2010–11 Honduran Liga Nacional

























































Liga Nacional
Season 2010–11
Champions Apertura:
Real España
Clausura:
Motagua
Relegated Hispano
Champions League
Real España
Motagua
Olimpia
Matches played 192
Goals scored 493 (2.57 per match)
Top goalscorer Apertura:
Jerry Bengtson (12)
Clausura:
Jerry Bengtson (15)
Biggest home win
Olimpia 6–0 Hispano
(7 March 2011)
Biggest away win
Hispano 1–4 Olimpia
(10 October 2010)
Highest scoring
Vida 5–3 Deportes Savio
(23 January 2011)
Longest unbeaten run
Olimpia (12)
Longest losing run
Victoria (8)

← 2009–10


2011–12 →


All statistics correct as of 15 May 2011.

The 2010–11 season in Honduran Liga Nacional was divided into two tournaments (Apertura and Clausura) and determined the 57th and 58th champions in the history of the league. It also provided two berths for the 2011–12 CONCACAF Champions League. The league had a reserve tournament for the first time in history with players between 15 and 20 years old.[1]




Contents






  • 1 2010–11 teams


  • 2 Team Information


  • 3 Apertura


    • 3.1 Regular season


      • 3.1.1 Standings


      • 3.1.2 Results




    • 3.2 Final round


      • 3.2.1 Semifinals


        • 3.2.1.1 Victoria vs Olimpia


        • 3.2.1.2 Marathón vs Real España




      • 3.2.2 Final


        • 3.2.2.1 Real España vs Olimpia






    • 3.3 Top goalscorers




  • 4 Clausura


    • 4.1 Regular season


      • 4.1.1 Standings


      • 4.1.2 Results




    • 4.2 Final round


      • 4.2.1 Semifinals


        • 4.2.1.1 Olimpia vs Marathón


        • 4.2.1.2 Motagua vs Vida




      • 4.2.2 Final


        • 4.2.2.1 Olimpia vs Motagua






    • 4.3 Top goalscorers




  • 5 Aggregate table


  • 6 References


  • 7 External links





2010–11 teams




2010–11 Honduran Liga Nacional is located in Honduras

Deportes Savio

Deportes Savio



Hispano

Hispano



Marathón

Marathón



Motagua

Motagua



Necaxa

Necaxa



Olimpia

Olimpia



Platense

Platense



Real España

Real España



Victoria

Victoria



Vida

Vida




Location of teams in 2010–11 season































Deportes Savio
















Hispano
















Marathón
















Motagua
















Necaxa (promoted)
















Olimpia
















Platense
















Real España
















Victoria
















Vida




  • C.D. Necaxa is from Tegucigalpa but will play their home games at Danlí.

  • Real C.D. España is from San Pedro Sula but played their home games at Choloma for the Apertura tournament.



Team Information






































































































Team
Stadium
Capacity
Manager
Captain
Shirt Manufacturer
Main Shirt Sponsor
Marathón Olímpico Metropolitano 40,000
Honduras Edwin Pavón

Honduras Mario Berríos
Joma Banco Continental
Motagua Tiburcio Carías Andino 35,000
Honduras Ramón Maradiaga

Honduras Amado Guevara
Joma
Pepsi
Olimpia Tiburcio Carías Andino 35,000

Colombia Carlos Restrepo

Honduras Danilo Turcios
Puma
Coca-Cola
Real España
Francisco Morazán1
20,000

Argentina Mario Zanabria

Honduras Alfredo Mejía
Lotto Respuestos de Atlántida
Victoria Nilmo Edwards 25,000
Honduras Jorge Pineda

Honduras Júnior Izaguirre
Leyde
Vida Nilmo Edwards 25,000

Honduras Carlos Martínez

Honduras Bryan Beckeles
Joma Leyde
Hispano Carlos Miranda 10,000
Honduras Raúl Martínez Sambulá

Argentina Pablo Genovese
Kaiser
Tigo
Platense Excélsior 10,000
Argentina Héctor Vargas

Honduras Juan Cárcamo
Joma
Necaxa Marcelo Tinoco 5,000
Honduras Jorge Jiménez
Puma CONGOLON
Deportes Savio Sergio Antonio Reyes 5,000
Honduras Hernán García
Kaiser
Tigo


  • 1 Due to disputes with the city, Real España played its home games in Choloma and Puerto Cortés during the Apertura tournament.


