G.D. Interclube

Grupo Desportivo Interclube, usually known as Interclube or Inter de Luanda, is an Angolan football club based in Luanda. The club is attached to the Angolan police force. Interclube is one of the two clubs based in Luanda (the other one is 1º de Agosto) with a stadium of its own as all the remaining clubs in the capital play their home matches at the state-owned 11 de Novembro and Coqueiros. The stadium, built in 2004, has an 10,000-seat capacity.

History
Founded on February 28, 1976, by the then Ministry of the Interior Santana André Pitra aka Petroff as Inter de Luanda, it won its first title, the Angolan Cup, in 1986.

In 2005, the club finished 9th in the Angolan first division. In that year, it also reached the domestic cup final, but was defeated 1–0 by ASA.

Two players from Inter represented the Angola national team in its first FIFA World Cup tournament, in 2006 in Germany: Miloy and Mário.

Stadium
Interclube is one of two clubs in Angola to play their home games in their own stadium, the Estádio 22 de Junho.

Honours

 * Angolan League: 2
 * Winner: 2007, 2010
 * Angolan Cup: 3
 * Winner: 1986, 2003, 2011
 * Runners-up: (6) 1985, 1989, 2000, 2005, 2010, 2021.
 * Angolan SuperCup: 4
 * Winner: 1986, 2001, 2008, 2012
 * Runners-up: (1) 2011

Recent seasons
Interclube's season-by-season performance:


 * PR = Preliminary round, 1R = First round, GS = Group stage, R32 = Round of 32, R16 = Round of 16, QF = Quarter-finals, SF = Semi-finals

Performance in CAF competitions

 * CAF Champions League: 2 appearances
 * 2008 – Third Round
 * 2011 – Second Round


 * CAF Confederation Cup: 7 appearances
 * 2004 – First Round
 * 2005 – First Round
 * 2006 – Group Stage
 * 2008 – Group Stage
 * 2011 – Semi-finals
 * 2012 – Group Stage


 * CAF Cup Winners' Cup: 2 appearances
 * 1987 – First Round
 * 2001 – Finalist

Manager history

 * João Gonçalves da Silva (1981)
 * Severino Cardoso Smica (1982–83)
 * Joka Santinho (1984–87) Gold medal world centered-2.svg Gold medal world centered-2.svg
 * Filipe Dikizeko † (1988)
 * Joka Santinho (1989)
 * Severino Cardoso Smica (1989–90)
 * Carlos Alves (1990–91)
 * João António André Cuca (1991–92)
 * João Machado (1992)
 * Raúl Kinanga (1995)
 * Napoleão Brandão (1996)
 * João António André Cuca (1997–99)
 * Arnaldo Chaves (1999)
 * Raúl Kinanga (2000)
 * Oliveira Gonçalves (2000)
 * 🇷🇸 Veselin Jelušić (2001)
 * Oliveira Gonçalves (2001)
 * 🇧🇷 Itamar Amorim (2002) Gold medal world centered-2.svg
 * Raúl Kinanga (2002–03)
 * 🇷🇸 Zoran Pešić (2003–04) Gold medal world centered-2.svg
 * Raúl Kinanga (2004)
 * 🇩🇪 Georg Tripp (2005)
 * Romeu Silva (2006)
 * Raúl Kinanga (2006)
 * 🇧🇷 Carlos Mozer (2006–08) Gold medal world centered-2.svg Gold medal world centered-2.svg
 * Augusto Inácio (2008–09)
 * João Arsénio Túbia (2009)
 * Álvaro Magalhães (2009–11) Gold medal world centered-2.svg
 * António Caldas (2011–12) Gold medal world centered-2.svg Gold medal world centered-2.svg
 * Bernardino Pedroto (2012–13)
 * Mirsad Omerhodžić (2014)
 * 🇧🇬 Ilian Iliev (2014–15)
 * 🇷🇸 Veselin Jelušić (2015)
 * Filipe Moreira (2015–16)
 * Paulo Torres (2016–18)
 * Rui Garcia (2018–19)
 * Bruno Ribeiro (2018–19)
 * Ivo Campos (2019–)

Other sports

 * Interclube Basketball
 * Interclube Handball