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Imortal DC currently plays in Campeonato de Portugal which is now the fourth tier of the Portuguese football league system since a new league was created in 2021.They finished 1st of the Algarve FA regional league in the 2020–2021 season as the league came to an end due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and the team with most points (Imortal DC at the time) was promoted to the Campeonato de Portugal.
Sébastien Loeb driving his Citroën C4 WRC at the 2007 Rally de Portugal won by him. The rally included super special stages performed at the stadium. The stadium hosted the inaugural Algarve Challenge Cup tournament on 22 and 24 July 2008 that saw Cardiff City, Celtic, Middlesbrough, and Vitória de Guimarães in action. Cardiff City were the ...
Estadio Municipal (literally 'municipal stadium') is a generic name for municipally-owned, -constructed, or -operated sport stadia in Spanish or Portuguese-speaking countries. In Angola : Estádio Municipal de Benguela , in Benguela
Estádio Municipal de Portimão is the current stadium of Portimonense S.C. It is located in the centre of Portimão in the Algarve, Portugal and was opened in 1937 for local football club Portimonense S.C. Its capacity is 4,961 people. [3] It hosted Portimonense's stay in the Primeira Liga in the 1980s.
Estádio da Nora is a football stadium located in the parish of Ferreiras, municipality of Albufeira, Portugal. It is currently managed and used by FC Ferreiras , which competes in the Algarve 1st District Division championship.
Estádio Municipal de Abrantes (English: Abrantes Municipal Stadium) is a Portuguese multi-purpose stadium, adapted to football, rugby union and athletics, inaugurated in 2005. The sports complex where the stadium is located also has a baseball park , the first in Portugal specially dedicated to the sport of baseball.
The Estádio Municipal de Aveiro is a football stadium in Aveiro, Portugal. It was designed for the UEFA Euro 2004 tournament by Portuguese architect Tomás Taveira . It has a capacity of 32,830 spectators, making it the fifth largest football stadium in Portugal .
Between 2002 and 2003, the municipal stadium was built. [2] The enormous rock moving process contributed heavily to the final €108.1 million cost, [ 3 ] the third most expensive of the ten new stadia built for Euro 2004, after Estádio da Luz (capacity: 64,642) and Estádio do Dragão (capacity: 50,033) in Porto , and beating Estádio José ...