1982–83 Honduran Liga Nacional

The 1982–83 Honduran Liga Nacional season was the 17th edition of the Honduran Liga Nacional. The format of the tournament remained the same as the previous season, with the exception that no final series were played. Club Deportivo Olimpia won the title after finishing first in the final round[1] and qualified to the 1983 CONCACAF Champions' Cup along with runners-up C.D. Motagua.

Liga Nacional
Season1982–83
ChampionsOlimpia (6th)
RelegatedIndependiente
CONCACAF Champions' CupOlimpia
Motagua
Matches played155
Goals scored310 (2 per match)
Top goalscorerAltamirano (13)

1982–83 teams

Regular season

Standings

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Olimpia[lower-alpha 1] 27 11 11 5 33 17 +16 33 Qualified to the Final round[lower-alpha 2]
2 Motagua 27 9 13 5 31 28 +3 31
3 Real España 27 9 12 6 35 28 +7 30
4 Vida 27 5 20 2 24 21 +3 30
5 Victoria 27 7 15 5 21 15 +6 29
6 Atlético Morazán 27 7 13 7 26 33 7 27
7 Dandy 27 6 14 7 20 22 2 26
8 Broncos UNAH 27 5 12 10 30 36 6 22
9 Marathón 27 6 10 11 24 31 7 22
10 Independiente Villela 27 6 8 13 25 38 13 20 Relegated to Segunda División[lower-alpha 3]
Source:
Notes:
  1. Olimpia secured Final spot as Regular season winner.
  2. Top five qualify to Final round.
  3. Independiente relegated to second division.

Final round

Pentagonal standings

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Olimpia[lower-alpha 1] 8 4 3 1 7 6 +1 11 Qualified to the 1983 CONCACAF Champions' Cup
2 Motagua 8 2 5 1 13 7 +6 9
3 Real España 8 4 1 3 9 7 +2 9
4 Victoria 8 2 3 3 6 12 6 7
5 Vida 8 1 2 5 6 10 4 4
Source:
Notes:
  1. Olimpia 1982–83 champions.

Final

  • No final series was necessary as Olimpia won both regular season and final round.

Top scorer

  • Luis O. Altamirano (Broncos UNAH) with 13 goals

Squads

Atlético Morazán
José Luis Cruz Figueroa Cruz Ramón Serrano "Guaya" Cruz Noel Omar Renderos
Marco A. Ordóñez Ramón Edgardo Moradel Zapata Delio Billonay Fajardo
Broncos
Luis Oswaldo "Che" Altamirano José Marcial "Canelo" Murillo José Salomón "Turco" Nazzar
Dandy
Luis Alonso Guzmán Velásquez Rigoberto Escalón Oscar Villegas
Efraín "Pucho" Osorio Roberto Escalón Oscar Núñez
Oscar Montoya Carlos Castellanos René Orellana
Orlando Garay Ricardo Castro Carlos Flores
Edward Kisling Carlos Alvarez Jorge Martínez
Carlos Banegas Roberto Moreno Oscar "Hormiga" Muñoz
José Molina Carlos Ramírez Roger Valladares
Eleázar Peña Jorge "Chino" Euceda Claudio Romano Castro
Daniel "Diablo" Sambulá Apolonio Sambulá Arnold Connor Costly
Arnaldo Guevara Oscar Torres Benedito Tiburcio
Julio "Banana" Alvarez Marcial Bonilla Roberto Castellanos
Oscar Machigua Oscar "Chino" Brizuela Mario Bustillo
Oscar Ríos Luis Guerrero Noé Meza
Pastor Martínez Benito Suazo Luis Guzmán
Julio "Chino" Ortiz Francisco Sandoval Oscar Orellana
Guillermo Bernárdez Manuel Rivera Oscar "Pito Loco" López
Independiente Villela
Jorge Martínez Antonio "Gato" Pavón Molina Rodolfo "Mirandinha" Smith
Edimar Luiz Marques Roberto Herrera Moreno
Marathón
Julio del Carmen Tapia Callao Roy Arturo Padilla Bardales German "Niño" Bernárdez
Roberto Reynaldo "Robot" Bailey Sargent Arturo Payne Othoniel Romero "Romerito"
Gilberto Leonel Machado García Celso Fredy Güity Hernán Santiago "Cortes" García Martínez
Jorge Alberto "Cuca" Bueso Iglesias Félix Concepción Carranza Arturo Torres "Pacharaca" Bonilla
José Angel Peña Oscar René "Hormiga" Muñoz Oswaldo Zaldívar
Motagua
Jorge Montenegro Angel Antonio Obando Luis Alberto "Chito" Reyes
Karl Bennett Williams Moisés "Tanque" Velásquez Roberto Escalante
Luis Medina Amílcar Leonel Suazo
Olimpia
Oscar Banegas José Mauricio "Guicho" Fúnez Barrientos Oscar Garcia
Jorge Alberto "Indio" Urquía Elvir Roberto "Pirata" Fernández "Nilo" Martínez
Prudencio "Tecate" Norales Emilio Martínez Juan Alberto Flores Maradiaga
Alberto Merelles Víctor Romero Héctor Uclés
Alberto Centurión Mario Hernán Juviny Carreño Jorge Alberto "Perro" González
Alejandro Ruiz Ramón Antonio "Pilín" Brand Oscar Medina
Real España
Julio César "El Tile" Arzú Hernán Zelaya Anthony "Hino" Hinds Mathews
Carlos Saúl Bonilla Junior Rashford Costly Edith Hernando Contreras
Carlos Orlando Caballero Esteban Pitío Centeno Marcos Campbell
Carlos Alberto Salgado Jimmy Steward Nahúm Alberto Espinoza Zerón
Julio Roberto "Chino" Ortiz
Victoria
Raúl David Fúnez Jorge Alberto "Camioncito" Duarte Efraín Martínez "Diablillo" Amaya
David Goff Miguel Angel "Primitivo" Ortiz Luis Alonso "Chorompo" Zúniga
José Reynaldo Villagra Víctor Calero Lozano
Vida
Marvin Geovany "Mango" Henríquez Alex Banegas Matilde Selím Lacayo
Roberto "Macho" Figueroa Junior Mejía Ramón Nectaly "Liebre" Guardado
Marco Tulio "Zocadito" Zelaya

