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Taca da Liga

Standings

Taca da Liga · 2025

Current Taca da Liga 2025 standings with 12 teams. Benfica leads the table with 3 points after 3 matches, followed by Galitos Barreiro on 2 points. The table shows wins, losses, scoring, and win percentage — essential for pre-match betting analysis.

Playoffs
TeamPlayedWonLostPoints For:Points AgainstPoint DiffForm
Group A
1Benfica330287:243+44
WWW
2Galitos Barreiro321267:250+17
WWL
3Vitoria312246:259-13
LLW
4CD Povoa303227:275-48
LLL
Group B
1FC Porto330265:231+34
WWW
2Sporting CP321257:237+20
LWW
3CA Queluz312236:248-12
WLL
4Imortal303212:254-42
LLL
Group C
1Ovarense330249:199+50
WWW
2Oliveirense321256:231+25
LWW
3Galomar312235:229+6
WLL
4Esgueira303223:304-81
LLL
Ranking of second-placed teams
1Oliveirense321256:231+25
LWW
2Sporting CP321257:237+20
LWW
3Galitos Barreiro321267:250+17
WWL

Results

Taca da Liga · 23
Final04/05/2025
Sun 04/05
Match Details
Semi-finals03/05/2025
Benfica95104OTFC Porto
Sat 03/05
Match Details
Sat 03/05
Match Details
Quarter-finals01/05/2025
Thu 01/05
Match Details
Thu 01/05
Match Details
Group stage17/12/2024–13/04/2025
Sun 13/04
Match Details
Wed 09/04
Match Details
Wed 09/04
Match Details
Tue 08/04
Match Details
Tue 08/04
Match Details
Tue 08/04
Match Details
Sat 01/03
Match Details
Sat 01/03
Match Details
Sat 01/03
Match Details
Sat 01/03
Match Details
Sat 01/03
Match Details
Wed 05/02
Match Details
Sun 02/02
Match Details
Sun 26/01
Match Details
Wed 18/12
Match Details
Tue 17/12
Match Details
Tue 17/12
Match Details
Tue 17/12
Match Details

Team Stats

Side-by-side performance comparison of all 12 teams in the Taca da Liga. Benfica leads with 3 wins this season. The colour-coded heatmap highlights wins, losses, scoring, scoring difference, and win percentage — making it easy to spot the strongest and weakest teams at a glance for betting analysis.

Top Scoring Teams

Team#PlayedWonLostPoints ForPoints Against
Benfica1330287243
Galitos Barreiro2321267250
Vitoria3312246259
CD Povoa4303227275
FC Porto5330265231
Sporting CP6321257237
CA Queluz7312236248
Imortal8303212254
Ovarense9330249199
Oliveirense10321256231
Galomar11312235229
Esgueira12303223304
Oliveirense13321256231
Sporting CP14321257237
Galitos Barreiro15321267250

Past Seasons

Taca da Liga

Browse 6 archived seasons of the Taca da Liga, from 2021 to 2026. Each season page includes full standings, top scorers, and match results — useful for comparing historical performance and identifying long-term betting patterns.

History 19 Mar 2026

Founded1989Preceded byTroféu Manuel Castelbranco

The Taça da Liga originated as the Troféu Manuel Castelbranco in 1989, serving as a secondary competition within Portuguese basketball's domestic structure. The tournament was rebranded to its current name, Taça da Liga, in 2009 and has since evolved into a significant cup competition that provides clubs with an alternative pathway to silverware. The competition was not disputed in the 2008/09 season during the transition period. Over its history, the tournament has maintained a consistent format involving group-stage play followed by knockout stages, allowing clubs from across Portugal's professional basketball pyramid to compete. The tournament has grown in prominence, with top-tier clubs like Benfica, FC Porto, and Sporting CP regularly competing alongside mid-table and lower-division clubs, creating opportunities for smaller clubs to upset the established hierarchy.

