1989–90 S.L. Benfica season explained

Club:Benfica
Season:1989–90
Chrtitle:President
Chairman:João Santos
Mgrtitle:Head coach
Manager:Sven-Göran Eriksson
League:Primeira Divisão
League Result:2nd
Cup1:Taça de Portugal
Cup1 Result:Fourth-round
Cup2:European Cup
Cup2 Result:Runners-up
Cup3:Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira
Cup3 Result:Winners
League Topscorer:Magnusson (33)
Season Topscorer:Magnusson (40)
Pattern La1:_benfica8990h
Pattern B1:_benfica8990h
Pattern Ra1:_benfica8990h
Pattern Sh1:_benfica8990h
Leftarm1:DD0000
Body1:DD0000
Rightarm1:DD0000
Shorts1:DD0000
Socks1:DD0000
Prevseason:1988–89
Nextseason:1990–91

The 1989–90 season was Sport Lisboa e Benfica's 86th season in existence and the club's 56th consecutive season in the top flight of Portuguese football, covering the period from 1 July 1989 to 30 June 1990. Benfica competed domestically in the Primeira Divisão, the Taça de Portugal and the Supertaça, and participated in the European Cup after winning the previous league.

After only winning the Primeira Divisão, Benfica disputed the Supertaça, winning it for the third time. The league campaign was another controversial battle with Porto, who finished four points ahead of Benfica. Magnusson won the Bola de Prata. With attentions set on the European Cup, Benfica reached the final after defeating Marseille in the semi-finals. In the seventh European Cup final, Benfica lost for a fifth time, prolonging Guttmann's curse.

Season summary

The new season saw the arrival of Sven-Göran Eriksson for a second term.[1] After Benfica won the 1988–89 Primeira Divisão on 7 May 1989,[2] Eriksson confirmed that he would take over Toni's job only three days later. In the transfer window, Benfica lost Shéu and Mozer, with the first retiring and the latter moving abroad. To replace him, the club hired Brazilian defender Aldair and Swedish midfielder Jonas Thern. Eriksson started working on 28 July with Benfica travelling to Netherlands the following day for a two-week tour.[3] They competed in the Rotterdam Tournament in early August and had their presentation game against Spartak Moscow on the 15. They then won the Trofeo Cidade de Vigo and had a late friendly with Varzim, postponing the league opening game.

Benfica's league campaign was again a clash with Porto. The season was notable by the constant controversy surrounding referees and the battle for control of the Portuguese Football Federation. The crucial Clássico on 11 March 1990 ended with a draw, keeping Porto with a three-point lead, nearly closing the title race. Benfica was nonetheless, entirely focused on the European Cup, as Eriksson admitted that winning another European title was a target of President João Santos. Eriksson led the team through easy wins against Derry City and Budapest Honvéd. The quarter-final matches with Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk fell within a busy schedule, but despite that, Benfica flew past the Ukrainian with three-nil win.

However, the semi-finals with Marseille were much different. Benfica lost in France by 2–1; their first loss after seven games and needed a win to go through, as Erisskon said "We are not dead yet. He have a 49% chance of going through" The home reception to Marseille saw 120 thousand fans fill Estádio da Luz to witness Vata score the sole goal that qualified Benfica. In the 83rd minute, in a corner, Vata rose above everyone and slipped the ball past Jean Castaneda with his hand. Several players immediately surrounded referee Marcel Van Langenhove protesting that the goal was scored with the hand, but he disregarded their appeals. Assistant manager Toni gave his opinion: "Vata was pulled and he could not fight for the ball – unable to use his chest or head, he used his hand. So what the referee should have done is signalled a penalty, which he did not do." Bernard Tapie furiously screamed "The Portuguese are pigs, they are pigs. They gave something to the referee, it could only be. Benfica still has a lot of power and scares a lot of people. This was a disgrace."

Benfica ended the league on 20 May, finishing four points behind Porto. Three days later, they met AC Milan in the European Cup final in Vienna. Before the final, Eusébio visited Béla Guttmann's grave and prayed for his curse to be lifted. Dressed fully in red, Benfica was defeated with a goal from Rijkaard in the second half. Eriksson regretted the loss and explained his strategy: "It consisted of closely marking Gullit and van Basten, so they would be offside while simultaneously paying attention to the midfielders. I talked a lot about it and they executed it perfectly, until Rijkaard came from behind and stole our dream".

Still, Benfica did not ended the season empty handed, having previously won their third Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira against Belenenses. Magnusson was the league top-scorer with 33 goals.

Competitions

Overall record

CompetitionFirst matchLast matchRecord
GWDLGFGAGDWin %Source
Primeira Divisão26 August 198920 May 1990
Taça de Portugal9 December 19894 February 1990
European Cup13 September 198923 May 1990
Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira25 October 198929 November 1989
Total

Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira

See main article: 1989 Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira.

Primeira Divisão

See main article: 1989–90 Primeira Divisão.

Matches

European Cup

See main article: 1989–90 European Cup.

Final

See main article: 1990 European Cup final.

