi at the beginning of the season won the league title on the last match day with a 4 0 victory over Salgueiros ending an 18 year drought 34 In the following season Sporting conquered the 2000 Super Cup but came third in the league In the 2001 02 season led by coach Laszlo Boloni Sporting conquered their 18th league title the Portuguese Cup and the 2002 Portuguese Super Cup On 21 June 2002 the club had opened its training facility located in Alcochete 30 km east of Lisbon On 14 August 2002 52 Cristiano Ronaldo then 17 played his first official match for a Sporting CP s senior team in a UEFA Champions League qualifying round at home against Inter Milan 53 54 On 1 September 2002 in the Azores Cristiano Ronaldo debuted as a senior player in official domestic competitions playing for Sporting CP B in a 2 1 away loss against Sport Clube Lusitania 55 and on 29 September he made his debut in the Primeira Liga playing for Sporting CP s main team in a way match against SC Braga 56 Second league title drought 2002 2021 edit 2002 2009 edit nbsp A new stadium Estadio Jose Alvalade was inaugurated in 2003 Sporting have failed to win Primeira Liga again since 2002 On 6 August 2003 the new Sporting CP s stadium the Estadio Jose Alvalade was inaugurated 57 In the 2004 05 season Jose Peseiro led Sporting was leading the Primeira Liga and was trailing a remarkable journey in UEFA Cup However at the end of the season the team eventually lost all the chances of winning any trophy that season the first set back had already happened on 26 January 2005 when Sporting was eliminated from Taca de Portugal after losing 7 6 on penalties against Benfica Nevertheless Sporting was able to reach the leadership of Primeira Liga and on 5 May the team booked their second European final after defeating Dutch team AZ in UEFA Cup While awaiting the Final on 14 May Sporting lost its penultimate match in Primeira Liga against Benfica and dropped to third place By the end of the season the team eventually finished 2004 05 Primeira Liga in that place Lastly playing the 2005 UEFA Cup Final at their home ground on 18 May Sporting lost 1 3 against Russian side CSKA Moscow after being 1 0 up at halftime 58 Domestically Sporting had back to back wins in the Portuguese Cup in 2007 and 2008 led by coach Paulo Bento Sporting also reached for the first time the knockout phase of UEFA Champions League in the 2008 09 season but were roundly defeated by Bayern Munich with an aggregate loss of 12 1 This is widely regarded as one of the lowest points in the history of the club 59 The club almost reached another European final in 2012 but were dropped out of the competition by Athletic Bilbao in the semi finals of the 2011 12 Europa League 60 Financial mismanagement and 2013 election edit After years of financial mismanagement Sporting had amassed debts exceeding 276 million by 2011 61 The results on the pitch were also negative with Sporting finishing seventh in the 2012 13 Primeira Liga their lowest ever finish 62 63 Managerial changes occurred within months or weeks apart from November 2009 to May 2013 nine managers were contracted with none of them lasting an entire season In 2013 after pressure from club members president Godinho Lopes resigned 64 65 and shortly afterwards Bruno de Carvalho was elected president in a snap election 66 67 Carvalho intended to return success to the football team while threatening to take Godinho Lopes to court 68 69 70 as well as to renegotiate the club s debt payment schedule with the banks involved 71 which eventually renegotiated the debt in very favourable conditions for Sporting CP in the following years as part of the club s financial restructuring started by Carvalho and finalized by Frederico Varandas ten years later 72 73 This allowed Sporting CP to get a multimillion euro debt relief in contrast to their rivals 74 75 Carvalho s election brought Angolan investors to the club most notably Alvaro Sobrinho through Holdimo which ultimately took possession of 20 million shares of Sporting s SAD through conversion of convertible debt 76 77 On 5 June 2015 it was released an audit that analyzed the management of Sporting in the past 20 years it concluded that in 1994 the club had 55 million worth of real estate assets and an almost nonexistent debt by 2013 real estate assets were almost nonexistent and the club had amassed a 331 million debt 78 Their new stadium completed in 2003 cost 74 more than what was expected when its construction started 184 million against the planned 106 million while their training facility cost 24 more and the costs of Alvalade XXI neighbourhood a real estate complex located around the stadium overshot its estimate by 60 such complex was almost entirely sold in the following years many estates of which were sold below market prices 79 From 1995 to 2013 the club invested 261 million in the football team however with few sports and financial results 78 The audit criticized many football transfers in the 2000s in which the club paid commissions well above market prices to player agents and discovered that Sporting even had paid commissions without evidence of written contracts 78 80 The audit also concluded that the administrations from 1995 to 2013 intended to convert Sporting a multi sports club exclusively into a football club although they did not openly admitted so which was being done gradually through the closure of other sport modalities 81 Moreover the audit also pointed out evidence of mismanagement and conflicts of interest by several administrators 78 Considering the audit s results club members approved the expulsion of Godinho Lopes as an associate of the club in June 2015 82 2013 2020 edit Led by coach Leonardo Jardim in the 2013 14 season Sporting finished second in the league thus gaining direct access to the 2014 15 UEFA Champions League their first Champions League presence in five years 83 84 nbsp Sporting playing a home match against German club Schalke 04 for the 2014 15 UEFA Champions League group stage In the 2014 15 season Sporting won their 16th Portuguese Cup in dramatic fashion The Lisbon side led by Marco Silva played the final against Braga and after a disastrous start found themselves losing 0 2 at half time and playing with ten men after the sending off of Cedric Soares With the final seemingly lost Islam Slimani gave some hope to the fans as he scored the 1 2 on the 83 minute In stoppage time Fredy Montero managed to equalize forcing extra time Sporting ultimately won the match 3 1 on penalties 85 Celebrations ended in a pacific pitch invasion of Estadio Jose Alvalade by the fans as the club touched silverware for the first time in seven years 86 87 In June 2015 Jorge Jesus joined Sporting after Benfica opted not to renew his contract as coach of the club signing a three year contract Presented as the new manager of the club on 1 July the managerial change took the rivalry of both Lisbon clubs to new heights 88 Under Jesus tenure Sporting won the Portuguese Super Cup for the eighth time against back to back champions Benfica 89 Despite a positive start Sporting did not win any other trophy finishing second in the Primeira Liga with 86 points two points behind Benfica despite breaking their own points record in the league Following a trophyless season Sporting won their first Taca da Liga on a penalty shoot out against Vitoria de Setubal However on 15 May 2018 days after finishing third in the league several players and coaches were attacked by around 50 ultra supporters of Sporting at the club s training ground 9 of them would be sentenced to at least a specified term of actual imprisonment 90 after trial 91 92 93 Five days later Sporting lost the Portuguese Cup final to Aves About a month later Bruno de Carvalho was dismissed by club members after a general assembly on 23 June 94 This followed the rescissions of nine players Bruno Fernandes Daniel Podence Rui Patricio Rodrigo Battaglia Rafael Leao Ruben Ribeiro Bas Dost Gelson Martins and William Carvalho 95 Sporting would be later eligible for court awarded compensation when the rescissions were declared illegal for those players who did not return to the club or were not sold by Sporting 96 97 nbsp Ruben Amorim during a training session in 2021 the year he led Sporting CP to its first Primeira Liga title under his leadership as manager of the team 98 In the period before scheduled elections a management committee headed by former President Sousa Cintra as acting president of the sports club 99 succeeded in returning some of the players who had left the club following the incident namely Bruno Fernandes Bas Dost and Rodrigo Battaglia 100 101 Frederico Varandas was elected president on 8 September 2018 102 Having