2016–17 Campeonato de Portugal explained

Competition:Campeonato de Portugal
Season:2016–17
Promoted:Oliveirense
Real
Relegated:Caniçal
Torre de Moncorvo
Limianos
Ponte da Barca
Pampilhosa
Académica – SF
Estarreja
Moimenta da Beira
Gafetense
Ginásio de Alcobaça
Vitória de Sernache
Naval 1º de Maio
Fabril do Barreiro
S.C. Viana do Alentejo
Atlético da Malveira
Barreirense
Carapinheirense
Angrense
Mineiro Aljustrelense
Atlético CP
Tourizense
Gouveia
Prevseason:2015–16
Nextseason:2017–18

The 2016–17 Campeonato de Portugal (also known as Campeonato de Portugal Prio, for sponsorship reasons) was the fourth season of Portuguese football's renovated third-tier league, since the merging of the Segunda Divisão and Terceira Divisão in 2013, and the second season under the current Campeonato de Portugal title. A total of 80 teams compete in this division, which began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 18 June 2017.

Format

The competition format consists of two stages. In the first stage, the 80 clubs were divided in eight series of 10 teams, according to geographic criteria. The only exceptions were teams from Madeira, which were placed in the first series, and teams from the Azores, which were distributed through the latter series. In each series, teams play against each other in a home-and-away double round-robin system.

In the second stage, the two best-placed teams from each first-stage series were divided in two groups of eight teams, again according to geographic proximity, with home-and-away matches. The two group winners secured promotion to the LigaPro. To determine the overall division champion, the group winners contested a one-off grand final on a neutral ground.

On 15 March 2016, the LPFP announced that four teams (instead of three) would be relegated to the 2017–18 Campeonato de Portugal, and two teams (instead of three) would be promoted directly from the Campeonato de Portugal to reduce the number of LigaPro teams to 20 for the 2017–18 season. There would also be a two-legged promotion/relegation play-off involving the 17th- and 18th-placed teams of 2016–17 LigaPro and both second-placed teams of the Campeonato de Portugal promotion groups (North and South).[1]

The remaining eight clubs from each first-stage series were divided into eight groups of eight teams, with home-and-away matches, but there was a reshuffle so that teams from Series A, C, E and G ending the first stage from seventh to tenth were placed in the second stage's Series B, D, F and H and vice versa. Each teams only conserved 25% of first-stage points. The bottom-two teams from each group were relegated to the District Championships. The sixth-placed teams were paired into four two-legged play-out ties, with the four winners being paired into two further two-legged play-out ties. All six play-out losers were also relegated.[2]

Teams

Relegated from the 2015–16 LigaPro:

From the 2015–16 Campeonato de Portugal:

Promoted from the 2015–16 District Championships:

First stage

Serie H

Second stage

Promotion groups

South zone

Relegation groups

Serie H

Relegation play-out

First round

Carapinheirense lost 2–0 on aggregate and were relegated.----Angrense lost 3–2 on aggregate and were relegated.----Mineiro Aljustrelense lost 2–1 on aggregate and were relegated.----Atlético CP lost 1–0 on aggregate and were relegated.

Second round

2–2 on aggregate. Tourizense lost 5–4 on penalties and were relegated.----Gouveia lost 6–2 on aggregate and were relegated.

Notes and References

  1. News: Aprovadas todas as propostas da Direção. Board's proposals all approved. LPFP. pt. 15 March 2016. 1 May 2016.
  2. Web site: Regulamento Campeonato de Portugal. Federação Portuguesa de Futebol. 30 April 2016. 30 July 2016. pt.