Portugal national rugby union team

The Portugal national rugby union team (Portuguese: Seleção Portuguesa de Rugby), nicknamed Os Lobos (The Wolves), represents Portugal in men's international rugby union competitions. The team, as well as all rugby union in Portugal, is administered by the Federação Portuguesa de Rugby.

Portugal
Nickname(s)Os Lobos (The Wolves)
EmblemPortuguese shield
UnionPortuguese Rugby Federation
Head coachSimon Mannix
CaptainTomás Appleton
Most capsGonçalo Uva (101)
Vasco Uva (101)
Top scorerGonçalo Malheiro (279)
Top try scorerRodrigo Marta (25)
Home stadiumVarious
First colours
Second colours
World Rugby ranking
Current13 (as of 9 October 2023)
Highest13 (2023)
Lowest30 (2015, 2016)
First international
 Portugal 5–6 Spain 
(Lisbon, Portugal; 13 April 1935)
Biggest win
 Portugal 93–0 Czech Republic 
(Caldas da Rainha, Portugal; 23 March 2019)
Biggest defeat
 New Zealand 108–13 Portugal 
(Lyon, France; 15 September 2007)
World Cup
Appearances2 (First in 2007)
Best resultPool stage (2007, 2023)
Websitefpr.pt

Portugal have experienced modest success in the last two decades. They qualified for the 2007 Rugby World Cup in France and though they lost all their matches, they managed to score one try in each game and led against Romania until the late minutes. Portugal qualified for their second Rugby World Cup in 2022, topping a repechage qualifying group featuring the United States, Hong Kong, and Kenya to qualify for the 2023 Rugby World Cup. In that edition of the tournament, Portugal got their first competition points in a Rugby World Cup when they drew Georgia 18-18. Later on in the tournament, they got their first ever win in the Rugby World Cup when they beat Fiji 24-23 thanks to a late try from Rodrigo Marta.

History

Early

Portugal played its first ever rugby international in April 1935 against Spain, losing by a single point, 6–5. They played Spain again the following year with Spain winning 16–9. Portugal had more regular competition from the mid-1960s, and won their first game in 1966, defeating Spain 9–3. Portugal played Italy for the first time in 1967, losing 6–3. They also had their first match against Romania soon after and lost by 40 points. They defeated Belgium in 1968, and also played Morocco for the first time.

The first game of the 1970s was a draw against the Netherlands. Portugal managed to draw with Italy (nil all) in 1972 and following that, defeated them 9–6 in 1973. After a number of mixed results throughout the early 1970s, Portugal won five matches in a row from 1979 through to 1981. They played Morocco, who won the encounter. After a 1983 draw against Spain, Portugal managed a seven-game winning streak from 1984 to 1985, including wins over Belgium, Denmark, Morocco, Czechoslovakia, Poland and Zimbabwe. The first Rugby World Cup was held in 1987, though it was by invitation, thus there was no qualifying tournament and Portugal did not participate.

1990s

From 1989 to 1990, the 1991 World Cup qualifiers were held for the European nations. Portugal started in Round 2b in October 1989. They defeated Czechoslovakia 15 to 13 in Ricant to advance to Round 2c. However here they were defeated by the Netherlands 32–3 and eliminated from qualifying.

Portugal again participated in the 1995 World Cup qualifying competition for European teams, starting in Round 1. They were pooled in the West Group, and defeated Belgium and Switzerland, but lost to Spain, advancing into Round 2. Here Wales defeated them, and they lost to Spain.

Portugal began in Pool 3 of Round B in the European qualifying competition for the 1999 Rugby World Cup. Portugal won all their group matches, except for the one against Spain, and still finished second in the group, which took them into Pool 3 of Round C. All games were held in Edinburgh, Scotland. Portugal lost 85–11 to Scotland, and 21–17 to Spain. Both Scotland and Spain went through to the World Cup; Portugal went into repechage, where Portugal lost a home and away series to Uruguay.

2000s

In 2002, Portugal began playing for a place in the 2003 Rugby World Cup in Pool A of Round 3 of the European qualifying tournament. They were grouped with Spain and Poland. Each nation only won one game, though on for and against Portugal finished second to Spain. Portugal were knocked out of competition. In 2003–04, Portugal won the European Nations Cup, losing only one match to win their first championship. In 2004, Professor Tomaz Morais, coach of the Portugal national team at both sevens and fifteen a side, was nominated for the IRB's coach of the year award. This was a remarkable achievement for a coach from a third tier rugby nation. Morais has been credited with much of Portugal's progress in recent years.

