C.F. Os Unidos

Unidos de Lisboa
Full name Clube de Futebol os Unidos
Founded 1936 (May 1, 1940 as CF Unidos)
Ground Estádio Dr. Agostinho Lourenço, Pontinha, Lisbon, Portugal
Ground Capacity 1,000
Chairman Joaquim Cabeça
Website Club home page

Clube de Futebol Os Unidos, or more commonly Unidos de Lisboa, is a Portuguese football established as Grupo Desportivo CUF de Lisboa (commonly known as CUF Lisboa, with CUF standing for the company Companhia União Fabril) in 1936.[1]

History

Established as Grupo Desportivo da CUF Lisboa (CUF Lisboa, with CUF standing for the company Companhia União Fabril) in 1937, it was one of three football clubs created by the parent company, whose players were also workers (the other clubs were CUF Barreiro, founded in 1937 and the most successful of the three, and the short-lived CUF Porto that existed between 1945 and 1950). In 1940, the Estado Novo forced the club to change its name, as it didn't allow sports teams with corporate names. Thus the club changed its name to Clube de Futebol Os Unidos or Unidos de Lisboa (CUF Barreiro, meanwhile changed to Unidos Futebol Clube or Unidos do Barreiro). It was during this period that the club had its most successful spell, playing three consecutive seasons, from 1940–41 to 1942–43, in the Primeira Divisão, when qualification was obtained through the district championships. They also reached the national cup semi-finals in 1941 and 1942. In 1944, the prohibition of corporate names ended, and Unidos reverted to CUF Lisboa. In 1945, they were runners-up in the Segunda Divisão, back then the second-tier national league. The club dissolved in 1947 for lack of a ground, but returned to the Lisbon FA district championships in 1954, under the Unidos de Lisboa name,[2] seemingly choosing to ignore its CUF connections. The last senior team to play was on the 2008–09 in the Lisbon FA First Division (district second tier). Nowadays, they only run junior teams.

League and cup history

Season League Cup Notes
Div. Pos. Pl W D L GS GA Pts Result
1939–40 2nd 1st 10901 421418 DNQ [A]
1940–41 1st 7th 142210 28506 SF
1941–42 1st 7th 227411 534918 SF
1942–43 1st 4th 18927 704620 QF [B]
1943–44 2nd 1st 18901 501518 R1 [A]
1944–45 2nd 1st 101000 75820 R1 [C]
1945–46 2nd 2nd 10712 571915 DNQ
1946–47 2nd 1st 8611 421113 n/a [A]
...
A. ^ Lost in the championship playoffs.
B. ^ Best league finish.
C. ^ Runner-up in the championship playoffs.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/15/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.