replaced Jorge Jesus at the beginning of the 2018 19 season Jose Peseiro was sacked after a poor performance on the Primeira Liga 103 In March 2019 Sporting CP announced a loan negotiated with Apollo Global Management based on the securitization of NOS television rights revenues 104 In March 2020 Ruben Amorim was appointed manager of Sporting CP for a managerial transfer worth 10 million 8 65 million becoming the third most expensive manager ever 105 2020 present edit In the 2020 21 season with no spectators allowed in Portugal due to COVID 19 restrictions and after being eliminated from European competition by LASK Linz Sporting won their third league cup and ended their 19 year period without winning the Portuguese league with only one loss against Benfica in the penultimate round and already as champions securing their 19th Primeira Liga title after a 1 0 home win against Boavista 106 At the 2021 22 UEFA Champions League group stage Sporting made a comeback by finishing second on Group C after a 5 1 home loss to Ajax and 1 0 away loss to Borussia Dortmund thereby reaching the knockout phase for only the second time since the 2008 09 season Domestically both the 2021 Supertaca Candido de Oliveira 107 and the 2021 22 Taca da Liga 108 were won by the Lions securing the trophies against Braga and Benfica respectively In the 2021 22 Primeira Liga Sporting finished second with the same 85 points as in the previous league campaign In the 2023 24 league season Sporting record signing Viktor Gyokeres helped propel the club to their 20th Primeira liga title won on the fifth of May after Benfica s 2 0 loss to Famalicao 109 nbsp New Jose Alvalade s image at the Estadio Jose Alvalade in Lisbon Portugal during the execution of a work of building renovation in 2023 110 For the 2022 2026 quadrennium Frederico Varandas administration started works of building renovation and modernization of the club s facilities 111 112 In December 2023 Sporting Clube de Portugal and Sporting Clube de Portugal Futebol SAD had gone ahead with a financial restructuring started in 2019 on the grounds of earlier agreements with creditors jump started by Bruno de Carvalho 74 which included the renegotiation of bank debt extinguishing the debt originally belonging to Novo Banco S A with outstanding capital of 35 403 508 62 euros with the exception of finance leases the company announced in a statement sent to the Portuguese Securities Market Commission CMVM A debt belonging to Millennium BCP was also settled 113 114 115 In addition Sporting Clube de Portugal announced it would own 88 per cent of Sporting Clube de Portugal Futebol SAD from 15 February 2024 onwards 116 instead of the 83 90 it owned at the time 117 118 119 With the completion of the restructuring the club said it intended to start a new strategic financial planning and secure the entry of a minority investor in its Futebol SAD 120 121 122 Motto crests kits mascot and names editMotto edit Since its formation Sporting CP s motto is Effort Dedication Devotion and Glory Esforco Dedicacao Devocao e Gloria 123 124 Crests edit The stylized rampant lion of the crest was taken by the Viscount of Alvalade from the heraldry of Dom Fernando de Castello Branco Mayor of Cascais and the main promoter of football at Sporting Club de Cascais widely known at the time as Sporting Club da Parada However Castello Branco demanded that the color used by the new sports club should not be blue since that was already a color adopted by Sporting Club da Parada 125 To keep up with times the club s emblem has been modernized throughout history and this led to the development of various crests consistent with the history of the club in all of them the rampant lion and the color green have always been present in prominence 126 Since its founding on the 1st July 1906 Sporting has already had five emblems in addition to two commemorating crests for the fiftieth 1956 and the one hundredth years of existence 2006 of the club nbsp Previous Sporting s crests Sporting CP radically changed its emblem in 2001 to convey a message of modernity more geared towards the new technologies at the time 127 The current emblem presents an image with simplified framing while maintaining the green color in the shield and adding three horizontal white stripes that symbolize the club s shirt Complemented with the words Sporting and Portugal now written in full they emphasize the national dimension of the club and clarify its name internationally 128 A stylized rampant lion appears in golden color and the acronym SCP which stands for the club s name Sporting Clube de Portugal is shown like a crown on top of the shield 129 126 Kits edit When the club was founded in 1906 its players wore white jerseys On 25 October 1908 Sporting Clube de Portugal presented the first ten football shirts that would come to be known as the Stromp kit The initiative came from founder Eduardo Quintela de Mendonca The Stromp kit is split at the top with the right half white and the left half painted green It was named in honour of one of the club s main founders Francisco Stromp and it had white shorts with the shorts changing to black in 1915 It stopped being used as the main jersey in 1928 130 On 6 November 1927 the striped jerseys were worn by the football team for the first time in a friendly match against Casa Pia but after that the split jerseys continued to be used When Sporting s football team travelled to Brazil in July 1928 and after considering the weather conditions in that country it was decided to wear the horizontal striped jerseys that Salazar Carreira had chosen for the club s rugby team a year earlier which were lighter and tighter to the body On their return the Sporting team once again wore the traditional split jerseys known as the Stromp kit However on 5 October 1928 in a match against Benfica whether it was because of the heavy rain that made them too heavy or for some other reason at half time the players swapped their usual jerseys for the striped ones thus establishing what is still the club s main kit today green and white horizontally stripped jersey with black shorts 131 Mascot edit The club s mascot is called Jubas plural of the Portuguese word for mane and is an anthropomorphic version of a lion wearing customized standard equipment and attire worn by the players of Sporting CP s main team 13 132 It also wears official Loja Verde Sporting CP s official store garment in both charity and promotional marketing initiatives 133 Names edit Founded on 1 July 1906 after two months during which the newly created sports club project was temporarily called Campo Grande Sporting Club 25 after Campo Grande instead of its final official name of Sporting Clube de Portugal which could be literally translated as Sporting Club of Portugal the club is currently officially referred to by UEFA and FIFA as written in its official full name or as Sporting CP a shortened form of the name 134 The designation Sporting Lisbon a common way some foreign media and non Portuguese speaking people use to refer to Sporting CP outside Portugal 1 has been a source of contention and controversy for some sportinguistas 135 2 because it does not conform with the official name of the sports club and its brand value 136 Regarding this issue club supporters and officials have promoted awareness campaigns to raise people s awareness nationwide and internationally and the club changed its official crest in 2001 137 with a focus on the name of the club and its words Sporting and Portugal in mind 4 138 139 5 Support edit nbsp Sporting CP supporters at the old Jose Alvalade Stadium 1956 2003 Sporting CP s supporters or fans are called sportinguistas 140 The club has about 150 000 14 affiliated members called socios and research studies have suggested it has a number of fans ranging from 1 100 000 to 2 700 000 in Portugal alone which makes it the second or third most supported sports club in Portugal depending on the study 141 142 143 144 Like the other two Portuguese Big Three sports clubs Sporting CP has also a sizable number of foreign fans in other Portuguese speaking countries beyond Portugal itself and supporters among the Portuguese expatriate community 145 146 147 The club s anthem is the Sporting s March original official name A Marcha do Sporting It was written in 1955 by songwriters Eduardo Damas and Manuel Paiao and originally sung by Portuguese singer Maria Jose Valerio 148 149 150 Sporting CP created and uses its own You ll Never Walk Alone style song through a Portuguese version of the classic song popularised by Frank Sinatra My Way called O Mundo Sabe Que that is performed by a massed chorus of supporters on match day 151 Other popular songs include