Portal dos Dragões
·11 March 2026
Sofia Oliveira slams Porto defence, big match stats say otherwise

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Yahoo sportsPortal dos Dragões
·11 March 2026

There are criticisms that sound good in the studio but stumble when confronted with the facts. That’s what happened when Sofia Oliveira stated: “I think sometimes people confuse defending well with defending with many players, and FC Porto, even when defending with many, still allows the opponent to create chances. That happened against Estoril and Braga; Benfica was just able to turn those chances into goals.” The statement is impactful, of course. But does it hold up to a serious review of what happened in the big matches?
The central point of the analysis was clear: FC Porto might appear solid, but that solidity would, in fact, be misleading. However, when you look at the mentioned classics, the narrative starts to lose strength. Against Sporting, in three matches, FC Porto conceded three goals: one own goal and two penalties. Against Benfica, in three matches, they conceded two goals, both in quick transitions, with no scenario of “defending with many.”
In other words: in six big matches, zero goals were conceded in situations of “defending with many.” Zero. If that was precisely the criticism, isn’t it legitimate to ask where the proof is? And if the goals conceded come in other contexts, isn’t it forced to insist on an idea that the very plays themselves disprove?
Sofia Oliveira went even further: “In my view, it shows that Porto is the defense that concedes the fewest goals, but if they faced teams like Sporting and Benfica more often, maybe they would concede more goals.” The expression “maybe” says a lot. It’s a hypothesis, not a fact. And in football, especially when aiming for analysis, it’s important to separate perceptions from evidence.
FC Porto can be discussed, as any big team should be. There can be less successful moments, adjustments to make, and details to correct. But turning hypothetical scenarios into the main argument against a defense that, in the most demanding encounters, did not concede goals in the context pointed out, seems more an exercise in supposition than a supported conclusion.
Moreover: when it’s said that Benfica “was just able to turn those chances into goals,” it’s important to remember that the two goals mentioned came from quick transitions and not from FC Porto’s low defensive organization. So, are we talking about the same thing? Or is everything being mixed together to reach a more convenient interpretation?
At FC Porto, the demand has never escaped scrutiny. And that’s a good thing. But analyzing is one thing; suggesting weaknesses that the classic match data itself does not confirm is another. Defending with many is not synonymous with defending poorly. And in Porto’s case, at least in these games, the numbers dismantle the suspicion.
With André Villas-Boas as president, Francesco Farioli as head coach, and Lucho González in the football team structure, the club continues on its path with the same hallmark as always: competing to win, responding on the pitch, and leaving the noise to those who live more by narrative than by reality. At the Dragão, identity is not up for debate — it is asserted.
This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇵🇹 here.
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