1991–92 Honduran Liga Nacional

The 1991–92 Honduran Liga Nacional season was the 26th edition of the Honduran Liga Nacional. The format of the tournament remained the same as the previous season. C.D. Motagua won the title[1] after defeating Real C.D. España in the finals.[2] Both teams qualified to the 1992 CONCACAF Champions' Cup.

Liga Nacional
Season1991–92
ChampionsMotagua (5th)
RelegatedAtlético Indio
CONCACAF Champions' CupMotagua
Real España
Matches played157
Goals scored349 (2.22 per match)
Top goalscorerBennett (12)
All statistics correct as of 5 March 1992.

1991–92 teams edit

Regular season edit

Standings edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Motagua[a] 27 16 5 6 38 19 +19 37 Qualified to the Final round[b]
2 Real España 27 14 7 6 37 23 +14 35
3 Olimpia 27 14 4 9 39 23 +16 32
4 Marathón 27 9 10 8 32 27 +5 28
5 Platense 27 8 11 8 27 28 −1 27
6 Victoria 27 9 8 10 29 28 +1 26
7 Vida 27 7 10 10 22 31 −9 24
8 Petrotela 27 5 14 8 23 35 −12 24
9 Sula 27 5 9 13 24 39 −15 19
10 Atlético Indio 27 2 14 11 19 37 −18 18 Relegated to Segunda División[c]
Source: [citation needed]
Notes:
  1. ^ Motagua clinched first spot as regular season winner.
  2. ^ Top 5 qualified to the Final round.
  3. ^ Atlético Indio relegated.

Final round edit

Pentagonal standings edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Real España 8 6 1 1 15 5 +10 13 Qualified to the Final[a]
2 Olimpia 8 5 1 2 18 9 +9 11
3 Platense 8 2 3 3 10 13 −3 7
4 Marathón 8 2 3 3 12 17 −5 7
5 Motagua 8 0 2 6 3 14 −11 2
Source: [citation needed]
Notes:
  1. ^ Real España qualified to the Final as winner of Pentagonal.

Final edit

 
 
 
 
 
 
Real España
 
 
 
 
 
 
Motagua
5 March 1992 1st leg Motagua 1–0 Real España Tegucigalpa, Francisco Morazán
19:30 CST Ávila   63' Stadium: Estadio Tiburcio Carías Andino
Attendance: 32,299
Referee: Gonzalo Tejada
 
 
 
 
 
 
Motagua
 
 
 
 
 
 
Real España
  • Motagua won 1–0 on aggregate score.
Liga Nacional
1991–92 Champion
C.D. Motagua
5th title

Top scorer edit

Squads edit

Atlético Indio
  Arnold Vladimir López   Edwin Ponce   Danery Berrios
  Cesilio "Chilo" Amaya   Eduardo, Rinaldi   Juan "Pelon" Flores
  Julio Cesar Ortega   Oscar Murillo   Jose Valladares
  Geremias "Burrito" Gonzalez   Eloy Molina   Mariano. Crisanto
  Rogelio. Enamorado   Ambrosio Rochez   Prudencio "Tekate" Norales
  Johnatan. Escalante   Victor Rutilio Mercadal   Jose "Leli" Guevara
Marathón
  Dangelo Daltino Bautista   Alfredo, Flores   José Luis "Joche" Alvarado
  Walter "Gualala" Trejo   Juan. Gómez Ortiz   Fernando. Ferreira
  Bayron. Suazo   Rolando Padilla   Marco. Antonio García
  Carlos Orlando Caballero   Luis Cornet   Leonel. Machado
  José Ulloa Villatoro   Rubén. Baeque   Nicolás Suazo Velásquez
  Geovany. Morán   Henry Guevara   José Luis "Joche" Alvarado
  Neptaly Turcios   Mauro Pacheco
Motagua
  Marvin Geovany "Mango" Henríquez   Carlos Augusto Solís   Alex Geovany Ávila
  Patrocinio Sierra Doblado   Miguel Armando Seminario   José "Panterita" Mejía
  Pablo Martínez   Carlos Matamoros   Edgar Sierra
  Mario Fernández Norales   Miguel Texeira   Jorge Flores
  Óscar Murillo   Vicente Viera   German "Ñato" Rodríguez
  Juan Ferreira   César Augusto "Nene" Obando   Fabricio Pérez
  Giovanni "Venado" Castro   Saturnino Norales Arzú   Juan Carlos "Rata" Contreras
  Hernaín Arzú   Donaldo Reyes Guillén   Iván Ponce
  Juan "Ninja" Padilla Bardales   David Pereira   Pedro Martínez
  Marlon Núñez   Ramón "Monchín" Rodríguez   Mateo Ávila Benedict
  Ramón Romero "Romerito"   Alex Alaniz   Julio Tejeda
Olimpia
  Belarmino Rivera   Eduardo "Balín" Bennett   Carlos José Laje Moreno
  Arnold Cruz   Danilo "Pollo" Galindo   Alex Pineda Chacón
  Rudy Alberto Williams   Juan Carlos Espinoza   Fernando Tovar Durón
  Dennis Antonio Piedy   Denilson Costa de Oliveira   Nahúm Alberto Espinoza Zerón
  Erick Darío Fú Lanza   José Antonio "Flaco" Hernández   Gilberto Gerónimo Yearwood
  Wilmer Neal "Matador" Velásquez   Óscar Gerardo "Maradona" Cruz
Petrotela
  Golbin Bonilla   Raúl Centeno Gamboa
Platense
  Anthony Hinds Mathews   Rossel Cacho   Mauricio Edgardo Figueroa
  Jorge Arita Neals
Real España
  Wilmer Enrique "Supermán" Cruz   José Mauricio "Guicho" Fúnez Barrientos   Juan Ramón "Montuca" Castro
  Ciro Paulino "Palic" Castillo   Nahamán Humberto González   Edith Hernando Contreras
  Karl Antonio Roland   Víctor Martín Castro   José Luis "Pili" Aguirre
  Norman "Tedy" Martínez   Luis Orlando "Caralampio" Vallejo Arguijo   Edgardo Emilson Soto Fajardo
  Erick Gerardo Gallegos   Marco Vinicio "Chacal" Ortega   Washington Leonardo "Piojo" Hernández
  Marco Antonio Anariba Zepeda   Carlos Fernando Landa   José Luis López Escobar
  Camilo Bonilla Paz   Luis Arriola Carter
Sula
  Sergio Rubén Busciglio   Víctor Hernán Duarte
Victoria
  Carlos Roberto "Condorito" Mejía Alvarenga   Jorge Alberto "Bala" Bennett   Enrique Reneau
  Renán "Chimbo" Aguilera Contreras
Vida
  Carlos Ramírez   Rudy Pine Pack   Wilson Omar Reyes Martínez
  Roy Arturo Padilla Bardales   René Arturo David "Pupa" Martínez   Jorge Ernesto Pineda

