fbpx
Wikipedia

Campeonato Brasileiro Série A

The Campeonato Brasileiro Série A (Portuguese pronunciation: [kɐ̃pjoˈnatu bɾaziˈlejɾu ˈsɛɾii ˈa]; English: "Brazilian Championship A Series"), commonly referred to as the Brasileirão (pronounced [bɾazilejˈɾãw]; English: "Big Brazilian"), and also known as Brasileirão Betano due to sponsorship with Betano, is a Brazilian professional league for men's football clubs. At the top of the Brazilian football league system, it is the country's primary football competition. Contested by 20 clubs, it operates on a system of promotion and relegation with the Campeonato Brasileiro Série B. In 2021, the competition was chosen by the IFFHS as the strongest national league in South America as well as the strongest in the world.[1]

Campeonato Brasileiro Série A
Organising bodyBrazilian Football Confederation
Founded1971; 53 years ago (1971)
CountryBrazil
ConfederationCONMEBOL
Number of teams20 (since 2006)
Level on pyramid1
Relegation toSérie B
Domestic cup(s)
International cup(s)
Current championsPalmeiras (12th title)
(2023)
Most championshipsPalmeiras (12 titles)
Most appearancesFábio (665)
Top goalscorerRoberto Dinamite (190)
TV partnersList of broadcasters
Websitebrasileiraobetano.com.br
Current: 2024 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A

Due to historical peculiarities and the large geographical size of the country, Brazil has a relatively short history of nationwide football competitions. The main and most prestigious competitions were the state championships, run in each of the Brazilian states,[2] with occasional inter-state tournaments, such as the Torneio Rio–São Paulo.[3] In 1959, advancements in civil aviation and air transport and the need to appoint a Brazilian representative to the first edition of the Copa Libertadores, led to the creation of a regular nationwide tournament, the Taça Brasil. In 1967, the Torneio Rio-São Paulo was expanded to include teams from other states, becoming the Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa, which was also considered a national tournament. The first tournament downright called a national championship was held in 1971, also won by Atlético Mineiro, although it was only referred to as "Campeonato Brasileiro" starting in 1989.

One of the historical characteristics of the Brazilian Championship was the lack of standardization in the competition system, the rules and the number of participants, which changed almost every season. Because of this, in several seasons there was no promotion and relegation system to the Second Division, and sometimes there weren't different tiers. Number of clubs also fluctuated, with the 1979 edition reached its peak, with 92 participants. The various formats already adopted include a knockout tournament system (1959–1968) and a mixed system with a group stage followed by playoffs (1967–2002). The championship's competition formula was standardized only in 2006, when the round-robin system with 20 clubs was adopted with all teams facing each other in home and away games.[4]

In 2010, the champions of national tournaments from 1959 to 1970—Taça Brasil and Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa—have been declared official winners of the Brazilian championship or champions of Brazil (not winners of Brasileirão or Série A) by the Brazilian Football Confederation.[5] In August 2023, the CBF declared the 1937 Torneio dos Campeões retroactively a Brazilian championship.[6] The titles of old tournaments, cited in the Brazilian championship history, are equated to the title of Série A, but the tournaments are cataloging with their original name in the statistics[7] (despite being different competitions, they confer the same title).[8][9]

The Campeonato Brasileiro is one of the strongest leagues in the world; it contains the second-most club world champions titles, with 10 championships won among six clubs, and the second-most Copa Libertadores titles, with 22 titles won among 10 clubs. The IFFHS ranked the league fourth in strength for the 2001–12 period after the Premier League (England), La Liga (Spain), and Serie A (Italy).[10] The Campeonato Brasileiro is the most-watched football league in the Americas and one of the world's most exposed, broadcast in 155 nations. It is also one of the world's richest championships, ranked as the sixth most valuable with a worth of over US$1.43 billion, generating an annual turnover of over US$1.17 billion in 2012.

Since 1959, a total of 156 clubs have played in the Campeonato Brasileiro.[11] Seventeen clubs have been crowned Brazilian football champions, thirteen of which have won the title more than once. Palmeiras is the most successful club of the Campeonato Brasileiro, having won the competition twelve times, followed by Santos with eight titles, and Corinthians and Flamengo with seven titles each. Santos' Os Santásticos won five consecutive titles between 1961 and 1965, a feat that remains unequalled. The state of São Paulo is the most successful, amassing 34 titles among five clubs.

History edit

Early competition and attempts to create a national championship edit

 
São Paulo Athletic Club and CA Paulistano in the final of the first São Paulo State Championship in 1902

Anglo-Brazilian Charles Miller introduced Brazil to football association rules to Brazil in 1894 upon his return from England, where he attended college and discovered the sport, and it soon became popular in the country. In 1902 Miller helped to organize the Liga Paulista de Foot-Ball (current Campeonato Paulista), Brazil's first football league. The league only played in the area of the State of São Paulo.[12] Due the size of Brazil, economic and geographical challenges, and lack of transport infraestructure, the creation of a fully national league or championship was almost impossible. Instead the rest of Brazil followed São Paulo's example and founded state football leagues for each of the federative units of Brazil.[13] The state leagues remained the main and most prestigious championships, and were considered the equivalent of national leagues of other countries.

