S.C. Braga B

Braga B
Full nameSporting Clube de Braga B
Nickname(s)Os Arcebispos (The Archbishops)
Os Arsenalistas (The Arsenalists)
Minhotos (Those from Minho)
Os Guerreiros do Minho (The Minho Warriors)
Short nameBraga B
Founded1999–2006, 2012–
GroundEstádio Primeiro de Maio
Capacity28,800 (limited to 5,000 in Segunda Liga)[1]
PresidentAntónio Salvador
ManagerCustódio Castro
LeagueLiga 3
2021–22Liga 3 Serie North, 3rd (First stage)
Promotion series Serie 2, 3rd (Second stage)
Websitehttp://www.scbraga.pt/

Sporting Clube de Braga B, commonly known as Sporting de Braga B or just Braga B, is a Portuguese football team. It is the reserve team of S.C. Braga. Reserve teams in Portugal play in the same league system as the senior team, rather than in a reserve team league. However, they cannot play in the same division as their senior team, therefore Braga B is ineligible for promotion to the Primeira Liga and also cannot play in the Taça de Portugal and Taça da Liga.

SC Braga had a B team until the 2005–06 season where it played in the Portuguese Second Division.[2] Prior to the end of the 2005–06 season, it was announced that Braga B would fold from the Portuguese league system along with the B teams of Benfica, Porto and Sporting.[3][4] The club refounded itself in the 2012–13 season, when a new set of rules regarding B teams was introduced in Portuguese football system. For 2012–13 season, another five B Teams, alongside Braga B, where refounded and established themselves in Segunda Liga.

Braga B plays its home games at the Estádio Primeiro de Maio, which holds a capacity of 30,000.[5] It inherited the stadium from the senior team who left there in 2003 following the construction of the Estádio Municipal de Braga.

  1. ^ Liga Portugal
  2. ^ "II Divisão Série A". ZeroZero (in Portuguese). Retrieved 1 November 2012.
  3. ^ "O fim das equipas B" [The end of the B teams]. Record (in Portuguese). 19 May 2006. Retrieved 1 November 2012.
  4. ^ "Fim da equipa B exige redefinição estrutural" [End of the B team requires redefining its structure]. Record (in Portuguese). 11 June 2006. Retrieved 1 November 2012.
  5. ^ "Estádio 1º Maio". ZeroZero (in Portuguese). Retrieved 1 November 2012.

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