2020–21 Primeira Liga
Season | 2020–21 |
---|---|
Dates | 18 September 2020 – 19 May 2021 |
Champions | Sporting CP 19th title |
Relegated | Rio Ave Farense Nacional |
Champions League | Sporting CP Porto Benfica |
Europa League | Braga |
Europa Conference League | Paços de Ferreira Santa Clara |
Matches played | 306 |
Goals scored | 739 (2.42 per match) |
Best Player | Sebastián Coates (Sporting CP) |
Top goalscorer | Pedro Gonçalves (23 goals) |
Best goalkeeper | Antonio Adán (19 clean sheets) |
Biggest home win | Sporting CP 4–0 Tondela (1 November 2020) Santa Clara 5–1 Nacional (11 April 2021) Porto 5–1 Farense (10 May 2021) Porto 4–0 Belenenses SAD (19 May 2021) Sporting CP 5–1 Marítimo (19 May 2021) Santa Clara 4–0 Farense (19 May 2021) |
Biggest away win | Boavista 0–5 Porto (26 September 2020) Paços de Ferreira 0–5 Benfica (10 April 2021) |
Highest scoring | Porto 4–3 Tondela (5 December 2020) Benfica 4–3 Sporting CP (15 May 2021) |
Longest winning run | 7 matches Porto |
Longest unbeaten run | 32 matches (record) Sporting CP |
Longest winless run | 10 matches Nacional |
Longest losing run | 10 matches Nacional |
Highest attendance | 932 Santa Clara 1–2 Sporting CP (24 October 2020)[note 1] |
Lowest attendance | 0[note 2] |
← 2019–20 2021–22 → |
The 2020–21 Primeira Liga (also known as Liga NOS for sponsorship reasons) was the 87th season of the Primeira Liga, the top professional league for Portuguese association football clubs. The season started later than usual, on 18 September 2020, due to the delayed end of the previous season caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, and it concluded on 19 May 2021.
This was the fourth Primeira Liga season to use video assistant referee (VAR). As was the case at the end of the previous season, there were limited or no attendance in the stadiums besides each team's staff and personnel.
Porto were the defending champions. Nacional and Farense were promoted from the second-tier 2019–20 LigaPro by decision of the Liga Portuguesa de Futebol Profissional, after the suspension of the 2019–20 LigaPro due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Portugal. They replaced Desportivo das Aves and Vitória de Setúbal, who were relegated to the 2020–21 Campeonato de Portugal.
On 11 May 2021, Sporting CP secured a 19th title after a 1–0 home win against Boavista, their first title since the 2001–02 season. It was also the first title since that season not being won by either Benfica or Porto.[1]
Since Portugal ascended from seventh to sixth place in the UEFA association coefficient rankings at the end of 2019–20 season, the three best-ranked teams could qualify for the UEFA Champions League (the champions and runners-up entered directly into the group stage, and the third placed team entered the third qualifying round). The fourth and fifth-placed teams would qualified respectively to the UEFA Europa Conference League play-off and third qualifying rounds.[2]
Effects of the COVID-19 pandemic
[edit]Due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Portugal, since March 2020, in contrast with various European leagues, the Primeira Liga began playing matches behind closed doors. On 13 September, Sporting confirmed that three players had tested positive for coronavirus, leading their pre-season match against Napoli to be cancelled due to the orders of the Portuguese Ministry of Health.[3] The following day, Sporting confirmed that four players and a member of their staff had tested positive for coronavirus.[4] Meanwhile, Gil Vicente confirmed that fifteen players had tested positive for coronavirus, leading also their pre-season match against Vitória de Guimarães to be cancelled.[5] Three days later, Sporting confirmed that their manager Ruben Amorim and another player tested positive for coronavirus, with both going into self-isolation.[6] On 17 September, it was announced that the Gil Vicente and Sporting fixture on matchday 1 would be postponed, following direct orders from the Portuguese Ministry of Health, after it was confirmed that Gil Vicente had four more positive cases of coronavirus.[7]