So Eu Sei and Curva Belissima popularized by organized Sporting CP s supporter s group Juventude Leonina as well as Dia de Jogo Forca Brutal and Voto Solene sung by Sporting CP s themed rock band Supporting 152 153 154 Throughout its history the club and its supporters established centres branches and delegations nucleos filiais e delegacoes of Sporting CP across Portugal and abroad Among them branches such as Sporting Clube de Tomar branch number 1 Farense branch number 2 Olhanense branch number 4 Covilha branch number 8 and Campomaiorense branch number 27 as well as delegations such as Lusitania delegation number 14 became noted autonomous sports clubs that reached the top level of Portuguese league systems in sports like football rink hockey or basketball 155 156 Founded in 1920 Sporting Clube de Lourenco Marques branch number 6 157 until 1975 and later renamed as CD Maxaquene was also a branch of Sporting CP in Mozambique East Africa and under this original name Portuguese footballer Eusebio graduated as a footballer and played for the Mozambican club at both youth level and the main squad between the ages of 15 and 18 158 159 The centres 160 were created and institutionalised in Sporting Clube de Portugal s 10th Club Statutes of 1984 and are characterised as being a group of sportinguistas who get together and organise themselves to promote support celebrate and publicise Sporting CP Many of them are also involved in important recreational social and sporting activities The branches more than 100 were founded around the world are sports clubs that have associated themselves with Sporting CP s core values are managed as autonomous sports clubs and contribute to the expansion of Sporting CP The delegations are sporting recreational and cultural institutions that represent the interests of Sporting CP in the places where they are based and mobilise the ideals of the club in those same regions 161 Rivalries editLisbon derby edit Main article Derby de Lisboa nbsp Sporting fans at the Estadio da Luz during the Lisbon derby 2013 Sporting s main rivals are Benfica with both teams contesting the Lisbon derby also known as the eternal derby among other names The local rivalry started in 1907 when eight Benfica players left for Sporting looking for better training conditions The first derby was contested that year and ended with a 2 1 win for Sporting One of Sporting s biggest defeats to Benfica 7 2 happened at the original Estadio da Luz on 28 April 1948 162 as well as three 5 0 losses in 1939 163 1978 164 and 1986 165 The biggest Sporting win over Benfica 7 1 occurred at the original Estadio Jose Alvalade on 14 December 1986 Manuel Fernandes was particularly inspired and scored four goals Mario Jorge two and Ralph Meade one Wando scored for Benfica 166 167 Before the start of the 1993 94 season Sousa Cintra then president of Sporting took advantage of Benfica s financial crisis by signing Paulo Sousa and Pacheco who had terminated their contracts with the latter club This event became known as Verao Quente Hot Summer 168 Later on 14 May 1994 a memorable derby was played at the old Jose Alvalade Stadium crowded to the top as winning the derby could be a decisive step for Sporting in trying to regain the title which by that time they had not won for 12 years Sporting were considered the favourites with a squad composed by Luis Figo Paulo Sousa Krasimir Balakov Ivaylo Yordanov Emilio Peixe Stan Valckx and others therefore Benfica were seen as the underdogs However Benfica defied the odds and won the match 6 3 and went on securing the league title weeks later leaving Sporting empty handed in one of the most dramatic seasons in their history 169 170 Two years later the rivalry continued intense with a dramatic incident in the 1996 Portuguese Cup final which Benfica won 3 1 After the latter scored the first goal a supporter of the club lit a flare which eventually struck a Sporting fan in the chest killing him instantly 171 Eight years later on 3 May 2004 Geovanni s winning goal for Benfica in the 87th minute at Alvalade caused a pitch invasion by Sporting fans 172 In November 2011 after a 1 0 loss to Benfica at the Estadio da Luz Sporting supporters set fire to one of the stands of the stadium 173 Four years later on 7 February 2015 during a futsal 174 derby members of No Name Boys one of Benfica s unofficial supporters groups showed a banner saying Very Light 96 in reference to the 1996 incident 175 The next day during a football derby at Estadio Jose Alvalade an official supporters group of Sporting Juve Leo showed a banner with the inscription Sigam o King Follow the King in reference to Eusebio s death a month before 176 177 Sporting vs Porto edit Main article FC Porto Sporting CP rivalry Sporting has also a rivalry with Porto Outside of the sports environment itself the confrontation between Lions and Dragons represents a form of expression in sport and in football in particular of the political and regional differentiation between Lisbon and the North of Portugal The confrontation captured the national imagination having been remembered in the film O Leao da Estrela 1947 starring Antonio Silva and Artur Agostinho a classic of the Portuguese cinema 178 and in its remake of 2015 starring Miguel Guilherme 179 Sporting and Porto have decided a competition 13 times The first final won by Sporting took place only in 1978 at the Estadio Nacional for the Taca de Portugal The dispute was decided in two matches a 1 1 draw and a 2 1 victory in the tie breaker There would be three more finals in the same location In 1994 Porto also won the tiebreaker 2 1 In 2000 Porto won the tiebreaker again 2 0 And in the 2007 08 Taca de Portugal Sporting won in extra time 2 0 In the 2019 after eleven years Sporting won once again with a 2 2 draw after extra time with Sporting winning the penalty shootout 4 3 Another four decisions between Porto and Sporting were for the Supertaca Candido de Oliveira In 1996 in a tie breaker valid for the 1994 95 edition in 2001 valid for the 1999 00 edition and in 2007 and 2008 In the first two finals the matches were held over two legs in the fields of rivals with tiebreakers in Paris 1996 and Coimbra 2001 In 2007 and 2008 under the format in force since 2001 the decisions took place in a single match held in Leiria and in the Algarve Another decision between the two clubs took place in 2019 counting for the 2018 19 Taca da Liga The match took place in Braga ending with a 3 1 victory on penalties after a 1 1 draw in regular time 180 Despite the rivalry both clubs formed an alliance against Benfica in 2017 when Bruno de Carvalho was the president of Sporting 181 182 183 Finances and ownership editResults edit In the 2022 2023 season Sporting Clube de Portugal Futebol SAD s Euronext Lisbon SCP net income was 25 2 million for a record breaking revenue of 222 million The net debt stood at 141 796 million a reduction in debt of 27 million comparing to the previous accounting period 184 Ownership edit By 2022 Sporting Clube de Portugal held 83 90 of Sporting Clube de Portugal Futebol SAD s capital 67 32 in category A shares and 16 58 in category B shares which is listed on Euronext Lisbon corresponding to 126 322 554 shares and Alvaro Sobrinho by keeping 20 000 000 shares in his possession had a stake of 13 28 The remaining shareholders had 2 82 of the stock 185 By December 2023 after a debt restructuring deal agreed with Portuguese banks Millennium bcp and Novobanco Sporting Clube de Portugal announced it will consequently own 88 per cent of Sporting Clube de Portugal Futebol SAD 117 118 Facilities editStadium edit Main article Estadio Jose Alvalade nbsp Estadio Jose Alvalade inside view Throughout its history Sporting has had several grounds The first one was inaugurated on 4 July 1907 and was called Sitio das Mouras It was a state of the art facility at the time and included changing rooms with individual lockers and changing rooms with showers and baths It included a grass playing field for football and two tennis courts It was considered luxurious and had also an athletics track 186 This was followed by the Estadio do Campo Grande 1917 1937 and the Estadio do Lumiar 1937 1956 In 1956 the first Estadio Jose Alvalade was inaugurated Sporting played their matches there until 2003 when the stadium was demolished A new stadium Estadio Jose Alvalade was built for the UEFA Euro 2004 hosted by Portugal Designed by Tomas Taveira it was inaugurated on 6 August 2003 and the wider complex called Alvalade XXI included a shopping mall cinemas health center office space residential areas club s museum official club store and other infrastructure 187 The opening match was a 3 1 victory over Manchester United in