Known results edit

Week 1 edit

Week 3 edit

28 April 1991 Vida 2–1 Olimpia La Ceiba
Stadium: Estadio Nilmo Edwards

Week 10 edit

18 July 1991 Olimpia v Victoria Tegucigalpa
Stadium: Estadio Tiburcio Carías Andino
Note: Olimpia didn't show up

Pentagonal edit

Real España2–0Olimpia
Vallejo  
Castillo  
San Pedro Sula
Motagua1–1Marathón
Castro   Ferreira  
Tegucigalpa
Platense2–2Olimpia
San Pedro Sula
Motagua1–3Real España
Tegucigalpa
Marathón1–1Real España
Cornet   Ortega  
San Pedro Sula
Olimpia2–0Motagua
Cruz  
Velásquez  
Tegucigalpa
Olimpia1–3Marathón
Costa   Baeque  
Ferreira  
N. Suazo  
Tegucigalpa
Platense2–0Motagua
Mathews  
Figueroa  
San Pedro Sula
Marathón2–1Motagua
Cornet  
Suazo  
Romero  
San Pedro Sula
Olimpia2–0Real España
Piedy  
Costa  
Tegucigalpa
Real España3–0Motagua
San Pedro Sula
Real España1–0Marathón
Anariba  
San Pedro Sula
Motagua0–1Olimpia
Cruz  
Tegucigalpa
Marathón2–7Olimpia
Ferreira   62' (pen.)
Trejo   75'
Espinoza   36'   87'
Chacón   48'   58'
Galindo   51'
Costa   59'
Cruz   70'
San Pedro Sula
Attendance: 2,223
Referee: Arturo Tábora
Motagua0–0Platense
Tegucigalpa
Olimpia3–0Platense
Tegucigalpa

Unknown rounds edit

Platense0–1Victoria
Flores  
San Pedro Sula
Motagua3–1Atlético Indio
Castro    
Obando  
Molina  
Tegucigalpa
Tela Timsa0–3Real España
Tela
Atlético Indio1–1Motagua
Crisanto   Castro  
Tegucigalpa
Sula5–1Victoria
La Lima
Sula0–1Olimpia
Yearwood  
La Lima
Olimpia1–2Real España
Hernández  
Tegucigalpa
Victoria2–0Marathón
La Ceiba
Motagua2–0Real España
Seminario    
Tegucigalpa
Sula0–1Olimpia
Costa   17'
La Lima
Motagua2–1Vida
Tegucigalpa
Súper Estrella4–2Real España
Danlí
Motagua1–0Olimpia
Seminario  
Tegucigalpa
Motagua0–1Marathón
Tegucigalpa
Motagua1–0Atlético Indio
Castro  
Tegucigalpa
Real España0–0Marathón
San Pedro Sula
Motagua7–0Súper Estrella
Tegucigalpa
Victoria1–1Vida
Lanza  
La Ceiba
Vida1–2Tela Timsa
La Ceiba
Motagua4–0Platense
Avila    
Pérez  
Obando  
Tegucigalpa
Olimpia2–0Vida

Controversies edit

On 14 April 1991, C.D. Victoria lost at home to C.D. Olimpia on week 1 with a 3–5 score. The game was later protested by Victoria due to the inclusion of Antonio Hernández in the Olimpia's lineup. Hernández, who had been sent off in the last game of the previous season, was inactive for one game. After two months of uncertainty, the Discipline Board decided to ignore Victoria's claim after they received a notification from Olimpia stating that Hernández complied with the suspension in an off-season friendly.[4]

References edit