São Paulo FC
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Full name | São Paulo Futebol Clube | ||
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Nickname(s) | Tricolor Paulista (Tri-Colored Paulista) O Mais Querido (The Dearest) Soberano (Sovereign) | ||
Founded | January 25, 1930 | ||
Ground | Morumbi, São Paulo | ||
Capacity | 67,428[1] | ||
President | Juvenal Juvêncio | ||
Head coach | Ney Franco | ||
League | Campeonato Brasileiro Série A | ||
2011 | 6th | ||
Website | http://www.saopaulofc.net/ | ||
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São Paulo Futebol Clube (Portuguese pronunciation: [sɐ̃w ˈpawlu fuʧiˈbɔw ˈklubi] São Paulo Football Club), is a professional football club based in São Paulo, Brazil that plays in the Campeonato Paulista, São Paulo's state league, and the Campeonato Brasileiro Série A or Brasileirão, Brazil's national league.
São Paulo is South America third most successful team, after Boca Juniors and Independiente, with 11 international titles. It is also one of the most successful clubs in Brazilian football in terms of overall titles, having won 21 state titles, six Brasileirão titles, three Copa Libertadores titles, one Supercopa Sudamericana, one Copa CONMEBOL, two Recopa Sudamericanas, two Intercontinental Cups and one FIFA Club World Cup.
Founded in 1930, São Paulo was an inaugural member of the Clube dos 13 group of Brazil's leading football clubs. The club's most consistent spell of success came in the 1990s, under coach Telê Santana, when it won three state titles, one national championship, two Copa Libertadores, two Recopa Sudamericanas, two Intercontinental Cups, one Supercopa Sudamericana, one Copa CONMEBOL, one Copa Masters CONMEBOL.
São Paulo is one of the best-supported clubs in Brazil, with over 15 million supporters.[2] The team's traditional home kit is a white shirt with two horizontal stripes (one red and one black), white shorts and white socks.[2] Its home ground is the 67,428-seater Morumbi football stadium in São Paulo, where it has played since 1947.[3] The stadium was the venue for the Copa Libertadores finals of 1992, 1993, 1994, 2000, 2003, 2005 and 2006. São Paulo is Brazil's second richest football club in terms of revenue, with an annual revenue of $111.9m (€78.2m), and the nation's third most valuable club, worth over $353.4m (€246.9m) in 2011.[4]
History
1900–1934: From Paulistano to São Paulo da Floresta
Club Athletico Paulistano was established on December 29, 1900 by São Paulo city youngsters after they watched a game between Internacional de São Paulo and Mackenzie College.[5][6] The club's first official game was played on May 3, 1902, when they were defeated by São Paulo Athletic.[5] After beating São Paulo Athletic on November 1, 1905 for the Taça Álvares Penteado, the team's captain Jorge Mesquita and other players left the club and joined Associação Atlética das Palmeiras.[5][7] The new club was formed on January 25, 1930 and was named the São Paulo Futebol Clube. At the time, São Paulo's stadium was called Floresta (Forest in Portuguese), so the team was known as São Paulo da Floresta.[7] In their first season, the team finished as runners-up in the Campeonato Paulista, and in 1931 São Paulo won the championship for the first time. In 1933, São Paulo played the first professional football match in Brazil, a 5–1 win over Santos.[8]
Stricken by financial difficulties, the club merged with the Clube de Regatas Tietê, another sports club from the town, and the football department was closed on May 14, 1935.[7]
1935–1939: The Rebirth of São Paulo FC
Just after the merger with Tietê, the founders and re-founders created the Grêmio Tricolor, which formed Clube Atlético São Paulo, on June 4, 1935, and, finally, São Paulo Futebol Clube on December 16 of the same year.[7]
The new club's first game was against Portuguesa Santista on January 25, 1936. The match was almost cancelled, owing to the city's anniversary, but Porphyrio da Paz, the football director and composer of the club's anthem, obtained permission from the Board of Education Office for the game to continue.[9]
Another merger occurred in 1938, this time with Clube Atlético Estudantes Paulista, from the neighborhood of Moóca, and the club finished as runners-up in the Campeonato Paulista.