 
The Taça Brasil trophy.

As the sport grew in size, the local state federations and the recently created Confederação Brasileira de Desportos (CBD) started to organize a number of different interstate and regional tournaments.[14] The most popular form of competition in a national level was the Campeonato Brasileiro de Seleções Estaduais (Brazilian Championship of State Teams), a tournament formed by Seleções, teams formed by the best representatives from each state of Brazil (a concept similar to national teams). Originally the nomenclature "Brazilian Championship" belonged to this tournament.[15] While the most prestigious club tournament outside the state championships was the Torneio Rio–São Paulo, organized jointly by the Federação Paulista de Futebol (FPF) and Federação Carioca de Futebol (FCF, current FERJ) and competed between clubs from the Campeonato Paulista and Campeonato Carioca.[3] Since the two championships had the best teams of Brazil at the time, this tournament was considered sometimes a de facto Brazilian championship,[3][16] for example, in 1951 the Spanish newspaper El Mundo Deportivo called the Rio-São Paulo Tournament the "unofficial Brazilian championship", stating that the two states had the best teams in Brazil.[16]

One of the first experiences of organizing a club championship at national level was the Torneio dos Campeões de 1920 [pt], competed between the winners of the Campeonato Paulista (Paulistano), Campeonato Carioca (Fluminense) and Campeonato Gaúcho (Brasil de Pelotas).[17] A second edition was done in the 1937 Torneios dos Campeões, won by Atlético Mineiro. It was the first with fully professional clubs. In August 2023, the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF) officially recognized the tournament as a Brazilian championship, thus conferring to Atlético Mineiro the status of first national champions of Brazil.[18]

Taça Brasil and Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa edit

 
The 1970 Taça de Prata awarded to Fluminense

The Taça Brasil (Brazil Cup) was introduced in 1959,[19] and ran until 1968.[20] The Taça Brasil was created to select a representative for the newly created Copa Libertadores de América, and it was intended to become Brazil's new national competition, replacing the Campeonato Brasileiro de Seleções Estaduais.[19] The Taça Brasil was a pure knockout tournament, with the participants selected from the champions of the state championships.[19] The first champion was Bahia which defeated Pelé's Santos in a remarkable underdog victory. Breaking the Rio de Janeiro-São Paulo hegemony in national football.[21]

In 1967, the Federação Paulista de Futebol and Federação Carioca de Futebol decided to expand the Torneio Rio–São Paulo to include teams from other states of Brazil. Thus becoming the Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa, nicknamed the Robertão by fans and media.[14] Differently from the Taça Brasil, the Robertão was competed with a round-robin system, with two groups in the first stage, and a quadrangular with the two best teams of each group on the final stage.[14] It was competed between 1967 and 1970.

In 1968, the delay in closing the 1968 Taça Brasil made CBD use the Robertão to determine the Libertadores representatives. The Confederation took over the organization of the Robertão, officially renaming it to the "Taça de Prata" (Silver Cup), and extinguished the Taça Brasil after the end of that year's edition. The Robertão remained the top Brazilian championship the following two years.[22] In 2010 the CBF announced that these were to be regarded as Brazilian championships. Because the Robertão and the Taça Brasil ran at the same time for two years (1967 and 1968), the 1968 season has two separate simultaneous Brazilian champions: the 1968 Taça Brasil was won by Botafogo and the 1968 Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa was won by Santos. In contrast, the 1967 season saw Palmeiras champion of both competitions.[23]

Campeonato Nacional de Clubes and Copa Brasil edit

 
Garrincha playing for Botafogo in the 1960s

Following Brazil's third world title at the 1970 FIFA World Cup, president Emílio Médici decided to better organize Brazilian football. The Brazilian military government had become heavily involved in football as a way to promote the legitimization of the military regime, national unity and patriotism, as well as part of the Programa de Integração Nacional [pt], which sought the geographical integration of Brazil.[24][25] In a meeting with the CBD and the club presidents in October 1970, it was decided to create the following year a Brazilian championship contested by twenty teams, inspired by the national tournaments in the European nations. The first edition was named "Campeonato Nacional de Clubes" ("National Championship of Clubs"), was held in 1971 and won by Atlético Mineiro.[26] The top division was named "Divisão Extra" (Extra Division), while a newly created second division earned the "Primeira Divisão" (First Division) name. The second division was a fusion of the already existing Torneio Centro-Sul and the Copa Norte-Nordeste, with teams from regions with less expression in national football and weaker teams from the main footballing states of Brazil. The first champion was Villa Nova Atlético Clube, from the town of Nova Lima, Minas Gerais.[27] There wasn't, however, a system of promotion and relegation. The clubs were instead selected to participate in either division according to their performances at their respective state championships.[26]

