Jump to content

G.D. Fabril

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Grupo Desportivo Fabril)
Fabril Barreiro
Full nameGrupo Desportivo Fabril
Short nameFabril
Founded27 January 1937; 87 years ago (27 January 1937)
GroundComplexo Desportivo Alfredo da Silva, Barreiro, Portugal
Capacity22,000
ChairmanFaustino Mestre
ManagerJoão Miguel Parreira
LeagueCampeonato de Portugal
2021–22AF Setúbal 1ª Divisão,1st
Websitehttp://www.grupodesportivofabril.pt/

Grupo Desportivo Fabril is a Portuguese sports club established as Grupo Desportivo CUF do Barreiro (commonly known as CUF Barreiro), with CUF standing for the company Companhia União Fabril. A multisports club best known for its football section, it was founded as a works team in the city of Barreiro, District of Setúbal, on 27 January 1937. CUF Barreiro's greatest achievement was a third place in the 1964–65 Portuguese Liga season. The club's football home ground is the Complexo Desportivo Alfredo da Silva, which was inaugurated in June 1965 and named after Alfredo da Silva, an entrepreneur who was the founder of CUF.

Besides football, Fabril's futsal team has reached top-flight twice in their history, participating in the I Divisão in the 2012–13 and 2016–17 seasons. In the 2012–13 season, Fabril reached the 5th round of the Taça de Portugal.

History

[edit]

Established as Grupo Desportivo da CUF (G.D. CUF, with CUF standing for the company Companhia União Fabril) in 1937, it also was known as CUF Barreiro, it was one of three football clubs created by the parent company, whose players were also workers (the other clubs were CUF Lisboa, founded in 1936 and now known as Unidos de Lisboa, 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 Unidos Futebol Clube or Unidos do Barreiro (CUF Lisboa, meanwhile changed to Clube de Futebol Os Unidos or Unidos de Lisboa). The original name returned in 1944. After the military coup in April 1974 the club was renamed Grupo Desportivo Quimigal.[1][2]

The club changed its name several times during its history:

  • 1937 : The club was founded under the name Grupo Desportivo CUF do Barreiro
  • 1940 : The club is renamed as the Unidos Futebol Clube do Barreiro
  • 1944 : The club is renamed again as the Grupo Desportivo CUF do Barreiro
  • 1978 : The club is renamed as the Grupo Desportivo Quimigal do Barreiro
  • 2000 : The club is renamed as the Grupo Desportivo Fabril do Barreiro

Timeline

[edit]
  • 1937 – Grupo Desportivo da CUF (CUF Sporting Club) is founded on 27 January. CUF (Companhia União Fabril) was a soap and chemical manufacturer founded by Alfredo da Silva.
  • 1939 – Joaquim Fernandes, a G.D. CUF cyclist, wins the Volta a Portugal.
  • 1942–43 – The senior football team participates for first time in the first division, only managing to stay one season. Also that year, Alfredo da Silva dies.
  • 1953–54 – The football team wins the second division and is promoted to the first division again, ushering a golden era for the club. The most important players were Barriga, Vasques, Luís, Sérgio, Aureliano, André, Carreira (captain), Orlando, Matos, Vale and Velhinho and the coach was João Mário. The club would remain in the first division for the next 22 years. That same year, the junior team became vice-champions of the first division losing in the final against Academica Coimbra.
  • 1964–65 – The football team achieved its highest position to date in the first division reaching the third place among 14 teams, qualifying for a European competition, the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup (now UEFA Cup), the first time. The rink hockey would perform even better, becoming national champions.
  • 1965–66 – The Alfredo da Silva stadium is inaugurated leaving their former stadium, Santa Bárbara. In the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, after a walkover in the first round, the team is eliminated by A.C. Milan after three games (2–0, 0–2, 0–1). The team would make two more appearances in the competition in 67/68 (1R) and in 72/73 (2R). The rink hockey team was eliminated from the Champions League in the first round by Reus Deportiu with a 1–4, 0–3 score.
  • 1968–69 – Football team reach the semifinals of the Taça de Portugal, only to lose 7–2 on aggregate to eventual champions Benfica.
  • 1972 – Víctor Domingos, the CUF and rink hockey national team goalkeeper, is considered the best player in the world in that position.
  • 1972–73 – Football team reaches the Taça de Portugal semifinals again, only to lose to the other big Lisbon team, Sporting, 0–1 at home. Again, Sporting goes on to win the entire competition.
  • 1974 – Carnation Revolution. During the communist-inspired period known as PREC, the company CUF, one of the largest conglomerates of Portugal, is nationalized.
  • 1975–76 – After 22 consecutive years in the first division, G.D. CUF is relegated to the second division after finishing in the 16th and last position. From then on, the football club would disappear into the lower divisions, never returning to the first division.
  • 1980–81 – The club changes its name to Grupo Desportivo da Quimigal.
  • 1991–92 – After decades in the professional divisions, the club fell into the Setúbal District Division.
  • 1999-00 – Quimigal wins the Setúbal District Championship, but would be relegated again in the next year. At the end of the season the club's name changed to its current name, Grupo Desportivo Fabril.
  • 2002–03 – The club wins the Setúbal District Championship again, only to be relegated again.
  • 2006–07 – The club once again wins the Setúbal District Championship.
  • 2012–13 – Tercera Divisão is disbanded, sending most of the clubs (excepting those promoted to the new Campeonato Nacional de Seniores) including Fabril, back to their district championships.
  • 2013–14 – The club once again wins the Setúbal District Championship and is promoted to the Campeonato Nacional.
Presences
Primeira Liga (First League) 23
Liga de Honra (League of Honour)
Segunda Divisão (Second Division) 21
Terceira Divisão 14
Taça de Portugal (Portuguese Cup) ?

