Clube Oriental de Lisboa

Clube Oriental de Lisboa is a Portuguese football club based in Lisbon. Founded in 1946, it currently competes in the Campeonato de Portugal, holding home games at Campo Engenheiro Carlos Salema, with an 8,500 capacity.

Oriental
Full nameClube Oriental de Lisboa
Founded1946
GroundEstádio Engenheiro Carlos Salema, Lisbon
Capacity8,500
ChairmanJosé Fernando Nabais
ManagerAntónio Pereira
LeaguePortuguese District Championships
WebsiteClub website

History

Clube Oriental de Lisboa was founded on 8 August 1946 by the merger of three clubs: Grupo Desportivo Os Fósforos, Marvilense Futebol Clube, and Chelas Futebol Clube.

Rui de Seixas, then-president of Chelas Football Club, in an interview with The Sports in January 1936, first raised the idea of a single club that encompasses the entire eastern part of the head. But many were the critics who lashed the most prestigious leader causing him to give up the idea almost immediately. Still, days later, José Marques de Oliveira returns to the charge but your interview is simply ignored.

In support of parochial ambitions and rivalries almost sick for a few more years Chelas, Marvilense Matches and battle it out in real battles "in search of fleeting glory. Lisbon lived quietly in their depression, as the war spread throughout the world.

It is then, in late April 1946, the billiards room Coffee Ice, Arthur Ines scribe prestigious newspaper "Republic", is asked by José Marques de Oliveira, former vice president of Chelas said: If you wanted to could make a great sports club in Lisbon ... Something with such incredulous words, Agnes Arthur replied: He guaranteed that no environment for a merger between the clubs? Absolutely. The elements of the three clubs want it. – Said José Marques de Oliveira.

Having then been introduced to some distinguished leaders of the three clubs, such as Rui de Seixas and others, publishes an opinion piece not signing in May 1946, but has the power to shake everyone's Marvila, Beato, Xabregas Well and Poço Bispo.

On 13 July 1946, Arthur Ines, visibly moved by the unfolding of events written in the pages of his "Republic": "We can guarantee that almost all the mass of the three associative friendly and valuable clubs, Chelas, Marvilense Matches and is excited about the idea of the merger. Likewise the leaders of the most prestigious of the communities concerned, except Mr. John Rose, president of Chelas also give its approval to the idea that needs to be properly studied and understood.

A large sports club in the area east of the city, able to impose himself in sport in the country, with its 5,000 members – minimum calculated – and all face today is an established idea that dominates the hard-working population of the area. That this is so is proved by the great enthusiasm already raging among members of the Chelas Futebol Clube, Marvilense Futebol Clube and Grupo Desportivo "Os Fósforos".

8 August 1946: Clube Oriental de Lisboa is born. Hundreds of athletes, club members who have joined to form a major new sports body of the eastern part of Lisbon appeared full of faith and enthusiasm at the headquarters of the former Marvilense, to vote the basis of the statutes of the great Lisbon club was born that day.

The vast hall of the former Marvilense Football Club was small to accommodate the hundreds of people – members of three clubs households – who wanted to attend the meeting magna to the foundation of the Clube Oriental de Lisboa. In the broad frontier of the building, a considerable crowd went hand in hand all the meeting through loudspeakers for this purpose.[1]

Oriental was one of the founders of the new Campeonato Nacional de Seniores in 2013. At the end of the season they won first place in their promotion group, returning to the Portuguese second tier for the first time since 1989, when the tier was unified after years of being regionalized.

League and cup history

Season Ti. Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Cup Notes
1995–96 3 12 34111112 413644 Round 3
1996–97 3 3 3415811 413553 Round 5
1997–98 3 2 341969 493463 Round 4
1998–99 3 6 3414128 403454 Round 4
1999–00 3 10 38151112 444356 Round 2
2000–01 3 18 3851716 314932 Round 2 Relegated
2001–02 4 1 342185 732671 Round 4 Promoted
2002–03 3 14 381387 364447 Round 4
2003–04 3 12 38121214 454848 Round 2
2004–05 3 15 38111512 364148 Round 4
2005–06 3 16 301623 19659 Round 2 Relegated
2006–07 4 3 3014115 502953 Round 2
2007–08 4 1 261574 452452 Round 2
2008–09 3 8 229310 273530 Round 2
2009–10 3 4 3014106 372552 Round 3
2010–11 3 6 3012108 423546 Round 2
2011–12 3 2 301686 491756 Round 3
2012–13 3 5 3015411 553449 Round 2
2013–14 3 2 181125 371735 Round 3 Promoted

Last updated: 25 May 2013
Ti. = Tier; 1D = Portuguese League; 2H = Liga de Honra; 2DS/2D = Segunda Divisão
3DS = Terceira Divisão; 5DS = AF Aveiro First Division
Pos. = Position; Pl = Match played; W = Win; D = Draw; L = Lost; GS = Goal scored; GA = Goal against; P = Points

Current squad

As of 27 January 2023

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Portugal POR André Marques
2 DF Portugal POR Deritson Lopes
3 DF Portugal POR Manuel Esteves
6 MF Portugal POR Gustavo Burity
7 FW Portugal POR Leo Morais
8 MF Cape Verde CPV Fábio Arcanjo
9 FW Brazil BRA Elvis Fernandes
10 MF Portugal POR Hugo Machado
14 DF Portugal POR Adilson
17 FW Portugal POR Tiago Gaspar
19 FW Portugal POR Manuel Eloy
20 DF Cape Verde CPV Léléco
No. Pos. Nation Player
21 MF Portugal POR Rafa Santos
23 DF Cape Verde CPV Carlos Bebé
24 GK Portugal POR Joaquim Carvalho
29 DF Portugal POR Zé Pedro
32 FW Argentina ARG Santiago Krieger
45 DF Portugal POR David Crespo
49 DF Portugal POR Duarte Grais
50 MF Portugal POR Diogo Costa
73 FW Portugal POR Gonçalo Mendes
98 FW Portugal POR Didi
99 GK Brazil BRA Tomás Godinho

References

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