Apertura


The Apertura tournament started on 7 August 2010 at Estadio Nilmo Edwards in La Ceiba with the game between Vida and Real España.[2]



Regular season



Standings











































































































































Pos
Team

Pld

W

D

L

GF

GA

GD

Pts
Qualification or relegation
1

Victoria
18
10
2
6
26
24
+2
32
Qualified to the Final round
2

Marathón
18
8
7
3
26
18
+8
31
3

Real España
18
7
8
3
28
22
+6
29
4

Olimpia
18
7
7
4
29
19
+10
28
5

Platense
18
8
2
8
20
22
−2
26

6

Vida
18
7
4
7
26
23
+3
25
7

Motagua
18
5
6
7
21
25
−4
21
8

Deportes Savio
18
5
6
7
22
30
−8
21
9

Necaxa
18
5
4
9
18
19
−1
19
10

Hispano
18
3
4
11
17
31
−14
13

Updated to match(es) played on 20 November 2010. Source:[citation needed]


Results


As of 20 November 2010

















































































































































Home Away[1]

SAV

HIS
MAR MOT NEC OLI PLA RES VIC
VID

Deportes Savio


1–0

0–2

2–2

2–1

1–1

3–1

0–0

1–0

2–1

Hispano

0–0


2–2

2–0

0–0

1–4

1–2

1–3

2–3

1–0

Marathón

1–1

0–2


1–0

0–0

1–0

1–0

0–0

5–1

0–0

Motagua

1–0

2–2

3–2


1–0

1–2

1–0

1–1

3–0

0–2

Necaxa

3–1

3–0

0–1

3–0


0–1

2–1

1–1

0–2

1–2

Olimpia

5–2

2–0

2–2

1–1

1–1


2–0

2–2

1–2

1–0

Platense

2–0

2–0

2–2

2–1

1–0

1–0


1–2

2–1

0–2

Real España

3–3

1–0

3–2

1–1

1–2

2–1

2–2


1–2

1–0

Victoria

3–1

2–1

0–1

2–1

1–0

1–1

2–0

2–1


1–2

Vida

4–2

4–2

2–3

2–2

2–1

1–1

0–1

1–3

1–1


Source: Soccerway
^ The home team is listed in the left-hand column.
Colours: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.



Final round



Semifinals



Victoria vs Olimpia

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24 November 2010

19:30 (UTC−06:00)












Olimpia 2–0 Victoria

Hernández Goal 79'
Güity Goal 90+1'
Report


Estadio Tiburcio Carías Andino
Tegucigalpa

Attendance: 7,387

Referee: Geovany Mendoza




















Olimpia
















Victoria


















27 November 2010

19:30 (UTC−06:00)












Victoria 0–1 Olimpia
Report
Bruschi Goal 38'


Estadio Nilmo Edwards
La Ceiba

Attendance: 5,308

Referee: Mario Moncada




















Victoria
















Olimpia














  • Olimpia won 3–0 on aggregate score.


Marathón vs Real España



25 November 2010

19:30 (UTC−06:00)












Real España 2–2 Marathón

Bica Goal 11'
Lobo Goal 17'
Report
Diamond Goal 24'
Valladares Goal 45'


Estadio Francisco Morazán
San Pedro Sula

Attendance: 10,711

Referee: Wilson Matute




















Real España
















Marathón


















28 November 2010

15:00 (UTC−06:00)












Marathón 0–2 Real España
Report
Lobo Goal 17' Goal 54'


Estadio Yankel Rosenthal
San Pedro Sula

Attendance: 3,958

Referee: Héctor Rodríguez




















Marathón
















Real España














  • Real España won 4–2 on aggregate score.