Known results

Round 1

Atlético Morazán2–0Motagua
Ordóñez
Tegucigalpa
Universidad2–2Olimpia

Round 2

Olimpia0–0Vida

Round 3

Marathón1–0Olimpia
San Pedro Sula

Round 4

Olimpia0–1Real España

Round 9

MarathónVida
San Pedro Sula

Round 14

Atlético Morazán0–0Marathón
Dandy1–0Independiente
Vida0–0Olimpia
La Ceiba
Real España1–0Broncos UNAH
San Pedro Sula
Motagua0–0Victoria
Tegucigalpa

Round 27

Marathón2–1Independiente
San Pedro Sula

Pentagonal

12 September 1982 Real España1–0OlimpiaSan Pedro Sula
Matthews Stadium: Estadio General Francisco Morazán
12 September 1982 Motagua7–1VictoriaTegucigalpa
Reyes
Velásquez
Escalante
Medina
Montenegro
Ortiz Stadium: Estadio Tiburcio Carías Andino
21 September 1982 Olimpia1–1MotaguaTegucigalpa
Norales Bennett Stadium: Estadio Tiburcio Carías Andino
17 October 1982 Olimpia0–0Real EspañaTegucigalpa
Stadium: Estadio Tiburcio Carías Andino
Referee: Orestes Aguilar
Note: Match suspended at 85' (0–0) as Real España abandoned the field for not accepting a late penalty. Olimpia was awarded the win.[2]
31 October 1982 Motagua1–1OlimpiaTegucigalpa
Reyes Norales Stadium: Estadio Tiburcio Carías Andino
14 November 1982 Victoria0–0Olimpia
Olimpia1–1Victoria

Unknown rounds

Olimpia4–0Atlético Morazán
Tegucigalpa
Independiente0–3Victoria
Calero
San Pedro Sula
Olimpia1–1Motagua
Tegucigalpa
Real España1–3Victoria
Centeno Girón
Lanza
Zúniga
San Pedro Sula
Olimpia5–2Atlético Morazán
Renderos
Tegucigalpa
Real España2–2Independiente
San Pedro Sula
Real España5–1Universidad
San Pedro Sula
MarathónDandy
Marathón
didn't show up
San Pedro Sula
OlimpiaAtlético Morazán
Tegucigalpa
Olimpia0–0Real España
Motagua2–2Marathón
Montenegro
Obando
Bernárdez
Carranza

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.