On 3 October, Santa Clara faced Gil Vicente on matchday 3 at the Estádio de São Miguel, in Ponta Delgada, Azores, in a match, which was the first one to allow spectators in Portugal, with the stadium being limited to 10% of its capacity (1,000 spectators).[8] Ten days later, it was announced that Paços de Ferreira's manager Pepa had tested positive for COVID-19, leading him and his staff being placed in quarantine as a preventive measure, forcing him to miss Paços de Ferreira's match against Santa Clara on October 18 at matchday 4.[9]
On matchday 5, played between 23 and 26 October, there were three matches in which spectatores were allowed: Tondela against Portimonense at Estádio João Cardoso, Santa Clara against Sporting at the Estádio de São Miguel (with spectators being allowed for the second consecutive match) and Farense against Rio Ave at Estádio Algarve, where Farense played their first three home matches, instead of their regular home stadium Estádio de São Luís, due to a turf change. Like the match against Gil Vicente, Santa Clara match was played with the stadium capacity limited to 10%,[10] as the other two matches were limited to 15% (approximately 750 and 4,500 spectators in Estádio João Cardoso and Estádio Algarve, respectively).[11]
Santa Clara announced on February 20 that spectators will be allowed in Estádio de São Miguel, for the third time this season, in the match against Paços de Ferreira on matchday 21, played one week later on 27 February. This time, one third of the stadium's maximum capacity was allowed.[12]
Teams
[edit]Eighteen teams competed in the league – the top sixteen teams from the previous season and two teams promoted from the LigaPro. Nacional and Farense were promoted on 5 May 2020 by decision of the Liga Portuguesa de Futebol Profissional, after the suspension of the 2019–20 LigaPro due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Portugal. This decision was made based on UEFA's recommendations, focusing on sporting merit, as these teams were in first and second place of the LigaPro, respectively, at the time of cancellation.[13]
Nacional came back to the top division one season after being relegated, while Farense secured their return after an 18-year absence. They replaced Desportivo das Aves and Vitória de Setúbal, who were relegated after three and sixteen seasons in the top flight, respectively.
Stadia and locations
[edit]Personnel and sponsors
[edit]Managerial changes
[edit]Team | Outgoing manager | Manager | Date of vacancy | Pos in table | Incoming manager | Date of appointment | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Santa Clara | João Henriques | Mutual consent | 24 July 2020 | Pre-season | Daniel Ramos | 28 July 2020 | [15] |
Vitória de Guimarães | Ivo Vieira | 24 July 2020 | Tiago Mendes | 28 July 2020 | [16] | ||
Boavista | Daniel Ramos | 25 July 2020 | Vasco Seabra | 30 July 2020 | [17] | ||
Rio Ave | Carlos Carvalhal | 25 July 2020 | Mário Silva | 30 July 2020 | [18] | ||
Marítimo | José Gomes | Signed for Almería | 27 July 2020 | Lito Vidigal | 30 July 2020 | [19] | |
Braga | Artur Jorge | End of caretaker role | 28 July 2020 | Carlos Carvalhal | 28 July 2020 | [20] | |
Benfica | Nélson Veríssimo | 1 August 2020 | Jorge Jesus | 3 August 2020 | [21][22] | ||
