1979–80 Honduran Liga Nacional

The 1979–80 Honduran Liga Nacional season was the 14th edition of the Honduran Liga Nacional. The format of the tournament remained the same as the previous season. C.D. Marathón won the title after defeating Universidad in the finals.[1] Both teams qualified to the 1980 CONCACAF Champions' Cup. Additionally, Marathón, Universidad, C.D. Broncos and C.D. Victoria obtained berths to the 1980 Copa Fraternidad.

Liga Nacional
Season1979–80
ChampionsMarathón (1st)
RelegatedPortuario
CONCACAF Champions' CupMarathón
Universidad
Copa FraternidadMarathón
Universidad
Broncos
Victoria
Matches played158
Goals scored360 (2.28 per match)
Top goalscorerNorales (15)
All statistics correct as of 16 December 1979.

1979–80 teams edit

Regular season edit

Standings edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Marathón[a] 27 17 3 7 40 23 +17 37 Qualified to the Final round[b]
2 Olimpia 27 13 7 7 43 36 +7 33
3 Broncos 27 11 8 8 32 27 +5 30
4 Victoria 27 10 7 10 34 30 +4 27
5 Motagua 27 9 9 9 29 29 0 27 Forced to playoff[c]
6 Universidad 27 9 9 9 22 22 0 27
7 Platense 27 7 12 8 27 31 −4 26
8 Real España 27 7 9 11 28 23 +5 23
9 Vida 27 6 9 12 30 38 −8 21
10 Portuario 27 6 7 14 29 55 −26 19 Relegated to Segunda División[d]
Source: [citation needed]
Notes:
  1. ^ Marathón clinched final spot as Regular season winner.
  2. ^ Top five qualify to Final round.
  3. ^ Extra match required between Motagua and Universidad for fifth place.
  4. ^ Portuario relegated to second division.

Fifth place playoff edit

17 October 1979 Playoff Motagua 1–2 (a.e.t.) Universidad
Obando  

Final round edit

Pentagonal standings edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Universidad 8 4 4 0 7 3 +4 12 Qualified to the Final[a]
2 Victoria 8 3 2 3 10 10 0 8
3 Marathón 8 3 1 4 12 11 +1 7
4 Broncos 8 2 3 3 8 11 −3 7
5 Olimpia 8 2 2 4 4 6 −2 6
Source: [citation needed]
Notes:
  1. ^ Universidad qualified to the final as Final round winners.

Final edit

 
 
 
 
 
 
Marathón
 
 
 
 
 
 
Universidad

 
 
 
 
 
 
Universidad
 
 
 
 
 
 
Marathón

Top scorer edit

  •   Prudencio "Tecate" Norales (Olimpia) with 15 goals

Squads edit

Atlético Portuario
  Eristeo Gómez   Jorge Alberto "Camioncito" Duarte   Aníbal Bravo
  Carlos "Calín" Morales   Orlando "Choloma" Rodríguez   Ernesto Bravo
  Edgardo Núñez   Óscar Rolando "Martillo" Hernández   Roscoe Charles
  Pablo Orellana   Erick Cabalceta   Ramón Cruz Colindres
Broncos
  German "Loco" Guzmán   Iván Ramos   Luis Alberto Escaurizza
  Cruz Ramón Serrano "Guaya" Cruz
Marathón
  Jorge Phoyoú   Roberto Reynaldo "Robot" Bailey Sargent   Hernán Santiago "Cortés" García Martínez
  Juan Carlos Weber   Luis Alonso Guzmán Velásquez   Carlos Solís
  Pablo "Payique" Espinoza   Richard Kenneth Payne   Alfonso Munguía
  José Martínez   Carlos Guevara   Alberto Merelles
  Arturo Payne   Roberto Zilkiewicks   Celso Güity
  Porfirio Armando Betancourt   Efraín "Pucho" Osorio   Exequiel "Estupiñán" García
  Ramón "Albañil" Osorio   Jorge Alberto "Cuca" Bueso Iglesias   Félix Concepción Carranza
  René "Maravilla" Suazo   Camilo Mejía   Juan Contreras
  Jorge Sánchez   Leónidas Nolasco   Carlos "Calín" Morales
  Francisco Javier Toledo   Arturo Torres "Pacharaca" Bonilla   Gilberto Leonel Machado García
  Carlos Mejía
Motagua
  Héctor Ramón "Pecho de Aguila" Zelaya   Luis Alberto "Chito" Reyes   Rigoberto Sosa
  Héctor "Lin" Zelaya
Olimpia
  Raúl David Fúnez   Prudencio "Tecate" Norales   Ramón Antonio "Pilín" Brand
  José Salomón "Turco" Nazzar   Jorge Alberto "Perro" Gonzáles   Jorge Alberto "Indio" Urquía Elvir
  Horacio Parham Castro
Platense
  Juan Jerezano   Tony Laing   Júnior Rashford Costly
  Tomás Cedricks Ewens "Quito" Wagner   Edith Hernando Contreras   Alex Rodríguez
Real España
  Jimmy Steward   Julio César "El Tile" Arzú   Antonio "Gato" Pavón Molina
  Walter Jimminson   Julio del Carmen Tapia Callao   Edelmín "Pando" Castro
  Alberto Ferreira da Silva   José Luis Cruz Figueroa   José Estanislao "Tanayo" Ortega
  Julio Roberto "Chino" Ortiz
Universidad
  Roger Mayorga   "Pirata" Fernández   Daniel "Diablo" Sambulá
Victoria
  Luis Alonso "Chorompo" Zúniga   Ramón Nectaly "Liebre" Guardado   Efraín Martínez "Diablillo" Amaya
  José Reynaldo Villagra   David Goff   Francisco Jiménez
  Miguel Angel "Primitivo" Ortiz   Fausto Humberto "Chiva" Ruiz   Marco Tulio López
Vida
  Dennis Hinds   Matilde Selím Lacayo   Carlos Orlando Caballero
  Roberto "Macho" Figueroa   Junior Mejía

Known results edit

Round 1 edit

Vida3 – 1Platense
Hinds  
La Ceiba

Pentagonal edit

Olimpia1 – 0Marathón
Tegucigalpa
Marathón2 – 0Olimpia
San Pedro Sula
Universidad1 – 0Victoria
Aguilar  
Tegucigalpa
Olimpia0 – 1Victoria
Villagra  
Tegucigalpa

Unknown rounds edit

Victoria5–0Atlético Portuario
La Ceiba
Olimpia2–0Motagua
Romero  
Parham  
Tegucigalpa
Universidad1–0Real España
Fernández  
Tegucigalpa
Universidad2–0Motagua
Fernández   1'
Tegucigalpa
Olimpia2–2Broncos
Tegucigalpa
Marathón1–0Olimpia
San Pedro Sula
Victoria1–0Olimpia
López  
La Ceiba
Real España3–2Motagua
Castro  
San Pedro Sula
Platense4–1Broncos
San Pedro Sula
Olimpia6–2Atlético Portuario
Norales        
Chavarría    
Charles  
Duarte  
Tegucigalpa
Platense0–0Atlético Portuario
Puerto Cortés
Platense2–1Atlético Portuario
San Pedro Sula
Platense1–1Atlético Portuario
San Pedro Sula
Motagua1–2Olimpia
Tegucigalpa
Olimpia2–1Motagua
Tegucigalpa

Curiosities edit

On 8 April 1979, Real C.D. España played two games. They lost 1–0 against Universidad at Tegucigalpa in the domestic league and 1–0 against Aurora in Guatemala for the 1979 Copa Fraternidad finals.[2]

References edit