In 2006, it was announced that Portugal would receive a grant from the IRB to help develop their rugby to Tier 2 standard. Few details were released regarding how the money was spent, but it was hoped it would ensure that Portugal's rugby would be able to move onto the next level. In 2006, the inaugural IRB Nations Cup was hosted in Lisbon. The tournament featured Portugal, Russia, Argentina A and Italy A.

2007 World Cup

Portugal began their qualification campaign for the 2007 Rugby World Cup in 2004, as part of the European Nations Cup Division 1 2004–06 tournament. They won their first match, defeating Ukraine 6–36. They then defeated Georgia 18–14 in their second match, won their third match against the Czech Republic, defeated Russia as well, but then lost to Romania. Portugal then drew with Russia 19-all and lost to Georgia. After a loss to Romania and a win against the Czech Republic, Portugal finished third overall in the standings, and qualified for Round 5.

Round 5 was played in October 2006 as a three match series between Italy, Russia and Portugal. Both Portugal and Russia lost heavily in their matches against Italy, who easily qualified for the finals. Second place came down to the final match of the round in Lisbon. Portugal won the match 26–23 against Russia to make it to Round 6. Round 6 was a home and away series against the Round 5 Pool B winners, Georgia. Portugal lost the first match, but drew 11-all in the second meeting. Georgia went through to the finals, and Portugal entered the repechage round where they defeated Morocco 26–20 on aggregate.

Portugal then faced Uruguay for the last position in the finals. In the first leg of the two-match Repechage series, Portugal won 12–5. In the second game in Montevideo Portugal lost 18–12. On aggregate, Portugal won 24–23, sending them to their first ever World Cup. Having qualified for their first World Cup, several players were subsequently arrested in the ensuing celebrations as a result of an altercation with local police. No charges were laid and the players involved were allowed to leave Uruguay.

In the 2007 Rugby World Cup, Portugal went to Pool C, alongside favourites the All Blacks, Italy, Romania and Scotland. Portugal's highlights included preventing Italy getting a bonus point, scoring a try against the All Blacks, and coming within a try of beating Romania before losing 14–10. They also managed to score in all the four games, unlike Scotland and Romania. The Portugal team were celebrated for their commitment and passion, and for being the only amateur team to make it to the World Cup.

2008–present

After the World Cup, Portugal faced some problems, including the end of the club and international careers of several key players, like Joaquim Ferreira, Paulo Murinello, Samuel Belo and Rui Cordeiro, and achieved only one win over Czech Republic in the final round of the European Nations Cup tournament, finishing in 5th place, their worst result since 2002.

On 1 November 2008, they lost at home against Canada 21–13 in a friendly game.[1] After a disappointing campaign under Tomaz Morais in the 2006-08 edition of the Six Nations B, that would qualify for the 2011 Rugby World Cup finals, Murray Henderson was assigned as Specialist Forward coach.

Portugal missed the second presence at the Rugby World Cup finals, after two surprising losses at home with Georgia (10–16) and Romania (9–20), which the "Lobos" had previously defeated 22–21 abroad. Portugal thus missed the 3rd place that would have granted access to the Rugby World Cup repechage.

Tomaz Morais was replaced by New Zealand coach Errol Brain, in October 2010, with a three years contract. He had mixed results, starting with strong performances but ended up with disappointing games. He was replaced by Frederico Sousa in October 2013.

Portugal lost to Germany in the 2015–16 European Nations Cup Division 1A, finishing last, resulting in relegation for the following year.

After Portugal got relegated to the 2016–17 Rugby Europe Trophy, Portugal went on to win the tournament 3 times in a row until the 2018-19 season, when they were granted promotion to the Rugby Europe Championship. Since then, Portugal have been quite successful in the competition. In the 2020-21 season, they finished 3rd place in a league system and in the 2022-23 season, they finished 1st place in a pool with Romania, Poland and Belgium, which led them to a semi-final with Spain, which they won (27-10), going all the way to the final in Badajoz, which they unfortunately lost to Georgia (38-11).

Portugal qualified for the 2023 Rugby World Cup through the repechage tournament held in Dubai, beating Hong Kong, Kenya and drawing with the USA (16-16) on the last game, winning the repechage tournament on point difference.