 
Group photo of the 1978 Guarani squad, from the city of Campinas, winners of the 1978 Campeonato Nacional de Clubes. Together with Santos, they are the only teams not belonging to a state capital to become national champions.[28]

In the next few years, due to the influence of the military regime, the number of clubs that participated in the competition steadily increased.[24] Each subsequent edition added teams to garner support to the military government, specially from regions were ruling party ARENA had less support. This was epitomized by a common aphorism at the time: "Onde a ARENA vai mal, mais um time no Nacional" ("Where ARENA is doing badly, another team in the National [championship]").[24][29] The inaugural edition, inspired in the European leagues, had 20 teams. The second edition in 1972 expanded to 26 clubs. The 1973 edition saw the second division dissolved and its clubs were now participating in an unified national championship with 40 clubs. By the 1979 edition, the number of clubs participating peaked, with a total of 92 teams. From 1975 onwards, the competition was officially named Copa Brasil (Brazil Cup).

Creation of the CBF, new reformulations and crises edit

 
Zico playing for Flamengo at the 1981 Taça de Ouro

In 1980, the CBD was dissolved and on its place was created the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF). This coincided with the 1980s financial crisis in Brazil, which together with the previous decade's oil crisis and the gradual end of the military dictatorship, led to major reorganization of Brazilian football.[25] The Championship was downsized and a new format was introduced. The 1980 edition was named "Taça de Ouro" (Gold Cup). The second division was also reintroduced, now with the name "Taça de Prata" (Silver Cup).[30] A mechanism of promotion also first appeared in this edition: the four best-ranked teams in the first phase of the "Taça Prata" would go on to compete in the second phase of the "Taça Ouro". The Taça de Bronze (Bronze Cup) was also created as a third division in 1981, with the inaugural champion being Olaria Atlético Clube, a club from the neighbourhood of Olaria in the city of Rio de Janeiro. But citing financial issues, the CBF announced, shortly after the end of the first edition, that the tournament would be discontinued.[31] The third division would later return in one-off editions in 1988, 1990, 1992 until it became regularly competed from 1994 onwards.

In 1987, CBF announced it was not financially able to organize the Brazilian football championship, a mere few weeks before it was scheduled to begin. As a result, the thirteen most popular football clubs in Brazil created an association, called Clube dos 13, to organize a championship of their own. This tournament was called Copa União and was run by the 16 clubs that eventually took part in it (Santa Cruz, Coritiba and Goiás were invited to join). CBF initially stood by the Club of the 13 decision. However, weeks later, with the competition already underway, and under pressure from football clubs excluded from the Copa União, CBF adopted a new set of rules, which considered the Copa União part of a larger tournament, comprising another 16 teams. According to that new set of rules, the Copa União would be dubbed the Green Module of the CBF championship, whereas the other 16 teams would play the Yellow Module. In the end, the first two teams of each Module would play each other to define the national champions and the two teams that would represent Brazil in the Copa Libertadores in 1988. However, that new set of rules was never recognized by the Club of the 13 and largely ignored by most of the Brazilian media, who concentrated their attention in the independent league, eventually won by Clube de Regatas do Flamengo. The eventual final tourney was set to have Sport and Guarani, from the yellow module, and Flamengo and Internacional from the green one. It never materialized, however, as Flamengo and Internacional refused to partake in it. As a result, Sport and Guarani played each other, with the first one winning the Championship for 1987 and both going on to represent Brazil in the 1988 Copa Libertadores. Although Flamengo has attempted to gain ownership of the championship multiple times through the justice system, Sport remains recognized by both CBF and FIFA as 1987 Champions.[32][33] Part of the football fans in Brazil still consider Flamengo as the Brazilian Champion of 1987, or at least co-champions.[34]

After the chaos caused by the 1987 edition, the CBF and Club of the 13 reached an agreement on how to organize the next year's edition of the Copa União. The 1988 Campeonato Brasileiro reduced the number of participants, to hold a more competitive championship with just 24 teams. Furthermore, for the first time, the competition had a true promotion and relegation system, as required by FIFA. The last four placed in the first division (Bangu, Santa Cruz, Criciúma and America) fell to the second division in 1989, being replaced by Inter de Limeira and Náutico, respectively champion and runner-up of the 1988 Special Division.[35] The 1989 edition was the first to use the terminology "Série A", inspired by the Italian league system.

