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Venezuelan football club From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Portuguesa Fútbol Club, usually known simply as Portuguesa, is a Venezuelan professional football club based in Acarigua, that competes in the Primera División.
Full name | Portuguesa Fútbol Club | |||
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Nickname(s) | Los rojinegros (The red-and-black) | |||
Founded | 2 March 1972 | |||
Ground | Estadio General José Antonio Paez | |||
Capacity | 18,000[1] | |||
Chairman | Vito Recchimurzo | |||
Manager | Jesús Ortiz | |||
League | Primera División | |||
2023 | Primera División, 3rd of 15 | |||
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The club was founded on 10 April 1972, in Acarigua in the northern part of the state of Portuguesa.
The encounter between Portuguesa and Estudiantes de Mérida is one of the most classic and oldest of Venezuelan football, they are two of the most traditional clubs in the country. The first match played between both teams was on 28 May 1972, in the Copa Venezuela. The match ended with a 1–1 draw, with goals from Chiazzaro at the 73rd minute and Cholo Mendoza at the 79th minute, and so beginning the oldest ongoing classic in the country.
Portuguesa played the so-called Clásico portugueseño against Llaneros de Guanare, these are the two most important clubs in the state of Portuguesa, both having a good number of fans. The first meeting between the two took place on September 28, 1986 (with a scoreless draw) and continued, for now, until 2022 when Llaneros was dissolved.
Club | Victories | Draws |
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Portuguesa | 15 | 7 |
Llaneros FC | 12 | 7 |
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The José Antonio Páez Stadium is a sports infrastructure built for the practice of football, located in the city of Acarigua in the state of Portuguesa of the western plains of Venezuela. Despite not being the capital of the region, the building was built in that place by the booming development of the place; owes its name to the recognized hero of Venezuelan independence and the first president of Venezuela, José Antonio Páez.
It is the headquarters of Portuguesa Fútbol Club, currently playing in the First Division of Venezuela. Its facilities have the capacity to hold approximately 14,000 spectators; in 2007 it underwent considerable improvements to be used in the National Sports Games of 2007.
It has a good fan base, having been a successful club in the past in Venezuelan football, with organised groups such as the Lanceros Rojinegros who are usually located in the south stand of the stadium.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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President VEN Vito Recchimurzo Díaz Vice President VEN Maiker Frías Members VEN Orlando Cárdenas Members VEN Luis Fernández Members VEN Olympia Labrador Adviser VEN Gianni Mazzocca General Manager VEN Eduardo Herrera Sports Manager VEN Gerzon Chacón Manager of Operations VEN Rafael Guaricuco
Media and Press || VEN Patricia Almao – Media Director Francisco Miliani – Media Assistant María Gabriela Almao – Social Networks Juan Sánchez – Photographer Raiber Jiménez – Graphic Designer
The radio station that broadcasts the games of the five-time Venezuelan champions.
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