1940–1950: The Steam Roller
In 1940, when the Estádio do Pacaembu was inaugurated, a new era began in São Paulo state football. São Paulo Futebol Clube finished as runners-up once again in the Campeonato Paulista in 1941, and a year later the club paid 200 contos de réis (equivalent to approximately R$ 162,000 today) to acquire Leônidas da Silva from Flamengo. During this period, São Paulo also acquired the Argentinian António Sastre and Brazilians Noronha, José Carlos Bauer, Zezé Procópio, Luizinho, Rui and Teixeirinha. With these new additions, Tricolor became known as the Steam Roller, winning the Paulista championship five times, in 1943, 1945, 1946, 1948 and 1949. The club sold its Canindé training ground to Portuguesa to raise money for their new stadium the Estádio do Morumbi, for which construction began in 1952.
1951–1957: The Dry Spell
The run of success of the 1940s, came to an end in the early 1950s, and the club only won two state championships in the new decade, in 1953 and 1957. The latter championship was won with the help of the 35-year-old Brazilian international Zizinho and Hungarian manager Béla Guttmann. In the years that followed, the club struggled to compete with the rise of Pelé and his club, Santos. With the construction of the Morumbi stadium still ongoing, São Paulo entered its longest period without a title in its history, which was to last thirteen years.
1958–1969: Just the Stadium
Since São Paulo's budget planning was focused on the Morumbi stadium construction rather than the signing of new players, few expensive players were bought during the 1960s, although the club did acquire Brazilian internationals Roberto Dias and Jurandir. In 1960, the Morumbi Stadium was inaugurated, and named after the late Cícero Pompeu de Toledo, the club's chairman during most of the stadium construction. One of the few happy moments for the fans during this period was the 1963 Paulista Championship 4–1 victory against Pelé's Santos.
1970–1979: Campeonato Brasileiro
In 1970, the Morumbi stadium was finally completed and the club purchased Gérson from Botafogo, Uruguayan midfielder Pedro Rocha from Peñarol and striker Toninho Guerreiro from Santos. The club was managed by Zezé Moreira, who was the manager of Brazil at the World Cup in 1954, and won the Paulista Championship after beating Guarani 2–1 in the Campinas a week before the end of the competition.
In 1971, the club beat Palmeiras 1–0, with a goal from Toninho Guerreiro, in the final to capture another state title. That year saw the inaugural Campeonato Brasileiro, with the club finishing as runners-up to Atlético Mineiro, managed by Telê Santana.
In the following years, São Paulo and Palmeiras gradually overtook Pelé's Santos and Corinthians as the dominant club sides in São Paulo state. In 1972, Palmeiras won the state championship title, only one point ahead of São Paulo, and the following year the clubs finished in the same positions in the Brazilian Championship. In 1974, São Paulo took part in the Copa Libertadores losing in the final to Independiente in a replay.
In 1975, former goalkeeper José Poy took over as manager, and São Paulo won the Paulista Championship after defeating Portuguesa in a penalty shoot-out.
Valdir Peres, Chicão, Serginho Chulapa and Zé Sérgio were the club's most influential players when São Paulo finally secured the Brazilian Championship for the first time in 1977 following a penalty shoot-out victory over Atlético Mineiro at the Mineirão. However, they failed to win another trophy until the reclaimed the Paulista Championship in 1980.
The 1980s: Tricolor Decade
In the 1980s, São Paulo won four Paulista and one Brazilian titles, helped by the impressive central defensive pair of Oscar and Dario Pereyra. 1980 and 1981, the club won the Paulista Championship in successive seasons for the first time since the 1940s.[10]
In 1985, the head coach Cilinho introduced to the world the Menudos of Morumbi, a team that included Silas, Müller and Sidney, and the club once again won the Paulista Championship. The main striker was Careca, a centre-forward who also played for Brazil in the 1986 FIFA World Cup. The midfield featured Falcão, brought in from Italian club A.S. Roma, and nicknamed the King of Rome.[10]
In 1986, manager Pepe led the club to its second Brazilian Championship title, defeating Guarani in a penalty shoot-out. In 1987, Dario Pereyra left the club, but in that year the Menudos team won its last title, another Paulista title. The so-called Tricolor Decade ended with the 1989 Paulista Championship title and a second place finish in the Brazilian Championship, when São Paulo lost to Vasco da Gama in the final match.[10]
1990–1995: The Telê Era[11]
In 1990, after a poor start to the campaign, Telê Santana was hired as the club's coach, and São Paulo went on to finish runners-up in the Brazilian Championship. The following year, the club won the Paulista Championship.