Changes to CBF and transitional period edit

On January 16, 1989, Ricardo Teixeira assumed the presidency of the CBF. He came to command the Confederation at a time when it was facing serious financial problems. Teixeira managed to turn it into a profitable operation through millionaire contracts involving the Brazilian national team. During his management, the Brazilian Championship became more reorganized and the revenue generated by the clubs was increased, both in television quotas and sponsorships. However, since the first decade of his administration, Ricardo Teixeira has been involved in several allegations of corruption.[36]

The Brazilian Championship had already been tested with countless different formulas and names, being quite bloated and confusing in several editions. However, from 1987 onwards, with the creation of the Copa União, there was a decrease in the number of participants in the championship. As a result, several clubs from less popular regions that entered the national competition because they were state champions no longer faced clubs considered "big" and traditional, and as a result, some associations were even at risk of becoming extinct. To calm the discontent of these clubs and smaller federations, the CBF was forced to create a national "cup" along the lines of the European ones. In 1989, the entity created a secondary national competition, the Copa do Brasil, which allowed clubs from all states to enter. The first champion of the Copa do Brasil was Grêmio.[37] With the creation of this new tournament, the CBF decided, for the first time, to officially name the country's main national football tournament the "Campeonato Brasileiro", to make it clear which was the national tournament in Brazil that would give its winner the title of Brazilian champion and, also, to avoid confusion between "Copa do Brasil" and "Copa Brasil", one of the old names used by the Brasileirão between 1975 and 1980.[37][38]

In the 1999 edition, a new relegation system was adopted, similar to that used in the Argentine football league. The two clubs with the worst campaigns in the first phase and in the previous season were relegated. However, this system only lasted a single season. During the first phase of the competition, it was discovered that the player Sandro Hiroshi of São Paulo was registered irregularly. Botafogo, at the risk of being relegated to Série B, requested a 6-1 loss to São Paulo to be annulled. Later Internacional also successfully appealed to have a match result voided (a 2-2 draw) on the same grounds.[39] The Supreme Court of Sporting Justice (STJD) ruled in favor of Internacional and Botafogo, and they both gained points. Botafogo was saved from relegation, and the change made SE Gama, from the Federal District, to be relegated instead.[39] Gama, together with the Distrito Federal Football Coaches Union and political party PFL immediately sued the CBF to return to the Série A. The common courts decided in favor of Gama, going against the STJD's decision.[4] By June 2000, the trial was not solved, and CBF could not organize the 2000 edition of the Brasileirão.[4][40]

Without the CBF, the Clube dos 13 decided to organize the Brazilian Championship, which became known as the Copa João Havelange. To avoid further legal problems, the championship would encompass all divisions. This edition became controversial for its organization: 116 clubs from all the three divisions, divided in four "modules" organized as the championships before the Sandro Hiroshi case. The Blue Module, equivalent to the Série A, Yellow Module, equivalent to the Série B with some Série C clubs, and the Green and White Modules from Série C clubs, the former from the North, Northeast and Central-West regions of Brazil and the latter from South and Southeast of Brazil. Although equivalents to different tiers, the best placed teams from the all modules would qualify for the play-offs.[4] Another controversy was the choice of clubs for the Blue Module: Fluminense, which had played in 1999 Campeonato Brasileiro Série C and obtained promotion to Série B, was included in the Blue Module of the new competition, where the elite of Brazilian football was, without having to go through the second division. Similarly, Bahia, playing at the 1999 Campeonato Brasileiro Série B failed to promote back to the top division, was included in the Blue Module.[4]

Modern championship: round-robin format, stabilization and growth edit

 
Tifo organized by Corinthians supporters to celebrate its 6th title after winning the 2015 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A

One of the historical characteristics of the Brazilian Championship was the lack of standardization and constant change in the competition system, as well as the rules and the number of participants. Changes to the format started being discussed in favor of a regular and stable form of competition ever since Ricardo Teixeira's election in 1989, but the chaos of the 2000 edition made it even more apparent that change was necessary.[4][41] In 2002, the Clube dos 13 voted in favor of adopting a European-style round-robin format: The matches are divided into two rounds, and the team that scores the most points is declared champion. The tiebreaker criteria vary, from goal sequence to number of victories. Rede Globo, the Brasileirão's main broadcasting partner was against the removal of playoffs, arguing for a loss of revenue and audience without decisive games.[41] 24 clubs disputed the 2003 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A, the first one with the round-robin system, and Cruzeiro won Brazil's first domestic treble after winning that year's Série A, Copa do Brasil and Campeonato Mineiro. The next years saw the number of clubs later scaled down to 22 in 2005 and 20 in 2006. In what the CBF itself confirmed as a "definitive format", with the four best teams qualifying for the Copa Libertadores, and the four worst teams being relegated to Série B with the season being between May and December. This was the last change to the competition's format, which has remained stable ever since.[42]

In 2008, the CBF announced the creation the Série D as a fourth division. In 2009, the number of clubs in the Série C was downsized from 63 to 20 teams. The 2009 Campeonato Brasileiro Série D had 39 teams and its first champion was São Raimundo from Santarém, Pará.[43] Currently the Série D has 64 teams and serves as the lowest national tier.