a friendly game that marked the departure of Cristiano Ronaldo from Sporting CP 188 The stadium was awarded a five star certificate at 2005 UEFA Cup Final by then UEFA president Lennart Johansson The stadium has a capacity of 50 095 spectators 189 The Multidesportivo Sporting is a multi sports arena located in a five floor semi detached building next to the stadium proper 190 The stadium hosted quarter finals and semi finals matches during the 2019 20 UEFA Champions League 191 Academia Cristiano Ronaldo and youth academy edit Main articles Academia Cristiano Ronaldo and Sporting CP Youth Academy The Cristiano Ronaldo Academy is the center of all Sporting CP s football activity It is the place where the Sporting CP professional football team has all its daily preparation and also serves as a hub for carrying out internships It is at the Sporting Professional Academy of Football that Sporting hosts its support staff which includes the directive clinical and administrative components On the other hand the Academy is also Sporting CP s Sports Training School 192 Sporting s youth academy system helped develop Ballon d Or recipients Luis Figo and Cristiano Ronaldo 193 In the victorious campaign of Portuguese National Team in the Euro 2016 10 out of the 14 players who played the final against France were players made in Sporting 194 195 Moreover at the 2018 FIFA World Cup Sporting CP had 14 players that came through their youth system making it the most represented youth academy system in the tournament followed by Barcelona with eleven 196 Pavilhao Joao Rocha edit Main article Pavilhao Joao Rocha nbsp Pavilhao Joao Rocha during the 2017 18 Portuguese Futsal Championship finals between Sporting CP and Benfica With a total capacity of 3 000 seats spread over 4 stands and a corporate area Sporting CP s indoor arena named after former Sporting CP s president Joao Rocha is the largest one in Portugal belonging to a sports club Its dimensions meet the requirements for all indoor team sports with an automatic table system for roller hockey and an advanced video and multimedia system In the roundabout between the pavilion and the stadium a monument was also inaugurated to evoke the club Those who follow the path that surrounds the pavilion will find the Passeio da Fama Walk of Fame of Sporting CP s former and current athletic glories where the names of famous Sporting CP s players athletes coaching staff and executives such as Antonio Livramento Carlos Lopes Dionisio Castro Domingos Castro Fernando Mamede Fernando Peyroteo Francis Obikwelu Joaquim Agostinho Jose Travassos Manuel Fernandes Mario Moniz Pereira Miguel Maia Naide Gomes Patricia Mamona and Teresa Machado among many others can be found 197 Next to the pavilion there is the Sporting CP s youth academy school Escola Academia Aurelio Pereira named after the club s historical youth development principal Aurelio Pereira with three 5 a side football fields with the aim of complementing the Polo EUL Sporting CP s facilities for U13 development footballers at the EUL Estadio Universitario de Lisboa 198 199 One of the entrances to the pavilion gives access to a Loja Verde the club s official store and to a branch of the Sporting Museum with a design more focused on virtual realities and the concept of a museum in real time There is also an auditorium prepared to host conferences training courses and special events The Pavilion and all the surrounding space is prepared to host concerts and cultural events 200 Club records editMain article List of Sporting CP records and statisticsHonours editNational edit League edit Primeira Liga Winners 20 1940 41 1943 44 1946 47 1947 48 1948 49 1950 51 1951 52 1952 53 1953 54 1957 58 1961 62 1965 66 1969 70 1973 74 1979 80 1981 82 1999 2000 2001 02 2020 21 2023 24 201 Cups edit Taca de Portugal Winners 17 1940 41 1944 45 1945 46 1947 48 1953 54 1962 63 1970 71 1972 73 1973 74 1977 78 1981 82 1994 95 2001 02 2006 07 2007 08 2014 15 2018 19 201 Taca da Liga Winners 4 2017 18 2018 19 2020 21 2021 22 Supertaca Candido de Oliveira Winners 9 1982 1987 1995 2000 2002 2007 2008 2015 2021 Campeonato de Portugal Winners 4 1922 23 1933 34 1935 36 1937 38 European edit UEFA Cup Winners Cup Winners 1 1963 64Players editCurrent squad edit As of 1 February 2024 202 Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player 1 GK nbsp ESP Antonio Adan 3rd captain 2 DF nbsp BRA Matheus Reis 3 DF nbsp NED Jerry St Juste 4 DF nbsp URU Sebastian Coates captain 5 MF nbsp JPN Hidemasa Morita 8 MF nbsp POR Pedro Goncalves 9 FW nbsp SWE Viktor Gyokeres 10 FW nbsp ENG Marcus Edwards 11 FW nbsp POR Nuno Santos 12 GK nbsp URU Franco Israel 13 DF nbsp POR Luis Neto vice captain 17 FW nbsp POR Francisco Trincao No Pos Nation Player 20 FW nbsp POR Paulinho 21 FW nbsp MOZ Geny Catamo 22 DF nbsp ESP Ivan Fresneda 23 MF nbsp POR Daniel Braganca 4th captain 25 DF nbsp POR Goncalo Inacio 5th captain 26 DF nbsp CIV Ousmane Diomande 42 MF nbsp DEN Morten Hjulmand 43 DF nbsp POR Joao Muniz 45 DF nbsp BRA Rafael Pontelo 47 DF nbsp POR Ricardo Esgaio 72 DF nbsp POR Eduardo Quaresma 80 MF nbsp FRA Koba Koindredi Sporting CP B edit Main article Sporting CP B Sporting CP B is the reserve football team of Sporting CP and it currently plays in the Liga 3 Sporting CP Youth Academy edit Main article Sporting CP Youth Academy Sporting CP Youth Academy is the youth development division of the club and hosts U23 U19 U17 and U15 youth teams Other players under contract edit Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player FW nbsp POR Rafael Camacho Out 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 Player 6 MF nbsp GRE Sotiris Alexandropoulos at Olympiacos until 30 June 2024 14 MF nbsp POR Dario Essugo at Chaves until 30 June 2024 18 FW nbsp GHA Abdul Fatawu Issahaku at Leicester City until 30 June 2024 32 MF nbsp ARG Mateo Tanlongo at Rio Ave until 30 June 2024 41 GK nbsp BRA Diego Callai at Feirense until 30 June 2024 77 FW nbsp CPV Jovane Cabral at Olympiacos until 30 June 2024 No Pos Nation Player 82 MF nbsp POR Mateus Fernandes at Estoril until 30 June 2024 90 FW nbsp POR Afonso Moreira at Gil Vicente until 30 June 2024 91 FW nbsp POR Rodrigo Ribeiro at Nottingham Forest until 30 June 2024 DF nbsp POR Ruben Vinagre at Hellas Verona until 30 June 2024 DF nbsp POR Goncalo Esteves at AZ until 30 June 2024 MF nbsp POR Samuel Justo at Casa Pia until 30 June 2024 Player accolades editPortuguese Top Goalscorer edit The Portuguese League top scorer was awarded the Silver Shoe from 1934 to 1935 until 1951 52 Since the 1952 53 season the sports newspaper A Bola awards the Silver Ball prize 203 Year Winner G 1934 35 nbsp Manuel Soeiro 14 1936 37 nbsp Manuel Soeiro 24 1937 38 nbsp Fernando Peyroteo 34 1939 40 nbsp Fernando Peyroteo1 29 1940 41 nbsp Fernando Peyroteo 29 1945 46 nbsp Fernando Peyroteo 37 Year Winner G 1946 47 nbsp Fernando Peyroteo 43 1948 49 nbsp Fernando Peyroteo 40 1950 51 nbsp Manuel Vasques 29 1953 54 nbsp Joao Martins 31 1965 66 nbsp Ernesto Figueiredo1 25 1973 74 nbsp Hector Yazalde2 3 46 Year Winner G 1974 75 nbsp Hector Yazalde 30 1979 80 nbsp Rui Jordao 31 1979 80 nbsp Rui Jordao 31 1985 86 nbsp Manuel Fernandes 30 1987 88 nbsp Paulinho Cascavel 23 1992 93 nbsp Jorge Cadete 18 Year Winner G 2001 02 nbsp Mario Jardel3 42 2004 05 nbsp Liedson 25 2006 07 nbsp Liedson 15 2016 17 nbsp Bas Dost 34 2020 21 nbsp Pedro Goncalves 23 1Shared award 2Portuguese record 3European Golden Shoe Player of the Year edit The Player of the Year award is named after former player Francisco Stromp and was instituted from 1992 The list below is a list of winners of the award Year Winner 1992 nbsp Krasimir Balakov 1993 nbsp Stan Valckx 1994 nbsp Luis Figo 1995 nbsp Oceano 1996 nbsp Ricardo Sa Pinto 1997 nbsp Marco Aurelio 1998 nbsp Ivaylo Yordanov Year Winner 1999 nbsp Delfim Teixeira 2000 nbsp Alberto Acosta 2001 nbsp Beto 2002 nbsp Joao Pinto 2003 nbsp Pedro Barbosa 2004 nbsp Rui Jorge 2005 nbsp Joao Moutinho Year Winner 2006 nbsp Ricardo 2007 nbsp Liedson 2008 nbsp Tonel 2009 nbsp Liedson 2010 nbsp Daniel Carrico 2011 nbsp Rui Patricio 2012 nbsp Rui Patricio Year Winner 2013 nbsp Adrien Silva 2014 nbsp William Carvalho 2015 nbsp Nani 2016 nbsp Joao Mario 2017 nbsp Bas Dost 2018 nbsp Bruno Fernandes 2019 nbsp Bruno Fernandes Year Winner 2020 nbsp Sebastian Coates 2021 nbsp Joao Palhinha nbsp Pedro Goncalves 2022 nbsp Antonio Adan Award winners edit Awards received while playing for Sporting CPEuropean Golden Boot 204 nbsp Hector Yazalde 46 goals 1974 Portuguese record nbsp Mario Jardel 42 goals 2002 African Footballer of the Year 205 nbsp Emmanuel Amuneke 1994 Bulgarian Footballer of the Year 206 nbsp Krasimir Balakov 1995 nbsp Ivaylo Yordanov 1998 Algerian Ballon d