1978–79 Honduran Liga Nacional

The 1978–79 Honduran Liga Nacional season was the 13th edition of the Honduran Liga Nacional. The format of the tournament remained the same as the previous season. C.D. Motagua won the title after defeating Real C.D. España in the finals.[1] It's unclear why no Honduran representation was sent to the 1979 CONCACAF Champions' Cup. Nevertheless, Motagua, Real España, Olimpia and Broncos obtained berths to the 1979 Copa Fraternidad.[2]

Liga Nacional
Season1978–79
ChampionsMotagua (4th)
RelegatedTiburones
CONCACAF Champions' CupNone
Copa FraternidadMotagua
Real España
Olimpia
Broncos
Matches played158
Goals scored281 (1.78 per match)
Top goalscorerBernárdez (15)
All statistics correct as of 28 January 1979.

1978–79 teams edit

Regular season edit

Standings edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Motagua[a] 27 13 12 2 34 16 +18 38 Qualified to the Final round[b]
2 Olimpia 27 13 7 7 29 17 +12 33
3 Real España 27 8 11 8 20 17 +3 27
4 Marathón 27 7 12 8 26 26 0 26
5 Platense 27 8 10 9 21 23 −2 26 Qualified to the repechage[c]
6 Broncos 27 5 16 6 17 19 −2 26
7 Universidad 27 8 10 9 17 20 −3 26
8 Vida 27 7 12 8 23 27 −4 26
9 Victoria 27 5 14 8 20 29 −9 24
10 Tiburones 27 4 10 13 20 34 −14 18 Relegated to Segunda División[d]
Source: [citation needed]
Notes:
  1. ^ Motagua secured final spot as regular season winner.
  2. ^ Top five qualify to final round.
  3. ^ Extra match required between Platense and Broncos to decide fifth place.
  4. ^ Tiburones relegated.

Fifth place playoff edit

12 October 1978 Playoff Broncos 0–1 Platense El Progreso, Yoro
(UTC−06:00) Awarded to Broncos[3] Flores   Stadium: Estadio Humberto Micheletti
  • Broncos advanced to Pentagonal on awarded points.

Final round edit

Pentagonal standings edit

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

Final edit

Top scorer edit

  •   Salvador Bernárdez (Motagua) with 15 goals

Squads edit

Broncos
  German "Loco" Guzmán   Carlos Luis "Macho" Arrieta   Cruz Ramón Serrano "Guaya" Cruz
Marathón
  Daniel Argelio Romero   Óscar Machigua   René "Maravilla" Suazo
  Exequiel "Estupiñán" García   Hernán Santiago "Cortés" García Martínez   Manuel Rodríguez
  David Sánchez   Tomás Wood   Manuel Doblado
  Leónidas Nolasco   Erick Cabalceta   Rigoberto Castro
  Richard Kenneth Payne   Arturo Torres "Pacharaca" Bonilla   Roberto Bailey
  Ramón "Albañil" Osorio   Francisco Javier Toledo   Julio "Ruso" Bonilla
  Ricardo Nuila   Osman Peña   Óscar Rolando "Martillo" Hernández
  Mario López   Carlos "Calín" Morales   Iván Ramos
  Félix Concepción Carranza   Jorge Alberto "Cuca" Bueso Iglesias   Celso Fredy Güity
  Porfirio Armando Betancourt   Luis Alonso Guzmán Velásquez
Motagua
  Roger Mayorga   Alcides Morales   Roberto Abrussezze
  Salvador "Pichini" Bernárdez   Carlos Mejía   Marco Tulio "Coyol" López
  Francisco "Pantera" Velásquez   Roberto "Muñiña" Escalante   Héctor "Lin" Zelaya
  René "Kun Fu" Velásquez   Camilo Mejía   Juan Ramón Aguilar
  Rubén "Chamaco" Guifarro   Marco Tulio Andino   Roxne Romero
  Ennos Pereira   Rigoberto Sosa   Luis Alberto "Chito" Reyes
  Ramón Enrique "Primitivo" Maradiaga   Héctor Ramón "Pecho de Aguila" Zelaya   Antonio Antonio Obando
  Samuel Rivera   Edgardo Sosa   José Luis Zelaya
  Mario Moncada   Feliciano Guardado   Mariano Godoy
  David Bueso   David Medina   Alberto Centurión
Olimpia
  Belarmino Rivera   Francisco Zelaya Pastrana   Alejandro "Indio" Ruiz
  Vicente Suazo   Óscar García   Héctor Uclés
  Víctor Romero   Víctor "Calero" Lozano   Óscar Batíz
  Adán Amador   Carlos Figueroa   Manuel Gámez
  Arturo Cáceres   Óscar Banegas   José Amador
  Joaquín del Arca   Osmán Zelaya   Ramón Antonio "Pilín" Brand
  Roger Chavarría   Prudencio "Tecate" Norales   Rigoberto "Shula" Gómez
  Jorge Alberto "Perro" González   Samuel Montoya   Walter Chávez
  Mario Hernán Juviny Carreño   Ricardo Carreño   Carlos Maldonado
  Walter "Estupiñán" Amador   José Antonio García   Jorge Alberto "Indio" Urquía Elvir
Platense
  Arnulfo Echeverría   Manuel de Jesús Fuentes   Tomás Cedricks Ewens "Quito" Wagner
  Danilo "Pulga" Flores   Arturo Payne   Rubén Rodríguez Peña Llantén
  Alex Rodríguez
Real España
  Julio César "El Tile" Arzú   Antonio "Gato" Pavón Molina   Walter Jimminson
  Julio del Carmen Tapia Callao   José Estanislao "Tanayo" Ortega   Clinton Campbell
  Gustavo Portillo   Junior Rashford Costly   Marvin Zúniga
  Alberto Ferreira da Silva   José Luis Cruz Figueroa   Jimmy James Bailey
  Allan Costly   Julio Roberto "Chino" Ortiz   Jimmy Steward
  Edith Hernando Contreras
Tiburones
  Juan Jerezano   "Yuyuga" Flores   David Silva
  Salustio Pacheco   Alejandro Palacios   "Nilo" Herrera
  Edgar Alfaro   Agustín Alemán   Pedro Colón
  José Reynaldo Villagra   Domingo Martínez
Universidad
  Roger Mayorga   Otoniel Oliva   Joaquín Pavón Sequeira
  Mauricio Cruz Jiron   Daniel "Diablo" Sambulá   José Salomón "Turco" Nazzar
Victoria
  Óscar Figueroa   Reynaldo Mejía Ortega   Camilo Bonifacio
  Roberto Reynaldo "Robot" Bailey Sargent   Efraín Martínez "Diablillo" Amaya   David Goff
  Pedro Caetano da Silva   Luis Alonso "Chorompo" Zúniga   Francisco Jiménez
  Miguel Ángel "Primitivo" Ortiz   Fausto Humberto "Chiva" Ruiz   Luis Edgardo Meléndez
Vida
  Gustavo Adolfo "Gorcha" Collins   Ramón Nectally "Liebre" Guardado   Carlos Humberto "Papeto" Lobo
  Edgardo Williams   Abraham Osorio   Peter Buchanan
  Hermenegildo Orellana   César "Cesarín" Aguirre   Marco Tulio "Socadito" Zelaya
  Carlos Aguirre   Neptally "Liebre" Guardado   Carlos Johnson
  Carlos Bejarano   Felipe "Embajador" Sánchez   Juan Dolmo Arzú
  Mario Ardón   Roberto "Macho" Figueroa   Carlos Talbot
  Manuel Gámez   Enrique "Palanca" Mendoza   Wilfredo Rodríguez
  Carlos Orlando Caballero   Dennis "Bomba" Hinds   Arnulfo Ardón
  Matilde Selim Lacayo   Carlos "Comay" Flores   Jesús "Bululo" Carías
  Jorge Bernárdez   Jaime Morales   Roberto Maradiaga