In 2010, CBF decided to recognize the champions of both Taça Brasil (1959–68) and Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa (1967–70) as Brazilian Champions, creating some controversy as there was a two-year period when both tournaments were held, thus Palmeiras was awarded two times for winning both in 1967 and both Santos and Botafogo were recognized as champions in 1968 as each tournament was won by one of them.[8] In August 2023, the CBF declared the Torneio dos Campeões 1937 retroactively a Brazilian championship, giving a Brazilian title to Atlético Mineiro.[6]

The titles of old tournaments, cited in the Brazilian championship history, are equated to the title of Série A, but the tournaments are cataloging with their original name in the statistics[7] (despite being different competitions, they confer the same title).[8][9]

Competition format edit

Competition edit

There are 20 clubs in the Brasileirão. During the course of a season (from May to December) each club plays the others twice (a double round-robin system), once at their home stadium and once at that of their opponents, for a total of 38 games. Teams receive three points for a win and one point for a draw. No points are awarded for a loss. Teams are ranked by total points, victories, goal difference, and goals scored. At the end of each season, the club with the most points is crowned champion. If points are equal between two or more clubs, the rules are:[44]

  • If the tie is between more than two clubs not competing for the national title or relegation, then the tie is broken using the total number of games won and total goal difference during the league. The following criteria are goals scored and points in head-to-head matches.
  • If the tie is still not broken, the winner will be determined by Fair Play scales.
  • If there is a tie for the championship, for relegation, or for qualification to other competitions, the Fair Play scales will not be taken into account; a play-off match at a neutral venue decides rank. Otherwise, a drawing of lots will determine the final positions.

A system of promotion and relegation exists between the Brasileirão and the Série B. The four lowest placed teams in the Brasileirão are relegated to Série B, and the top four teams from the Série B promoted to the Brasileirão.

Qualification for international competitions edit

 
Peñarol vs Santos in the Centenario Stadium of Montevideo during the 2011 Copa Libertadores Finals.

Since 2016, the top six clubs in the Brasileirão qualify for the following Copa Libertadores. The top four clubs directly enter the group stage whilst the fifth and sixth-placed clubs enter in the second round. The number of teams qualifying for the Libertadores may increase depending on who wins the Copa do Brasil, Copa Sudamericana or Copa Libertadores.

Clubs from seventh to twelfth place qualify for the following Copa Sudamericana, although as above the numbers can depend on other competitions.

Champions edit

Seventeen clubs are officially recognized to have been the Brazilian football champions. In bold those competing in Série A as of 2024 season. In italic the clubs who have never been relegated to any lower division.

Club Titles Runn. Years won Years runner-up
  Palmeiras 12 4 1960, 1967, 1967, 1969, 1972, 1973, 1993, 1994, 2016, 2018, 2022, 2023 1970, 1978, 1997, 2017
  Santos 8 8 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1968, 2002, 2004 1959, 1966, 1983, 1995, 2003, 2007, 2016, 2019
  Corinthians 7 3 1990, 1998, 1999, 2005, 2011, 2015, 2017 1976, 1994, 2002
  Flamengo 7 3 1980, 1982, 1983, 1992, 2009, 2019, 2020 1964, 2018, 2021
  São Paulo 6 6 1977, 1986, 1991, 2006, 2007, 2008 1971, 1973, 1981, 1989, 1990, 2014
  Cruzeiro 4 5 1966, 2003, 2013, 2014 1969, 1974, 1975, 1998, 2010
  Vasco da Gama 4 4 1974, 1989, 1997, 2000 1965, 1979, 1984, 2011
  Fluminense 4 1 1970, 1984, 2010, 2012 1937
  Internacional 3 8 1975, 1976, 1979 1967, 1968, 1988, 2005, 2006, 2009, 2020, 2022
  Atlético Mineiro 3 5 1937, 1971, 2021 1977, 1980, 1999, 2012, 2015
  Grêmio 2 4 1981, 1996 1982, 2008, 2013, 2023
  Botafogo 2 3 1968, 1995 1962, 1972, 1992
  Bahia 2 2 1959, 1988 1961, 1963
  Guarani 1 2 1978 1986, 1987
  Athletico Paranaense 1 1 2001 2004
  Coritiba 1 0 1985
  Sport Recife 1 0 1987
  Fortaleza 0 2 1960, 1968
  São Caetano 0 2 2000, 2001
  Náutico 0 1 1967
  Bangu 0 1 1985
  RB Bragantino 0 1 1991
  Vitória 0 1 1993
  Portuguesa 0 1 1996

Note: although some consider Flamengo as champion of the Brazilian Championship in 1987, Sport is officially the only champion of this competition.

Nomenclature and sponsorship edit

The Campeonato Brasileiro had its official name changed often before settling on Campeonato Brasileiro in 1989.[45]

Identity English name Years Official Sponsor
Copa dos Campeões Estaduais State Champions Cup
1937
None
Taça Brasil Brazil Cup
1959–1968
Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa Roberto Gomes Pedrosa Tournament
1967–1970
Campeonato Nacional National Championship
1971–1973
Copa Brasil Brazil Cup
1974–1979, 1984, 1986
Taça de Ouro Golden Cup
1980–1983, 1985
Copa Brasil Brazil Cup*
1987–88
Copa João Havelange João Havelange Cup
2000
Campeonato Brasileiro Brazilian Championship
1989–1999, 2001–

2001: LATAM (Brasileirão TAM)
2002: Visa (Troféu VISA Electron)
2005: Nestlé (Taça Nestlé Brasileirão)[46]
2009–2012: Petrobras (Brasileirão Petrobras)[47][48]
2014–2017: Chevrolet (Brasileirão Chevrolet)[49][50]
2018–2023: Assaí Atacadista (Brasileirão Assaí)[51] 2024–: Betano (Brasileirão Betano)

  • The official name was Copa Brasil (Brazil Cup), but it became known as Copa União (Union Cup).