Friendlies

[4]

Player statistics

The squad for the season consisted of the players listed in the tables below, as well as staff members Sven-Göran Eriksson (manager) and Toni (assistant manager), Eusébio (assistant manager), José Capristano (director of football), Shéu (Secretary of football department), Bernardo Vasconcelos (doctor), Amílcar Miranda (doctor), Asterónimo Araújo (masseur), António Gaspar (physiotherapist), Jorge Castelo (scout), Luís Santos (kit man), José Luís (kit man).[5]

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Transfers

In

Entry datePositionPlayerFrom clubFeeRef
31 May 1989FWCésar BritoPortimonenseLoan return
31 May 1989DFPaulinhoEstoril-PraiaLoan return[6]
14 June 1989DFAldairFlamengoUndisclosed[7]
22 July 1989MFFernando MendesSporting CPFree[8]
July 1989DFJosé CarlosPortimonenseLoan return
10 August 1989MFJonas ThernMalmöUndisclosed[9]

Out

Exit datePositionPlayerTo clubFeeRef
20 May 1989FWRickyEstrela da AmadoraUndisclosed[10]
22 May 1989MFShéuNoneRetired[11]
6 June 1989CBMozerUndisclosed[12]
18 July 1989MFTueba MenayaneTirsenseUndisclosed[13]
29 July 1989MFWandoMarítimoUndisclosed[14]
16 August 1989DFJosé GarridoBoavistaUndisclosed[15]
16 August 1989MFAntónio MirandaChavesUndisclosed
August 1989MFLuís MarianoUnião de Leiria
8 September 1989MFElzo CoelhoFree[16]

Out by loan

Exit datePositionPlayerTo clubReturn dateRef
July 1989FWJoão PiresEstoril-Praia30 June 1991
July 1989CBPedro ValidoFeirense30 June 1990
27 July 1989DFEdmundoBelenenses30 June 1990[17]
8 August 1989MFAugusto JerónimoBeira-Mar30 June 1990[18]
16 August 1989CBAbel SilvaPenafiel30 June 1990

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. News: Eriksson: Patrão absoluto do futebol benfiquista. 10 May 1989. 22961. 20. 20 February 2017. Eriksson: Total control of Benfica's football. Diário de Lisboa. Portuguese. https://web.archive.org/web/20170224053059/http://www.fmsoares.pt/aeb_online/visualizador.php?bd=IMPRENSA&nome_da_pasta=06889.206.31445&numero_da_pagina=20. 24 February 2017. dead.
  2. Book: Manuel Dias. Carlos Pinhão. Benfica: O voo da Águia. May 1990. 96. First. Portuguese.
  3. News: Benfica: Apresentação. Diário de Lisboa. 28 July 1989. 23026. 21. 20 February 2017. Benfica: Presentation. Portuguese. https://web.archive.org/web/20170224053134/http://www.fmsoares.pt/aeb_online/visualizador.php?bd=IMPRENSA&nome_da_pasta=06889.206.31509&numero_da_pagina=21. 24 February 2017. dead.
  4. Book: António Manuel Morais. Carlos Perdigão. João Loureiro. José de Oliveira Santos. Benfica: 90 Anos de História. 1994. SOGAPAL. 260. Portuguese.
  5. Web site: Staff. Thefinalball.com. 23 February 2017.
  6. News: Benfica: volta ao mundo na rota dos dólares. Diário de Lisboa. 31 May 1989. 22978. 20. 30 December 2016. Benfica: tour around the world in search of dollars. Portuguese.
  7. News: Aldair: Por 230 mil muda-se para a Luz. Diário de Lisboa. 14 June 1989. 22988. 19. 30 December 2016. Aldair: Signs for Benfica for 1,1 million. Portuguese.
  8. News: Eriksson, Douglas e Fernando Mendes protagonizam esperança, serenidade e agitação. Diário de Lisboa. 22 July 1989. 23021. 17. 17 January 2017. Eriksson, Douglas and Fernando Mendes bring hope, serenity and troubles. Portuguese.
  9. News: Jonas Thern assinou pelo Benfica. Diário de Lisboa. 10 August 1989. 23037. 23. 17 January 2017. Jonas Thern signs with Benfica. Portuguese.
  10. News: Ricky no Estrela. Diário de Lisboa. 20 May 1989. 22970. 15. 30 December 2016. Ricky signs with Estrela. Portuguese.
  11. News: Onde vai nascer outro senhor Shéu?. Diário de Lisboa. 22 May 1989. 22971. 20–21. 30 December 2016. Where will it be born the next Shéu?. Portuguese.
  12. News: Mozer vai, dinheiro vem. Diário de Lisboa. 6 June 1989. 22983. 20. 30 December 2016. Mozer goes, Money comes. Portuguese.
  13. News: Tueba:Da Luz para Santo Tirso. Diário de Lisboa. 18 July 1989. 23017. 19. 17 January 2017. Tueba:From Benfica to Santo Tirso. Portuguese.
  14. News: Benfica: a peneira funcionará na Holanda. Diário de Lisboa. 29 July 1989. 23027. 17. 17 January 2017. Benfica: Tour in the Netherlands will help define the squad. Portuguese.
  15. News: Força de Leste gelou exames na Luz. Diário de Lisboa. 16 August 1989. 23041. 23. 17 January 2017. Eastern Force freezes tryout in Da Luz. Portuguese.
  16. News: Elzo no Brasil. Diário de Lisboa. 8 September 1989. 23061. 23. 17 January 2017. Elzo moves to Brazil. Portuguese.
  17. News: Silas, Ricardo, Aldair e companhia. Diário de Lisboa. 27 July 1989. 23025. 21. Silas, Ricardo, Aldair and others. Portuguese.
  18. News: Augusto muda-se para Aveiro. Diário de Lisboa. 8 August 1989. 23035. 23. 17 January 2017. Augusto moves to Aveiro. Portuguese.