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{{Infobox football club
| clubname = Olimpia
| image =
CDOlimpia flag.png
| upright = 0.7
| fullname = Club Deportivo Olimpia
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==History==
Olimpia was founded as a baseball club on June 12, 1912,<ref>{{cite news|title=Con ansias de título |url=http://www.laprensa.hn/especiales/2007/torneo_apertura_2006_2007/con_ansias_de_titulo |publisher=Diario La Prensa |date=2007-08-10 |access-date=2007-08-11 |language=es |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070928075826/http://www.laprensa.hn/especiales/2007/torneo_apertura_2006_2007/con_ansias_de_titulo |archive-date=2007-09-28 |url-status=dead }}</ref> by Héctor Pineda Ugarte, Carlos Bram, Arturo Bram, Enrique
C.D. Olimpia is the most successful football team in Honduras, having won 34 domestic league titles since it was founded in 1912, the latest being the 2021 Apertura tournament. It has also represented the Honduran football association in international club competitions more than any other team by far. They are the only Honduran club that has won the [[CONCACAF Champions Cup]] twice, first in [[1972 CONCACAF Champions' Cup|1972]] and again in [[1988 CONCACAF Champions' Cup|1988]]. Olimpia is also the first team to win the Domestic Cup, known as "Copa Presidente," in 2015.
==Amateur era==
In 1957, C.D. Olimpia won the national championship of Honduras for the first time.
Players like [[Jorge Alberto Solís|"Furia"]] Solis, [[Rolin Castillo]], Ricardo "Chendo" Rodriguez were stars during these seasons.
==National League==
The professional National League began in 1965, with Platense winning the first tournament. Olimpia was runner-up, finishing with 26 points to Platense's 27.
They relinquished the title to Motagua in 1968–69, but in 1969–70 stormed through the league undefeated, winning their third title in four years (43–35 ahead of Motagua).
It would take 6 years for Olimpia to be crowned again.
It was during the 1980s that Olimpia emerged as the dominant team in Honduras, winning five championships in ten years—1982, 1984, 1986, 1987, and 1989–90.
==Short tournament==
Olimpia qualified for the playoffs in each of the first two seasons under the new format, but was eliminated each time.
Olimpia reached the finals of both Apertura 1999 and Clausura 2000, but on each occasion was defeated by Motagua on penalties.
The Platense rivalry built, as Platense avenged the loss by beating Olimpia in Clausura 2001.
Clausura 2004 was the start of a new phase in the already fierce rivalry between Olimpia and [[C.D. Marathón]], as the teams would meet in the finals four consecutive seasons
Clausura 2006 completed the most glorious run in Olimpia's history; they beat Victoria 4–3 on aggregate to complete their first threepeat (three wins). It was an achievement celebrated wildly as the {{lang|es|Tricampeón}}.
Other titles followed in Clausura 2008 (beating the old rivals Marathón), Clausura 2009 (in extra time over Real Espana), and Clausura 2010 (over Motagua).
Tosello stepped down after the season, but Olimpia's run of dominance continued. They won a fourth consecutive championship in Clausura 2013; after losing 1–0 to Real Sociedad in the first leg, they won 2–0 at home to claim the crown.
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==International success==
In 1973, Olimpia won their first [[CONCACAF Champions' Cup]] by defeating [[SV Robinhood]] of [[Suriname]] in San Pedro Sula by a score of 1–0 after tying the first leg at zero in Tegucigalpa. Before reaching the final, Olimpia managed to eliminate Mexico's [[Club Toluca]]. The club won their second CONCACAF Champions' Cup in 1988 when they defeated [[Defence Force F.C.|Defence Force]] in the final match of the tournament.
In January 2001, Olimpia beat the Mexican teams of [[Club Toluca|Toluca]] and [[C.F. Pachuca|Pachuca]]. The team, managed by Edwin Pavón triumphed over Toluca with a goal from Robert Lima, 3 goals from [[Denilson Costa]], and one from [[Alex Pineda Chacon]]. The lineup for that match was: Donaldo González, Gerson Vásquez, Robert Lima, Samuel Caballero, Nerlin Membreño, Christian Santamaría, Arnold Cruz, Danilo Tosello, José Luis Pineda, Alex Pineda, Denilson Costa, Carlos Paez, and Elmer Marín.