Finances edit

The Brasileirão had total club revenues of US$1.17 billion in 2012. This makes the Brasileirão the highest revenue football league in the Americas, and the highest outside of Europe's "big five."[52]

The Brasileirão is also one of the world's most valuable football leagues, having a marketing value and worth over US$1.24 billion in 2013.[53] The total worth of every club in the 2013 Brasileirão is US$1.07 billion.[54]

The Brasileirão's television rights were worth over US$610 million in 2012; that accounts for over 57% of Latin America as a whole.[55]

In 2013 Corinthians was the 16th most valuable club in the world, worth over US$358 million.[56] As of 2021, no Brazilian club enters the list of the most valuable football clubs.[57]

Clubs edit

The following 20 clubs are competing in the Série A during the 2024 season.

Club Position
in 2023
First season in
top division
Number of seasons
in top division
First season of
current spell
Number of seasons
of current spell
Top
division
titles
Last top
division title
Athletico Paranaense 8th 1959 48 2013 12 1 2001
Atlético Goianiense 4th (Série B) 1965 14 2024 1 0 N/A
Atlético Mineiro 3th 1959 62 2007 18 3 2021
Bahia 16th 1959 51 2023 2 2 1988
Botafogo 5th 1962 59 2022 3 2 1995
Corinthians 13th 1967 56 2009 16 7 2017
Criciúma 3rd (Série B) 1979 14 2024 1 0 N/A
Cruzeiro 14th 1960 61 2023 2 4 2014
Cuiabáa 12th 2021 4 2021 4 0 N/A
Flamengoa, b 4th 1964 59 1967 57 7 2020
Fluminense 7th 1960 59 2000 25 4 2012
Fortaleza 10th 1959 26 2019 6 0 N/A
Grêmio 2nd 1959 64 2023 2 2 1996
Internacional 9th 1962 58 2018 7 3 1979
Juventude 2nd (Série B) 1977 19 2024 1 0 N/A
Palmeiras 1st 1960 61 2014 11 12 2023
Red Bull Bragantino 6th 1990 14 2020 5 0 N/A
São Pauloa, b 11th 1967 57 1980 45 6 2008
Vasco da Gama 15th 1959 55 2023 2 4 2000
Vitória 1st (Série B) 1965 40 2024 1 0 N/A

a: Unrelegated clubs
b: Clubs that never played outside the top division

Most appearances edit

As of 2024 season, after 1937 Copa dos Campeões Estaduais recognition

Below is the list of clubs that have more appearances in the Campeonato Brasileiro. There are 159 teams that have taken part in 1 Copa dos Campeões Estaduais, 10 Taça Brasil, 4 Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa and 53 Campeonato Brasileiro editions. The teams in bold compete in Série A currently. The year in parentheses represents the most recent year of participation at this level.

Clubs relegated from Série A edit

Taça de Ouro era

Clubs are relegated from Taça de Ouro to Taça de Prata of the same year, likewise happens today in international club competitions (3rd place of Copa Libertadores to Copa Sudamericana knock-out playoff). The last place of each group and the four clubs that lost in the repechage play-off were sent to the dispute of Taça de Prata.[58][59]

Year Clubs
1982 Nacional (AM) (Group A), Ríver (Group B), Ferroviário (Group C), Itabaiana (Group D), Mixto (Group E), Vitória (Group F), Taguatinga (Group G), Joinville (Group H)

América de Natal (Play-off loser), CSA (Play-off loser), Goiás (Play-off loser), Desportiva (Play-off loser)

1983 Moto Club (Group A), Joinville (Group B), Galícia (Group C), Fortaleza (Group D), Mixto (Group E), Rio Branco (ES) (Group F), Brasília (Group G), Treze (Group H)

Paysandu (Play-off loser), CSA (Play-off loser), Juventus (Play-off loser), Ferroviário (Play-off loser)

Copa União
Year Clubs
1987 Santos, Corinthians

According to the regulation, The 15th (Santos) and 16th (Corinthians) placed teams would play the 1988 Second Level.[60] However, the Clube dos 13, organizer of the Copa União, and the Confederação Brasileira de Futebol, put an end to the litigation between the associations, and the 1988 championship was again organized entirely by the CBF, making the relegations invalid.[61]

