S.H. Benfica (Huambo) Explained

Benfica do Huambo
Fullname:Sport Huambo e Benfica
Ground:Estádio das Cacilhas
Huambo, Angola
Capacity:12.000
Chairman:Amílcar Kandimba
Manager:n/a
League:Gira Angola
Season:2012
Position:9th (Série B)
Pattern B1:_thinwhitesides
Leftarm1:ff0000
Body1:ff0000
Rightarm1:ff0000
Shorts1:ff0000
Socks1:ff0000

Sport Huambo e Benfica, originally Sport Nova Lisboa e Benfica or Benfica de Nova Lisboa, later renamed as Sport Huambo e Benfica or Benfica do Huambo or Mambroa, is a football club from Huambo, Angola. The club was established as the then Nova Lisboa affiliate of S.L. Benfica of Portugal, and shares the same colours. The logo is also very similar to the Portuguese one.[1]

In 1972, the club won the Angolan provincial football championship.

Following the country's independence in 1975 and in an attempt by the communist regime to erase all traces of colonial rule, the club which has been created as an affiliate to S.L. Benfica was ordered to change its name and therefore became known as Estrela Vermelha do Huambo (Huambo Red Star) as it participated in the first edition of the country's post-independence premier league and later on to Mambroa. In a General Assembly meeting held on March 10, 1990, the club's name was reverted to its original denomination, and since shortly after independence, the Portuguese-named city of Nova Lisboa had changed to Huambo, so did the club's name.

Achievements

1

1972

League & Cup Positions

TimeAxis = orientation:horizontalImageSize = width:1500 height:125PlotArea = width:1200 height:42 bottom:68 left:100DateFormat = mm/dd/yyyyPeriod = from:01/01/1978 till:12/31/2012ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:1 start:1979ScaleMinor = unit:year increment:1 start:1979AlignBars = justify

Colors = id:sc value:orange id:pri value:green id:seg value:gray(0.5) id:ter value:rgb(0.8,0.6,0.1)

BarData = bar:primera text:"Girabola" bar:segunda text:"Segundona" bar:tercera text:"Angola Cup" bar:sincompetir text:"Super Cup"

PlotData =

  1. set defaults

width:10 fontsize:s textcolor:white align:left anchor:from shift:(5,-5)

bar:primera color:pri from:06/07/1978 till:06/07/1979 shift:(16,-4) text:8 from:06/07/1979 till:06/07/1980 shift:(16,-4) text:3 from:06/07/1980 till:06/07/1981 shift:(16,-4) text:3 from:06/07/1981 till:06/07/1982 shift:(16,-4) text:5 from:06/07/1982 till:06/07/1983 shift:(16,-4) text:3 from:06/07/1983 till:06/07/1984 shift:(16,-4) text:6 from:06/07/1984 till:06/07/1985 shift:(16,-4) text:6 from:06/07/1985 till:06/07/1986 shift:(16,-4) text:9 from:06/07/1986 till:06/07/1987 shift:(12,-4) text:11 from:06/07/1987 till:06/07/1988 shift:(16,-4) text:8 from:06/07/1988 till:06/07/1989 shift:(12,-4) text:10 from:06/07/1989 till:06/07/1990 shift:(16,-4) text:6 from:06/07/1990 till:06/07/1991 shift:(16,-4) text:9 from:06/07/1991 till:06/07/1992 shift:(12,-4) text:10 from:06/07/1995 till:06/07/1996 shift:(12,-4) text:12 from:06/07/1996 till:06/07/1997 shift:(12,-4) text:13

bar:segunda color:seg from:06/07/2004 till:06/07/2005 shift:(12,-4) text:2b from:06/07/2005 till:06/07/2006 shift:(12,-4) text:3b from:06/07/2007 till:06/07/2008 shift:(12,-4) text:4b from:06/07/2008 till:06/07/2009 shift:(12,-4) text:5b from:06/07/2009 till:06/07/2010 shift:(12,-4) text:3b from:06/07/2010 till:06/07/2011 shift:(12,-4) text:3b from:06/07/2011 till:06/07/2012 shift:(12,-4) text:9b

bar:tercera color:ter from:06/07/2010 till:06/07/2011 shift:(12,-4) text:PR

bar:sincompetir color:sc

Stadium

The club is the owner of the 15,000-seat Estádio das Cacilhas stadium. At present, the stadium has been demolished, awaiting government funding for the construction of a new stadium on the same site, with the capacity of 15,000 seats.[2]

Manager history and performance

Season Coach Coach Coach
1979 Bogomil Bijev 8th
1980 3rd
Arlindo Leitão Bogomil Bijev 3rd
1982 Vidić Daniel Lutucuta 5th
Daniel Lutucuta Carlos Sério
1984 Carlos Sério
1985 Daniel Lutucuta Jaime Chimalanga
1986 Filipe Mascarenhas António Mpuissi
1987 Arlindo Leitão
1988 Daniel Lutucuta Laurindo
1989 Zé do Pau
Laurindo
1991 Horácio Cangato
1992 Carlos Queirós
1996 Horácio Cangato Patrick
1997 Zé do Pau 13th
2005 Napoleão Brandão 2b
2007 António Sayombo
2008 2b
2009 Hélder Teixeira 5b
2010 3b
2011 Alberto Cardeau 3bPR
2012 Horácio Libengué 9b

See also

External links

References

  1. RSSSF
  2. RSSSF
  3. RSSSF
  4. RSSSF
  5. RSSSF

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Benfica do Huambo celebrates 79th anniversary looking ahead . ANGOP.com . 2010-09-29 . 2014-04-16.
  2. Web site: Estádio do Mambroa - um "gigante" abandonado . ANGOP.com . 21 Jul 2020 . pt.