Sporting Clube de Macau

Sporting de Macau
Full nameSporting Clube de Macau
Founded1926; 98 years ago (1926)
ChairmanAntónio Conceição Júnior
ManagerNuno Capela
LeagueLiga de Elite
2024Liga de Elite, 9th
Current season

Sporting Clube de Macau (Chinese: 士砵亭) is a Macanese professional football club that competes in the Liga de Elite. It was founded in 1926 as a branch of Sporting Clube de Portugal.[1]

History

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Beginnings

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The Sporting Clube de Macau (Macau Sporting Club in English) was founded on 22 September 1926 as the No.25 branch of Sporting Clube de Portugal.[1] It began under the direction of Henrique Nolasco da Silva (President), Francisco Borralho (secretary), Angelo Rosary (treasurer), and alternates Dr. Horacio Carvalho, Pedro Pereira Leite, and Mário Ribeiro.

Among its past Presidents, there were athletes such as António Conceição, the first Macanese athlete to become Portuguese National Champion of 5x80 meters velocity relay races in 1928 and 1930.

He would return to Macau in the late 1930s and would be Macau team coach and in 1951 become President of the club. In this position, he would send Augusto Rocha and Joaquim Pacheco to his beloved Sporting, where they would be selected for the Portugal national football team.

Golden Era

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The Macau Sporting Club was reactivated a second time in 1951 after a certain period of erasure, by António Conceição,[2] Adelino Serra, Major Acacio Cabrera Henriques, and Mario Abreu, among others.

In the 1960s Eduardo Atraca played for Sporting Clube de Macau and in the 1980s he would become the President of the club. Sporting became champion of Macau during this time.

In the 1990s it was the turn of Fernando Lopes to be President of Sporting Clube de Macau leading the team to become champion of Macau once again.

The Macau Sporting Club had in the 80s, when the club was chaired by Eduardo Atraca, a great football team. It was this club that reached the Sporting players like Rock . Club members, including two of reactivating the Macau Sporting Club in 1951 and two presidents of the club, and the son of António Conceição, António Conceição Júnior.[3]

After that, the vicissitudes of life led to the club once again to stay asleep for more than 20 years.

Reactivation

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On 4 June 2008, António Conceição Júnior set the challenge of reviving the Branch no. # 25 of Sporting Clube de Portugal, as a way to honor the memory of his father, António Conceição Sr.

One of the first projects undertaken was the identification of Sportinguistas the territory of Macao Special Administrative Region and. Working at cruising speed, on 25 November 2008 a historic Extraordinary General Meeting was held, as this was a truly important step in reactivation of the branch, where it proceeded to the admission of new partners and marking of elections to the governing bodies.

On 15 February 2009 elections were finally held, in which 40 of the 54 members voted with electoral capacity. In 2009 Sporting was once more reactivated and counts with more than 100 members. The President since 2009 has been António Conceição Júnior.

On 5 June 2009, almost a year after the launch of the challenge of reviving the club, there was a new General Assembly for approval of new statutes, since the last one dated from 10 March 1951. Subsequently, the Articles were published in the Official Gazette, thus allowing, for their formalization, registration of the Club at the Institute of Sport and the championship of the Macau Football Association.

In just one year, the vision of António Conceição Júnior became a reality. The work done by you and your peers are evidence of a large Sporting spirit, living up to the words of John F. Kennedy: "Ask not what your country (club) can do for you before you question what you can do for your country (club) ".

The club suffered a boost with the creation of a team that premiered on 19 August 2009 in the championship of the 2nd Division of football. It was called football seven, and was played with a number 4 ball – ranking for which all new teams enter and were attended by 92 clubs and 18 groups. Paul Conde and Mandinho offered their services to help the club of their heart.

In November 2010, Agostinho Caetano became the coach.

In December 2011, the club achieved promotion to the 2nd Division Football Macau, to clinch the runner-up in Division 3.

In 2013, the club achieved promotion to Division 1 of Macau Football, the Liga de Elite. The club was preparing for the 2nd Division, but the withdrawal of another club gave them the rise to the top flight.

Board of directors

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  • President: TBA
  • Vice-president: TBA
  • Director of Football: TBA
  • Treasurer: TBA

Honours

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Champions: 1950, 1962, 1963, 1991
Runners-up: 2014
Champions: 2013
Champions: 1951

Current squad

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Squad for the 2020 Liga de Elite

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
4 MF Macau MAC Filipe Pereira
5 DF Macau MAC Billy Leong
7 DF Macau MAC Wu Pak Wai
8 DF Macau MAC Wu Pak Lam
10 FW Macau MAC Niki Torrão
11 FW Macau MAC Iuri Capelo
12 GK Macau MAC So Ka Chon
14 FW Portugal POR Hugo Almeida
15 DF Macau MAC Romir Goswami
19 DF France FRA Sébastien Mariojouls
21 MF Brazil BRA Hugo Flecha
No. Pos. Nation Player
22 MF Macau MAC Leung Chon In
26 MF Portugal POR Fernandinho
27 FW Macau MAC Kuok Meng Chon
28 MF Macau MAC Rodrigo Pontes
31 MF Macau MAC Ieong Ka Hong
32 MF Brazil BRA Bruno Leite
63 MF Macau MAC Marcos Modesto
66 DF Macau MAC Fong Chan Fai
68 FW Ghana GHA Felix Adzayi
82 DF Portugal POR Pedro Pires
96 GK Macau MAC Tiago Monteiro

Staff

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Position Name
Head coach Portugal

Partnership

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On 2 September 2014, Sporting Clube de Macau announced a partnership with FC Osaka, which makes the transfer of players between Macau and Japan possible.[4]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Filiais do Sporting". Diário de Notícias (in Portuguese). Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  2. ^ "HOMENAGEM A ANTÓNIO CONCEIÇÃO - 1910 - 1985". www.arscives.com. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 24 June 2019.
  3. ^ "40 Years of CreActivity". www.arscives.com. Archived from the original on 24 June 2019. Retrieved 24 June 2019.
  4. ^ Catarina Pinto (3 September 2014). "Sporting Macau signs partnership with Osaka F.C." Macau Daily Times. Archived from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 3 September 2014.
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