Final



Real España vs Olimpia



5 December 2010

16:00 (UTC−06:00)












Olimpia 1–1 Real España

Días Goal 7'
Report
Lobo Goal 4'


Estadio Tiburcio Carías Andino
Tegucigalpa

Attendance: 16,964

Referee: Wilson Matute




















Olimpia
















Real España


















11 December 2010

19:30 (UTC−06:00)












Real España 2–1 (a.e.t.) Olimpia

Martínez Goal 87'
Caetano Goal 111'
Report
Bruschi Goal 71'


Estadio Francisco Morazán
San Pedro Sula

Attendance: 17,197

Referee: Benigno Pineda




















Real España
















Olimpia














  • Real España won 3–2 on aggregate score.




Liga Nacional
2010–11 Apertura Champion

Real C.D. España
10th title


Top goalscorers


As of 11 December 2010

  • 12 goals:



Honduras Jerry Bengtson (Vida)


  • 11 goals:



Honduras Saul Martínez (Victoria)


  • 9 goals:




Honduras Rony Flores (Marathón)


Brazil Douglas Mattoso (Real España)



  • 8 goals:




Belize Elroy Smith (Deportes Savio)


Honduras Luis Lobo (Real España)


Uruguay Ramiro Bruschi (Olimpia)



  • 7 goals:




Honduras Rubén Licona (Necaxa)


Honduras Alexander López (Olimpia)



  • 6 goals:




Honduras Randy Diamond (Marathón)


Brazil Carlos Días (Olimpia)



  • 5 goals:




Honduras Héctor Flores (Hispano)


Honduras Georgie Welcome (Motagua)



  • 4 goals:




Honduras Mario Martínez (Real España)


Honduras Milton Ruiz (Vida)


Colombia Mauricio Copete (Olimpia)


Honduras Pompilio Cacho (Hispano)


Argentina Christian Pereira (Platense)


Honduras Christian Martínez (Real España)


Honduras Michel Rivera (Platense)


Honduras Luis Rodas (Necaxa)



  • 3 goals:




Brazil Edilson Pereira (Deportes Savio)


Honduras Yobani Avila (Real España)


Honduras Víctor Ortiz (Victoria)


Honduras Roger Rojas (Olimpia)


Honduras Elmer Zelaya (Victoria)


Brazil Marcelo Lopes (Platense)


Honduras Juan Mejía (Deportes Savio)


Honduras Juan Cárcamo (Platense)



  • 2 goals:




Honduras Rubén Matamoros (Necaxa)


Uruguay Claudio Cardozo (Marathón)


Honduras Maynor Martínez (Real España)


Honduras Víctor Morales (Hispano)


Honduras Francisco Pavón (Vida)


Honduras José Velásquez (Victoria)


Honduras Boniek García (Olimpia)


Honduras Luis Guzmán (Motagua)


Uruguay Sergio Bica (Real España)


Honduras Carlos Solórzano (Deportes Savio)


Honduras Jorge Claros (Motagua)


Honduras Orvin Paz (Marathón)


Honduras Alexander López (Olimpia)


Honduras Shannon Welcome (Motagua)


Argentina Héctor Amarilla (Marathón)


Uruguay Oscar Torlacoff (Hispano)


Honduras Reynaldo Tilguath (Olimpia)


Honduras Samir Arzú (Victoria)


Honduras Alfredo Mejía (Real España)


Honduras Edder Delgado (Real España)


Honduras Amado Guevara (Motagua)


Belize Harrison Róches (Platense)


Honduras Danilo Turcios (Olimpia)


Belize Deon McCauley (Deportes Savio)


Honduras Walter Hernández (Olimpia)


Honduras Alexander López (Olimpia)



  • 1 goal:




Honduras Romell Quioto (Vida)


Honduras David Meza (Platense)


Brazil Marcelo dos Santos (Motagua)


Colombia Luis Castro (Vida)


Honduras Julián Rápalo (Deportes Savio)


Honduras Brayan Beckeles (Vida)


Honduras Mario Berríos (Marathón)


Honduras Carlos Mejía (Marathón)


Honduras Oscar Durón (Necaxa)


Honduras Carlos Morán (Victoria)


Honduras Wilmer Crisanto (Victoria)


Honduras Mariano Acevedo (Marathón)


Honduras Alexander Aguilar (Platense)


Honduras Angel Hill (Hispano)


