Date | R | Home vs Away | - |
---|---|---|---|
02/01 18:00 | 11 | SC Horta vs Belenenses | View |
02/08 17:00 | 19 | Povoa Andebol/Bodegao vs Sporting Clube | View |
02/08 17:00 | 19 | Madeira vs ABC Braga | View |
02/08 17:00 | 19 | SL Benfica vs Aguas Santas | View |
02/08 18:00 | 19 | Vitoria SC vs AA Avanca | View |
02/08 18:00 | 19 | FC Porto vs Belenenses | View |
02/08 18:00 | 19 | SC Horta vs Nazare Dom Fuas AC | View |
02/15 15:00 | 20 | Belenenses vs Vitoria SC | View |
02/15 18:00 | 20 | Sporting Clube vs Madeira | View |
02/15 18:00 | 20 | AA Avanca vs SL Benfica | View |
02/15 18:30 | 20 | Aguas Santas vs SC Horta | View |
02/15 18:30 | 20 | ABC Braga vs FC Porto | View |
Date | R | Home vs Away | - |
---|---|---|---|
12/18 21:00 | 18 | [7] Aguas Santas vs Vitoria SC [6] | 28-27 |
12/18 21:00 | 18 | [10] AA Avanca vs FC Porto [2] | Abandoned |
12/18 20:30 | 18 | [11] Nazare Dom Fuas AC vs SL Benfica [3] | 26-34 |
12/18 20:00 | 18 | [8] Belenenses vs Maritimo Madeira [5] | 28-36 |
12/18 20:00 | 18 | [9] Povoa Andebol/Bodegao vs SC Horta [12] | 35-34 |
12/18 18:00 | 18 | [1] Sporting CP vs ABC Braga [5] | 38-29 |
12/15 15:30 | 17 | [5] Maritimo Madeira vs AA Avanca [10] | 36-23 |
12/14 20:30 | 17 | [3] SL Benfica vs Povoa Andebol/Bodegao [9] | 39-24 |
12/14 18:00 | 17 | [12] SC Horta vs Sporting CP [2] | 22-41 |
12/14 17:30 | 17 | [5] ABC Braga vs Belenenses [8] | 34-29 |
12/14 15:00 | 17 | FC Porto vs Aguas Santas | 39-24 |
12/14 15:00 | 17 | [6] Vitoria SC vs Nazare Dom Fuas AC [11] | 37-25 |
The Campeonato Nacional de Andebol Masculino (English: Men's Handball National Championship), also known simply as Andebol 1 (or Campeonato Placard Andebol 1 for sponsorship reasons), is the premier handball league in Portugal and is overseen by the Portuguese Handball Federation.
The competition was created in 1951 and was formerly named Campeonato Nacional da Primeira Divisão (1951–1982 and 1985–2001), Divisão de Elite (2002–2006), and Liga Portuguesa de Andebol (2001–2009). Seven teams have won the league title since its inception.
Sporting CP are the current champions with 22 titles, followed by FC Porto with 24 titles and ABC with 13.
This section does not cite any sources.(September 2022) |
Handball was first introduced in Portugal in 1929 and in 1939 the Portuguese Handball Federation is established. During the first half of the 20th century, the sport became increasingly trendy, becoming one of the most important team sports in Portugal, aside football and roller hockey. The increasing number of clubs featuring handball teams had already led to the establishment of regional championships in the regions of Metropolitan Lisbon and Greater Porto, as well as around Coimbra. The interest in defining a "national champion" led the federation to create a small tournament between the best teams of Lisbon and Porto (at first) and Coimbra (in a second phase).
Of the 23 championships played before the Carnation Revolution, only three were not won by Sporting CP or FC Porto. The two teams readily established themselves as the top-clubs in the country, growing after their eclecticism. Both teams featured the best Portuguese players of that time, sparking up a North-South rivalry between Porto and Lisbon, respectively.
FC Porto won the first tetracampeonato (4 titles in a row) in the history of the competition. On the other side, Sporting CP won the first pentacampeonato (5 titles in a row) in the history of the Portuguese handball, with a team that became known as "Os Sete Magníficos" (in English, The Seven Magnificent).
In 1985, the championship assumed a league format disputed with 12 teams. This change in the competition format approximated the Portuguese league to other major European leagues and accounted for a significant increase in competitiveness. This consistent growth was backed by the investments made by multiple clubs, who sought to secure some foreign players (especially from the Balkans) as well as experienced and well-regarded coaches, whose knowledge of the sport allowed a solid increase in playing quality.
The peak of the growth of the club handball in Portugal was achieved by ABC, from Braga, when they reached the final of the first EHF Champions League final in 1994. They lost to CB Cantabria by 45–43. In 1999-00, ABC also reached the semi-finals of the EHF Cup.
In 2001, the clubs created an independent association, the Liga Portuguesa de Clubes de Andebol (in English, Portuguese Handball Clubs League), whose goal was to oversee a fully professional handball league, called Liga Portuguesa de Andebol (in English, Portuguese Handball League). However, in 2002, the Portuguese Handball Federation disputed the validity of the League and eventually refused accept the Liga Portuguesa de Andebol champions as "national champions".
As a consequence of the dispute, second-tier was renamed to Divisão de Elite (in English, Elite Division) and transformed into the official first-tier of the Portuguese handball. Its champions were declared "Portuguese champions".
The most dramatical consequence was the inability of the big professional clubs playing in Liga Portuguesa de Andebol to enter European Handball Federation competitions.
In 2005, the Federation finally recognised the Liga Portuguesa de Andebol as the first-tier of the Portuguese handball league system and agreed to granting autonomy to the League while overseeing it at the same time.
The Liga Portuguesa de Clubes de Andebol folded in 2008, bringing the Liga Portuguesa de Andebol to an end. The short-lived competition was replaced by the new Andebol 1 (in English, Handball One) under the scope of the Portuguese Handball Federation. Since the rebranding of the championship in the 2009–2010 season, Portuguese club handball regained some of its notoriousness, namely in the international competitions. Sporting CP won the EHF Challenge Cup in 2010 and 2017 and ABC won the competition in 2016, in the first solely-Portuguese European final in the history of handball, beating Benfica by an aggregate of 53–51. ABC had also reached the final of the EHF Challenge Cup in 2015.
In the 2013–14 season, FC Porto became the first Portuguese team to participate in the group stage of the EHF Champions League since 2002. FC Porto, ABC and Sporting CP also participated in the 2015–16, 2016–17 and 2017–18 editions, although none of them passed through the group stage.
But the biggest achievement by Portuguese teams in international competitions run by EHF was Benfica win of 2021–22 season, defeating SC Magdeburg 40-39, in a dramatic final solved in the last second of the Extra-Time.