They had a successful tournament, coming 4th in Pool C. They drew 18-18 with Georgia and pulled off a shock upset by beating Fiji 24-23. After the tournament, their world ranking was 13th, the highest they had ever been.

Kit providers

YearKit manufacturerMain shirt sponsor
2005-2008 Quebramar Caixa Geral de Depósitos
2008-2014 Adidas
2014-2016 Canterbury
2016-2019
2019-2020 CV&A Consulting
2020- Banco Santander

Record

Rugby Europe International Championships

Season Division Head Coach Captain G W D L PF PA +/− Pts Pos
2000Championship Evan Crawford520374100–2695th
2001Championship Evan Crawford510477165–8875th
2002Championship Tomaz MoraisRohan Hoffmann520393130–3794th
2003Championship Tomaz MoraisLuís Pissarra550015385+68151st
2004Championship Tomaz MoraisLuís Pissarra54019295-3132nd
2005Championship Tomaz MoraisLuís Pissarra540110173+28133rd
2006Championship Tomaz MoraisVasco Uva521292100-8104th
2007Championship Tomaz MoraisVasco Uva52035896–3894th
2008Championship Tomaz MoraisJoão Correia5104116100+1675th
2009Championship Tomaz MoraisJoão Correia531112484+40123rd
2010Championship Tomaz MoraisJoão Correia520313165+6694th
2011Championship Errol BrainJoão Correia530211398+15143rd
2012Championship Errol BrainGonçalo Uva5104102132–3075th
2013Championship Errol BrainJoão Correia51137596–2174th
2014Championship Frederico SousaJoão Correia510470126–5655th
2015Championship João Luís PintoVasco Uva510452100–4855th
2016Championship Ian SmithFrancisco Pinto Magalhães500572210–13816th*
2017Trophy Martim AguiarFrancisco Pinto Magalhães550017937+142251st
2018Trophy Martim AguiarJoão Lino550016876+92231st
2019Trophy Martim AguiarSalvador Vassalo550027231+242251st
2020Championship Patrice LagisquetTomás Appleton520398111-1394th
2021Championship Patrice LagisquetTomás Appleton5302196139+57143rd
2022Championship Patrice LagisquetTomás Appleton521213998+41124th
2023Championship Patrice LagisquetTomás Appleton540119588+107192nd
2024Championship Daniel HourcadeTomás Appleton5302152107+45152nd

Notes: Portugal's last place finish in the 2014–16 European Nations Cup First Division resulted in their relegation to 2016–17 Rugby Europe Trophy in the following year.

World Rugby Nations Cup

Year G W D L PF PA +/− Pts Pos
200630126287–2534th
2007did not enter
2008
2009
2010
201131026089–2956th
2012300337104–6716th
2013did not enter
2014
2015

World Cup Record

Rugby World Cup record Qualification
Year Round Pld W D L PF PA Squad Head coach Pos Pld W D L PF PA
1987 Not invited Not invited
1991 Did not qualify n/a 2 1 0 1 18 45
1995 3rd 5 2 0 3 85 177
1999 3rd 8 3 0 5 181 245
2003 2nd 2 1 0 1 60 60
2007 Pool Stage 4 0 0 4 38 209 Squad T. Morais 2nd 18 10 2 6 283 360
2011 Did not qualify 4th 10 5 1 4 255 149
2015 2nd 10 2 1 7 145 222
2019 2nd 7 6 0 1 237 65
2023 Pool Stage 4 1 1 2 64 103 Squad P. Lagisquet 1st 13 7 2 4 478 267
2027 To be determined To be determined
Total 8 1 1 6 102 312 75 37 6 32 1742 1590
  Champions    Runners-up    Third place    Fourth place Home venue

Overall

Top 30 as of 24 June 2024[2]
RankChange*TeamPoints
1  South Africa094.54
2  Ireland090.69
3  New Zealand089.80
4  France087.92
5  England085.75
6  Scotland082.82
7  Argentina080.68
8  Italy079.41
9  Australia077.48
10  Wales077.26
11  Fiji076.38
12  Japan074.27
13  Georgia074.02
14  Samoa072.23
15  Tonga071.57
16  Portugal070.28
17  United States067.94
18  Uruguay067.39
19  Spain064.37
20  Romania061.66
21  Canada060.90
22  Namibia060.56
23  Chile060.49
24  Hong Kong059.80
25  Russia058.06
26   Switzerland057.44
27  Netherlands057.29
28  Belgium055.89
29  Brazil055.37
30  Korea053.46
* Change from the previous week
Portugal's historical rankings
See or edit source data.
Source: World Rugby[2]
Graph updated to 24 June 2024

