1983–84 S.L. Benfica season explained

Club:Benfica
Season:1983–84
Chrtitle:President
Chairman:Fernando Martins
Mgrtitle:Head coach
Manager:Sven-Göran Eriksson
League:Primeira Divisão
League Result:1st
Cup1:Taça de Portugal
Cup1 Result:Round of 16
Cup2:European Cup
Cup2 Result:Quarter-finals
Cup3:Supertaça
Cup3 Result:Runners-up
Cup4:Iberian Cup
Cup4 Result:Winners
League Topscorer:Nené (21)
Season Topscorer:Nené (30)
Pattern La1:_benfica8687h
Pattern B1:_benfica8485h
Pattern Ra1:_benfica8687h
Pattern Sh1:_benfica8889h
Pattern So1:_benfica8889h
Prevseason:1982–83
Nextseason:1984–85

The 1983–84 season was Sport Lisboa e Benfica's 80th season in existence and the club's 50th consecutive season in the top flight of Portuguese football, covering the period from 1 July 1983 to 30 June 1984. Benfica competed domestically in the Primeira Divisão, Taça de Portugal and the Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira, and participated in the European Cup after winning the previous league. They also played in the Iberian Cup with the La Liga winners, Athletic Bilbao.

In the second year of Eriksson at Benfica, he lost João Alves and Frederico Rosa but hired António Oliveira and Michael Manniche. Benfica started the season by winning the Portuguese Cup final of the past season and the Iberian Cup. In the league, Benfica started strong until their drop points in October. A home win against Porto propelled them into first place, which they never lost. Twelve consecutive wins followed until they were stopped in February. In March, Benfica was knocked out of Europe and lost for the first time in the league. They reacted with five wins and a draw in the next month, before losing for a second time in late April. In May, Benfica confirmed their 26th league title, as Eriksson departed the club in June.

Season summary

Benfica entered the new season having won the league, and reached the Portuguese Cup final and the UEFA Cup final. Due to conflict between Porto and the Portuguese Football Federation, the final for the Taça de Portugal did not take place and was postponed.[1] During the transfer window, Benfica lost João Alves and Frederico Rosa, who opted not to renew their contracts. New signings included centre-back, António Oliveira and striker, Michael Manniche. The latter replaced Cláudio Adão, who stayed just one month in the club. The pre-season began on 17 July, with medical tests, followed by roughly two weeks of training sessions.[2] Benfica made their presentation game to the fans on 31 July with Coventry City, and competed in North America, with Tecos and Toronto Blizzard. The pre-season closed with the Lisbon International Tournament, which they won. On 10 August, it was confirmed that the Portuguese Cup final of the past season would be played on the 21, at Estádio das Antas.[3] The first official game was the Iberian Cup with the La Liga winners, Athletic Bilbao. In a competition sponsored by the Portuguese Football Federation and the Royal Spanish Football Federation, that joined the Primeira Divisão and La Liga Champions in a two-legged Super cup.Benfica first visited the San Mamés Stadium on the 17, losing 2–1. A week later, they received Bilbao at home and won by 3–1, thus keeping the trophy. Between that, Benfica played the Portuguese Cup final with Porto, winning one-nil with a goal from Carlos Manuel. The league campaign started in the best of terms, with four consecutive wins, while in the European Cup, Benfica eliminated Linfield in the first round. In October, they dropped the first points, in a draw with Braga, which left the club in second, a point shy of the leader Porto, their next opponent. In the Clássico, Benfica beat his rival Porto and assumed first place. Later in the month, Benfica defeated Olympiacos in the second round of the European Cup, qualifying for the quarter-final. In November and December, Benfica won all their league matches, but lost the Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira to Porto.

Benfica kept on winning in the Primeira Divisão in January, lapping the first part of league with a three-point lead. However they suffered a set-back in the Taça de Portugal, losing 2–1 in Estádio de Alvalade being eliminated by Sporting. In February, Benfica lost points again in the league after twelve consecutive wins. March was even more troublesome because the team was knocked-out of the European Cup by Liverpool, while in the league, Porto gave them their first league loss all season. Still, in the following month, Benfica won five games and draw one, allowing them to keep the three point lead over Porto. On 29 April, Benfica unexpectedly lost 4–1 with Vitória de Guimarães. The loss did not cause major damage because Porto had also lost points, so the distance was only cut to two points. The very next match-day, the Derby de Lisboa with Sporting, Benfica drew one-all but still celebrated their 26th league title, due to Porto having lost on the same day.[4] Against an opponent that broke the record for the fewest goals conceded in the history of the Primeira Divisão and had won all of their matches at home, Benfica responded with more goals scored, and a better record in away games, only losing six points there all season. Nené with 21 goals in 26 goals came in second place in the Bola de Prata, because he had played in more games, but oddly, with fewer minutes in overall. In June, Sven-Göran Eriksson announced his departure to Roma, having won back-to-back league titles in his two-year stint in Portugal.[5]