Or 207 nbsp Islam Slimani 2013 UEFA European Under 21 Championship Golden Player 208 209 nbsp Luis Figo 1994 nbsp William Carvalho 2015 FIFA U 20 World Cup 210 Golden Ball nbsp Emilio Peixe 1991 Portugal Silver Ball nbsp Dani 1995 Qatar Bronze Ball nbsp Paulo Torres 1991 Portugal UEFA European Under 17 Championship Golden Player Award 211 nbsp Miguel Veloso 2003 Portugal Portuguese Golden Ball 212 nbsp Luis Figo 1994 Portuguese Footballer of the Year 213 nbsp Rui Jordao1 1980 nbsp Antonio Oliveira1 1981 1982 nbsp Jorge Cadete2 1990 nbsp Luis Figo1 2 1995 nbsp Alberto Acosta2 2000 nbsp Mario Jardel1 2 2002 Primeira Liga Breakthrough Player of the Year nbsp Miguel Veloso 2006 07 nbsp William Carvalho 2013 14 nbsp Pedro Goncalves 2020 21 LPFP Primeira Liga Player of the Year nbsp Bruno Fernandes 2017 18 nbsp Bruno Fernandes 2018 19 nbsp Sebastian Coates 2020 21 LPFP Primeira Liga Goalkeeper of the Year nbsp Rui Patricio 2011 12 2015 16 2017 18 nbsp Antonio Adan 2020 21 LPFP Primeira Liga Best Goal nbsp Jovane Cabral 2018 19 Segunda Liga Breakthrough Player of the Year nbsp Bruma 2012 13 FIFA World Cup All Star Team nbsp Krasimir Balakov 1994 United States nbsp Ricardo 2006 Germany nbsp Marcos Rojo 2014 Brazil The 100 Greatest Players of the 20th Century 214 nbsp Peter Schmeichel Historical records edit Most appearances for the club edit Hilario 474 215 216 Most goals scored for the club edit Fernando Peyroteo 526 215 Best goals per game ratio for the club edit Fernando Peyroteo 1 62 215 Youngest footballer who played in a Primeira Liga game for the club edit Dario Essugo 16 years and 6 days 217 Youngest footballer who played in a UEFA club competitions game for the club edit Dario Essugo 16 years and 268 days 218 219 Oldest footballer who played in an official game for the club edit Vitor Damas 41 years and 31 days 220 Highest player transfer fee received by the club edit Bruno Fernandes 65 million euros as of 2023 221 potentially 80 million euros in total 222 Highest player transfer fee paid by the club edit Viktor Gyokeres 21 million euros as of February 2024 223 potentially 26 million euros in total 224 Former coaches editFor details on former coaches see List of Sporting CP managers Head coaches who won the Primeira Liga while at the helm for Sporting CP 225 Josef Szabo Hungary in 1940 41 and 1943 44 Robert Kelly England in 1946 47 Candido de Oliveira Portugal in 1947 48 and 1948 49 Randolph Galloway England in 1950 51 1951 52 and 1952 53 Tavares da Silva Portugal in 1953 54 Enrique Fernandez Uruguay in 1957 58 Otto Gloria Brazil in 1961 62 and 1965 66 Fernando Vaz Portugal in 1969 70 Mario Lino Portugal in 1973 74 Fernando Mendes Portugal in 1979 80 Malcolm Allison England in 1981 82 Augusto Inacio Portugal in 1999 2000 Laszlo Boloni Romania in 2001 02 Ruben Amorim Portugal in 2020 21 and 2023 24 Head coaches who won UEFA club competitions for Sporting CP Anselmo Fernandez 1964 European Cup Winners Cup final 226 Media editNewspaper edit Jornal Sporting is a weekly newspaper published by Sporting Beginning its activity as Sporting Club of Portugal Bulletin on 31 March 1922 it was initially an eight page calendar with the optional payment of 2 a semester Under the direction of Artur da Cunha Rosa the bulletin became known as a newspaper in June 1952 Sporting TV edit Main article Sporting TV Sporting TV is the television channel of Sporting Clube de Portugal An open channel available on satellite and cable television as well as online it is offered by telecommunications companies MEO NOS Vodafone and Nowo in Portugal 227 228 and also in other countries like Angola and Mozambique where it is broadcast by operator ZAP 229 The channel broadcasts content linked to Sporting CP s universe ranging from documentaries interviews talk shows news and post match analysis and commentary programs to live and recorded Sporting CP s ball sport matches and coverage of all the other competitions and sporting events involving the multi sports club 230 231 Museum editInaugurated on 31 August 2004 in Lisbon the Sporting Museum Museu Sporting is divided into several thematic areas that express the wealth of the club s heritage and its sporting achievements over more than a century of existence in thirty two different modalities About two thousand trophies are on display and there are many others in store 232 233 234 235 236 The history of the museum dates back to the trophy room of the old headquarters on Rua do Passadico where in 1956 1850 trophies were already stored In 1994 President Sousa Cintra inaugurated a new trophy room where less than half of the club s collections were exhibited 237 The following year the remodeling and organization of the museum is promoted and a conservative viewpoint is incorporated During the construction of the new Estadio Jose Alvalade a new museum is inaugurated culminating in four years of investigation Throughout the years through donations with several origins in addition to the trophies the patrimony of the club never stopped growing In July 2016 there was a new inauguration after a total renovation 238 232 233 239 Outside of Lisbon there is also an official Sporting Museum in the city of Leiria in the Central Region of Portugal 240 241 242 243 244 236 Foundation editSporting CP had already developed social solidarity initiatives throughout its history but in 2006 it created a section called Sporting Solidario which until the creation of the Sporting Foundation developed a series of social solidarity actions 245 Established in 2012 246 247 the Fundacao Sporting Sporting Foundation is a humanitarian charity foundation devoted to helping people in need including children at risk the homeless and war victims 248 249 250 251 252 In kind donations are collected by the Sporting Foundation on match days 253 254 255 256 257 and the proceeds from the sale of tickets of some selected matches at Estadio Jose Alvalade go to the Sporting Foundation to finance the foundation s charity work 258 259 260 261 Club officials editAs of 26 June 2021 262 Directive Board edit See also List of Sporting Clube de Portugal presidents President Frederico Varandas Vice presidents Carlos Vieira Vicente Moura Vitor Silva Ferreira Antonio Rebelo Board members Bruno Mascarenhas Garcia Luis Roque Rui Caeiro Alexandre Henriques Jose Quintela Substitutes Rita Matos Luis Gestas Jorge Sanches Luis Loureiro General Assembly edit President Rogerio Alves Vice president Rui Solheiro Secretaries Miguel de Castro Luis Pereira Tiago Abade Substitutes Diogo Orvalho Manuel Mendes Rui FernandesNotes edit a b c d e Until 1919 the club s original foundation date was 8 May 1906 In 1920 they changed it to coincide with the date of their name change 9 References edit a b Club History The Badge Sporting Clube de Portugal 9 July 2015 Archived from the original on 8 December 2021 Retrieved 14 December 2021 with the Club largely being known a Sporting Lisbon abroad a b Goncalo Ferreira Social Media Manager at Sporting CP Behind Sport 11 April 2023 Retrieved 27 February 2024 Sporting Lisbon Seven players terminate contracts after training ground attack Archived 3 March 2021 at the Wayback Machine Matt Davis BBC Sport 14 June 2018 a b From Sporting Lisbon to Athletic Bilbao why do we get foreign clubs names wrong Archived 7 April 2023 at the Wayback Machine Michael Cox The Athletic 16 March 2023 a b Who are Real Madrid playing tonight NotSportingLisbon Diario AS 22 November 2016 Retrieved 19 February 2024 Sporting sinonimo de ecletismo www dn pt in European Portuguese 18 November 2008 Archived from the original on 30 April 2023 Retrieved 30 April 2023 a b Jose Alvalade acima do Sporting so a ambicao pelo ecletismo Maisfutebol in Portuguese Archived from the original on 30 April 2023 Retrieved 30 April 2023 Portugal Radio e Televisao de 21 September 2019 Frederico Varandas coloca Sporting no topo do ecletismo em Portugal Frederico Varandas coloca Sporting no topo do ecletismo em Portugal in Portuguese Archived from the original on 30 April 2023 Retrieved 30 April 2023 A data da fundacao dos clubes e mais um pretexto para as polemicas Archived 19 November 2023 at the Wayback Machine Sol in Portuguese O dia em que Maria Jose Valerio cantou a Marcha do Sporting na redacao de Record www record pt in European Portuguese Retrieved 1 April 2024 Esforco dedicacao devocao gloria e eis Figo SAPO 24 in Portuguese Retrieved 1 April 2024 Dicionario Priberam da Lingua Portuguesa Dicionario Priberam da Lingua Portuguesa in Brazilian Portuguese Retrieved 1 April 2024 a b Jubas mascote do Sporting vai entrar no proximo episodio das Kardashians www record pt in European Portuguese Retrieved 1 April 2024 a b Sporting tem quase 150 mil socios Abola pt Abola pt in