Sports

[edit]

Football

[edit]

Honours

[edit]

League and cup history

[edit]
Season Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Cup Europe Notes
1942–1943 1D 9 18 5 1 12 46 77 11 QF
...
1947–1948 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 1/8
1948–1949 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 1/8
...
1954–1955 1D 7 26 10 5 11 45 52 25 1/16
1955–1956 1D 10 26 6 8 12 33 58 20 1/16
1956–1957 1D 9 26 9 3 4 35 69 21 1/8
1957–1958 1D 12 26 8 3 15 40 59 19 1/8
1958–1959 1D 11 26 8 5 13 34 55 21 -
1959–1960 1D 5 26 10 5 11 36 39 25 1/32
1960–1961 1D 6 26 10 6 10 38 28 26 1/8
1961–1962 1D 4 26 14 5 7 44 34 33 1/16
1962–1963 1D 12 26 6 6 14 37 40 18 1/16
1963–1964 1D 5 26 12 6 8 46 33 30 QF
1964–1965 1D 3 26 15 5 6 49 29 35 1/8 best classification ever
1965–1966 1D 9 26 8 8 10 37 46 24 1/8 FC 2nd Round
1966–1967 1D 8 26 9 5 12 27 43 23 1/16
1967–1968 1D 11 26 7 7 12 28 37 21 1/32 FC 1st Round
1968–1969 1D 7 26 8 11 7 32 30 27 SF
1969–1970 1D 8 26 9 5 12 24 38 23 1/16
1970–1971 1D 8 26 8 5 13 28 37 21 1/16
1971–1972 1D 4 30 12 13 5 43 28 37 1/16
1972–1973 1D 8 30 11 8 11 38 37 30 SF UC 2nd round
1973–1974 1D 8 30 8 9 13 33 44 25 QF
1974–1975 1D 8 30 10 9 11 41 41 29 1/8
1975–1976 1D 16 30 4 10 16 15 50 18 1/16 relegated
1976–1977 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? QF
1977–1978 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 1/32
1978–1979 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 1/32
1979–1980 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 1/64
1980–1981 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 1/128
1981–1982 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 1/64
1982–1983 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 1/16
1983–1984 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 1/128
1984–1985 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 1/128
1985–1986 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 1/128
1986–1987 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 1/128
1987–1988 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 1/64
1988–1989 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 1/128
1989–1990 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 1/32
1990–1991 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 1/128
1991–1992 3D ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 1/256
...
2000–2001 3D ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 1/256
...
2007–2008 3D 4 26 12 8 6 38 25 40 1/128

1D = First Division

3D = Third Division

FC = Fairs Cup

UC = UEFA Cup

International performance

[edit]

As CUF Barreiro, the club has made three official appearances in international football competitions:

Season Competition Round Club Score
1965–66 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup 2R Italy AC Milan 2–0, 0–2, 0–1
1967–68 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup 1R Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Vojvodina Novi Sad 0–1, 1–3
1972–73 UEFA Cup 1R Belgium Racing White 1–0, 2–0
2R Germany 1. FC Kaiserslautern 1–3, 1–0
1973–74 Intertoto Cup Gr.3 Germany Hertha Berlin 0–0, 0–1; 2nd
Sweden Malmö FF 4–0, 0–1
Switzerland Grasshopper 3–0, 4–1
1974–75 Intertoto Cup Gr.10 Sweden Landskrona 1–0, 1–1; Winner
Turkey Altay S.K. 2–0, 1–2
Sweden Hammarby IF 1–0, 2–2

Futsal

[edit]

Fabril has a futsal team that has played top tier futsal in the Liga Sport Zone.

Honours

[edit]
  • I Divisão: 9th place (relegated through the Relegation Playout; 3rd place) – 2012–13

Current squad

[edit]
As of 9 May 2020

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Portugal POR João Crespo
2 DF Angola ANG Valdo Wilson
4 DF Portugal POR Janita
5 MF Portugal POR Miguel Pimenta
6 MF Portugal POR Crisanto Silva
7 FW Portugal POR Miguel Correia
8 MF Cape Verde CPV Nelson Cruz
9 FW Brazil BRA Jackson Souza
10 FW Portugal POR Cajó Conceição
11 FW Portugal POR Daniel Lourenço
12 DF Portugal POR Diogo Vilela
13 MF Portugal POR Bruno Elias
16 DF Portugal POR Rúben Tavares
18 DF Portugal POR Rafael Matos
19 FW Cape Verde CPV Ailton Moreira
No. Pos. Nation Player
20 MF Portugal POR Iddy Embaló
21 MF Portugal POR Diogo Palma
27 DF Portugal POR Fábio Freitas
28 MF Portugal POR Miguel Flor
29 GK Angola ANG Nilton Paulo
30 MF Portugal POR Diogo Semedo
31 MF Portugal POR João Vasco
93 GK Portugal POR Kevin Bernardeco
GK Portugal POR Marco Mosca
DF Portugal POR André Amaral
DF Portugal POR André Esteves
DF Brazil BRA Odilon Jr.
MF Portugal POR Rafael Bastos
MF Portugal POR André Flôr
FW Portugal POR Rúben Nicolau

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "CUF (Fabril Barreiro) :: História :: zerozero.pt". www.zerozero.pt (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2024-04-13.
  2. ^ "GD Fabril: "Um clube operário que deixou de ser fortemente operário, após o 25 de abril. Tornou-se meio burguês, a coberto de ser popular"". SAPO 24 (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2024-04-13.
[edit]