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FC Porto

Porto
FC Porto.svg
Full name Futebol Clube do Porto
Nickname(s) Azuis e brancos (Blue and whites)
Dragões (Dragons)
Short name Porto
Founded 28 September 1893 (123 years ago)
as Foot-Ball Club do Porto
Ground Estádio do Dragão
Ground Capacity 50,092
President Jorge Nuno Pinto da Costa
Head coach Nuno Espírito Santo
League Primeira Liga
2015–16 Primeira Liga, 3rd
Website Club home page
Current season
Active sections of
Futebol Clube do Porto
Football pictogram.svg Football pictogram.svg Football pictogram.svg
Football Football B Football Youth
Handball pictogram.svg Roller hockey pictogram.svg Basketball pictogram.svg
Handball Roller hockey Basketball
Cue sports pictogram.svg Swimming pictogram.svg Cycling (road) pictogram.svg
Billiards Swimming Cycling
Boccia pictogram (Paralympics).svg Boxing pictogram.svg
Adapted
sports
Boxing

Futebol Clube do Porto, MHIH, OM (Portuguese pronunciation: [futɨˈβɔɫ ˈkluβ(ɨ) ðu ˈpoɾtu]), commonly known as FC Porto or simply Porto, is a Portuguese sports club based in Porto. It is best known for the professional football team playing in the Primeira Liga, the top flight of Portuguese football.

Founded on 28 September 1893, Porto is one of the "Big Three" (Portuguese: Os Três Grandes) teams in Portugal – together with Lisbon-based rivals Benfica and Sporting CP – that have appeared in every season of the Primeira Liga since its establishment in 1934. They are nicknamed Dragões (Dragons), for the mythical creature atop the club's crest, and Azuis e brancos (Blue-and-whites), for the shirt colours. The club supporters are called Portistas. Since 2003, Porto have played their home matches at the Estádio do Dragão, which replaced the previous 52-year-old ground, the Estádio das Antas.

Porto is the second most successful Portuguese team, with a total of 74 official trophies. 67 were achieved in domestic competitions and comprise 27 league titles (five of which were won consecutively between 1994–95 and 1998–99, a Portuguese football record), 16 Taça de Portugal (seven of which included in a double), 4 Campeonato de Portugal, and a record 20 Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira. Porto is the only team in Portuguese league history to have won two titles without conceding any defeat, namely in the 2010–11 and 2012–13 seasons. In the former, Porto achieved the largest-ever difference of points between champion and runner-up in a three-points-per-win system (21 points), on their way to a second quadruple.


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