1984–85 Honduran Liga Nacional

The 1984–85 Honduran Liga Nacional season was the 19th edition of the Honduran Liga Nacional. The format of the tournament consisted of a four round-robin schedule followed by a 4-team playoff round. Club Deportivo Olimpia won the title[1] after winning both rounds and qualified to the 1985 CONCACAF Champions' Cup along with runners-up C.D.S. Vida.

Liga Nacional
Season1984–85
ChampionsOlimpia (7th)
RelegatedSula
CONCACAF Champions' CupOlimpia
Vida
Matches played192
Goals scored355 (1.85 per match)
Top goalscorerCenteno (17)

1984–85 teams edit

Regular season edit

Standings edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Olimpia[a] 36 13 18 5 41 31 +10 44 Qualified to the Final round[b]
2 Vida 36 13 16 7 44 35 +9 42
3 Victoria 36 14 12 10 44 33 +11 40
4 Marathón 36 12 14 10 36 27 +9 38
5 Motagua 36 11 13 12 30 33 −3 35
6 Platense 36 6 23 7 26 29 −3 35
7 Universidad 36 9 16 11 35 39 −4 34
8 Juventud Morazánica 36 6 20 10 27 34 −7 32
9 Real España 36 9 14 13 26 34 −8 32
10 Sula 36 8 12 16 27 41 −14 28 Relegated to the Second division[c]
Source: [citation needed]
Notes:
  1. ^ Olimpia clinched a spot for final match.
  2. ^ Top four qualify for final round.
  3. ^ Sula relegated to second division.

Final round edit

Cuadrangular standings edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
1 Olimpia[a] 6 5 0 1 7 2 +5 10
2 Vida 6 2 2 2 6 5 +1 6
3 Victoria 6 1 2 3 4 7 −3 4
4 Marathón 6 1 2 3 2 5 −3 4
Source: [citation needed]
Notes:
  1. ^ Olimpia automatic champions as winner of regular season and final round.
    No final match was necessary.

Top scorer edit

Squads edit

Juventud Morazánica
  Oscar Villegas,   Jorge Hibrán Maldonado   Alfonso Ramón "Niño" López
  Ramón Edgardo Moradel Zapata   Francisco Pancho Gonzalez   Kaco Reyes
  "Tigre" Carbajal   Choreta Ordoñez   Crisanto Batista
  Felix Cáceres   Gilberto Ramírez   Samuel Rivera
  Martin Lacayo   Pedro Manzanares
Marathón
  Erasmo "Chícharo" Guerrero   José Luis "Joche" Alvarado   Jorge Alberto "Cuca" Bueso Iglesias
  Marco Antonio "Tono" García   Oswaldo Zaldívar   Marco Antonio Chávez
  Delio Billonay Fajardo   Noel Omar Renderos   Gilberto Leonel Machado García
  Roberto Reynaldo "Robot" Bailey Sargent   Arturo Torres "Pacharaca" Bonilla   Pablo Madrid
  Ciro Paulino "Palic" Castillo   Nelson Quiroz
Motagua
  José Luis Cruz Figueroa   Roy Arturo Padilla Bardales   Luis Alberto "Chito" Reyes
  Junior Rashford Costly   Juan Gómez Ortiz   Oscar Medina
  Amílcar Leonel Suazo   Frank Ponce
Olimpia
  Juan Néstor Dorony   Carlos Solís   Raúl Martínez Sambulá
  Juan Alberto Flores Maradiaga   Alejandro "Indio" Ruiz   Arturo Recarte Cáceres
  José Emilio Martínez   José Mario "Chueco" Figueroa   Óscar Banegas
  Bayardo Martínez   Fernando "Azulejo" Bulnes   Víctor Romero
  Fernando Tovar   Víctor López   Armando Aguilar
  Luis Arriola   Daniel Zapata   Ramón "Pilín" Bran
  Jorge Alberto "Perro" González   Osman Madrid   Juan Carlos Espinoza
  Prudencio "Tecate" Norales   Roger Javier Valladares   Carlos "Gigio" Maldonado
  Belarmino Rivera   Benito Suazo   José González
  Rigoberto Ruiz   Antonio "Flaco" Hernández   Darío Mejía
  Mario Castellanos
Platense
  Juan Jerezano   Armando López "Babalaba" Bodden   Raúl Centeno Gamboa
  Nelson "Hungaro" Larios   Eugenio Dolmo Flores   Carlos Roberto Deras
  Carlos Javier Marquez
Real España
  Julio César "El Tile" Arzú   José Mauricio "Guicho" Fúnez Barrientos   Jimmy Steward
  Karl Antonio Roland   Jorge Arzú   David Maldonado
  Manuel Fuentes López   Carlos Orlando Caballero   Edgardo Emilson Soto Fajardo
  Nelson Benavídez   Hernán Santiago García Martínez   Esteban Pitío Centeno
  Luis Laing   Nahúm Alberto Espinoza Zerón   Edith Hernando Contreras
  Miguel Antonio "Hino" Mathews
Sula
  Raúl David Fúnez   Marco Antonio "Machaca" Soriano   Fernando Nuila
  Carlos "Perro" Zavala   Luis Alonso Zúniga   Antonio "Machangay" Amaya López
  José Manuel Enamorado Díaz   Armando "Quebrado" Martínez   Manuel de Jesús Rivera
  Celso Fredy Güity   Carlos Aguilar Bonilla
Universidad
  Luis Oswaldo "Che" Altamirano   Julián Núñez   José Marcial "Canelo" Murillo
  Salomón Nazzar   Olman Flores   Guillermo Salazar
  Víctor Rutilio Mercadal   Jorge "Chino" Euceda   Nelson "La Titi" Pavón Castillo
  Samuel "Chucho" Armijo   Roberto "Chele" Barahona   Víctor Romero
  David Bueso
Victoria
  Jorge Alberto "Camioncito" Duarte   Carlos Ramón Monchín" Rodríguez   Luis Azneth Ortiz
  Luis Alonso Zelaya   David Goff   Luis Alonso "Chorompo" Zúniga
  César Martínez   Miguel Angel "Primitivo" Ortiz   Ramón Berckling
Vida
  Marvin Geovany "Mango" Henríquez   Wilson Omar Reyes Martínez   Natividad Morales Barrios
  Marco Tulio "Zocadito" Zelaya   Rolando "Pipo" Valladares Laguna   Juan Dolmo "Juanito" Arzú
  Matilde Selím Lacayo   Junior Mejía

