SC Angrense
Full nameSport Club Angrense
Founded (1929-12-01) 1 December 1929
GroundMunicipal Field of Angra do Heroísmo
Capacity2000
Presidente Assem.Avelino Luís Gonçalves
Presidente DireçãoBruno Mão de Ferro
CoachNuno Janeiro
LeagueCampeonato de Portugal
2021–22Portuguese District Championships, promoted
WebsiteClub website

Sport Clube Angrense (also abbreviated as S.C. Angrense) is a multi-disciplinary sports club, located in the municipality of Angra do Heroísmo, on the island of Terceira, in the Portuguese archipelago of the Azores. The S.C. Angrense soccer team plays in the Campeonato de Portugal.

History

The origins of the Sport Club have their origin in the beginning of the 20th century, when its football players first played with a ball that arrived from England, in the fields of Relvão, alongside the Bay of Angra near the walls of the Fort of São João Baptista.[1] The first teams that developed in Terceira were unorganized, but slowly developed into a formal union of teams, leading to the creation of the Associação de Foot-Ball de Angra do Heroísmo on 4 August 1921.[1] At that time the União Desportiva dos Empregados do Comércio (Sporting Union of Commercial Workers), one of the oldest football clubs on Terceira, that would form the nucleus of Sport Club Angrense. In the beginning this group only accepted enthusiasts linked with commerce, but later accepted a series of players who had difficulty in being recruited by other teams.[1]

The growth in the interest in organized football increased markedly, resulting in the construction of the Campo de Jogos de Angra do Heroísmo (Angra do Heroísmo Game Field), inaugurated on 24 June 1924.[1]

But, due to disagreements on the direction of the club, the Commercial Workers Union was dissolved, resulting in the appearance of several new teams, that included Club Desportivo Angrense (Angrense Sports Club), known locally as Os Caveiras (the skulls), and Sporting Club da Terceira.[1]

Union

For many of its early years, the Terceira Sporting Club just practised physical education, with its seat in the old Convent of Graca, in Alto das Covas.[1] On 22 November 1929, through the initiative of the members of the Terceira Sporting Club, these clubs merged to form Sport Club Angrense.[1] Officially, the club was organized on 1 December 1929, and approved by the Governor of the Autonomous District of Angra do Heroísmo (on 16 January 1942).[1][2] A letter from the Administrative Council, signed by President Lieutenant Gil Gonçalves and dated 2 December 1929, was published in the weekly publication A Pátria (14 December 1929) to the creation of the new club.[1]

Apart from President Gil Gonçalves, the administrative council consisted of: Jacinto da Câmara Teixeira (Vice-President), António Mendes Linhares (Tresurer), Armando Magalhães de Mendonça (first Secretary), José Elias do Amaral (second Secretary), António Lino dos Santos Ramos Moniz (Director) and José Correia Berbereia (Director).[1] In addition to corresponding publications in O Pátria, acknowledge the teams training schedule in the city field on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, with the season opener dated for 22 December 1929, against the Lusitânia Sport Club.[1] This game, which would be the first of an ongoing rivalry between the two teams, was won by Angrense (4-3), and included the following players: José C. da Silva Freitas (José Baptista), Pedro José Pimentel (Pedro Brasileiro) and Mário Pereira de Aguiar; José Luís Gonçalves (José das Terras), Eugénio Pereira de Aguiar and Ildefonso Borges; Manuel Serpa Bulcão, Manuel Pereira, António Lino dos Santos Moniz, João Borges and José António Ávila. The goals were marked by Manuel Pereira, João Borges (captain of the team at the time) and António Lino (who scored twice).[1] The first team was equipped with a red jersey, with black vertical stripes, taking on some of the characteristics of the former Sporting Club of Terceira (red jerseys and white shorts) and Club Desportivo Angrense (all black jerseys).[1]

