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・ 2004–05 Rangers F.C. season
・ 2004–05 Ranji Trophy
・ 2004–05 Reading F.C. season
・ 2004–05 Real Betis season
・ 2004–05 Real Madrid C.F. season
・ 2004–05 Red Bull Barako season
・ 2004–05 Reggina Calcio season
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・ 2004–05 Romanian Hockey League season
・ 2004–05 Ross County F.C. season
・ 2004–05 Rotherham United F.C. season
・ 2004–05 Royal League
・ 2004–05 Royal League statistics
・ 2004–05 Rugby Pro D2 season
・ 2004–05 Russian Superleague season
2004–05 S.L. Benfica season
・ 2004–05 S.S. Lazio season
・ 2004–05 S.S.C. Napoli season
・ 2004–05 Sacramento Kings season
・ 2004–05 San Antonio Spurs season
・ 2004–05 San Jose Sharks season
・ 2004–05 San Miguel Beermen season
・ 2004–05 Saudi Premier League
・ 2004–05 SC Bastia season
・ 2004–05 Scottish Challenge Cup
・ 2004–05 Scottish Cup
・ 2004–05 Scottish First Division
・ 2004–05 Scottish Football League
・ 2004–05 Scottish League Cup
・ 2004–05 Scottish Premier League


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2004–05 S.L. Benfica season : ウィキペディア英語版
2004–05 S.L. Benfica season

The 2004–05 season was Sport Lisboa e Benfica's 101st season in existence and the club's 71st consecutive season in both Portuguese football and UEFA competitions. It ran from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005. Benfica competed domestically in the Primeira Liga and the Taça de Portugal. The club also participated in the UEFA Champions League as a result of finishing second in the Primeira Liga in the previous season.
As José Antonio Camacho led Benfica to another second place, while also breaking an eight-year title drought, he attracted interest from Real Madrid; who signed him in late May. As a replacement, Benfica unsuccessfully inquired Luiz Felipe Scolari for the position. After much speculation, Benfica announced Giovanni Trapattoni, Italy's former manager. Benfica signed more players than the year before, but only Quim, Dos Santos and Karadas became regulars. The most significant departure was Tiago, who had been a regular for the past two seasons. Because their second-place finish only granted a berth in the third qualifying round of the UEFA Champions League, Benfica had to play Anderlecht for a spot in the group stage. A three-one loss on aggregate led to the relegation to the UEFA Cup. Between both legs, Benfica contested and lost the 2004 Supercup with Porto.
Domestically, Benfica started the season with consecutive wins, rising to the top of the table by early October. After a home loss in the Clássico, the team started to gather bad results, which included three draws and two losses that saw the team drop to third by New Year. In January, Benfica continued to slip, losing the Lisbon derby and dropping to fifth place on two occasions. A home win against Sporting for the Portuguese Cup had a positive effect on the team, as they had their best period all season, regaining first place and opening up a six-point lead over second place.
Still, with the league being unusually competitive, a slip in early April caused Benfica to lose much of its lead and not even the qualification for the Portuguese Cup final helped to gather momentum. In early May, Benfica suffered a major blow, losing in Penafiel and dropping to second. A crucial win against Sporting brought back the title hope, and a week later Benfica secured their first league title in ten seasons. The season would end with a loss against Vitória Setúbal on the Taça de Portugal Final, preventing Benfica from winning his first double since 1987.
==Season summary==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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