Below is a table of the representative rugby matches played by a Portugal national XV at test level up until 18 March 2024:[3][4][5]

Opponent Played Won Lost Drawn  % Won
 Andorra3300100%
 Argentina XV514020%
 Australia10100%
 Australia A10100%
 Barbarians10100%
 Belgium17114264.71%
 Brazil640266.67%
 Canada514020%
 Chile4400100%
 Czech Republic121200100%
 Czechoslovakia2200100%
 Denmark2200100%
 England Saxons10100%
 Fiji312033.33%
 France A30300%
 Georgia27419414.81%
 Germany963066.67%
 Hong Kong321066.67%
 Italy1311117.69%
 Italy A20110%
 Japan10100%
 Japan XV10100%
 Kenya321066.67%
 Lithuania1100100%
 Moldova2200100%
 Morocco1475250%
 Namibia826025%
 Netherlands17133176.47%
 New Zealand10100%
 Poland1293075%
 Romania29524017.24%
 Russia21614128.57%
 Scotland10100%
 Scotland A10100%
 Spain421327230.95%
 South Africa Amateurs10100%
 Soviet Union20200%
 Sweden2200100%
  Switzerland7700100%
 Tonga10100%
 Tunisia936033.33%
 Ukraine541080%
 United States512220%
 Uruguay1037030%
 Yugoslavia320166.67%
 Wales20200%
 West Germany312033.33%
 Zimbabwe422050%
Total[n 1]3281391701942.38%

Players

Current squad

On 18 January, Portugal named their squad for the 2024 Rugby Europe Championship.[6] [7] [8] [9] [10]