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==Honours==
'''Domestic'''
*'''[[Liga Nacional de Fútbol de Honduras]]:
**[[1966–67 Honduran Liga Nacional|1966–67]], [[1967–68 Honduran Liga Nacional|1967–68]], [[1969–70 Honduran Liga Nacional|1969–70]], [[1971–72 Honduran Liga Nacional|1971–72]], [[1977–78 Honduran Liga Nacional|1977–78]], [[1982–83 Honduran Liga Nacional|1982–83]], [[1984–85 Honduran Liga Nacional|1984–85]], [[1986–87 Honduran Liga Nacional|1986–87]], [[1987–88 Honduran Liga Nacional|1987–88]], [[1989–90 Honduran Liga Nacional|1989–90]], [[1992–93 Honduran Liga Nacional|1992–93]], [[1995–96 Honduran Liga Nacional|1995–96]], [[1996–97 Honduran Liga Nacional|1996–97]], [[1998–99 Honduran Liga Nacional|1998–99]], [[2000–01 Honduran Liga Nacional|2000–01 Apertura]], [[2002–03 Honduran Liga Nacional|2002–03 Apertura]], [[2003–04 Honduran Liga Nacional|2003–04 Clausura]], [[2004–05 Honduran Liga Nacional|2004–05 Clausura]], [[2005–06 Honduran Liga Nacional|2005–06 Apertura]], [[2005–06 Honduran Liga Nacional|2005–06 Clausura]], [[2007–08 Honduran Liga Nacional|2007–08 Clausura]], [[2008–09 Honduran Liga Nacional|2008–09 Clausura]], [[2009–10 Honduran Liga Nacional|2009–10 Clausura]], [[2011–12 Honduran Liga Nacional|2011–12 Apertura]], [[2011–12 Honduran Liga Nacional|2011–12 Clausura]], [[2012–13 Honduran Liga Nacional|2012–13 Apertura]], [[2012–13 Honduran Liga Nacional|2012–13 Clausura]], [[2013–14 Honduran Liga Nacional|2013–14 Clausura]], [[2014–15 Honduran Liga Nacional|2014–15 Clausura]], [[2015–16 Honduran Liga Nacional|2015–16 Clausura]], [[2019–20 Honduran Liga Nacional|2019–20 Apertura]], [[2020–21 Honduran Liga Nacional|2020–21 Apertura]], [[2020–21 Honduran Liga Nacional|2020–21 Clausura]], [[2021–22 Honduran Liga Nacional|2021–22 Apertura]], [[2022-23 Honduran Liga Nacional|2022–23 Apertura]], [[2022-23 Honduran Liga Nacional|2022–23 Clausura]], [[2023-24 Honduran Liga Nacional|2023-24 Apertura]], 2023-24 Clausura
**Runners-up (19): [[Liga Nacional de Fútbol de Honduras 1965-66|1965–66]], [[Liga Nacional de Fútbol de Honduras 1968-69|1968–69]], [[Liga Nacional de Fútbol de Honduras 1970-71|1970–71]], [[Liga Nacional de Fútbol de Honduras 1975-76|1975–76]], [[Liga Nacional de Fútbol de Honduras 1988-89|1988–89]], [[Liga Nacional de Fútbol de Honduras 1994-95|1994–95]], [[Liga Nacional de Fútbol de Honduras 1997-98 Clausura|Clausura 1998]], [[Liga Nacional de Fútbol de Honduras 1999–2000 Apertura|Apertura 1999]], [[Liga Nacional de Fútbol de Honduras 1999–2000 Clausura|Clausura 2000]], [[Liga Nacional de Fútbol de Honduras 2000-01 Clausura|Clausura 2001]], [[Honduras Clausura 2001-02|Clausura 2002]], [[Honduras Apertura 2003-04|Apertura 2003]], [[Honduras Apertura 2004-05|Apertura 2004]], [[Honduras Apertura 2006-07|Apertura 2006]], [[2009–10 Liga Nacional de Fútbol de Honduras Apertura|Apertura 2009]], [[2010–11 Honduran Liga Nacional|Apertura 2010]], [[2010–11 Honduran Liga Nacional|Clausura 2011]]
*'''[[Honduran Super Cup|Super Copa]]: 1'''
**[[1996-97 Honduran Super Cup|1996–97]]
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===Individual club achievements===
*Seven Consecutive Honduran finals
*First Central American Team to be
*Only Central American team to play in [[Estadio Centenario]] in [[Uruguay]]
*Only Honduran team that has defeated {{flagicon|Argentina}} [[Boca Juniors]] 2–1
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{{Fs player|no= 2|nat=HON|pos=DF|name=[[Maylor Núñez]]|other=}}
{{Fs player|no= 3|nat=HON|pos=DF|name=[[Elvin Oliva]]|other=}}
{{Fs player|no= 4|nat=HON|pos=DF|name=[[
{{Fs player|no= 5|pos=DF|nat=HON|name=[[Juan Pablo Montes]]|other=}}
{{Fs player|no= 6|nat=HON|pos=DF|name=[[Brayan Beckeles]]|other=}}
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===Top goalscorers===
{{Updated|
''Players in '''bold''' are still present in club.''
{|style="text-align:center;"
!style="background:white; color:blue; border:2px solid red;"|Rank
!style="background:white; color:blue; border:2px solid red;"|Scorer
!style="background:white; color:blue; border:2px solid red;"|Goals
* {{flagicon|Brazil}} [[Denilson Costa]] ''(262 matches/99 goals)''▼
!style="background:white; color:blue; border:2px solid red;"|Apps
|-
* {{flagicon|Honduras}} [[Prudencio Norales|Prudencio "Tecate" Norales]] ''(189 matches/76 goals)''▼
|1||align=left|{{flagicon|HON}} [[Wilmer Velásquez]] ||196||392
* {{flagicon|Honduras}} [[Roger Rojas (footballer, born 1990)|Roger Rojas]] ''(122 matches/70 goals)''▼
|-
* {{flagicon|Honduras}} [[Rigoberto Gómez|Rigoberto "Shula" Gomez]] ''(63)''▼
|-
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|10||align=left|{{flagicon|HON}} Jorge González ||46||144
|}
==List of coaches==
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