In 1991, São Paulo won its third competition title after beating Carlos Alberto Parreira's Bragantino, and the club began a period of consistent achievement both nationally and internationally. The following year they reached the Copa Libertadores final, where they faced Newell's Old Boys of Argentina. São Paulo lost the first leg 1–0, but reversed the scoreline in the second leg in Brazil, and then won the competition in the penalty shoot-out to take the title for the first time.[12]
In the same year, in Tokyo the club won its first Intercontinental Cup, beating Johann Cruyff's FC Barcelona team 2–1. After returning to Brazil, the club beat Palmeiras 2–1 to win its eighteenth state championship title.
In 1993, São Paulo retained the Copa Libertadores, beating Universidad Católica of Chile in the final. After the competition, influential midfielder Raí left the club, but São Paulo won the Intercontinental Cup again, beating Fabio Capello's A.C. Milan 3–2. Müller scored the winning goal in the 86th minute of the match, from an assist by Toninho Cerezo.[13]
In 1994, the club reached the final of the Copa Libertadores for the third year in a row, and faced Argentina's Vélez Sársfield. On this occasion they lost a penalty shoot-out to the Argentine side at the Morumbi stadium. But by the end of this year, São Paulo won the Copa CONMEBOL, defeating Peñarol of Uruguay in the final.
1996–2004: Post-Telê Traumatic Shock?
At the beginning of 1996, owing to health issues, Telê Santana left São Paulo, ending the club's golden era. Between 1995 and 2004the club had fourteen managers. Among the most notable titles during those ten years were the 2000 Paulista Championship and the club's first Rio-São Paulo Tournament title in 2001. Rogério Ceni, Julio Baptista, Luís Fabiano and Kaká were the club's stars. Raí briefly returned to the club between 1998 and 2000, and with him, the club won the Paulista Championship twice, in 1998 and 2000, after beating Corinthians and Santos, respectively. In 2004 São Paulo were back in the Copa Libertadores and reached the semi-finals before being eliminated by underdogs Once Caldas, from Colombia. At the end of that year Émerson Leão was hired as the club's coach.
In 2003, São Paulo made a deal with Spanish amateur side Santangelo Club Aficionado that resulted in the Spanish club changing its name to São Paulo Madrid.[14]
2005 - present
In 2005, with Leão as the club's manager, São Paulo won the Paulista Championship. However, Leão would soon leave the club, and Paulo Autuori, the former manager of Peru's national team, was hired to replace him. São Paulo won the Libertadores Cup for the third time, beating another Brazilian team, Atlético Paranaense in the final. Atlético switched the first leg of the final to Estádio Beira-Rio in Porto Alegre, their own ground not having sufficient capacity for a final, and the match ended in a 1–1 draw. In the second leg, at the Morumbi, São Paulo won 4–0 to become the first Brazilian club to win three Copa Libertadores titles.
In December 2005, São Paulo competed in the FIFA Club World Championship in Japan. After beating Saudi Arabia's Al-Ittihad 3–2, they faced the European champions Liverpool in the final. A 1–0 victory over the English team gave São Paulo its third intercontinental title. The single goal was scored by Mineiro in the first half of the match.[15] [16] Other players in that year's squad included centre-back Diego Lugano, full-back Cicinho and forward Amoroso.[17]
After the success of the 2005 season, Paulo Autuori left the team to coach Kashima Antlers in the J. League. Muricy Ramalho was signed up as the new coach, having led Internacional to the runners-up position in the 2005 Brazilian Championship. In his first tournament as a manager, Ramalho reached second place in the Paulista Championship, losing to Santos by one point. São Paulo reached the final of the 2006 Copa Libertadores, but lost 4-3 on aggregate to Brazilian rivals Internacional. However, they went on to win their fourth Campeonato Brasileiro trophy, becoming the first team to become national champions in the new league system format.
After being eliminated from the Copa Libertadores in 2007, São Paulo won the Brazilian title for the second year in a row, fifteen points ahead of second-placed Santos. They won the title for the third season running in 2008 season, overturning an eleven-point deficit behind Gremio, to become the first team win the national title six times. Manager Muricy Ramalho was also the first manager to win three Brazilian titles in a row with the same team.
Muricy Ramalho was fired from the manager post following a defeat in the home leg of the 2009 Copa Libertadores to Cruzeiro, São Paulo's fourth consecutive Libertadores Cup elimination to another Brazilian. Ricardo Gomes took over as manager.