Known results edit

Round 1 edit

Real España2–0Tiburones
Pavón  

Pentagonal place playoff edit

Platense1–0Broncos

Pentagonal edit

Marathón1–1Olimpia
San Pedro Sula
Real España0–0Olimpia
San Pedro Sula
Real España4–3Broncos
Costly    
Bailey  
Jiminson 
Altamirano  
Arzú  
Cruz  
San Pedro Sula
Motagua2–0Marathón
Bernárdez  
López  
Danlí
Real España4–2Motagua
San Pedro Sula
Marathón2–3Broncos
San Pedro Sula
Marathón0–1Real España
Bailey  
San Pedro Sula
Olimpia1–0Motagua
Gámez  
Tegucigalpa
Marathón0–3Motagua
Escalante  
Godoy  
Obando  
San Pedro Sula
Olimpia0–0Real España
Tegucigalpa
Real España3–0Marathón
Bailey    
Jimminson  
San Pedro Sula
Olimpia2–0Marathón
Tegucigalpa
Motagua1–0Olimpia
Obando  
Tegucigalpa
Motagua0–1Real España
Tegucigalpa
Broncos0–0Marathón
Broncos1–1Real España

Unknown rounds edit

21 May 1978 Motagua v Broncos
CST Obando  
2 July 1978 Motagua v Vida
CST Obando  
23 July 1978 Motagua v Vida
CST Obando  
10 September 1978 Motagua 0–0 Olimpia Danlí
CST Stadium: Estadio Marcelo Tinoco
15 September 1978 Vida 2–2 Universidad La Ceiba
CST Figueroa       Fernández
  Zavala
Stadium: Estadio Nilmo Edwards
Tiburones0–3Motagua
Maradiaga  
Reyes  
Centurión  
Choluteca
Real España0–2Olimpia
Norales  
González  
San Pedro Sula
Motagua4–2Victoria
López    
Reyes  
Bernárdez  
Amaya  
Zelaya   0' (a.g.)
Danlí
Platense2–1Broncos
El Progreso
Marathón0–1Universidad
San Pedro Sula

References edit

  1. ^ RSSSF.com–Honduras - Final Tables 1965/66-1994/95–11 December 2009
  2. ^ RSSSF.com–Copa Fraternidad–29 November 2007
  3. ^ The game was suspended at 85' as Platense retired for not accepting a late penalty against them; the league decided to award the points to Broncos.