Knock-out tournament
Round-robin tournament
Year Clubs (points)
2003 Fortaleza (49), Bahia (46)
2004 Criciúma (50), Guarani (49), Vitória (49), Grêmio (39)
2005 Coritiba (49), Atlético Mineiro (47), Paysandu (41), Brasiliense (41)
2006 Ponte Preta (39), Fortaleza (38), São Caetano (36), Santa Cruz (28)
2007 Corinthians (44), Paraná (43), Juventude (41), América de Natal (17)
2008 Figueirense (44), Vasco da Gama (40), Portuguesa (38), Ipatinga (35)
2009 Coritiba (45), Santo André (41), Náutico (38), Sport (31)
2010 Vitória (42), Guarani (37), Goiás (33), Grêmio Prudente (28)
2011 Atlético Paranaense (41), Ceará (39), América Mineiro (37), Avaí (31)
2012 Sport (41), Palmeiras (34), Atlético Goianiense (30), Figueirense (30)
2013 Portuguesa[c] (44), Vasco da Gama (44), Ponte Preta (37), Náutico (20)
2014 Vitória (38), Bahia (37), Botafogo (34), Criciúma (32)
2015 Avaí (42), Vasco da Gama (41), Goiás (38), Joinville (31)
2016 Internacional (43), Figueirense (37), Santa Cruz (31), América Mineiro (28)
2017 Coritiba (43), Avaí (43), Ponte Preta (39), Atlético Goianiense (36)
2018 América Mineiro (40), Sport (39), Vitória (37), Paraná (23)
2019 Cruzeiro (36), CSA (32), Chapecoense (32), Avaí (20)
2020 Vasco da Gama (41), Goiás (37), Coritiba (31), Botafogo (27)
2021 Grêmio (43), Bahia (43), Sport (38), Chapecoense (15)
2022 Ceará (37), Atlético Goianiense (36), Avaí (35), Juventude (22)
2023 Santos (43), Goiás (38), Coritiba (30), América Mineiro (24)
  1. ^
    América-MG was suspended for 2 years in 1994, because they contested their relegation in a civil court instead the sports court. In 1996 the team would return to the Série B (2nd level).[62]
  2. ^
    Sports court (STJD) canceled all relegations in 1996 season, sparing Fluminense and Bragantino.[63]
  3. ^
    Fluminense is spared from relegation after the end of championship.[64] Sports court deducted 3 points from Portuguesa[65] and 4 points for Flamengo,[66] for fielding an ineligible players (Héverton and André Santos, respectively).[67][68]

All-time Campeonato Brasileiro table (1937, 1959–2023) edit

The All-time Campeonato Brasileiro table is an overall record of all match results, points, and goals of every team that has played in the Brazilian League. The table is accurate as of the end of the 2023 season, and includes the recently recognized 1937 Copa dos Campeões Estaduais, and all editions since 1959. Teams in bold will take part in the top division in 2024.[69][70]

Team Pts GP W D L GF GA GD
1 São Paulo 2368 1614 703 478 433 2323 1667 +656
2 Internacional 2308 1595 695 448 452 2156 1633 +523
3 Atlético Mineiro 2295 1616 697 443 476 2347 1873 +474
4 Palmeiras 2294 1541 708 424 409 2286 1640 +646
5 Flamengo 2281 1622 688 451 483 2267 1832 +435
6 Santos 2278 1630 681 461 488 2368 1850 +518
7 Corinthians 2267 1597 678 471 448 2085 1659 +426
8 Grêmio 2223 1589 679 433 477 2134 1697 +437
9 Cruzeiro 2133 1519 647 417 455 2166 1710 +456
10 Fluminense 2051 1555 609 422 524 2077 1866 +211
11 Vasco da Gama 1852 1447 543 436 468 1967 1763 +204
12 Botafogo 1819 1462 531 418 513 1842 1784 +58
13 Athletico Paranaense 1715 1291 488 341 462 1676 1578 +98
14 Goiás 1428 1169 401 325 443 1477 1523 -46
15 Coritiba 1351 1145 396 303 446 1329 1413 -84
16 Bahia 1337 1168 386 359 423 1318 1423 -105
17 Sport Recife 1161 1010 335 277 398 1133 1252 -119
18 Vitória 1107 972 319 259 394 1165 1360 -195
19 Portuguesa 900 787 260 249 278 961 973 -12
20 Guarani 889 709 269 215 225 898 797 +101
Campeonato Brasileiro table from 1971 to 1979[citation needed]
Pos Team GP W D L Pts
1 Internacional 122 66 38 18 188
2 Grêmio 122 63 38 21 176
3 Palmeiras 120 61 41 18 174
4 Corinthians 121 58 46 17 173
5 Cruzeiro 121 56 47 18 171
6 Atlético Mineiro 121 58 36 27 168
7 Flamengo 122 59 32 31 164
8 São Paulo 121 54 43 24 163
9 Vasco da Gama 121 41 27 158 750
10 Botafogo 120 44 49 27 147
Campeonato Brasileiro table from 1980 to 1989[citation needed]
Pos Team GP W D L Pts
1 Flamengo 228 112 70 46 308
2 Vasco da Gama 214 101 64 49 287
3 Atlético Mineiro 209 100 67 42 281
4 São Paulo 206 98 65 43 274
5 Grêmio 216 95 65 56 267
6 Fluminense 203 203 87 61 248
7 Santos 201 82 67 52 241
8 Internacional 199 77 65 57 237
9 Corinthians 201 79 65 57 234
10 Cruzeiro 179 67 62 50 205
Campeonato Brasileiro table from 1990 to 1999[citation needed]
Pos Team GP W D L Pts
1 Palmeiras 235 123 59 53 368
2 Corinthians 235 106 65 64 329
3 Santos 235 99 67 69 320
4 São Paulo 235 98 64 73 305
5 Atlético Mineiro 224 90 63 71 300
6 Vasco da Gama 225 86 70 69 297
7 Cruzeiro 218 86 57 75 282
8 Flamengo 231 85 64 82 280
9 Botafogo 225 87 58 80 276
10 Internacional 217 80 62 75 274
Campeonato Brasileiro table from 2000 to 2009[citation needed]
Pos Team GP W D L Pts
1 São Paulo 365 185 95 85 650
2 Santos 368 162 92 114 578
3 Cruzeiro 362 167 73 122 574
4 Internacional 362 161 81 120 564
5 Athletico Paranaense 366 151 85 130 538
6 Fluminense 368 140 104 124 524
7 Flamengo 362 139 94 129 511
8 Palmeiras 316 134 78 104 480
9 Grêmio 325 132 77 116 473
10 Corinthians 330 126 85 119 463
Campeonato Brasileiro table from 2010 to 2019[citation needed]
Pos Team GP W D L Pts
1 Corinthians 380 170 113 97 623
2 Grêmio 380 174 100 106 622
3 Flamengo 380 161 111 108 594
4 São Paulo 380 163 101 116 590
5 Santos 380 163 99 118 588
6 Atlético Mineiro 380 160 93 127 573
7 Cruzeiro 380 158 98 124 572
8 Fluminense 380 153 94 133 553
9 Palmeiras 342 145 89 108 524
10 Internacional 342 140 96 106 516