In 2010 São Paulo lost again against Internacional in the 2010 Libertadores Cup, ending Ricardo Gomes's spell as manager. In 2011 the club signed Rivaldo, and Luís Fabiano was bought for 7.6 million euros, the most expensive player in the history of São Paulo, and goalkeeper Rogério Ceni scored his hundredth career goal, against Corinthians.
Colours and badge
When Paulistano and Palmeiras merged, their colours (red and white for Paulistano and black and white for Palmeiras) were inherited by São Paulo. The colours match those of São Paulo's state flag, and also represent the three main races that lived in Brazil during that period: the native Americans (represented by the red), the Europeans (represented by the white) and the Africans (represented by the black).
The club's home strip is a white shirt, with two horizontal stripes at chest level, the upper one red and the lower one black, and with a badge in the centre of the chest. The shorts and socks are all-white. The away strip consists of a red shirt with red, black and white vertical stripes, black shorts and socks.
The badge, which was designed by Walter Ostrich in the early days of São Paulo,[citation needed] consists of a shield with a black rectangle in the upper section bearing the initials SPFC in white. Below the rectangle is a red, white and black triangle. The badge also has five stars, two gold and three red ones. The gold ones denote Adhemar Ferreira da Silva's world and Olympic records and the red ones represents the three world championships won by São Paulo.
Stadium
São Paulo's stadium is officially named Estádio Cícero Pompeu de Toledo (Cicero Pompeu de Toledo Stadium) and commonly known by the nickname Estádio do Morumbi (Morumbi Stadium). It was inaugurated in 1960, with a maximum sitting capacity of 120,000 people, but now its maximum capacity is only 80,000 seats, and only 75,000 tickets are sold each game for safety reasons. Its record attendance for a football match,set in 1977, is 146,082.[3]
The club also owns two training grounds, one named Centro de Treinamento Frederico Antônio Germano Menzen (Frederico Antônio Germano Menzen Training Center), and nicknamed Centro de Treinamento (CT) da Barra Funda (Barra Funda's Training Center), which is used mostly by the professional team.[18] The other is the Centro de Formação de Atletas Presidente Laudo Natel (President Laudo Natel Athletes Formation Center), nicknamed Centro de Treinamento (CT) de Cotia (Cotia's Training Center), which is used by the youth teams.[19]
Current squad
As of February 14, 2012
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Youth & reserve squad
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Out on loan
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Personnel
Current technical staff
Position | Staff |
---|---|
Head coach | Ney Franco |
Assistant manager | Milton Cruz |
Fitness coach | José Mário Campeiz, Sergio Rocha |
Goalkeeping coach | Haroldo Lamounier |
Director of football | Adalberto Dellape Batista |
Medical Staff | Jose Sanchez, Auro Rayel |
Last updated: July 2012
Source: São Paulo Futebol Clube
Notable players
Carlos Casemiro, Rafael Toloi, Luis Fabiano, Fernandihno
Notable managers
Rivalry
São Paulo vs. Corinthians
The game between these clubs is also known as "Majestoso", a name coined by Thomas Mazzoni. The first "Majestoso" occurred on 25th May 1930.[20] The fixture has seen 115 wins by Corinthians, 97 wins by São Paulo and 97 draws.