Tondela | Natxo González | Mutual Consent | 5 August 2020 | Pako Ayestarán | 9 August 2020 | [23] | |
Vitória de Guimarães | Tiago Mendes | 8 October 2020 | 11th | João Henriques | 13 October 2020 | [24] | |
Moreirense | Ricardo Soares | Resigned | 9 November 2020 | 9th | César Peixoto | 10 November 2020 | [25] |
Gil Vicente | Rui Almeida | Sacked | 11 November 2020 | 17th | Ricardo Soares | 13 November 2020 | [26] |
Marítimo | Lito Vidigal | 4 December 2020 | Milton Mendes | 5 December 2020 | [27] | ||
Boavista | Vasco Seabra | 8 December 2020 | 15th | Daniel Gonçalves (Caretaker) | 8 December 2020 | [28] | |
Daniel Gonçalves (Caretaker) | End of caretaker role | 13 December 2020 | Jesualdo Ferreira | 13 December 2020 | [29] | ||
Rio Ave | Mário Silva | Sacked | 30 December 2020 | 13th | Pedro Cunha (Caretaker) | 30 December 2020 | [30] |
Moreirense | César Peixoto | Resigned | 2 January 2021 | 8th | Leandro Mendes (Caretaker) | 2 January 2021 | [31] |
Leandro Mendes (Caretaker) | End of caretaker role | 5 January 2021 | Vasco Seabra | 5 January 2021 | [32] | ||
Rio Ave | Pedro Cunha (Caretaker) | 29 January 2021 | 10th | Miguel Cardoso | 29 January 2021 | [33] | |
Famalicão | João Pedro Sousa | Sacked | 31 January 2021 | 16th | Silas | 1 February 2021 | [34] |
Farense | Sérgio Vieira | Mutual Consent | 1 February 2021 | 17th | Jorge Costa | 4 February 2021 | [35] |
Famalicão | Silas | 8 March 2021 | Ivo Vieira | 8 March 2021 | [36][37] | ||
Marítimo | Milton Mendes | Resigned | 5 March 2021 | 18th | Julio Velázquez | 11 March 2021 | [38][39] |
Nacional | Luís Freire | Sacked | 21 March 2021 | 17th | Manuel Machado | 22 March 2021 | [40] |
Vitória de Guimarães | João Henriques | 5 April 2021 | 6th | Bino (Caretaker) | 5 April 2021 | [41] | |
Bino (Caretaker) | End of caretaker role | 13 May 2021 | 8th | Moreno (Caretaker) | 13 May 2021 | [42] |
League table
[edit]Pos | Team | Pld | W | D | L | GF | GA | GD | Pts | Qualification or relegation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Sporting CP (C) | 34 | 26 | 7 | 1 | 65 | 20 | +45 | 85 | Qualification for the Champions League group stage |
2 | Porto | 34 | 24 | 8 | 2 | 74 | 29 | +45 | 80 | |
3 | Benfica | 34 | 23 | 7 | 4 | 69 | 27 | +42 | 76 | Qualification for the Champions League third qualifying round |
4 | Braga | 34 | 19 | 7 | 8 | 53 | 33 | +20 | 64 | Qualification for the Europa League group stage[a] |
5 | Paços de Ferreira | 34 | 15 | 8 | 11 | 40 | 41 | −1 | 53 | Qualification for the Europa Conference League third qualifying round[a] |
6 | Santa Clara | 34 | 13 | 7 | 14 | 44 | 36 | +8 | 46 | Qualification for the Europa Conference League second qualifying round[a] |
7 | Vitória de Guimarães | 34 | 12 | 7 | 15 | 37 | 44 | −7 | 43[b] | |
8 | Moreirense | 34 | 10 | 13 | 11 | 37 | 43 | −6 | 43[b] | |
9 | Famalicão | 34 | 10 | 10 | 14 | 40 | 48 | −8 | 40[c] | |
10 | B-SAD | 34 | 9 | 13 | 12 | 25 | 35 | −10 | 40[c] | |
11 | Gil Vicente | 34 | 11 | 6 | 17 | 33 | 42 | −9 | 39 | |
12 | Tondela | 34 | 10 | 6 | 18 | 36 | 57 | −21 | 36[d] | |
13 | Boavista | 34 | 8 | 12 | 14 | 39 | 49 | −10 | 36[d] | |
14 | Portimonense | 34 | 9 | 8 | 17 | 34 | 41 | −7 | 35[e] | |
15 | Marítimo | 34 | 10 | 5 | 19 | 27 | 47 | −20 | 35[e] | |
16 | Rio Ave (R) | 34 | 7 | 13 | 14 | 25 | 40 | −15 | 34 | Qualification for the Relegation play-offs |
17 | Farense (R) | 34 | 7 | 10 | 17 | 31 | 48 | −17 | 31 | Relegation to Liga Portugal 2 |
18 | Nacional (R) | 34 | 6 | 7 | 21 | 30 | 59 | −29 | 25 |
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Head-to-head points; 3) Head-to-head goal difference; 4) Head-to-head away goals scored; 5) Goal difference; 6) Matches won; 7) Goals scored; 8) Play-off.