Brazil Bruno da Silva (Victoria)


Honduras Jorge Lozano (Vida)


Belize Elroy Kuylen (Platense)


Honduras Víctor Mena (Victoria)


Honduras Marvin Sánchez (Vida)


Honduras Fabio Ulloa (Necaxa)


Honduras Edwin Salvador (Necaxa)


Honduras Léster Macías (Hispano)


Honduras Bani Lozano (Olimpia)


Honduras Aly Arriola (Motagua)


Honduras Rommel Murillo (Vida)


Honduras Dixon Mauricio (Necaxa)


Honduras Franco Güity (Olimpia)


Honduras Elder Valladares (Marathón)


Honduras Jesús Navas (Necaxa)


Argentina Pablo Genovese (Hispano)


Honduras Quiarol Arzú (Platense)


Colombia Charles Córdoba (Motagua)


Honduras Roger Mondragón (Motagua)


Honduras Francisco López (Deportes Savio)


Honduras Carlos Navarro (Hispano)


Brazil Ney Costa (Deportes Savio)


Honduras Milton Palacios (Marathón)


Honduras Jairo Crisanto (Victoria)


Honduras Vicente Solórzano (Deportes Savio)


Honduras Gustavo Alvarado (Motagua)


Honduras Johnny Leverón (Motagua)



  • 1 own-goal:




Honduras Johny Galdámez (Deportes Savio)


Uruguay Sergio Bica (Real España)


Honduras Erick Norales (Marathón)


Belize Elroy Smith (Deportes Savio)


Honduras Francisco Díaz (Platense)


Honduras Angel Hill (Hispano)


Honduras Luis Mercado (Hispano)




Clausura


The Clausura tournament started on 15 January 2011 with the game between reigning champions Real C.D. España who played against C.D.S. Vida.[3] The game ended with an unexpected 0–1 home defeat for Real España; Pompilio Cacho scored the first goal of the season.[4]

On 16 March 2011, the league decided to switch rounds 14 and 15, thereby the local derbies from 26–27 March don't interfere with the Honduras national football team fixtures.[5]

On 9 April 2011, C.D. Olimpia ensured its participation in the semifinals after defeating C.D. Marathón 0–1 at Estadio Francisco Morazán;[6]C.D. Motagua did it on 17 April 2011 in La Ceiba against C.D. Victoria with a 1–2 away victory;[7] and on the very last round, C.D.S. Vida and Marathón also joined to face C.D. Motagua and C.D. Olimpia on the semifinals respectively.[8] On 30 April 2011, C.D. Motagua earned a ticket to the Final after a 3–3 draw on aggregate against C.D.S. Vida;[9]C.D. Olimpia qualified against C.D. Marathón one day later.[10] As a result, the contenders of the Honduran Superclásico faced each other again for the sixth time in a Final series in the history of the league. Motagua rectified its good performance and with a 5–3 aggregate score defeated its main rival and obtained its 12th league title.[11]


Real España, Motagua and Olimpia earned berths to the 2011–12 CONCACAF Champions League.[12]



Regular season



Standings











































































































































Pos
Team

Pld

W

D

L

GF

GA

GD

Pts
Qualification or relegation
1

Olimpia
18
9
6
3
24
11
+13
33
Qualified to the Final round
2

Motagua
18
8
7
3
25
17
+8
31
3

Vida
18
7
5
6
23
18
+5
26
4

Marathón
18
7
4
7
21
17
+4
25
5

Real España
18
6
7
5
25
25
0
25

6

Necaxa
18
5
9
4
25
24
+1
24
7

Hispano
18
5
9
4
16
18
−2
24
8

Deportes Savio
18
5
5
8
25
36
−11
20
9

Platense
18
4
5
9
21
29
−8
17
10

Victoria
18
3
5
10
25
35
−10
14

Updated to match(es) played on 20 April 2011. Source:[citation needed]


Results


As of 20 April 2011

















































































































































Home Away[1]