Champions

The importance of Angrense within Azorean football was consolidated between the 1930s and 1950s, with a total of eight district championships.[1] By the time Angrense captured its first title, in the district championship of Angra do Heroísmo (1931-1932), the team had already adapted its recognizable red shirt, white shorts and red socks, that was comparable to the early Sporting Club of Terceira.[1]

At the end of the 1933-1934 season, Angrense won the Azorean championship in Ponta Delgada, against rivals União Micaelense and Angústias da Horta.[1] This championship was never recognized officially, because the Azorean tournament (which began to serve as the regional championship), for the Portuguese Cup, only began in the following season.[1]

In the 1936-1937 season, Angrense was the first team from Terceira to capture the Azorean title, on home soil, in the Angra do Heroísmo. Game Field.[1] In addition to winning this title, within the same epoch Angrense became a farm team of S.L. Benfica, based on Benfica's annual accounts and report (1936–37). From here Angrense began to use the same equipment and colors, including the eagle and motto E Pluribus Unum.[1][3]

On 1 December 1954, Angrense commemorated its silver anniversary under the presidency of Major Miguel Cristovão de Araújo.[1] Part of these celebrations included an honorary game with União Praiense, and solemn ceremony and speech by Lieutenant-Colonel Frederico Lopes Júnior, one of the early club players.[1]

In May 1958, Angrense brought to Terceira the Senhor Santo Cristo do Milagres Cup, after winning a four-way tournament between Santa Clara, União Micaelense and Marítimo sport clubs.[1]

It was in the 1960s, that Angrense achieved its highest point, when it won the insular, Azorean and district championships during the 1959-60 seasons.[1] A large crowd was present on 3 May 1960, in the Angra do Heroísmo Game Field, to watch the game between Angrense and Marítimo of Madeira, during the quarter-finals of the Portuguese Cup. Angrense won this championship over Marítimo 2-1, while the secondary game was decided in a draw.[1] For the first time in regional football history, an Azorean team participated in the Portuguese Cup, against the national champion and benefactor, Benfica.[1] Benfica's first trip to the Azores for a championship, the team arrived on 4 June 1960, to the enthusiasm of local spectators and supporters, and members of the team travelled, not only to Terceira, but to the islands of Faial and São Miguel, where they were met was adulation.[1] In the final, Benfica won 2-0 on 5 June 1960, and later soundly defeated Angrense 10-0 in the return engagement in the Estádio da Luz, Lisbon, on 12 June.[1]

Two seasons later, after capturing the island title, Angrense once again captured the district title in Angra do Heroísmo, during the 1961-62 season.[1]

Current squad

As of 12 April 2017

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 David Dinis
2 DF Portugal POR Diogo Silva
3 MF Guinea-Bissau GNB Jaime Seidi
4 MF Portugal POR Rúben Miranda
5 DF Portugal POR Gonçalo Valadão
6 DF Portugal POR Ivan Santos
7 MF Portugal POR Rui Silveira
8 DF Portugal POR Miguel Oliveira
9 FW Portugal POR Cristiano Magina
10 MF Portugal POR João Borges
11 DF Portugal POR Eugénio Fernandes
12 GK Portugal POR Rui Santos
No. Pos. Nation Player
13 DF Portugal POR Vitor Miranda
14 FW Portugal POR Tiago Macedo
19 FW Portugal POR Wilson Dias
21 MF Portugal POR Jordanes Medeiros
22 DF Portugal POR Gustavo Mendonça
23 GK Portugal POR Délcio Azevedo
26 DF Portugal POR Ivanildo Reis
28 MF Portugal POR Pedro Aguiar
30 MF Portugal POR Nuno Graxinha
55 DF Portugal POR Pedro Ferreira
76 GK Portugal POR Filipe Soares
80 FW Portugal POR Marco Aurélio

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 SC Angrense (ed.). "História" (in Portuguese). Angra do Heroísmo (Azores), Portugal: Sport Club Angrense.
  2. The only revision to this charter was approved on May 2005, during a general assembly.
  3. In 1965, Benfica separated its branches and Angrense became a local delegation of the team.

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