(C) Champions; (R) Relegated
Notes:
- ^ a b c Braga qualified for the Europa League group stage by winning the 2020–21 Taça de Portugal. Since they would have qualified for the Europa Conference League third qualifying round by finishing fourth, the berth was awarded to the fifth-placed team (Paços de Ferreira), and the Europa Conference League second qualifying round berth reserved to the fifth-placed team was awarded to the sixth-placed team (Santa Clara).
- ^ a b Vitória de Guimarães are ranked ahead of Moreirense on head-to-head points: Vitória de Guimarães 4, Moreirense 1.
- ^ a b Famalicão are ranked ahead of Belenenses SAD on head-to-head points: Famalicão 4, Belenenses SAD 1.
- ^ a b Tondela are ranked ahead of Boavista on head-to-head points: Tondela 4, Boavista 1.
- ^ a b Portimonense are ranked ahead of Marítimo on head-to-head points: Portimonense 4, Marítimo 1.
Relegation play-offs
[edit]The relegation play-offs took place on 26 and 30 May 2021.
Team 1 | Agg. | Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
---|---|---|---|---|
Rio Ave | 0–5 | Arouca | 0–3 | 0–2 |
Arouca | 3–0 | Rio Ave |
---|---|---|
|
Report |
Rio Ave | 0–2 | Arouca |
---|---|---|
Report |
|
Arouca won 5–0 on aggregate and were promoted to 2021–22 Primeira Liga; Rio Ave were relegated to 2021–22 Liga Portugal 2.
Results
[edit]Positions by round
[edit]The table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included to the round at which they were originally scheduled, but added to the full round they were played immediately afterwards.
Statistics
[edit]Top goalscorers
[edit]Rank | Player | Club | Goals[43] |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Pedro Gonçalves | Sporting CP | 23 |
2 | Haris Seferovic | Benfica | 22 |
3 | Mehdi Taremi | Porto | 16 |
4 | Mario González | Tondela | 15 |
5 | Carlos | Santa Clara | 14 |
6 | Sérgio Oliveira | Porto | 13 |
7 | Beto | Portimonense | 11 |
8 | Mateo Cassierra | Belenenses SAD | 10 |
Hat-tricks
[edit]Player | For | Against | Result | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mario González | Tondela | Moreirense | 3–2 (A) | 17 April 2021 |
Pedro Gonçalves | Sporting CP | Marítimo | 5–1 (H) | 19 May 2021 |
- Notes
(H) – Home team
(A) – Away team
Top assists
[edit]Rank | Player | Club | Assists[44] |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Mehdi Taremi | Porto | 11 |
2 | Darwin Núñez | Benfica | 10 |
3 | Everton | Benfica | 9 |
Álex Grimaldo | Benfica | ||
5 | Otávio | Porto | 8 |
6 | Jesús Corona | Porto | 7 |
Alberth Elis | Boavista | ||
Ryan Gauld | Farense |
Clean sheets
[edit]Rank | Player | Club | Clean sheets |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Antonio Adán | Sporting CP | 19 |
2 | Agustín Marchesín | Porto | 16 |
3 | Paweł Kieszek | Rio Ave | 11 |
Stanislav Kritsyuk | Belenenses SAD | ||
5 | Amir Abedzadeh | Marítimo | 10 |
Bruno Varela | Vitória de Guimarães | ||
Denis | Gil Vicente | ||
8 | Matheus | Braga | 9 |
Jordi | Paços de Ferreira | ||
Léo Jardim | Boavista | ||
Luiz Júnior | Famalicão | ||
Samuel Portugal | Portimonense | ||
Marco Pereira | Santa Clara |
Discipline
[edit]Player
[edit]- Most yellow cards: 13[45]
- Nicolás Otamendi (Benfica)
- Fábio Pacheco (Moreirense)
- Most red cards: 2[46]
- Salvador Agra (Tondela)
- Chidozie Awaziem (Boavista)
- David Carmo (Braga)
- Júlio César (Nacional)
- Rafael Defendi (Farense)
- Fransérgio (Braga)
- Javi García (Boavista)
- Stanislav Kritsyuk (Belenenses)
- Ygor Nogueira (Gil Vicente)
Club
[edit]Awards
[edit]Monthly awards
