1982–83 S.L. Benfica season explained

Club:Benfica
Season:1982–83
Chrtitle:President
Chairman:Fernando Martins
Mgrtitle:Head coach
Manager:Sven-Göran Eriksson
League:Primeira Divisão
League Result:1st
Cup1:Taça de Portugal
Cup1 Result:Winners
Cup2:UEFA Cup
Cup2 Result:Runners-up
League Topscorer:Nené (22)
Season Topscorer:Nené (32)
Pattern La1:_benfica8687h
Pattern B1:_benfica8485h
Pattern Ra1:_benfica8687h
Pattern Sh1:_benfica8889h
Pattern So1:_benfica8889h
Prevseason:1981–82
Nextseason:1983–84

The 1982–83 season was Sport Lisboa e Benfica's 79th season in existence and the club's 49th consecutive season in the top flight of Portuguese football, covering the period from 1 July 1982 to 30 June 1983. Benfica competed domestically in the Primeira Divisão and the Taça de Portugal, and participated in the UEFA Cup after coming in second in previous league.

In the new season, manager Lajos Baróti was replaced by Sven-Göran Eriksson. The Swede released several players from the squad, but only added Diamantino Miranda. The league campaign saw Benfica win the first eleven league games, opening a four-point gap by the end of the first round. In Europe, Benfica progressed through the UEFA Cup, by eliminating Real Betis, KSC Lokeren and FC Zürich. The domestic campaign in the second half of the season was less impressive, with Benfica having three batches of two consecutive draws. In the UEFA Cup, Benfica eliminated Roma in the quarter-finals and Universitatea Craiova in the semis, before they meeting Anderlecht in the UEFA Cup final. An away loss and home draw cost them the trophy. Still, five consecutive wins in the final five league matches secured the club's 25th Primeira Divisão title. The last match of the season, the Taça de Portugal final was postponed and only played in the following season.

Season summary

After Lajos Baróti failed to defend retain any of the titles he won in his first season, he was replaced by the 33–year old Sven-Göran Eriksson, who had just won the UEFA Cup.[1] Prior to his signing, Benfica contacted John Bond, but he declined the offer.[2] He arrived on 27 June and pre-season begun two days later, on Tuesday, the 29.[3] [4] Benfica made almost no new signings, other than the return of Diamantino Miranda, so Eriksson sought to reduce the size of the squad which approached 40, with more than 10 players leaving the club in the transfer season. Benfica made their presentation game against Ferencvárosi and competed in the Toronto Tournament in early August.

Benfica started their league campaign by winning their first eleven matches in a row, opening a five-point lead over second place, while scoring 27 goals and conceding only four. Manuel Bento went 565 minutes without conceding from match-day 4 to match-day 8. At the same time, Benfica started the UEFA Cup by eliminating Real Betis and KSC Lokeren. In December, Benfica dropped the first points in the league in a draw in Alcobaça, while in Europe, they knocked-out FC Zürich with 4-0 win at home. On 2 January, Benfica lost for the first time in the Primeira Divisão, in the Derby de Lisboa with Sporting. However they still lapped the first round with a four-point lead over their rivals. On match-day 17, Benfica drew again, now by 2–2 in Bessa, but it did not have any real effect because Porto had also drawn on the same day. On the opening match of February, another draw that cost a point in the title race. Benfica remained erratic, having two more draws in March, followed by a win. In Europe, Benfica faced Roma, one of strongest Italian teams of his era; beating them 2–1 on the Stadio Olimpico. At home, Benfica drew one-equal and eliminate them on aggregate. Filipovic had scored all of Benfica's goals in the tie.

Domestically, in late March, Benfica visited the Estádio das Antas in the Clássico with Porto. A 0–0 draw better suited Benfica, who kept the four point lead over his rival. A few days later, Benfica beat Sporting by 3–0 in the quarter-final of the Taça de Portugal. That game preceded the UEFA Cup tie with Universitatea Craiova that followed, in which Benfica passed on away goals, securing a place in the UEFA Cup final. On 4 May, Benfica faced Anderlecht on the Heysel Stadium, losing one-nil. On the return leg, two weeks later, Benfica sold-out their stadium and even scored first by Shéu, but the Belgians levelled it only a few minutes later and held on to the draw, winning the competition. Eriksson said: "The party ended up early with that goal from Lozano. We should have played smarter because the fast breaks of Anderlecht were very strong. Patience...". Humberto Coelho said that Benfica rushed to score the second goal, after Sheú's goal, and made a fatal mistake that allowed their opponent to score. João Alves, irritated by not starting, complained of Eriksson choice of the starting eleven. Four days later, Benfica visited Portimonense, where they won 1–0 with a goal from Carlos Manuel on the 85th minute. The win confirmed the 25th league title for the club, after a one-year off. They closed the Primeira Divisão with a four-point lead over Porto, after winning the two remaining games. The season should have concluded with the Portuguese Cup final which pinned Benfica against Porto in the Estádio Municipal de Coimbra.[5] However, Porto and Porto Football Association started a legal battle with the Portuguese Football Federation to change the venue to Estádio das Antas. It ended up being postponed and only played in August 1983 in Estádio das Antas, with Benfica winning it by 1–0.

