Campomaiorense
Est. 1926 · Portugal
About Campomaiorense
Campomaiorense are one of Portuguese football's most romantic stories, a small-town club from Campo Maior in the Alentejo region who defied every expectation to reach the top level of the Portuguese game. Founded in 1926 as a branch of Sporting CP, the club eventually forged their own identity, reaching the final of the Taca de Portugal in 1999, an extraordinary achievement for a side from a tiny border town. After the club's owner decided to disband the professional team following the 2000-01 season, Campomaiorense disappeared from professional football, but their legacy endures as one of the great underdog stories in Iberian football.
Campomaiorense were founded in 1926 in Campo Maior in the Portalegre District, Alentejo, Portugal. They competed in the Primeira Liga and were Taca de Portugal finalists in 1999. The club disbanded their professional team in 2001 and now compete in regional leagues. The club began as branch 27 of Sporting CP.
Campomaiorense are celebrated by shirt enthusiasts for one of the most extraordinary kits in the history of Portuguese football: their late 1990s Reebok-made shirt featuring an avant-garde all-green design with a long white band across the upper shoulder, sponsored by Delta Cafes. It was a kit as bold and surprising as the club itself, worn when a tiny Alentejo border town was competing at the highest level of Portuguese football. That shirt is now one of the most sought-after pieces of Portuguese football memorabilia.