  • Caps Updated: 10 March 2024
Player Position Date of birth (age) Caps Club/province
Luka Begic Hooker (2001-01-19) 19 January 2001 4 Chambéry
Lucas da Silva Hooker (1997-12-19) 19 December 1997 0 Brive
Jayson Rodrigues Hooker (2003-07-23) 23 July 2003 0 Massy
Pedro Santiago Lopes Hooker (2003-12-15) 15 December 2003 0 Cascais
Pedro Vicente Hooker (2002-11-07) 7 November 2002 4 Agronomia
André Arrojado Prop (1992-02-17) 17 February 1992 5 Técnico
Abel da Cunha Prop (2002-01-13) 13 January 2002 4 Albi
Diogo Hasse Ferreira Prop (1996-10-17) 17 October 1996 44 Dax
José Lavos Prop (2005-04-18) 18 April 2005 0 Cascais
António Machado Santos Prop (1998-06-09) 9 June 1998 6 Belenenses
António Prim Prop (2002-12-07) 7 December 2002 8 Direito
Cody Thomas Prop (1996-03-01) 1 March 1996 1 Rouen
Giorgi Turabelidze Prop (1996-11-06) 6 November 1996 0 Agronomia
Manuel Worm Prop (2003-08-28) 28 August 2003 0 Belenenses
Francisco Almeida Lock (2004-10-08) 8 October 2004 0 CDUL
Martim Bello Lock (2000-09-27) 27 September 2000 13 Cascais
Steevy Cerqueira Lock (1993-08-09) 9 August 1993 16 Chambéry
André da Cunha Lock (2004-05-19) 19 May 2004 1 Belenenses
José Madeira Lock (2001-03-19) 19 March 2001 37 Grenoble
José Rebelo de Andrade Lock (1997-11-24) 24 November 1997 22 Agronomia
Duarte Torgal Lock (1997-12-23) 23 December 1997 23 Direito
Boaventura Almeida Back row (2001-04-18) 18 April 2001 1 Pau
Vasco Baptista Back row (1996-10-26) 26 October 1996 7 Benfica
Nicolas Fernandes Back row (2000-01-12) 12 January 2000 0 Mâcon
João Granate Back row (1997-02-21) 21 February 1997 39 Direito
Nicolas Martins Back row (1999-01-18) 18 January 1999 16 Soyaux Angoulême
Luís Moreira Back row (2004-10-25) 25 October 2004 0 CDUP
Manuel Picão Back row (1997-04-10) 10 April 1997 22 Direito
Diego Pinheiro Back row (2003-09-01) 1 September 2003 3 Grenoble
Clément Ribeiro Back row (2002-03-22) 22 March 2002 0 Rouen
José Roque Back row (1999-11-23) 23 November 1999 4 CDUL
Rafael Simões Back row (1991-06-20) 20 June 1991 32 Belenenses
David Wallis Back row (1997-04-17) 17 April 1997 30 Belenenses
Duarte Azevedo Scrum-half (1998-10-06) 6 October 1998 10 Belenenses
João Bello Scrum-half (1995-08-02) 2 August 1995 27 CDUP
Hugo Camacho Scrum-half (2004-05-27) 27 May 2004 4 Bayonne
Pedro Lucas Scrum-half (2000-10-16) 16 October 2000 20 Técnico
Hugo Aubry Fly-half (2003-01-28) 28 January 2003 4 Rouen
Jerónimo Portela Fly-half (2000-11-02) 2 November 2000 30 Direito
José Rodrigues Fly-half (1992-07-22) 22 July 1992 8 Benfica
Manuel Vareiro Fly-half (2005-01-14) 14 January 2005 0 Direito
Tomás Appleton (c) Centre (1993-07-29) 29 July 1993 71 CDUL
Pedro Bettencourt Centre (1994-11-18) 18 November 1994 35 Oyonnax
José Lima Centre (1992-04-24) 24 April 1992 61 Agronomia
António Vidinha Centre (1997-12-29) 29 December 1997 17 Cascais
José Maria Cortes Wing (2000-08-18) 18 August 2000 0 Agronomia
Vasco Leite Wing (2004-03-18) 18 March 2004 0 Agronomia
Rodrigo Marta Wing (1999-11-18) 18 November 1999 37 Colomiers
Lucas Martins Wing (2003-01-16) 16 January 2003 3 Blagnac
José Paiva dos Santos Wing (2001-04-03) 3 April 2001 4 Belenenses
Pierre Sayerse Wing (1995-10-05) 5 October 1995 2 Mont-de-Marsan
Raffaele Storti Wing (2000-12-19) 19 December 2000 27 Béziers
Simão Bento Fullback (2001-06-21) 21 June 2001 12 Mont-de-Marsan
Vasco Correia Fullback (2001-06-25) 25 June 2001 0 Cascais
Manuel Cardoso Pinto Fullback (1998-04-07) 7 April 1998 37 Agronomia
Nuno Sousa Guedes Fullback (1994-11-21) 21 November 1994 42 CDUP

Individual all-time records

Gonçalo Uva and Vasco Uva are the most capped players for Portugal (both 101) and Gonçalo Uva also has the record for most matches in the starting XV (95).[11][12] The highest scorer for Portugal is Gonçalo Malheiro, with 279 points.[13] Malheiro is also the player with the most drop goals (12) and penalty goals (51).[14][15] Pedro Leal holds the record for most conversions (45).[16] Rodrigo Marta with 27 tries is the player with the most tries scored.[17] Duarte Pinto has the record for most matches as a substitute, with 23 substitutions.[18] Bernardo Duarte holds the record for most matches as a substitute, without ever playing in the starting XV (14).[18]

Coaches

Current coaching staff

The current coaching staff of the Portuguese national team (as of 2024):

Name Nationality Role
Simon Mannix NZLHead coach
Frederico Sousa PORNational Tecnical Director
João Mirra PORCoach
Daniel Hourcade ARGWorld Rugby Consultant
Esteban Meneses ARGWorld Rugby Consultant
Rodolfo Ambrosio ARGWorld Rugby Consultant
Olivier Rieg FRAStrength & conditioning coach
Lino Rebolo PORStrength & conditioning coach
José Paixão PORVideo analyst
Marcellin Segaut FRAGPS analyst
António Cruz Ferreira PORTeam doctor
José Carlos Rodrigues PORPhysiotherapist
Rodrigo Pais PORPhysiotherapist
Mónica Neves PORNutricionist
Fernando Murteira PORTeam Manager