[edit]For the 2020–21 season, there were seven monthly awards in the Primeira Liga: best player, goalkeeper, defender, midfielder, forward, manager and goal of the month.[49][50]
Month | Player of the Month | Goalkeeper of the Month | Defender of the Month | Midfielder of the Month | Forward of the Month | Manager of the Month | Goal of the Month | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Player | Club | Player | Club | Player | Club | Player | Club | Player | Club | Manager | Club | Player | Club | |
September/October | Pedro Gonçalves | Sporting CP | Bruno Varela | Vitória de Guimarães | Pepe | Porto | Pedro Gonçalves | Sporting CP | Thiago Santana | Santa Clara | Jorge Jesus | Benfica | Bruno Jordão | Famalicão |
November | Matheus | Braga | Pedro Porro | Sporting CP | Rodrigo Pinho | Marítimo | Pepa | Paços de Ferreira | Luis Díaz | Porto | ||||
December | Sérgio Oliveira | Porto | Antonio Adán | Sporting CP | Sérgio Oliveira | Porto | Mehdi Taremi | Porto | Sérgio Conceição | Porto | Iuri Medeiros | Braga | ||
January | Mehdi Taremi | Porto | Bruno Costa | Paços de Ferreira | Pepa | Paços de Ferreira | Pedro Porro | Sporting CP | ||||||
February | Ali Al Musrati | Braga | Sebastián Coates | Sporting CP | Ali Al Musrati | Braga | Ruben Amorim | Sporting CP | Ryan Gauld | Farense | ||||
March | Haris Seferovic | Benfica | Helton Leite | Benfica | Sérgio Oliveira | Porto | Haris Seferovic | Benfica | Jorge Jesus | Benfica | Beto | Portimonense | ||
April | Sebastián Coates | Sporting CP | Antonio Adán | Sporting CP | Pedro Gonçalves | Sporting CP | Mario González | Tondela | Ruben Amorim | Sporting CP | André Almeida | Vitória de Guimarães |
Annual awards
[edit]Annual awards were announced on 8 July 2021.[51]
Award | Winner | Club | |
---|---|---|---|
Player of the Season | Sebastián Coates | Sporting CP | |
Manager of the Season | Ruben Amorim | ||
Goal of the Season | Beto | Portimonense | |
Young Player of the Season | Pedro Gonçalves | Sporting CP | |
Top scorer | |||
Neno Fair-Play Prize | Luiz Díaz | Porto | |
Club Fair-Play Prize | Moreirense |
Team of the Year[52] |
Team of the Year | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Goalkeeper | Antonio Adán (Sporting CP) | |||||
Defence | Pedro Porro (Sporting CP) | Pepe (Porto) | Sebastián Coates (Sporting CP) | Nuno Mendes (Sporting CP) | ||
Midfield | João Palhinha (Sporting CP) | Pedro Gonçalves (Sporting CP) | Sérgio Oliveira (Porto) | |||
Attack | Carlos (Santa Clara) | Haris Seferovic (Benfica) | Mehdi Taremi (Porto) |
Number of teams by district
[edit]Rank | District Football Associations | Number | Teams |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Braga | 5 | Braga, Famalicão, Gil Vicente, Moreirense and Vitória de Guimarães |
2 | Porto | 4 | Boavista, Paços de Ferreira, Porto and Rio Ave |
3 | Lisbon | 3 | Belenenses SAD, Benfica and Sporting CP |
4 | Faro | 2 | Farense and Portimonense |
Funchal | Marítimo and Nacional | ||
5 | Ponta Delgada | 1 | Santa Clara |
Viseu | Tondela |
Notes
[edit]- ^ Due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Portugal, the matches that were not played behind closed doors, were allowed to be played with limited attendance.
- ^ All league matches played were played behind closed doors without any spectators due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Portugal, with the exception being four Santa Clara's home matches, Tondela against Portimonense and Farense against Rio Ave
References
[edit]- ^ Cotovio, Vasco (12 May 2021). "Sporting Lisbon's bittersweet title win after 19 years of hurt". CNN. Retrieved 7 April 2022.