  • 1989 — Troféu Manuel Castelbranco established as secondary domestic cup competition
  • 2009 — Tournament rebranded to Taça da Liga and moved to tier-2 status
  • 2010/11 — Benfica claimed first title in rebranded competition
  • 2012/13 — Benfica began dominant period with consecutive titles
  • 2019/20 — UD Oliveirense won their fourth title, establishing themselves as major contenders
  • 2023/24 — Benfica captured 13th title, extending their all-time record

Competition Format 19 Mar 2026

Teams12

The Taça da Liga operates through a group-stage format where 12 teams are divided into three groups of four clubs each. Each team plays three matches within their group (one home, one away, one neutral or home/away). The top team from each group advances directly to the semi-finals, while the best-placed second-team also qualifies, creating a semi-final stage with four clubs. The tournament culminates in a single-game final to determine the champion. This format ensures competitive balance while allowing clubs across Portugal's basketball landscape to participate in a prestigious domestic cup competition.

Records 19 Mar 2026

Most titlesSport Lisboa Benfica (13)

FC Porto holds the second-most titles with 8 championships, while UD Oliveirense has won 5 titles, establishing themselves as the third most successful club in the competition's history.

Analysis 19 Mar 2026

Current Season Analysis

The 2024/25 Taça da Liga season showcases the competitive depth of Portuguese basketball, with Benfica and FC Porto establishing themselves as the early frontrunners in their respective groups. In Group A, Benfica has maintained a perfect record with three wins from three matches, accumulating 287 points while limiting opponents to just 243, demonstrating their offensive prowess and defensive solidity. Their goal differential of +44 points represents the strongest performance across all groups, signalling their intent to claim another title. Meanwhile, in Group B, FC Porto has matched Benfica's perfect record, scoring 265 points and conceding 231 to establish a +34 goal differential that positions them as serious contenders for the final.

The battle for the third qualifying spot reveals intriguing sub-plots across the tournament. Galitos Barreiro (Group A) and Sporting CP (Group B) occupy second positions in their respective groups with identical 3-0 records, each accumulating 267 and 257 points respectively. Ovarense has emerged as the dominant force in Group C, matching Benfica and Porto's perfect 3-0 record while posting an impressive +50 goal differential—the highest margin relative to their point total—suggesting they could pose a serious threat to the traditional powerhouses in the knockout stages. This three-way competition between Ovarense, Benfica, and Porto for the strongest semi-final seeding creates compelling narrative tension heading into the final group matches.

The relegation battle appears non-existent in traditional terms, as the Taça da Liga features no relegation mechanism. However, the bottom-placed teams in each group—CD Povoa (Group A), Imortal (Group B), and Esgueira (Group C)—have all suffered winless records with 0-3 results, indicating significant competitive gaps. Esgueira faces particular challenges with a catastrophic -81 goal differential, the worst in the tournament, suggesting they are outmatched against the professional-level competition. These results highlight the disparity between Portugal's elite basketball clubs and mid-tier competitors.

Ovarense emerges as the season's standout performer, combining their perfect record with the tournament's best goal differential (+50 points). Their ability to dominate opponents while maintaining defensive discipline positions them as potential dark horses capable of upsetting the established hierarchy. The squad's consistency across all three group matches suggests they possess the cohesion and tactical discipline required to challenge Benfica and Porto in a knockout setting, where a single-game format could neutralise the traditional powerhouses' depth advantages.

The 2024/25 season's most unexpected storyline involves the competitive balance between the three group winners. While Benfica and Porto have historically dominated Portuguese basketball, Ovarense's superior goal differential (+50) compared to Benfica (+44) and Porto (+34) raises intriguing questions about whether the traditional hierarchy might be challenged in the semi-finals. If Ovarense can maintain their momentum into the knockout stages, they could become the season's defining upset narrative, potentially preventing another title for Benfica or Porto and elevating themselves among the competition's elite clubs.

Tournament Structure and Competitive Format

The Taça da Liga operates under a unique group-stage format designed to maximise competitive balance while maintaining the participation of Portugal's professional basketball clubs. The division of 12 teams into three balanced groups ensures that mid-tier clubs have realistic pathways to the semi-finals, preventing the tournament from becoming a foregone conclusion dominated exclusively by Benfica, Porto, and Sporting CP. This structure contrasts with cup competitions in other nations, where larger team pools and single-elimination formats often eliminate competitive clubs early. The Portuguese format preserves competitive integrity by guaranteeing that group winners advance automatically, while rewarding consistency through the best second-place team qualification rule.

