1966–67 Honduran Liga Nacional

Liga Nacional
Season 1966–67
Champions Olimpia (1st)
Relegated Troya
CONCACAF Champions' Cup Olimpia
Matches played 90
Goals scored 277 (3.08 per match)
Top goalscorer Caballero (12)

The 1966–67 Honduran Liga Nacional season was the 2nd edition of the Honduran Liga Nacional. The format of the tournament remained the same as the previous season. Club Deportivo Olimpia won the title and qualified to the 1967 CONCACAF Champions' Cup.[1]

1966–67 teams

Regular season

Standings

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Olimpia[lower-alpha 1] 18 14 1 3 35 19 +16 29 Qualified to the 1967 CONCACAF Champions' Cup
2 Marathón[lower-alpha 2] 18 9 5 4 42 27 +15 23
3 Vida 18 6 7 5 31 26 +5 19
4 España 18 7 5 6 25 21 +4 19
5 San Pedro 18 5 8 5 31 32 1 18
6 Honduras 18 7 4 7 25 30 5 18
7 Atlético Español 18 6 4 8 25 31 6 16
8 Platense 18 6 4 8 25 31 6 16
9 Motagua 18 5 3 10 24 31 7 13
10 Troya 18 3 4 11 14 30 16 10 Relegated to the Segunda División[lower-alpha 3]
Source:
Notes:
  1. Olimpia champions as regular season winner
  2. Marathón runner-up as second place in regular season
  3. Troya relegated as finishing last in regular season
Liga Nacional
1966–67 Champion
Olimpia
1st title

Top scorer

Squads

Atlético Español
Honduras Humberto "Bululo" Amador Honduras Salvador Irías
España
Honduras Mariano Aguiluz Honduras Carlos Alberto Acosta "El Indio" Lara Honduras Vidal Canales
Honduras José Roberto Colón Honduras Dolores Edmundo "Lolo" Cruz Honduras Héctor Gómez
Honduras Carlos Francisco "Chico Chico" Handal Honduras René "Pelón" Orellana Honduras Armindo "Pitorra" Palacios
Honduras Augusto Palacios Honduras Raúl "Ratabú" Peri Argentina Pedro Roberto Rivas
Honduras Mario Ramón Sandoval
Honduras
Honduras Pedro Deras Honduras Domingo "Mingo" Ramos Honduras Jacobo Sarmiento
Honduras Óscar Trejo
Marathón
Honduras Martín "Piruleta" Rodríguez Honduras Mauro "Nayo" Caballero Honduras José Shubert
Honduras Emilio Ramos Banks Honduras Julio Cesar "Bajito" Iglesias Honduras Franklin Meza
Honduras René "Papi" Cruz Honduras Mario Felipe "Cofra" Caballero Álvarez Honduras Julio César "Cucaracha" Fonseca
Honduras Gil "Fátima" Valerio Honduras Edgardo Armando Doblado Honduras Germán "Torito" Chávez
Honduras Arnold "Tigre" Cabús Honduras Ramón "Moncho" Cano
Motagua
Honduras Ricardo "Catín" Cárdenas Honduras José Castillo Honduras Amado Castillo
Honduras Marcos Banegas Honduras "Chiquín" Hernández Honduras Elio Banegas
Honduras Marcio Ramos Honduras José Mario “Profesor” García Honduras Alfonso "Foncho" Navarro
Honduras Luis Alonso Metzquin Honduras Nelson Benavídez Honduras Jesús Castillo
Honduras Antonio Jérez Honduras Fermín "Min" Navarro Honduras Roberto Jérez
Honduras Jacobo Godoy Honduras Marco Tulio Callizo Honduras Jorge "Coqui" Berríos
Honduras José Miralda Honduras Lenard Wells
Olimpia
Honduras Ronald Arnox "Nox" Chessman Honduras Ricardo Taylor Honduras Augusto "Royal" Alvarez
Honduras Conrado "Chorotega" Flores Honduras Rigoberto "Shula" Gómez Honduras Angel Ramón Rodríguez
Honduras Federico "Lico" Budde Honduras Domingo "Toncontín" Ferrera Honduras Raúl Suazo Lagos
Honduras Roberto Crisanto "Manga" Norales Honduras "Plitis" Bonilla Honduras Miguel Angel "Shinola" Matamoros
Honduras Marco Antonio "Tonín" Mendoza Honduras Rafael Dick Honduras Donaldo "Coyoles" Rosales
Honduras René "Reno" Rodríguez Honduras David McCalla Honduras Hermes "Mito" Bertrand Anduray
Honduras Carlos "Calistrín" Suazo Lagos Honduras Juan Isidro "Juanín" Lanza Honduras Reynaldo Centeno
Honduras Marco Antonio "Tigrillo" Rosales Honduras Juan Manuel “Chino” Aguilar
Platense
Honduras Alexander "Nina" Guillén Honduras Víctor León Yalú Honduras Tomás Máximo
Honduras Modesto Armando "Sargento" Urbina Honduras José Duarte Honduras Ricardo "Cañón" Fúnez
Honduras Pablo "Chita" Arzú Honduras Héctor "Chino" Hernández Honduras Carlos Duarte
Honduras Félix "Mantequilla" Guerra Honduras Francisco "Pancho" Brocato Honduras Eduardo "Basuka" Flashing
Honduras Carlos "Care" Alvarado Honduras Jimmy Steward
San Pedro
Honduras Víctor Henderson Honduras Héctor Castro Honduras Astor Perdomo
Honduras Leonardo "Guembo" Vásquez Honduras Román Hernández Honduras Carlos "Calín" Cobos
Honduras Víctor Castro Honduras Luis Alonso Metzgen Honduras Ricardo Montalván
Honduras Mario "Bulla" Tróchez Honduras Israel "Gato" Juárez Honduras Santiago Rodríguez
Honduras Salvador Azcúnaga Honduras Getulio Millares Honduras Miguel "Pelo" Pavón
Honduras Adalberto "Chino" Menjívar Honduras Enrique "Quique" Grey Fúnez
Troya
Guatemala Emilio Calderini
Vida
Honduras Tomás "Tommy" Marshall Honduras Israel "Gato" Juárez Honduras Morris Garden
Honduras Alberto "Campeón" Amaya Honduras Arturo Edilson "Junia" Garden Honduras Jesús "Pun" Fuentes
Honduras Joe Hendicks Honduras Cristóbal "Craka" Brooks Honduras Jesús "Shuna" Blanco
Honduras Antonio "Danto" Urbina Honduras Óscar Banegas Honduras José María "Chema" Salinas

Trivia

  • La Salle changed its name to San Pedro

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.