SAV

HIS
MAR MOT NEC OLI PLA RES VIC
VID

Deportes Savio


1–0

2–1

3–3

2–2

0–0

4–2

3–3

2–1

1–0

Hispano

2–0


0–0

0–0

2–0

1–0

1–0

2–3

2–1

0–0

Marathón

1–0

2–1


0–1

2–2

0–1

0–1

2–0

3–0

2–1

Motagua

4–1

0–0

1–0


1–1

2–1

1–1

2–3

0–2

2–0

Necaxa

4–0

2–2

1–0

0–1


1–0

1–0

2–1

2–2

0–0

Olimpia

2–1

6–0

1–1

1–1

2–0


1–0

1–0

3–1

2–1

Platense

2–0

1–1

1–2

1–3

1–1

1–1


0–1

2–2

2–1

Real España

1–1

1–1

2–2

2–1

2–2

0–0

2–1


2–3

0–1

Victoria

3–1

0–0

0–2

1–2

3–3

1–2

3–4

1–1


0–2

Vida

5–3

1–1

2–1

0–0

3–1

0–0

4–1

0–1

2–1


Source: Soccerway
^ The home team is listed in the left-hand column.
Colours: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.



Final round



Semifinals



Olimpia vs Marathón



28 April 2011

19:30 (UTC−06:00)












Marathón 1–0 Olimpia

Henríquez Goal 35'
Report


Estadio Olímpico Metropolitano, San Pedro Sula

Attendance: 9,259

Referee: Héctor Rodríguez




















Marathón
















Olimpia


















1 May 2011

17:00 (UTC−06:00)












Olimpia 1–0 Marathón

Henríquez Goal 90+1' (o.g.)
Report


Estadio Tiburcio Carías Andino
Tegucigalpa

Attendance: 10,802

Referee: Benigno Pineda




















Olimpia
















Marathón














  • Olimpia 1–1 Marathón on aggregate score; Olimpia advanced on better Regular season performance.


Motagua vs Vida



27 April 2011

19:30 (UTC−06:00)












Vida 1–0 Motagua

Altamirano Goal 78'
Report


Estadio Nilmo Edwards, La Ceiba

Attendance: 6,067

Referee: Miguel Torres




















Vida
















Motagua


















30 April 2011

19:30 (UTC−06:00)












Motagua 3–2 Vida

Bengtson Goal 41' (pen.)
Ramírez Goal 80'
Copete Goal 90+2'
Report
Genovese Goal 58'
Castro Goal 71'


Estadio Tiburcio Carías Andino
Tegucigalpa

Attendance: 6,836

Referee: Erick Andino




















Motagua
















Vida














  • Motagua 3–3 Vida on aggregate score; Motagua advanced on better Regular season performance


Final



Olimpia vs Motagua



8 May 2011

16:30 (UTC−06:00)












Motagua 2–2 Olimpia

Guevara Goal 42'
Bengtson Goal 68'
Report
Caetano Goal 10'
Bruschi Goal 74'


Estadio Tiburcio Carías Andino
Tegucigalpa

Attendance: 12,462

Referee: Raúl Castro




















Motagua
















Olimpia


















15 May 2011

17:00 (UTC−06:00)












Olimpia 1–3 Motagua

de Souza Goal 29'
Report
Bengtson Goal 16' Goal 90+3' (pen.)
Guevara Goal 46'


Estadio Tiburcio Carías Andino
Tegucigalpa

Attendance: 23,326

Referee: Héctor Rodríguez




















Olimpia
















Motagua














  • Motagua won 5–3 on aggregate score.




Liga Nacional
2010–11 Clausura Champion

Motagua
12th title


Top goalscorers


As of 15 May 2011

  • 15 goals:



Honduras Jerry Bengtson (Motagua)


  • 12 goals:



Brazil Ney Costa (Deportes Savio)


  • 9 goals:



Honduras Elmer Zelaya (Victoria)


  • 7 goals:




Honduras Rolando López (Deportes Savio)


Uruguay Óscar Torlacoff (Hispano)



  • 6 goals:




Uruguay Julio Rodríguez (Real España)


Honduras Eddie Hernández (Platense)



  • 5 goals:




Honduras Roger Rojas (Olimpia)


Honduras Nery Medina (Necaxa)


Uruguay Ramiro Bruschi (Olimpia)