Competitions

Overall record

CompetitionFirst matchLast matchRecord
GWDLGFGAGDWin %Source
Primeira Divisão28 August 198313 May 1984
Taça de Portugal6 November 198329 January 1984
European Cup14 September 198321 March 1984
Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira8 December 198314 December 1983
Iberian Cup17 August 198324 August 1983
Total

Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira

See main article: 1983 Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira.

Iberian Cup

See main article: Iberian Cup.

Primeira Divisão

See main article: 1983–84 Primeira Divisão.

Matches

Taça de Portugal

1982–83 Edition

See main article: 1983 Taça de Portugal final.

1983–84 Edition

European Cup

See main article: 1983–84 European Cup.

Quarter-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), Eusébio (assistant manager), Júlio Borges (Director of Football), Amilcar Miranda (Doctor).

Transfers

In

Entry datePositionPlayerFrom clubFeeRef
22 July 1983DFAntónio OliveiraMarítimoUndisclosed[6]
22 July 1983 FWCláudio AdãoAl AinFree
24 August 1983FWMichael MannicheHvidovreUndisclosed[7]
24 August 1983GKNenoBarreirenseUndisclosed

Out

Entry datePositionPlayerFrom clubFeeRef
15 July 1983MFJoão AlvesBoavistaFree[8]
19 July 1983DFFrederico RosaBoavistaFree[9]
24 August 1983MFCarlos Manuel IIRio AveFree
30 August 1983FWCláudio AdãoFlamengoFree[10]

Out by loan

Exit datePositionPlayerTo clubReturn dateRef
20 July 1983FW Fernando FolhaVarzim30 June 1984[11]
24 August 1983GKNenoBarreirense30 June 1984[12]

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. News: Taça: Final foi adiada. Diário de Lisboa. 9 June 1983. 21175. 16. 16 March 2017. Portuguese Cup: Final was postponed. Portuguese.
  2. News: Benfica atira-se ao trabalho. Diário de Lisboa. 18 July 1983. 21206. 15. 16 March 2017. Benfica back to work. Portuguese.
  3. News: Final da Taça será mesmo no dia 21. Diário de Lisboa. 10 August 1983. 21226. 17. 16 March 2017. Cup final will be played on the 21. Portuguese.
  4. News: Benfica: palmas para o campeão. Diário de Lisboa. 7 May 1984. 21450. 16 March 2017. Benfica: applause for the champions. Portuguese.
  5. News: Eriksson já em Roma. Diário de Lisboa. 7 June 1984. 21477. 15. 15 March 2017. Eriksson is already in Rome. Portuguese.
  6. News: Oliveira assina pelo Benfica. Diário de Lisboa. 22 July 1983. 21210. 17. 16 March 2017. Oliveira signs for Benfica. Portuguese.
  7. News: Maniche:500 por mês ao dinamarquês da Luz. Diário de Lisboa. 24 August 1983. 21237. 19. 16 March 2017. Maniche: 500 per month for Danish player. Portuguese.
  8. News: João Alves e Boavista: a transferência mais cara do futebol português. Diário de Lisboa. 15 July 1983. 21204. 17. 16 March 2017. João Alves and Boavista: the most expensive transfer of Portuguese football. Portuguese.
  9. News: Frederico no Boavista. Diário de Lisboa. 19 July 1983. 21207. 17. 16 March 2017. Frederico signs with Boavista. Portuguese.
  10. News: Adão volta ao Brasil. Diário de Lisboa. 30 August 1983. 21242. 17. 16 March 2017. Adão returns to Brasil. Portuguese.
  11. News: Folha deve continuar. Diário de Lisboa. 20 July 1983. 21208. 17. 16 March 2017. Folha should stay. Portuguese.
  12. News: Sessão de boas vindas. Diário de Lisboa. 19 July 1984. 21511. 15. 15 March 2017. Welcome party. Portuguese.