- ^ "UEFA Coefficient Rankings: Portugal overtake Russia". PRÓXIMA JORNADA. 23 October 2019. Retrieved 5 June 2023.
- ^ "Casos de Covid-19 obrigam Sporting a cancelar jogo com o Napoli". 13 September 2020.
- ^ "Tribuna". Expresso.
- ^ Dantas, Miguel. "Gil Vicente com 15 casos de covid-19 no plantel. Quarentena obrigatória decretada". PÚBLICO.
- ^ "Notícia Record: Rúben Amorim testa positivo à Covid-19 - Sporting - Jornal Record".
- ^ "Sporting-Gil Vicente foi adiado: leões têm 10 infetados, equipa de Barcelos tem 19 casos. Decisão foi tomada pela ARS Norte – Observador". observador.pt.
- ^ "Balanço "extremamente positivo". Público voltou aos estádios nos Açores". 4 October 2020.
- ^ "Pepa infetado com Covid-19". www.record.pt.
- ^ "Covid-19: Confirmada a presença de público no Santa Clara–Sporting". SAPO Desporto.
- ^ "Tondela-Portimonense e Farense-Rio Ave vão ter público".
- ^ "Nota à Imprensa sobre regresso do público no Santa Clara - FC P. Ferreira".
- ^ "Direção da Liga Portugal em reunião extraordinária" [LPFP board extraordinary meeting]. LPFP (in Portuguese). 5 May 2020. Retrieved 6 May 2020.
- ^ "Liga NOS stats". LPFP. Retrieved 14 June 2020.
- ^ "Oficial: Daniel Ramos é o novo treinador do Santa Clara" [Official: Daniel Ramos is the new manager of Santa clara]. O Jogo (in Portuguese). 28 July 2020. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
- ^ "Oficial: Tiago é o novo treinador do Vitória de Guimarães" [Official: Tiago is the new manager of Vitória de Guimarães]. O Jogo (in Portuguese). 28 July 2020. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
- ^ "Oficial: Vasco Seabra é treinador do Boavista" [Official: Carlos Carvalhal is manager of Boavista]. O Jogo (in Portuguese). 30 July 2020. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
- ^ "Mário Silva é o sucessor de Carlos Carvalhal no Rio Ave" [Mário Silva is the successor of Carlos Carvalhal at Rio Ave]. O Jogo (in Portuguese). 30 July 2020. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
- ^ "Lito Vidigal sucede a José Gomes no Marítimo" [Lito Vidigal succeeds José Gomes at Marítimo]. O Jogo (in Portuguese). 30 July 2020. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
- ^ "Oficial: Carlos Carvalhal é o novo treinador do Braga" [Official: Carlos Carvalhal is the new manager of Braga]. O Jogo (in Portuguese). 28 July 2020. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
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- ^ Andrade, Tomaz; Casaca, Manuel (8 October 2020). "Tiago deixa comando técnico do Vitória: números de um curto percurso" [Tiago leaves helm of Vitória: numbers of a short spell]. O Jogo (in Portuguese). Retrieved 10 October 2020.
- ^ "Ricardo Soares deixa o comando técnico do Moreirense" [Ricardo Soares leaves the technical command of Moreirense]. Record (in Portuguese). 9 November 2020. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
- ^ "Ricardo Soares substitui Rui Almeida no comando técnico do Gil Vicente" [Ricardo Soares replaces Rui Almeida at the helm of Gil Vicente]. Observador (in Portuguese). 13 November 2020. Retrieved 14 November 2020.
- ^ "Marítimo oficializa saída de Lito Vidigal do comando técnico" [Marítimo confirm exit of Lito Vidigal from managerial position]. Observador (in Portuguese). 15 December 2020. Retrieved 16 December 2020.
- ^ "Vasco Seabra é o quarto treinador a sair em equipas da I Liga" [Vasco Seabra is the fourth manager to leave an I League team] (in Portuguese). SAPO. 8 December 2020. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
- ^ "Jesualdo Ferreira oficializado como novo técnico do Boavista" [Jesualdo Ferreira confirmed as new Boavista manager] (in Portuguese). SAPO. 14 December 2020. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
- ^ Cunha, Pedro (30 December 2020). "Rio Ave oficializa saída de Mário Silva e anuncia sucessor imediato" [Rio Ave confirm Mário Silva's exit and announce immediate successor]. O Jogo (in Portuguese). Retrieved 11 January 2021.
