2010–11 Taça de Portugal

The 2010–11 Taça de Portugal, also known as Taça de Portugal Millennium for sponsorship reasons, was the 71st season of the Taça de Portugal. A total of 172 clubs from all four tiers of Portuguese football took part in this tournament. In the final (played at the Estádio Nacional, in Oeiras), Porto beat Vitória de Guimarães by 6–2, in a reedition of the 1988 final.

2010–11 Taça de Portugal
Taça de Portugal Millennium
Country Portugal
Teams172
ChampionsPorto
Runners-upVitória de Guimarães
Matches played170
Goals scored470 (2.76 per match)
Top goal scorer(s)Edgar
Óscar Cardozo
(5 goals)

Participating teams

The following teams took part in this competition:

Liga Zon Sagres (16 teams, 2 in competition)
Liga Orangina (16 teams)
Second Division (46 teams[1][2])
Third Division (94 teams)

First round

In this round entered teams from Second Division (3rd level) and Third Division (4th level). Twenty teams received a bye to the Second Round: 1º de Maio (III), Alcochetense (III), Aliados Lordelo (II), Amarante (III), Atlético da Malveira (III), Camacha (II), Coimbrões (II), Esposende (III), Limianos (III), Maria da Fonte (III), Mondinense (III), Monsanto (III), Moura (III), Paredes (III), Penalva do Castelo (III), Pontassolense (II), Praiense (II), Sousense (III), Tirsense (II) and Tondela (II). The matches were played on September 4 and 5, 2010.

Second round

In this round entered teams from Liga Orangina (2nd level) and the winners from the first round. The matches were played on September 18 and 19, 2010.

Third round

In this round entered teams from Liga ZON Sagres (1st level) and the winners from the second round. The matches were played on October 10, 16 and 17th and December 23, 2010.

1 0-3 defeat was given to both teams.

Fourth round

The matches were played on November 21, December 12, 2010 and January 5, 2011.

2 It was scheduled that the winner of the match between Bombarralense and Louletano would play against U. Madeira, but both teams have been eliminated, and so U. Madeira is qualified to next round.

Fifth round

The matches were played on December 11, 12, 2010 and January 12, 2011.

Quarterfinals

The matches were played on January 12, 26, 27 and 28, 2011.

12 January 2011 Porto2 – 0PinhalnovensePorto
19:45 UTC+0 Hulk  78', 90+2' Stadium: Estádio do Dragão
26 January 2011 Rio Ave0 – 2BenficaVila do Conde
TBD UTC+0 Cardozo  44' (pen.), 87' Stadium: Estádio dos Arcos
27 January 2011 Merelinense0 – 2Vitória de GuimarãesBraga
TBD UTC+0 Edgar  30'
Cléber  45'
Stadium: Estádio 1º de Maio
Referee: Rui Costa
28 January 2011 Académica3 – 2Vitória de SetúbalCoimbra
TBD UTC+0 Éder  40'
Sougou  44'
Bischoff  85'
Brasão  16'
Collin  87'
Stadium: Estádio Cidade de Coimbra

Semifinals

Final phase bracket

Teams that are listed first play at home in the first leg.[1]

  Semi-finals
2/3 February 2011
27 March 2011/20 April 2011
Final
22 May 2011
                     
Porto (a) 0 3 3  
Benfica 2 1 3  
    Porto 6
  Vitória de Guimarães 2
Vitória de Guimarães 1 0 1
Académica de Coimbra 0 0 0  
Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Porto 3–3 (a) Benfica 0–2 3–1
Vitória de Guimarães 1–0 Académica de Coimbra 1–0 0–0

First leg

Porto0 − 2Benfica
Coentrão  6'
García  26'
Attendance: 50,000

Vitória de Guimarães1 – 0Académica
Faouzi  80'

Second leg

Benfica1 – 3Porto
Cardozo  79' (pen.) Moutinho  64'
Hulk  72'
Falcao  74'

Porto 33 Benfica on aggregate. Porto won on away goals.


Vitória won 10 on aggregate.

Final

Vitória de Guimarães2 – 6Porto
Á. Pereira  21' (o.g.)
Edgar  23'
Report J. Rodríguez  2', 45+2', 73'
Varela  22'
Rolando  35'
Hulk  43'

Top scorers

Rank Player Club Goals
1 Edgar Vitória de Guimarães 5
Óscar Cardozo Benfica 5
3 Hulk Porto 4
Walter Porto 4
Yazalde Rio Ave 4
6 Éder Académica de Coimbra 3
James Rodríguez Porto 3
Javier Saviola Benfica 3
Radamel Falcao Porto 3

Last updated: 27 January 2013

Footnotes

  1. ^ Boavista was suspended for two years for forfeiting a match in the 2009-10 season.[2]
  2. ^ Marítimo B team is not allowed to take part in the competition, as rules forbid the participation of "B teams".

References

  1. FPF – Semifinals draw Archived 2012-02-22 at the Wayback Machine (in Portuguese)
  2. Amorim, Miguel (27 November 2009). "Two seasons without Boavista in the Taça de Portugal" (in Portuguese). Retrieved 24 April 2011.
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