Honduras Francisco Pavón (Vida)


Honduras Rony Flores (Marathón)


Honduras Amado Guevara (Motagua)


Colombia Charles Córdoba (Necaxa)


Brazil Douglas Caetano (Olimpia)



  • 4 goals:




Honduras Mitchel Rivera (Platense)


Honduras Carlos Oliva (Victoria)


Honduras Emil Martínez (Marathón)


Honduras Pompilio Cacho (Vida)



  • 3 goals:




Belize Harrison Róches (Necaxa)


Honduras Melvin Valladares (Real España)


Honduras Alexander Aguilar (Platense)


Brazil Jocimar Nascimento (Vida)


Argentina José Pacini (Platense)


Honduras Samir Arzú (Victoria)


Honduras Óscar Durón (Necaxa)


Argentina Pablo Genovese (Vida)


Honduras Mario Martínez (Real España)


Honduras Javier Portillo (Vida)


Honduras Saul Martínez (Victoria)


Guatemala Guillermo Ramírez (Motagua)



  • 2 goals:




Honduras Román Castillo (Vida)


Uruguay Jorge Ramírez (Real España)


Honduras Óscar García (Olimpia)


Honduras Rubén Licona (Necaxa)


Honduras Juan Cárcamo (Platense)


Honduras Orvin Paz (Marathón)


Honduras Gerson Rodas (Real España)


Honduras Julián Rápalo (Deportes Savio)


Honduras Edder Delgado (Real España)


Honduras Sergio Mendoza (Motagua)


Honduras Fernando Castillo (Marathón)


Honduras Adán Ramírez (Motagua)


Honduras Carlos Mejía (Marathón)


Honduras Reynaldo Tilguath (Olimpia)


Honduras Víctor Morales (Hispano)


Honduras Milton Ruiz (Vida)


Honduras Rommel Murillo (Vida)


Honduras Rubén Matamoros (Necaxa)



  • 1 goal:




Honduras Marvin Sánchez (Necaxa)


Colombia Steven Jiménez (Victoria)


Honduras Erick Norales (Marathón)


Honduras Fredixon Elvir (Olimpia)


Colombia Eder Arias (Platense)


Honduras Jairo Róchez (Victoria)


Honduras Franco Güity (Olimpia)


Honduras Henry Martínez (Real España)


Honduras Kurt Cárcamo (Marathón)


Honduras Víctor Ortiz (Victoria)


Honduras Danilo Turcios (Olimpia)


Honduras Johnny Leverón (Motagua)


Honduras Mario Girón (Motagua)


Honduras Juan Mejía (Deportes Savio)


Honduras Maynor Martínez (Real España)


Honduras Astor Henríquez (Marathón)


Brazil Fábio de Souza (Olimpia)


Brazil Edilson Pereira (Marathón)


Honduras Bani Lozano (Olimpia)


Honduras Irbin Guerrero (Deportes Savio)


Uruguay Sergio Bica (Real España)


Honduras Henry Acosta (Hispano)


Honduras José Discua (Hispano)


Honduras Jorge Claros (Motagua)


Honduras Johnny Calderón (Olimpia)


Honduras Víctor Mena (Victoria)


Honduras Carlos Sánchez (Marathón)


Honduras Milton Palacios (Victoria)


Honduras Leonardo Morales (Hispano)


Uruguay Claudio Cardozo (Marathón)


Honduras Félix Crisanto (Victoria)


Argentina Héctor Patiño (Deportes Savio)


Colombia Mauricio Copete (Motagua)


Honduras Francisco López (Deportes Savio)


Honduras Carlos Solórzano (Platense)


Honduras Alexander López (Olimpia)


Argentina Sergio Diduch (Hispano)


Honduras Dany Pineda (Hispano)


Honduras Carlos Morán (Motagua)


Honduras David Meza (Platense)


Honduras Leonardo Isaula (Necaxa)


Honduras Luis Santamaría (Marathón)


Honduras Pedro Domínguez (Hispano)


Honduras Luis Lobo (Real España)


Honduras Diego Rodríguez (Real España)


Honduras Fabio Ulloa (Necaxa)


Honduras Jesús Navas (Necaxa)


