2002–03 Honduran Liga Nacional
The 2002–03 season in the Honduran Liga Nacional was the 37th edition since the intervention of the professional league in Honduran football. The season was divided into two halves (Apertura and Clausura) which ran from August 2002 to June 2003.[1] 2002–03 teams
AperturaThe Apertura tournament lasted from August to December 2002, C.D. Olimpia defeated C.D. Platense in the Final to secure its 16th league title. Regular seasonResults
Standings
Updated to match(es) played on 24 November 2002. Source: [citation needed] Notes: Final roundSemifinalsPlatense vs Real España
Olimpia vs Marathón
FinalPlatense vs Olimpia
SquadsJose Gonzales Top goalscorers15 goals 11 goals 6 goals ClausuraThe Clausura tournament was played from February to June 2003. C.D. Marathón took revenge a year and a half later and defeated C.D. Motagua in the finals to claim its 4th league title. Regular seasonResults
Standings
Updated to match(es) played on 10 May 2003. Source: [citation needed]
Final roundSemifinalsOlimpia vs Motagua
Marathón vs Real España
FinalMarathón vs Motagua{{football box collapsible | round = 1st leg | date = 25 May 2003 | time = 16:00 (UTC−06:00) | team1 = Motagua | score = 1–1 | report = | team2 = Marathón | goals1 = Lozano 79' | goals2 = Martínez 65' | location = Tegucigalpa, Francisco Morazán | stadium = Estadio Tiburcio Carías Andino | attendance = 21,691 | referee = Óscar Bardales | result = | nobars =
SquadsTop goalscorers10 goals 8 goals 6 goals 6 goals 5 goals 4 goals
3 goals RelegationRelegation was determined by the aggregated table of both Apertura and Clausura tournaments. On 10 May 2003, C.D. Victoria were relegated to Liga de Ascenso, however they bought Honduras Salzburg's franchise and stayed in first division.
Updated to match(es) played on 10 May 2003. Source: [citation needed] Notes: ControversiesDuring the Apertura tournament, C.D. Marathón hosted Real C.D. España on week 9, the match was played on 28 September and ended with a 0–2 away win to Real España. During halftime, Real España delayed more than 15 minutes and returned late to play the second half. Marathón alleged and the Board of Discipline annulled the game. A rematch was played on 13 October ending in a 0–0 draw. Such decision affected the final standings which resulted in Marathón owning the third place and sent Real España to fourth.[2] References
|