Portuguese 7 March 2024 Retrieved 11 March 2024 Benfica e Sporting no top mundial quanto ao numero de socios www record pt in European Portuguese Archived from the original on 8 April 2023 Retrieved 15 August 2023 Observador Quase metade dos portugueses e do Benfica Porto e Sporting em segundo e terceiro lugar Observador in European Portuguese Archived from the original on 15 August 2023 Retrieved 15 August 2023 Curado Paulo 21 June 2017 A casa que Jose Roquete idealizou e Bruno de Carvalho concretizou PUBLICO in Portuguese Archived from the original on 15 August 2023 Retrieved 15 August 2023 Clapham Alex 16 February 2018 Inside the Sporting Portugal academy where Ballon d Or winners are made The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Archived from the original on 27 July 2018 Retrieved 10 August 2023 Sporting Clube de Portugal UEFA Profile UEFA Archived from the original on 11 June 2020 Retrieved 23 December 2015 FK Partizan UEFA com Archived from the original on 19 October 2013 Retrieved 18 September 2012 All time stats UEFA com Archived from the original on 10 November 2022 Retrieved 10 November 2022 All time records 1971 2023 PDF UEFA 19 September 2023 Archived PDF from the original on 11 December 2018 Retrieved 19 September 2023 O Sporting e fruto do amor de um avo pelo seu neto www dn pt in European Portuguese 21 April 2017 Archived from the original on 31 October 2023 Retrieved 12 November 2023 Museum featured areas Sporting CP 26 November 2014 Archived from the original on 20 November 2015 Retrieved 7 December 2015 a b As datas de fundacao dos grandes O Sport Lisboa o Campo Grande e os dois Portos www record pt in European Portuguese Retrieved 27 February 2024 a b Resumo Historico Historical Summary Sporting Clube de Portugal 10 March 2015 Archived from the original on 11 September 2018 Retrieved 22 September 2018 Montero Jose Luis 18 October 2015 O Passado Tambem Chuta O Visconde de Alvalade Bola na Rede in European Portuguese Archived from the original on 15 November 2023 Retrieved 15 November 2023 Resumo da Historia do Sporting Diario de Noticias in Portuguese Retrieved 27 February 2024 3 500 celebram centenario na relva de Alvalade www record pt in European Portuguese Retrieved 27 February 2024 Clube www sporting pt in European Portuguese Archived from the original on 2 November 2023 Retrieved 2 November 2023 Sporting Clube Portugal Fotobiografia por Rui Guedes Lisbon Publicacoes Dom Quixote 1988 pp XVII XIX Resume www sporting pt 10 March 2015 Retrieved 20 February 2024 Razao de Ser atascadocherba com Archived from the original on 26 December 2015 Retrieved 2 October 2021 a b Historias do campeonato 2200 jogos de Benfica FC Porto e Sporting zerozero pt Alvaro Goncalves 22 August 2013 Archived from the original on 24 August 2013 Retrieved 26 December 2015 O dia em que os cinco violinos marcaram 12 golos The day the five violins scored 12 goals maisfutebol iol pt Sara Marques 16 February 2015 Archived from the original on 20 June 2018 Retrieved 22 December 2015 Better than Messi Pele Muller How Cristiano Ronaldo s scoring stacks up fourfourtwo com Chris Flanagan 19 October 2015 Archived from the original on 23 December 2015 Retrieved 22 December 2015 Jose Nuno Pimentel 4 September 2015 When Sporting and Partizan broke new ground UEFA Archived from the original on 29 November 2020 Retrieved 22 December 2015 Vaza Marco 23 May 2003 Sporting despede se de Alvalade PUBLICO in Portuguese Archived from the original on 15 October 2023 Retrieved 11 October 2023 1963 64 Sporting at the second attempt UEFA 1 May 1964 Archived from the original on 29 June 2010 1963 64 Sporting at the second attempt UEFA 17 August 2001 Archived from the original on 19 May 2008 Retrieved 24 November 2015 Joao Rocha do Sporting a banca e as empresas Dinheiro Vivo in European Portuguese 8 March 2013 Retrieved 23 November 2023 Roseiro Bruno Sporting Joao Rocha o eterno presidente que da nome ao pavilhao Observador in European Portuguese Retrieved 23 November 2023 PUBLICO 8 March 2013 Quatro antigos presidentes do Sporting nao esquecem Joao Rocha PUBLICO in Portuguese Retrieved 5 January 2024 Sociedades Desportivas www parlamento pt in European Portuguese Retrieved 5 January 2024 Magdeburgo x Sporting E Depois do Adeus Taca das Tacas 1973 74 zerozero pt www zerozero pt in Portuguese Archived from the original on 2 November 2023 Retrieved 2 November 2023 Malcolm Allison 1927 2010 o treinador que gostava de viver para la do futebol publico pt Marco Vaza 16 October 2010 Archived from the original on 5 April 2016 Retrieved 26 December 2015 1990 91 Matthaus makes the difference for Inter UEFA Archived from the original on 15 June 2011 Retrieved 16 November 2012 UEFA Europa League 1994 95 History Matches UEFA com UEFA Archived from the original on 1 December 2015 Retrieved 11 June 2016 UEFA Europa League 1986 87 History Sporting CP UEFA com UEFA Archived from the original on 17 March 2023 Retrieved 11 June 2016 Acoes da Sporting SAD valorizaram se 6 este ano mas so negociaram 128 mil euros 24 sapo pt Retrieved 5 January 2024 Tovar Rui Miguel Inacio O Sporting campeao em 2000 Nem o Spielberg Observador in European Portuguese Archived from the original on 5 November 2023 Retrieved 5 November 2023 UEFA com History Sporting CP Inter UEFA Champions League 2002 03 Qualif 3 UEFA com Archived from the original on 24 December 2023 Retrieved 24 December 2023 38 anos 38 momentos marcantes da carreira de Cristiano Ronaldo SAPO Desporto in Portuguese Retrieved 24 December 2023 Cristiano Ronaldo s five senior debuts in his career and how he fared in them Planet Football 10 September 2021 Archived from the original on 24 December 2023 Retrieved 24 December 2023 KeeG Sabia Que o 1º jogo como senior de Cristiano Ronaldo foi nos Acores I Love Azores Archived from the original on 10 August 2023 Retrieved 10 August 2023 MINHO O 2 October 2022 A estreia de Cristiano Ronaldo na Liga foi ha 20 anos em Braga Depois tudo mudou O Minho in European Portuguese Archived from the original on 15 October 2023 Retrieved 12 October 2023 Atual Estadio Jose Alvalade foi inaugurado ha 13 anos Maisfutebol in Portuguese Archived from the original on 15 October 2023 Retrieved 11 October 2023 UEFA com Sporting CP CSKA Moskva UEFA Europa League 2004 05 Final UEFA com in Portuguese Archived from the original on 2 November 2023 Retrieved 2 November 2023 Sporting sofre humilhacao historica jn pt Rui Miguel Melo Archived from the original on 22 December 2015 Retrieved 18 December 2015 LE At Bilbao Sporting 3 1 cronica maisfutebol iol pt 26 April 2012 Archived from the original on 24 December 2015 Retrieved 23 December 2015 Tavares Isabel 27 July 2015 Sporting Soares Franco pode ser o senhor que se segue na lista das expulsoes ionline pt Archived from the original on 23 December 2015 Retrieved 23 December 2015 O pior Sporting de sempre desporto sapo pt Eduardo Santiago 20 May 2013 Archived from the original on 23 December 2015 Retrieved 23 December 2015 Pacos de Ferreira deixa Sporting a um ponto da zona de despromocao publico pt Paulo Curado 5 January 2013 Archived from the original on 13 April 2016 Retrieved 23 December 2015 Godinho Lopes demite se na terca feira Godinho Lopes resigns on Tuesday desporto sapo pt 3 February 2013 Archived from the original on 23 December 2015 Retrieved 23 December 2015 Sporting 2013 Guerra e Paz vavel com Bruno Gomes 26 December 2013 Archived from the original on 23 December 2015 Retrieved 23 December 2015 Bruno de Carvalho e o novo presidente do Sporting Bruno de Carvalho is the new president of Sporting publico pt Jorge Miguel Matias e Tiago Pimentel 20 March 2013 Archived from the original on 8 March 2016 Retrieved 23 December 2015 Bruno Carvalho confirmado presidente do Sporting expresso sapo pt Bruno Roseiro 26 March 2013 Archived from the original on 23 December 2015 Retrieved 23 December 2015 Vamos devolver a paz ao Sporting desporto sapo pt Joao Paulo Godinho 26 March 2015 Archived from the original on 23 December 2015 Retrieved 23 December 2015 Bruno de Carvalho ameaca Godinho Lopes com tribunal publico pt Nuno Ferreira Santos 20 February 2013 Archived from the original on 13 April 2016 Retrieved 23 December 2015 Interview O Sporting merecia outros candidatos e eu merecia outros adversarios publico pt Paulo Curado 22 March 2013 Archived from the original on 8 March 2016 Retrieved 23 December 2015 Bruno Carvalho explica 15 dias de trabalho faraonico Jornal Expresso in European Portuguese Retrieved 14 January 2024 Renascenca 30 April 2018 Bruno de Carvalho anuncia reducao da divida e explica emprestimo obrigacionista Renascenca Radio Renascenca in European Portuguese Retrieved 14 January 2024 Sporting admite a entrada de