The group-stage format's three-match requirement per team creates a compressed but intense competition window. Each team plays all other group members once, with the home-and-away structure determining match scheduling. This condensed format differs significantly from the Liga Portuguesa's full season structure, creating a sprint-like competition where momentum and form prove crucial. Teams cannot afford extended slumps, as dropping points in any of the three matches substantially diminishes their qualification prospects. The format's intensity has historically produced surprising results, with lower-seeded clubs occasionally upsetting favourites when tactical preparation or individual performances converge effectively.

Historical Dominance and Club Hierarchy

The Taça da Liga's historical record establishes an unmistakable hierarchy within Portuguese basketball, with Benfica's 13 titles representing nearly 50% of the competition's championships since the rebranding in 2009. This dominance reflects Benfica's broader superiority in Portuguese basketball, where they have won 31 Liga Portuguesa championships—more than any other club. FC Porto's eight titles position them as the second force, while UD Oliveirense's five championships demonstrate that success in the Taça da Liga extends beyond the traditional "big three" of Benfica, Porto, and Sporting CP. Sporting CP, despite their status as one of Portugal's elite clubs, has won only two Taça da Liga titles, suggesting that the cup competition's format or scheduling has occasionally disadvantaged them relative to their league performance.

The competition's history reveals cyclical patterns in club success. Between 2012 and 2017, Benfica won five titles in six seasons, establishing an era of dominance that reflected their investment in player development and coaching infrastructure. The subsequent period (2018–2024) saw more distributed success, with UD Oliveirense, Sporting CP, and Porto each claiming titles, suggesting the tournament's format may be creating genuine competitive opportunities outside the traditional hierarchy. The 2024/25 season's early standings indicate this competitive dispersion continues, with Ovarense's strong performance suggesting that investment in basketball development outside Lisbon's traditional powerhouses is yielding results.

International Context and Portuguese Basketball Development

The Taça da Liga operates within Portugal's broader basketball ecosystem, where the Liga Portuguesa de Basquetebol (founded 1932) remains the primary professional competition. Portugal's basketball culture, while not matching football's global prominence, has developed a respectable domestic structure supporting professional clubs. The national team has competed in European championships, though consistent Olympic or World Cup qualification remains elusive. The Taça da Liga's existence as a secondary competition reflects Portugal's commitment to providing multiple pathways for club success and player development, creating a three-tournament structure (Liga Portuguesa, Taça da Liga, and Taça de Portugal) that distributes silverware and maintains competitive interest throughout the season.

European basketball's broader context reveals Portugal's position as a mid-tier basketball nation within Europe. While not competing at the level of traditional powers like Spain, France, or Serbia, Portuguese clubs have occasionally qualified for European competitions and produced individual players who have competed in higher-profile leagues. The Taça da Liga's existence and broadcast coverage on national television (Sport TV and SIC) demonstrates domestic investment in basketball's development, even if international prominence remains limited. The tournament serves as a development platform where younger players gain experience against professional-standard opposition, supporting the pipeline that feeds both domestic and European club basketball.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many teams compete in the Taça da Liga?

Twelve professional basketball clubs from the Liga Portuguesa de Basquetebol compete in the Taça da Liga each season, divided into three groups of four teams.

Who has won the most Taça da Liga titles?

Sport Lisboa Benfica holds the all-time record with 13 Taça da Liga titles, followed by FC Porto with 8 championships and UD Oliveirense with 5 titles.

When was the Taça da Liga basketball competition founded?

The competition was originally founded in 1989 as the Troféu Manuel Castelbranco and was rebranded to Taça da Liga in 2009, becoming the current secondary domestic cup competition.

How does the Taça da Liga format work?

The tournament features 12 teams divided into three groups. Each team plays three matches within their group, with the winners of each group plus the best second-place team advancing to the semi-finals. A single-game final determines the champion.

Is the Taça da Liga broadcast on television?

Yes, the Taça da Liga is broadcast on Portuguese television channels Sport TV and SIC, with matches and the final receiving nationwide coverage.

What is the difference between the Taça da Liga and Taça de Portugal?

The Taça da Liga is the secondary domestic cup competition featuring Liga Portuguesa teams only, while the Taça de Portugal is a cup competition that includes teams from multiple levels of Portuguese basketball.

API data: 13 May 2026 · Content updated: 19 Mar 2026