Competitions

Overall record

CompetitionFirst matchLast matchRecord
GWDLGFGAGDWin %Source
Primeira Divisão22 August 19825 June 1983
Taça de Portugal7 November 198221 August 1983
UEFA Cup15 September 198218 May 1983
Total

Primeira Divisão

See main article: 1982–83 Primeira Divisão.

Matches

Taça de Portugal

See main article: 1982–83 Taça de Portugal.

UEFA Cup

See main article: 1982–83 UEFA Cup.

Final

See main article: 1983 UEFA Cup final.

Friendlies

Player statistics

The squad for the season consisted of the players listed in the tables below, as well as staff member Sven-Goran Eriksson (manager), Toni (assistant manager), Júlio Borges (Director of Football), Amilcar Miranda (Doctor).

Transfers

In

Entry datePositionPlayerFrom clubFeeRef
5 June 1982GKDelgadoPortimonenseUndisclosed[6]
15 July 1982MF Diamantino MirandaBoavistaLoan return
10 January 1983MFGlenn StrömbergGöteborgUndisclosed[7]

Out

Exit datePositionPlayerTo clubFeeRef
25 June 1982FWReinaldo GomesBoavistaFree[8]
29 June 1982DFAlberto FonsecaBoavistaFree[9]
15 July 1982GKAntónio BotelhoAmoraFree[10]
17 July 1982FWJoel AlmeidaFarenseFree[11]
15 July 1982FWFrancisco VitalFarenseFree
17 July 1982GKJorge MartinsFarenseFree
17 July 1982DFJoão LaranjeiraAmoraFree
29 July 1982MFCavungiAlcobaçaFree[12]
30 July 1982MFPaulo CamposFarenseFree[13]
4 August 1982FWJorge GomesBragaUndisclosed[14]
26 January 1983FW César OliveiraGrêmioUndisclosed[15]

Out by loan

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. News: Benfiquistas vão jogar á Sueca. Diário de Lisboa. 5 June 1982 . 20870 . 19 . 17 March 2017. Benfica will play like the Swedes. Portuguese.
  2. News: Bond recusa treinar o Benfica. Diário de Lisboa. 25 May 1982 . 20860 . 17 . 17 March 2017. Bond refuses to manage Benfica. Portuguese.
  3. News: Eriksson, domingo na Luz. Diário de Lisboa. 25 June 1982 . 20886 . 20 . 17 March 2017. Eriksson, Sunday in Estádio da Luz. Portuguese.
  4. News: Eriksson: Não vou por o Benfica a jogar á Sueca. Diário de Lisboa. 28 June 1982 . 20888 . 17 . 17 March 2017. Eriksson: "I will not make Benfica play cards". Portuguese.
  5. News: Associação do Porto impugna final em Coimbra. Diário de Lisboa. 1 June 1983 . 21169 . 18 . 17 March 2017. Porto FA challenges final in Coimbra. Portuguese.
  6. News: Delgado assinou. Diário de Lisboa. 5 June 1982 . 20870 . 19 . 17 March 2017. Delgado signs . Portuguese.
  7. News: Stromberg no Benfica. Diário de Lisboa. 10 January 1983 . 21049 . 15 . 17 March 2017. Stromberg signs for Benfica . Portuguese.
  8. News: Reinaldo é do Boavista. Diário de Lisboa. 25 June 1982 . 20886 . 20 . 17 March 2017. Reinaldo signs with Boavista . Portuguese.
  9. News: Alberto no Boavista. Diário de Lisboa. 29 June 1982 . 20889 . 20 . 17 March 2017. Alberto signs for Boavista . Portuguese.
  10. News: Futebol benfiquista arruma a sua montra. Diário de Lisboa. 15 July 1982 . 20903 . 19 . 17 March 2017. Benfica clears house . Portuguese.
  11. News: Ferencvaros na Luz. Diário de Lisboa. 17 July 1982 . 20905 . 17 . 17 March 2017. Ferencvaros in Estádio da Luz . Portuguese.
  12. News: Cavungi em Alcobaça. Diário de Lisboa. 29 July 1982 . 20915 . 14 . 17 March 2017. Cavungi signs with Alcobaça . Portuguese.
  13. News: Trocas e baldatrocas. Diário de Lisboa. 30 July 1982 . 20916 . 17 . 17 March 2017. Transfer moves . Portuguese.
  14. News: Jorge Gomes: Da Luz para Braga. Diário de Lisboa. 4 August 1982 . 20920 . 16 . 17 March 2017. Jorge Gomes: From Benfica to Braga . Portuguese.
  15. News: César deixa o Benfica. Diário de Lisboa. 26 January 1983 . 21063 . 16 . 17 March 2017. César leaves Benfica . Portuguese.
  16. News: Folha na Póvoa. Diário de Lisboa. 25 August 1982 . 20937 . 16 . 17 March 2017. Folha loaned to Varzim . Portuguese.