List of S.L. Benfica players

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Eusébio is Benfica’s all-time top goalscorer.
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Sport Lisboa e Benfica is a Portuguese professional football team based in São Domingos de Benfica, Lisbon.[1][a] The club was formed in 1904 and played its first competitive match on 4 November 1906, when it entered the inaugural edition of the Campeonato de Lisboa. They won their first title in 1910, and their first nationwide club competition in 1930, the Campeonato de Portugal, a knockout competition which determined the Portuguese champion among the winners of the regional championships.[7] In 1934, an experimental league competition known as Primeira Liga was introduced in Portuguese football. Due to its success among the clubs, it became the official top-tier championship in 1938, in place of the Campeonato de Portugal.[7] Since its first edition, Benfica have won a record 37 titles.[9] Internationally, they won the European Cup twice, in 1961 and 1962.[9]

Since their first competitive match, more than 750 players have appeared in first-team matches for the club, and almost 150 have made at least 100 appearances. Six former players went on to be first-team managers: Fernando Caiado, José Augusto, Toni, Artur Jorge, Shéu, and Fernando Chalana. Benfica’s record appearance maker is Nené, who played 575 matches during his record 18-year career at the club; he is followed by António Veloso and Luisão, each with 538 appearances in 15 seasons.Manuel Bento, who appeared 465 times for the club, is the oldest player to have played for Benfica. He was 41 years and 298 days when he played against Belenenses on 20 May 1990.

Eusébio is the club’s top goalscorer with 474 goals in 15 seasons, 317 of which were scored in league matches. Ten players have made more than 400 appearances, including four members of the 1961 European Cup-winning team.[15] Other than Eusébio, only two players, Nené and José Águas, have scored more than 300 goals for the club.

  • The list is ordered by date of debut.
  • Appearances as a substitute are included.
  • Statistics are correct up to and including the match played on 2 April 2023. Where a player left the club permanently after this date, his statistics are updated to the date of departure.
Position
Playing positions are listed according to the tactical formations that were employed at the time. Thus the change in the names of defensive and midfield positions reflects the tactical evolution that occurred from the 1960s onwards.
Club career
Club career is defined as the first and last calendar years in which the player appeared for the club in any of the competitions listed below.
League appearances and League goals
League appearances and goals comprise those in the Campeonato de Lisboa and the Primeira Liga. Starting in the 1934–35 season, appearances are only counted in the Primeira Liga.
Total appearances and Total goals
Total appearances and goals comprise those in the Primeira Liga, Taça de Portugal (including in the early denomination as Campeonato de Portugal), Taça da Liga, Supertaça, European Cup/Champions League, UEFA Cup/Europa League, and defunct competitions such as Campeonato de Lisboa, Latin Cup, Cup Winners’ Cup, Inter-Cities Fairs Cup and Intercontinental Cup
International team
Countries are listed only for players who have been selected for international football. Only the highest level of international competition is given, except where a player competed for more than one country, in which case the highest level reached for each country is shown.
Caps
For players having played at full international level, the caps column counts the number of such appearances during their career with the club. All information relating to international teams, including number of caps won while with the club, is sourced to Tovar (2012), pp. 679–761, unless otherwise noted.

Players with 100 or more appearances[edit]

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José Águas is Benfica’s second-highest all-time goalscorer.
A man in a coat, talking with a man in a suit

José Torres (left) played for Benfica for 12 years, winning nine league titles.
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Mário Coluna represented Benfica in 525 games, the third highest number in club history.
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A man with glasses, wearing a red coat.

Shéu made 487 appearances for Benfica.
A middle-age man lining up to play association football
A man wearing a red shirt, changing direction. In the background is another man watching.

Óscar Cardozo scored 172 goals for Benfica, more than any other foreigner.
A man wearing a yellow shirt, lining up to sing their national anthem.

Luisão made 538 appearances for Benfica, the second-highest number alongside Veloso.
A man lining up.

Gilberto is the most recent player to have made his 100th appearance.

Players with fewer than 100 appearances[edit]

  1. ^ Originally located in Benfica; in 1959, the parish was split in two, with Estádio da Luz located in the new parish.[3]
  2. ^ Player with the most hat-tricks for Benfica, aged 17
  3. ^ Second overall for both league and total goals scored
  4. ^ a b c d e f Player who later became first-team head coach.
  5. ^ Third overall in number of appearances
  6. ^ He holds the club record for total goals scored, league goals scored, and goals scored in a top-flight season (42, in 1967–68).
  7. ^ He holds the club record for both league and overall appearances, and is joint-first with Bento in consecutive seasons at Benfica (18).
  8. ^ Oldest to play for Benfica, aged 41
  9. ^ Second overall in number of appearances
  10. ^ He holds the club record for most trophies won (20) and matches as captain.
  11. ^ These statistics are missing a league goal because Soccerway attributes Pizzi’s goal in a 2–0 away win over Braga on 30 November 2015 to Stanislav Kritsyuk as an own goal. According to Liga Portugal (official source) and Benfica, Pizzi scored that goal.[113][114]
  12. ^ Joined in the 2015–16 season, but only made his first team debut in 2018–19 season.

References[edit]

General

  • Tovar, Rui Miguel (2012). Almanaque do Benfica [Benfica’s Almanac] (in Portuguese). Alfragide: Lua de Papel. ISBN 978-989-23-2087-8.
  • Pereira, Luís Miguel (2014). Bíblia do Benfica [Benfica’s Bible] (in Portuguese). Carcavelos: PrimeBooks. ISBN 978-989-655-215-2.

Specific



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