Former coaches

Name Years Tests Won Drew Lost Win percentage Source
Pedro Lynce 1976-1983 10 6 0 4 60% [19]
João Paulo Bessa 1983-1986 17 9 1 7 52.94% [20]
Vasco Lynce 1986-1989 15 4 1 10 26.67% [21]
Olegário Borges 1989-1993 14 7 0 7 50% [22]
Andrew Cushing 1993–1994 12 2 0 10 16.67% [23]
João Paulo Bessa 1994–1999 25 12 1 12 48% [24]
Evan Crawford 1999–2001 11 3 0 8 27.27% [25]
Tomaz Morais 2001–2010 76 33 4 39 43.42% [26]
Errol Brain 2010–2013 26 9 1 16 34.62% [27]
Frederico Sousa 2013–2014 8 2 0 6 25% [28]
João Luís Pinto 2014–2015 7 2 0 5 28.57% [29]
Olivier Baragnon 2015–2016 3 1 0 2 33.33% [30]
Ian Smith 2016 5 0 0 5 0% [31]
Martim Aguiar 2016–2019 23 18 0 5 78.26% [32]
Patrice Lagisquet 2019–2023 37 18 3 16 48.65% [33]
Sébastien Bertrank 2023 0 0 0 0 0% [34]
Daniel Hourcade (interim) 2024 5 3 0 2 60% [35]
Simon Mannix 2024- 0 0 0 0 0%

Last updated: 17 April 2024.

Player records

Most caps

# Player Pos Span Mat Pts Tries
1Gonçalo UvaLock2004–20181015010
Vasco UvaNumber 82003–20161016513
3Joaquim FerreiraProp1993–200787153
4António AguilarWing1999–20148311523
5João CorreiaHooker2003–201481204
6Pedro LealScrum-Half2005–2017772655
7Diogo MateusCentre2000–2010746513
8Luís PissarraScrum-half1996–20077200
9Tomás AppletonCentre2014-718016
10Miguel PortelaCentre1996-201065387

Last updated: Georgia vs Portugal, 17 March 2024. Statistics include officially capped matches only.

Most tries

# Player Pos Span Mat Pts Tries
1Rodrigo MartaWing2018-3814529
2Gonçalo ForoWing2007–20176211523
António AguilarWing1999–20148311523
4Raffaele StortiWing2019-289519
5Tomás AppletonCentre2014-718016
6Manuel Cardoso PintoFullback2017-376013
Nuno DurãoWing1983-1995439413
Diogo MateusCentre2000–2010746513
Vasco UvaNumber 82003–20161016513
10Rohan HoffmannFullback1996-2002269612

Last updated: Georgia vs Portugal, 17 March 2024. Statistics include officially capped matches only.

Most points

# Player Pos Span Mat Pts Tries Conv Pens Drop
1Gonçalo MalheiroFly-half1998–200741279723575
2João QueimadoFly-half1984-1994482695235511
3Pedro LealFullback2005–201777265542493
4Samuel MarquesScrum-Half2012-202327253365360
5Pedro CabralFly-half2006–201136183225392
6Nuno Sousa GuedesFullback2016-43149637150
7Rodrigo MartaWing2018-3814529000
8Pedro BettencourtCentre2013-36130107220
9José Maria Vilar GomesFullback1989–200033120510241
10Gonçalo ForoWing2007-20171511523000
António AguilarWing1999–20148311523000

Last updated: Georgia vs Portugal, 17 March 2024. Statistics include officially capped matches only.

Most points in a match

# Player Pos Pts Tries Conv Pens Drop Opposition Venue Date
1Thierry TeixeiraFly-half300091 Georgia Lisbon08/02/2000
2José RodriguesFly-Half262240  Switzerland Setúbal24/02/2018
3Gonçalo MalheiroFullback250252 Spain Coimbra23/03/2003
Jorge AbecasisFly-half250550 Poland Setúbal16/02/2019
Raffaele StortiWing255000 Netherlands Amsterdam10/07/2021
6Gonçalo MalheiroFullback242140 Czech Republic Lisbon08/03/2003
7Pedro LealFly-half230170 Chile Santiago17/11/2012
8Pedro CabralFullback221403 Czech Republic Lisbon16/02/2008
Manuel MartaFullback222600 Czech Republic Caldas da Rainha23/03/2019
10Gonçalo MalheiroFly-half213300Barbarians Lisbon10/06/2004

Last updated: Georgia vs Portugal, 17 March 2024. Statistics include officially capped matches only.