um parceiro estrategico O Jogo in Portuguese Retrieved 14 January 2024 a b SAPO Sporting corta 100 milhoes de euros ao passivo SAPO Desporto in Portuguese Retrieved 13 January 2024 Sporting So eu sei porque nao pago ao banco Archived 30 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine ECO in Portuguese Cavaleiro Diogo 21 June 2013 Investidores angolanos sao os novos accionistas do Sporting Angolan investors are the new shareholders in Sporting s SAD Jornal de Negocios in Portuguese Archived from the original on 1 May 2018 Retrieved 30 April 2018 Cavaleiro Diogo 17 December 2016 Burocracias da CMVM obrigam Sporting a divulgar posicao de Sobrinho CMVM bureaucracies force Sporting to disclose Sobrinho s position Jornal de Negocios in Portuguese Archived from the original on 1 May 2018 Retrieved 30 April 2018 a b c d Santos Guerreiro Pedro 27 June 2015 Auditoria a gestao do Sporting implica ex gestores Audit to Sporting s management implicates former administrators Expresso in Portuguese Archived from the original on 23 August 2018 Retrieved 5 June 2018 Pombo Diogo Dinis David 27 June 2015 Derrapagens nos custos contratos sem papel e comissoes pagas o que os socios do Sporting vao saber Overshootings unwritten contracts and paid commissions what Sporting s associates will know Observador in Portuguese Archived from the original on 27 July 2018 Retrieved 5 June 2018 Cabral Mariana 27 June 2015 Auditoria denuncia negocios questionaveis do Sporting com agentes e fundos Audit denounces questionable Sporting businesses with agents and funds Expresso in Portuguese Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 5 June 2018 Auditoria a gestao do Sporting conclui que quiseram acabar com o ecletismo Audit to the management of Sporting concludes they intended to end with the club s eclecticism Diario de Noticias in Portuguese 27 September 2015 Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 5 June 2018 Vaza Marco 28 June 2015 Godinho Lopes expulso do Sporting por infraccoes muito graves Godinho Lopes expelled from Sporting for very severe wrongdoings Publico in Portuguese Archived from the original on 2 October 2022 Retrieved 5 June 2018 Sporting vence Belenenses e garante segundo lugar e acesso direto a Champions jn pt 23 December 2015 19 April 2014 Archived from the original on 23 December 2015 Retrieved 19 April 2014 Sporting vence no Restelo e assegura entrada direta na Champions TSF 19 April 2014 Archived from the original on 23 December 2015 Retrieved 23 December 2015 Sporting win dramatic Taca de Portugal final on penalties portugoal net 31 May 2015 Archived from the original on 20 June 2015 Retrieved 26 December 2015 Sporting vence Taca de Portugal pt uefa com UEFA 31 May 2015 Archived from the original on 23 July 2018 Retrieved 24 November 2015 Festa de Alvalade termina com invasao de campo ojogo pt Jornal O Jogo 31 May 2015 Archived from the original on 23 July 2018 Retrieved 24 November 2015 Os sete espinhos de Jesus expresso sapo pt Nicolau Santos 1 July 2015 Archived from the original on 23 December 2015 Retrieved 23 December 2015 Silva Susana 9 August 2015 Sporting vence Benfica 1 0 e conquista oitava Supertaca jn pt Archived from the original on 23 December 2015 Retrieved 23 December 2015 Bruno de Carvalho e Mustafa absolvidos So 9 com prisao efetiva www dn pt in European Portuguese 28 May 2020 Archived from the original on 31 October 2023 Retrieved 16 October 2023 Sporting players staff attacked by hooded supporters at training ground As Reuters 15 May 2018 Archived from the original on 16 May 2018 Retrieved 16 May 2018 Kiley Ben 15 May 2018 Sporting Lisbon players attacked at training ground after failing to secure Champions League spot Sports Joe Archived from the original on 16 May 2018 Retrieved 16 May 2018 Jesus e jogadores agredidos na Academia Jesus and players attacked at Academy A Bola in Portuguese 15 May 2018 Archived from the original on 17 May 2018 Retrieved 16 May 2018 Todo o filme da Assembleia Geral que afastou Bruno de Carvalho da presidencia The entire film of the General Assembly that took Bruno de Carvalho away from presidency A Bola in Portuguese Archived from the original on 10 July 2018 Retrieved 24 June 2018 Oficial Bruno de Carvalho ja nao e presidente do Sporting depois de o sim a sua destituicao ter recolhido 71 por cento das preferencias dos socios 28 por cento dos socios pretendiam a continuidade do ex presidente do clube de Alvalade Bruno de Carvalho confirma nove rescisoes Bruno de Carvalho confirms nine rescissions SAPO Desporto in Portuguese 14 June 2018 Archived from the original on 15 June 2018 Retrieved 15 June 2018 Roseiro Bruno CAP da razao a Rui Patricio e Podence nas rescisoes caso vai agora seguir na justica Observador in European Portuguese Archived from the original on 15 October 2023 Retrieved 14 October 2023 Roseiro Bruno Tribunal Arbitral de Desporto decide a favor do Sporting Rafael Leao tem de pagar 16 5 milhoes pela rescisao Observador in European Portuguese Archived from the original on 15 October 2023 Retrieved 14 October 2023 Sporting campeao O milagreiro Amorim a visao de Varandas e a aposta certeira nos jovens www dn pt in European Portuguese 11 May 2021 Archived from the original on 5 November 2023 Retrieved 5 November 2023 Sousa Cintra no adeus Servirei o Sporting ate a morte www sabado pt in European Portuguese Archived from the original on 31 October 2023 Retrieved 16 October 2023 Sousa Cintra Acredito que Bruno Fernandes e Podence regressem www dn pt in European Portuguese 3 July 2018 Archived from the original on 31 October 2023 Retrieved 16 October 2023 Sousa Cintra Bruno Fernandes nao quis que o ordenado fosse aumentado www dn pt in European Portuguese 10 July 2018 Archived from the original on 31 October 2023 Retrieved 16 October 2023 Roseiro Bruno 9 September 2018 Frederico Varandas com 42 32 dos votos e o novo presidente do Sporting como aconteceu Observador in European Portuguese Archived from the original on 31 October 2023 Retrieved 16 October 2023 Roseiro Bruno Jose Peseiro despedido Sporting procura novo treinador que deve ser portugues Observador in European Portuguese Archived from the original on 31 October 2023 Retrieved 16 October 2023 ECO 18 March 2019 Sporting fecha emprestimo de 75 milhoes com Apollo ECO in European Portuguese Retrieved 5 January 2024 Ruben Amorim no podio das contratacoes mais caras do mundo entre treinadores conheca a lista www record pt in European Portuguese Archived from the original on 15 October 2023 Retrieved 12 October 2023 Sporting ends 19 year title drought in Portuguese league The Washington Post 12 May 2021 Archived from the original on 12 May 2021 Retrieved 12 May 2021 Sporting beats Braga and wins Supertaca OJogo 31 July 2021 Archived from the original on 2 February 2023 Retrieved 2 February 2023 Sporting beats Benfica with comeback and wins Taca da Liga for the second year in a row Observador 29 January 2022 Archived from the original on 2 February 2023 Retrieved 2 February 2023 Liga Portugal www ligaportugal pt Retrieved 14 January 2024 Rosto de Jose Alvalade ganha forma no estadio do Sporting www record pt in European Portuguese Archived from the original on 15 October 2023 Retrieved 6 October 2023 Obras em Alvalade e na Academia SAD do Sporting fechou exercicio com investimento em curso de 1 4 M www record pt in European Portuguese Archived from the original on 15 October 2023 Retrieved 11 October 2023 Alvalade renovado Varandas prepara fecho do fosso www record pt in European Portuguese Retrieved 19 February 2024 Acordo do Sporting com Novo Banco aumenta preco dos VMOC do Millenium bcp www record pt in European Portuguese Retrieved 5 January 2024 ECO 6 September 2022 Sporting extingue divida ao BCP e fica exposto a Sagasta e Novo Banco ECO in European Portuguese Retrieved 13 January 2024 Sporting extingue divida ao BCP CNN Portugal in Portuguese Retrieved 13 January 2024 Sporting passa a ser dono de 88 da SAD a 15 de fevereiro www record pt in European Portuguese Retrieved 15 January 2024 a b ECO 27 December 2023 Sporting recompra divida ao Novobanco Clube passa a controlar 88 da SAD ECO in European Portuguese Retrieved 4 January 2024 a b SAPO Vice presidente do Sporting destaca marco muito importante com a compra dos 88 da SAD SAPO Desporto in Portuguese Retrieved 4 January 2024 Roseiro Bruno Sporting compra VMOC em falta ao Novo Banco passa a ter 88 da SAD reestrutura divida bancaria e admite entrada de acionistas minoritarios Observador in European Portuguese Retrieved 14 January 2024 Sporting compra ultimas VMOC e quer um investidor na SAD Jornal de Noticias in Portuguese Retrieved 14 January 2024 Sporting pondera venda de participacao minoritaria www jornaldenegocios