Known results edit

Round 1 edit

Juventud Morazánica0–1Real España
Arzú  
Platense0–0Marathón
Puerto Cortés

Cuadrangular edit

Marathón1–0Olimpia
San Pedro Sula
Victoria2–0Marathón
Zelaya  
La Ceiba
Vida3–0Victoria
Valladares  
La Ceiba
Olimpia1–0Marathón
Tegucigalpa
Vida0–1Olimpia
Dorony   84' (pen)
La Ceiba
Olimpia0–0Victoria
Tegucigalpa

Unknown rounds edit

Sula1–1Juventud Morazánica
El Progreso
OlimpiaReal España
Fuentes  
Tegucigalpa
Marathón4–0Olimpia
San Pedro Sula
Motagua2–2Vida
Acosta  
Tegucigalpa
Motagua1–0Marathón
Reyes  
Tegucigalpa
Olimpia3–0Marathón
Tegucigalpa
Olimpia2–0Sula
Motagua2–1Victoria
Suazo  
Maradiaga  
Ulruch  
Tegucigalpa
Vida5–1Juventud Morazánica
La Ceiba
Real España1–1Sula
San Pedro Sula
Victoria4–0Vida
La Ceiba
Marathón2–3Motagua
San Pedro Sula
Real España1–0Marathón
Maldonado  
San Pedro Sula
Marathón5–0Olimpia
Bueso    
García  
Renderos  
Machado  
San Pedro Sula
Referee: Óscar Chávez
Vida2–2Real España
San Pedro Sula
Motagua2–1Sula
Chavarría  
Costly  
  Enamorado
Tegucigalpa
Sula2–0Vida
Vindel  
San Pedro Sula
Motagua1–3Juventud Morazánica
Suazo   Reyes  
Zapata  
Manzanares  
Tegucigalpa
Real España1–1Olimpia
Centeno   [2]   Martínez
San Pedro Sula
Referee: Joaquín Ricardo Ortiz
Sula0–1Victoria
San Pedro Sula
Universidad3–2Olimpia
Tegucigalpa
Vida3–0Real España
Vida3–0Sula

References edit

  1. ^ RSSSF.com–Honduras - Final Tables 1965/66-1994/95–11 December 2009
  2. ^ Match suspended at 85' (1–1) as Olimpia abandoned the field for not accepting a late penalty. Real España was awarded the win.