- ^ "César Peixoto deixa o Moreirense por vontade própria" [César Peixoto leaves Moreirense by his own will] (in Portuguese). SAPO. 2 January 2021. Retrieved 24 January 2021.
- ^ Freitas, Bruno; Malacó, Pedro (7 January 2021). "Vasco Seabra oficial no Moreirense até junho de 2022" [Vasco Seabra confirmed at Moreirense until June 2022]. Record (in Portuguese). Retrieved 24 January 2021.
- ^ "Rio Ave confirma regresso de Miguel Cardoso" [Rio Ave confirm return of Miguel Cardoso] (in Portuguese). Rádio Renascença. 29 January 2021. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
- ^ Morais, Pedro (1 February 2021). "Famalicão oficializa contratação de Silas" [Famalicão make signing of Silas official]. Record (in Portuguese). Retrieved 1 February 2021.
- ^ Encarnação, Carlos (31 January 2021). "Sérgio Vieira deixa o Farense e há três nomes apontados ao lugar" [Sérgio Vieira leaves Farense and there are three names pointed to the place]. O Jogo (in Portuguese). Archived from the original on 31 January 2021. Retrieved 1 February 2021.
- ^ "Silas de saída do F.C.Famalicão" [Silas leaving F.C.Famalicão] (in Portuguese). Cidade Hoje. 8 March 2021. Archived from the original on 24 September 2021. Retrieved 8 March 2021.
- ^ "Comunicado" [Announcement] (in Portuguese). F.C. Famalicão. 8 March 2021. Archived from the original on 9 March 2021. Retrieved 8 March 2021.
- ^ Caires, Raul (8 March 2021). "Milton Mendes de saída do Marítimo" [Milton Mendes exits Marítimo]. JM Madeira (in European Portuguese). Archived from the original on 8 March 2021. Retrieved 8 March 2021.
- ^ Arnaldo, Cafôfo (8 March 2021). "Milton Mendes confirma saída do comando técnico do Marítimo" [Milton Mendes confirms departure from Marítimo's technical command]. Jornal de Notícias (in Portuguese). Archived from the original on 8 March 2021. Retrieved 8 March 2021.
- ^ "Luís Freire de saída do comando técnico do Nacional" [Luís Freire leaving the helm of Nacional]. Observador (in Portuguese). 21 March 2021. Retrieved 25 March 2021.
- ^ "João Henriques deixa Vitória de Guimarães. Segue-se Bino" [João Henriques leaves Vitória de Guimarães. Bino succeeds him]. O Jogo (in Portuguese). 5 April 2021. Retrieved 7 April 2021.
- ^ "Bino demite-se do Vitória de Guimarães. Moreno termina a época no banco" [Bino resigns from Vitória de Guimarães. Moreno ends the season on the bench] (in Portuguese). Rádio Renascença. 13 May 2021. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
- ^ "Top Scorers: Liga NOS". Liga Portugal. Retrieved 26 April 2021.
- ^ "Assists: Liga NOS". Liga Portugal. Retrieved 26 April 2021.
- ^ "Primeira Liga Player Stats – Yellow Cards". Zero Zero. Retrieved 25 October 2020.
- ^ "Primeira Liga Player Stats – Red Cards". Zero Zero. Retrieved 16 June 2020.
- ^ "Primeira Liga Club Stats – Yellow Cards". Zero Zero. Retrieved 27 September 2020.
- ^ "Primeira Liga Club Stats – Red Cards". Zero Zero. Retrieved 1 July 2020.
- ^ "Best of September/October 2020-21: Pedro Gonçalves and Gonçalo Ramos are the highlights of the month". Liga Portugal. Retrieved 13 March 2021.
- ^ "Best of December 2020-21: Sérgio Oliveira and Crespo are the highlights of the month". Liga Portugal. Retrieved 13 March 2021.
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