pt in European Portuguese Retrieved 15 January 2024 Sporting garante 88 da SAD e procura investidores www cmjornal pt in European Portuguese Retrieved 15 January 2024 Missao www sporting pt in European Portuguese 25 November 2014 Retrieved 6 March 2024 Esforco devocao dedicacao e gloria Este lema do Sporting foi a lama o sermao da juiza aos invasores www record pt in European Portuguese Retrieved 6 March 2024 O Leao Rampante do SCP nasceu em Cascais Camara Municipal de Cascais cascais pt in European Portuguese Retrieved 23 February 2024 a b A Historia dos Emblemas The History of Emblems sporting pt in European Portuguese Sporting Clube de Portugal 6 April 2015 Archived from the original on 8 June 2023 Retrieved 3 March 2024 Devem os clubes mudar os seus emblemas dn pt in European Portuguese 19 July 2019 Archived from the original on 31 October 2023 Retrieved 30 October 2023 Sporting quer renovar o simbolo Radio Renascenca in European Portuguese 24 December 2022 Archived from the original on 31 October 2023 Retrieved 30 October 2023 De brasoes a quatro escudos O que inspirou os varios emblemas do Sporting antes de nova mexida record pt Archived from the original on 3 February 2023 Retrieved 3 February 2023 Sporting nao tera equipamento Stromp esta epoca mas vai homenagear simbolo a abrir 2024 Sporting Jornal Record Record Retrieved 25 April 2024 Camisolas www sporting pt in European Portuguese 26 March 2015 Retrieved 25 April 2024 Pereira Bruno Alexandre 5 February 2022 FIFA 22 vem ai o Jubas do Sporting e mais umas mascotes Leak in European Portuguese Retrieved 2 April 2024 Jogadores do Sporting visitaram a Casa de Acolhimento de Santa Teresinha Flashscore pt www flashscore pt in Portuguese Retrieved 2 April 2024 UEFA com Sporting CP UEFA Europa League 2023 24 UEFA com Retrieved 27 February 2024 Abola pt 18 December 2023 Young Boys comete gafe com o Sporting e adeptos nao perdoam Abola pt Abola pt in Portuguese Retrieved 27 February 2024 Mereu Sebastiano 3 August 2015 NotSportingLisbon How the STAMP model can help keep control over the misuse of the Sporting Clube de Portugal brand name Sports Business Research Academy Retrieved 4 March 2024 De brasoes a quatro escudos o que inspirou os varios emblemas do Sporting antes de nova mexida Sporting Jornal Record Record Retrieved 23 February 2024 NotSportingLisbon Sportinguista quer ensinar ao mundo o nome do clube CNN Portugal in Portuguese Retrieved 19 February 2024 NotSportingLisbon Leoes querem ensinar o mundo Diario de Noticias in Portuguese Retrieved 19 February 2024 S A Priberam Informatica sportinguista Dicionario Priberam in Brazilian Portuguese Archived from the original on 31 October 2023 Retrieved 31 October 2023 Sporting ultrapassa os 160 mil socios www record pt in European Portuguese Archived from the original on 31 October 2023 Retrieved 31 October 2023 Observador Quase metade dos portugueses e do Benfica Porto e Sporting em segundo e terceiro lugar Observador in European Portuguese Archived from the original on 15 August 2023 Retrieved 31 October 2023 ZAP 8 August 2023 Afinal o Benfica tem quantos adeptos nao nao sao 6 milhoes ZAP Noticias Atualidade mundo ciencia saude desporto in European Portuguese Archived from the original on 2 November 2023 Retrieved 2 November 2023 Saiba Quantos Adeptos Portugueses tem cada clube de Portugal www jogadores pt in European Portuguese 1 July 2022 Archived from the original on 2 November 2023 Retrieved 2 November 2023 O Futebol tambem e Soft Power portugues em Africa www dn pt in European Portuguese 3 June 2023 Archived from the original on 31 October 2023 Retrieved 31 October 2023 Silva Goncalo Viegas e Costa Marques da 2013 Internacionalizacao da marca Sporting Clube de Portugal masterThesis thesis Archived from the original on 31 October 2023 Retrieved 31 October 2023 Emigrantes assistem a Taca de Portugal in European Portuguese Archived from the original on 31 October 2023 Retrieved 31 October 2023 SAPO Morreu Maria Jose Valerio a voz da Marcha do Sporting Tinha 87 anos SAPO 24 in Portuguese Archived from the original on 3 March 2021 Retrieved 1 November 2023 PUBLICO 3 March 2021 Morreu Maria Jose Valerio a voz de Viva o Sporting vitima de covid 19 PUBLICO in Portuguese Archived from the original on 5 November 2023 Retrieved 31 October 2023 Rapaziada oucam bem o que eu vos digo e gritem todos comigo viva ao Sporting Adeptos ensaiam a Marcha SIC Noticias in Portuguese 11 May 2021 Archived from the original on 31 October 2023 Retrieved 31 October 2023 Comercial Radio Musicas adotadas pelo futebol Radio Comercial in Portuguese Archived from the original on 31 October 2023 Retrieved 31 October 2023 Supporting colocam ponto final no diferendo com Bruno de Carvalho www record pt in European Portuguese Archived from the original on 31 October 2023 Retrieved 31 October 2023 Supporting voltam a ser ouvidos em Alvalade Maisfutebol in Portuguese Archived from the original on 31 October 2023 Retrieved 31 October 2023 Supporting www sporting pt in European Portuguese Archived from the original on 31 October 2023 Retrieved 31 October 2023 Filiais do Sporting Diario de Noticias in Portuguese Retrieved 20 February 2024 Historia e projeto eis o passado recente do centenario Lusitania zerozero pt www zerozero pt in Portuguese Retrieved 5 April 2024 O SPORTING CLUBE DE LOURENCO MARQUES EM 1937 E EM 1962 THE DELAGOA BAY WORLD in European Portuguese 18 February 2021 Retrieved 5 April 2024 Antigo vice do Sporting sugere destaque a Eusebio no museu do clube CNN Portugal in Portuguese Retrieved 20 February 2024 EUSEBIO NO SPORTING por Rui Alves Replay RTP Memoria Canais TV RTP www rtp pt in Portuguese Retrieved 7 April 2024 Clube de Portugal nas bancadas 51 nucleos do Sporting vao estar representados esta noite em Alvalade www record pt in European Portuguese Retrieved 13 March 2024 Nucleos Filiais e Delegacoes www sporting pt in European Portuguese 26 November 2014 Retrieved 20 February 2024 Benfica 7 2 Sporting zerozero in Portuguese Archived from the original on 22 March 2014 Retrieved 24 June 2018 Benfica 5 0 Sporting zerozero in Portuguese Archived from the original on 20 March 2014 Retrieved 24 June 2018 Benfica 5 0 Sporting zerozero in Portuguese Archived from the original on 22 March 2014 Retrieved 24 June 2018 Benfica 5 0 Sporting zerozero in Portuguese Archived from the original on 22 March 2014 Retrieved 24 June 2018 Sporting deu 7 1 ao Benfica ha 25 anos desporto sapo pt sapo pt Archived from the original on 17 August 2016 Retrieved 17 June 2016 Sporting Benfica A loucura dos 7 1 Record xl pt Retrieved 26 November 2015 permanent dead link Pimentel Tiago 12 June 2018 Uma pequena loucura ou um novo Verao Quente A little craziness or a new Hot Summer Publico in Portuguese Archived from the original on 20 June 2018 Retrieved 19 June 2018 Benfica Sporting Queiroz foi o responsavel pelos 6 3 relvado aeiou pt Lusa Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 26 November 2015 Sporting Benfica 3 6 Pesadelo em Alvalade com genio a solta record xl pt Archived from the original on 17 March 2023 Retrieved 26 November 2015 Gullit e very light incendiaram o ultimo Sporting Benfica sabado pt Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 30 November 2015 Roseiro Bruno 5 May 2018 Um derbi e sempre pela honra e nao pelo dinheiro mas ha mais milhoes em jogo do que se possa pensar A derby is always for the honour and not money but there are more millions at stake than one can think of Observador in Portuguese Archived from the original on 24 June 2018 Retrieved 24 June 2018 Gannon Willie 3 May 2013 Dortmund vs Bayern Munich and Europe s 6 Premier Rivalries Right Now Bleacher Report Archived from the original on 6 March 2016 Retrieved 7 January 2016 Top 11 football clubs with futsal sections futsallfeed com Archived from the original on 11 April 2020 Retrieved 8 April 2020 Bruno de Carvalho pede punicao para o Benfica dn pt 9 February 2015 Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 30 November 2015 Benfica deselegancia catering e speaker justificam interdicao de Alvalade Benfica inelegance catering and speaker justify interdition of Alvalade in Portuguese Maisfutebol 13 February 2015 Archived from the original on 1 February 2016 Retrieved 13 January 2016 Tarjas canticos very light e desvio de jogadores esta e a historia de uma rivalidade sem fim Jornal Observador Archived from the original on 21 April 2017 Retrieved 20 April 2017 Esta a chegar o novo O Leao da Estrela Extra RTP Extra in European Portuguese 18 November 2015 Archived from the original on 27 September 2023 Retrieved 27 September 2023, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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