Most tries in a match

# Player Pos Pts Tries Conv Pens Drop Opposition Venue Date
1Raffaele StortiWing255000 Netherlands Amsterdam10/07/2021
2Rodrigo MartaWing204000 Poland Warsaw11/02/2023
Vincent PintoWing204000 Poland Warsaw11/02/2023
4Nuno GarvãoWing153000 Spain Ibiza21/03/2004
Gonçalo MalheiroFly-half213300Barbarians Lisbon10/06/2004
Gonçalo ForoWing153000 Germany Heusenstamm27/02/2010
Caetano Castelo BrancoWing153000 Czech Republic Caldas da Rainha23/03/2019
Antonio VidinhaCentre153000 Czech Republic Caldas da Rainha23/03/2019
Rodrigo MartaWing153000 Netherlands Amsterdam10/07/2021
Mike TadjerHooker153000 Kenya Dubai12/11/2022
Hugo CamachoScrum-half153000 Poland Lisbon10/02/2024

Last updated: Georgia vs Portugal, 17 March 2024. Statistics include officially capped matches only.

Most matches as captain

# Player Pos Span Mat Won Lost Draw % Pts Tries Conv Pens Drop
1.Tomás AppletonCentre2019–present351814351.43%408000
João CorreiaHooker2008–2014351023228.57%102000
3.Vasco UvaFlanker2006–201520513225%204000
4.Francisco Pinto MagalhãesScrum-half2015–20171266050%153000
5.Luís PissarraScrum-half2003–20051091090%00000

Last updated: Georgia vs Portugal, 17 March 2024. Statistics include officially capped matches only.

Notes

  1. Only includes test matches in which the Portuguese Rugby Federation awarded caps to the players involved, according to their official website.[4]

References

  1. "Pritchard seals win".
  2. "Men's World Rankings". World Rugby. Retrieved 24 June 2024.
  3. International Rugby Union Statistics - Statistics for Portugal - Teams Played
  4. "Federação Portuguesa de Rugby - Games played". Archived from the original on 2012-11-20. Retrieved 2012-01-23.
  5. "Statsguru / Team analysis / Portugal / Test matches". Scrum.com. Retrieved 2012-01-26.
  6. "1ª Convocatória da Seleção Nacional de XV Masculina".
  7. "2ª Convocatória da Seleção Nacional de XV Masculina".
  8. "3ª Convocatória da Seleção Nacional de XV Masculina".
  9. https://fpr.pt/noticias/detalhe/4-convocatoria-da-selecao-nacional-de-xv-masculina
  10. https://fpr.pt/noticias/detalhe/convocatoria-n-5-da-selecao-nacional-masculina-de-xv
  11. "Most matches". Scrum.com. Retrieved 2014-06-09.
  12. "Most starting matches". Scrum.com. Retrieved 2014-06-09.
  13. "Most points". Scrum.com. Retrieved 2010-10-04.
  14. "Most drop goals". Scrum.com. Retrieved 2010-10-04.
  15. "Most penalty goals". Scrum.com. Retrieved 2010-10-04.
  16. "Most conversions". Scrum.com. Retrieved 2010-10-04.
  17. "Most tries". Scrum.com. Retrieved 2010-10-04.
  18. "Most substitutions". Scrum.com. Retrieved 2010-09-26.
  19. https://maodemestrebiblos.files.wordpress.com/2011/11/n19.pdf
  20. https://xvcontraxv.blogspot.com/
  21. "Xv Contra Xv: Rugby No Colégio Militar". 20 April 2020.
  22. "Olgário Borges".
  23. https://maodemestrebiblos.files.wordpress.com/2011/12/n1-abr-93.pdf
  24. https://xvcontraxv.blogspot.com/
  25. "Crawford to coach Portugal".
  26. https://tomazmorais.pt/
  27. "Neozelandês Errol Brain é novo técnico dos "Lobos"".
  28. "Frederico Sousa é o novo selecionador nacional".
  29. "João Luís Pinto é o novo selecionador nacional".
  30. "Olivier Baragnon apresentado como novo selecionador de râguebi".
  31. "Ian Smith é o novo selecionador português de XV".
  32. "Martim Aguiar é o novo selecionador nacional".
  33. "Patrice Lagisquet apresentado como novo seleccionador nacional". 5 July 2019.
  34. "Sébastien Bertrank é o novo seleccionador de râguebi de Portugal". 12 October 2023.
  35. "Daniel Hourcade irá orientar Portugal no Rugby Europe Championship 2024".
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