Honduras Christian Altamirano (Vida)


Colombia Luis Castro (Vida)



  • 1 own-goal:




Honduras Henry Acosta (Hispano)


Honduras Carlos Pérez (Necaxa)


Honduras Astor Henríquez (Marathón)


Brazil Douglas Mattoso (Olimpia)


Honduras Mario Padilla (Deportes Savio)


Honduras Vicente Solórzano (Deportes Savio)


Honduras Jorge Lozano (Vida)




Aggregate table


Relegation was determined by the aggregated table of both Apertura and Clausura tournaments. On 17 April 2011 Hispano F.C. were mathematically relegated to the Liga de Ascenso after a 0–0 home draw against C.D. Marathón at Estadio Carlos Miranda.[13] Hispano played 6 season at Liga Nacional since 2005–06.















































































































































Pos
Team

Pld

W

D

L

GF

GA

GD

Pts
Qualification or relegation
1

Olimpia
36
16
13
7
53
30
+23
61
Qualified to the 2011–12 CONCACAF Champions League Preliminary Round[a]
2

Marathón
36
15
11
10
47
35
+12
56

3

Real España
36
13
15
8
53
47
+6
54
Qualified to the 2011–12 CONCACAF Champions League Group Stage[b]
4

Motagua
36
13
13
10
46
42
+4
52
Qualified to the 2011–12 CONCACAF Champions League Preliminary Round[b]
5

Vida
36
14
9
13
49
41
+8
51

6

Victoria
36
13
7
16
51
59
−8
46
7

Necaxa
36
10
13
13
43
43
0
43
8

Platense
36
12
7
17
41
51
−10
43
9

Deportes Savio
36
10
11
15
47
66
−19
41
10

Hispano
36
8
13
15
33
49
−16
37
Relegated to the 2011–12 Liga de Ascenso

Updated to match(es) played on 20 April 2011. Source:[citation needed]
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
Notes:




  1. ^ Olimpia qualified to the 2011–12 CONCACAF Champions League as berth reallocated from Belize.


  2. ^ ab Real España and Motagua qualified to the 2011–12 CONCACAF Champions League as Apertura and Clausura champions respectively.




References





  1. ^ LaTribuna.hn–Muchas novedades trae el Apertura 2010-11 Archived 2010-10-25 at the Wayback Machine–7 August 2010


  2. ^ Diez.hn - El torneo de la Liga Nacional inicia el 7 de agosto Archived 2013-07-06 at Archive.today – 23 May 2010


  3. ^ Diez.hn–El torneo Clausura en Honduras arranca el 15 de enero Archived 2012-08-03 at Archive.today–6 January 2011


  4. ^ LaPrensa.hn–Vida le estrena la corona al Real España Archived 2012-09-07 at Archive.today–15 January 2011


  5. ^ LaTribunaDeportiva.hn–Jornada 14 pasa a ser la 15 y esta la 14 Archived 2012-03-17 at the Wayback Machine–16 March 2011


  6. ^ LaTribunaDeportiva.hn–Olimpia se metió a la "fiesta" Archived 2012-09-05 at Archive.today–9 April 2011


  7. ^ LaTribunaDeportiva.hn–Vuelo a la Liguilla Archived 2012-03-17 at the Wayback Machine–17 April 2011


  8. ^ Diez.hn–Honduras tiene a sus semifinalistas–20 April 2011


  9. ^ Tiempo.hn–¡Grandeza azul![permanent dead link]–1 May 2011


  10. ^ ElHeraldo.hn–De carambola, Olimpia a la final contra Motagua Archived 2011-05-10 at the Wayback Machine–1 May 2011


  11. ^ ElHeraldo.hn–Y el Motagua vuelve a mandar... Archived 2011-05-21 at the Wayback Machine–16 May 2011


  12. ^ CONCACAF.com–Olimpia awarded fourth straight CCL berth Archived 2011-05-21 at the Wayback Machine–17 May 2011


  13. ^ LaTribunaDeportiva.hn–El "Burro" se despidió de la Primera Archived 2012-08-04 at Archive.today–17 April 2011




External links


  • Official website - LINA.hn









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