São Paulo vs. Palmeiras
This fixture is nicknamed the "Choque Rei", and has seen 103 wins by São Paulo, 99 wins by Palmeiras and 99 draws.[21]
São Paulo vs. Santos
Also known as "San-São", this fixture was first played in 1936. Since then, São Paulo have won it 110 times, Santos 84, and there have been 62 draws. [22]
Supporters
São Paulo's average attendances per year in Brazilian Championship:
Year | Attendance | Year | Attendance | Year | Attendance | Year | Attendance | Year | Attendance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1971 | 19,518 | 1981 | 41,179 | 1991 | 22,196 | 2001 | 18,085 | 2011 | 21,485 |
1972 | 21,270 | 1982 | 23,841 | 1992 | 20,440 | 2002 | 25,452 | 2012 | |
1973 | 18,282 | 1983 | 21,643 | 1993 | 23,275 | 2003 | 12,231 | 2013 | |
1974 | 8,596 | 1984 | 8,202 | 1994 | 8,992 | 2004 | 8,613 | 2014 | |
1975 | 14,001 | 1985 | 12,532 | 1995 | 6,135 | 2005 | 9,805 | 2015 | |
1976 | 18,266 | 1986 | 29,483 | 1996 | 7,498 | 2006 | 22,948 | 2016 | |
1977 | 32,031 | 1987 | 12,907 | 1997 | 5,889 | 2007 | 28,662 | 2017 | |
1978 | 11,472 | 1988 | 10,635 | 1998 | 9,430 | 2008 | 21,333 | 2018 | |
1979 | - | 1989 | 17,211 | 1999 | 19,282 | 2009 | 26,268 | 2019 | |
1980 | 21,369 | 1990 | 18,243 | 2000 | 10,113 | 2010 | 14,704 | 2020 |
São Paulo's average attendances per year in Copa Libertadores:
Year | Attendance | Year | Attendance |
---|---|---|---|
1972 | 38,616 | 2004 | 56,103 |
1974 | 21,821 | 2005 | 48,822 |
1978 | 31,132 | 2006 | 50,755 |
1982 | 14,552 | 2007 | 26,287 |
1987 | 7,301 | 2008 | 36,809 |
1992 | 25,771 | 2009 | 38,403 |
1993 | 68,725 | 2010 | 42,686 |
1994 | 54,663 |
Honors
- International
- FIFA Club World Cup (1): 2005
- Intercontinental Cup (2): 1992, 1993
- Continental
- Copa Libertadores (3): 1992, 1993, 2005
- Copa CONMEBOL (1): 1994
- Recopa Sudamericana (2): 1993, 1994
- Supercopa Sudamericana (1): 1993
- Copa Masters CONMEBOL (1): 1996
- National
- Campeonato Brasileiro Série A (6): 1977, 1986, 1991, 2006, 2007, 2008
- Torneio Rio-São Paulo (1): 2001
- Campeonato Paulista (21): 1931, 1943, 1945, 1946, 1948, 1949, 1953, 1957, 1970, 1971, 1975, 1980, 1981, 1985, 1987, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1998, 2000, 2005
- Supercampeonato Paulista (1): 2002
References
- ^ CBF
- ^ a b [1]
- ^ a b "Morumbi – Tricolor Pride". Official Website. Retrieved September 16, 2008.
- ^ Clubes mais ricos do Brasil 2011
- ^ a b c "Club Athletico Paulistano – História" (in Portuguese). Campeões do Futebol. Retrieved February 27, 2009.
- ^ "Origins" (in Portuguese). Arquivo Tricolor. Retrieved September 18, 2008.
- ^ a b c d "Origins". Official Website. Retrieved September 16, 2008.
- ^ "São Paulo Futebol Clube" (in Portuguese). IG. Retrieved September 23, 2008.
- ^ "SPFC". Official Website. Retrieved September 16, 2008.
- ^ a b c "Tricolor decade". Official Website. Retrieved September 16, 2008.
- ^ "Telê Era". Official Website. Retrieved September 16, 2008. [dead link]
- ^ Karel Stokkermans (8 October 2010 (updated)). "Copa Libertadores de América 1992". RSSSF. Retrieved 7 May 2012.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help) - ^ "Toyota cups 1992 and 1993". FIFA Official Website. Retrieved December 17, 2008.
- ^ Tricolor mais perto do Real Madrid – Gazeta Esportiva (April 23, 2003) (retrieved on July 6, 2006)
- ^ "Ceni wins best player prize". FIFA.com. December 22, 2005. Retrieved December 29, 2010.
- ^ "High drama in Yokohama". FIFA.com. December 22, 2005. Retrieved June 29, 2010.
- ^ "Ceni: I see my team-mates in these awards". FIFA.com. December 18, 2005. Retrieved June 29, 2010.
- ^ "Frederico Antonio Germano Menzen Training Center". Official Website. Retrieved September 16, 2008.
- ^ "CFA – President Laudo Natel Athlete Formation Center". Official Website. Retrieved September 16, 2008.
- ^ http://www.espbr.com/noticias/sao-paulo-x-corinthians-rivalidade-historica
- ^ http://www.saopaulofc.net/noticias/noticias/historia/2012/7/14/choque-rei-300-jogos-de-historia
- ^ http://colunistas.ig.com.br/esportes/2009/02/27/o-sansao/
External links