Media coverage edit

Value of television rights
Season(s) Price TV
1987–89 $3.4 million Globo
1990–94 not available Globo
1994–96 $31.4 million Globo
1997–2003 $50 million Globo
2003–05 $390 million Globo
2005–08 $900 million Globo
2009–11 R$1.9 billion Globo
2012–15 R$2.96 billion[71] Globo
2016–19 R$4.11 billion[72] Globo

Currently, the money of television represent a significant share in the finances of clubs in Brazil. The league broadcasting rights are total exclusivity of Grupo Globo, which distributes the live matches for its television stations: TV Globo (terrestrial and satellite), SporTV (pay), and the Premiere FC (through the system pay-per-view), where subscribers have the privilege to follow all 380 annual league matches. Globo, first cited, displays the League first time in 1987, when was created the Clube dos 13, trading tool of clubs with the television. The first television contract was negotiated in 1987, with only conveying the Green Module of the Copa União, organized by the Clube dos 13, the television rights were sold for $3.4 million to Rede Globo.[73][74] And only with the conveying of the championship final, SBT broadcast the game instead,[75] a blow to the Rede Globo, who says today that the Green Module would be the league itself, and then was prevented from entering the Ilha do Retiro.[76][77][78] In 1990, only Rede Bandeirantes acquired the broadcast rights. This edition marked the first national title of Corinthians, second most popular team in the country. Both the final transmission, as the other games, attracted the attention of the public, causing the network to acquire an Ibope Rating of 53 points in the deciding game.[79] This led to the Rede Globo prioritize the League from the next edition, in 1991.[79]

In 1997, began to be restricted games live in cities where the matches are held (except finals). The Clube dos 13 closed the contract with Rede Globo's television rights as the holder of the Brasileirão for $50 million (including editions of 1998 and 1999), and resolves itself split the rights with Rede Bandeirantes during this period. It was the first edition to be shown on pay-per-view (via Premiere).[80] In addition, the first games shown on pay television were courtesy of SporTV, after a controversial signing contract of Clube dos 13 with Globosat. Previously, in 1993, the Club of the 13 an CBF had signed a contract with TVA, a company in which ESPN Brazil was part. However, that decision was declined.[81]

In 2000, the broadcasting rights of the Copa João Havelange, organized by the Clube dos 13, were sold to Rede Globo for $50 million. However, the final of this competition in 2001, was marked by an unusual situation. Vasco da Gama, a finalist against São Caetano, graced the logo of SBT, the second largest television station of Brazil, a direct rival to Globo. This situation was somewhat embarrassing for Globo, which transmitted the final exclusively, and which was seen by an estimated audience of 60 million people.[82] Despite the large number of spectators in the final match, this edition was marked by low ratings, what did the Rede Globo to cancel the broadcast of a few matches.[83]

In 2001, Clube dos 13 defines four divisions of transmission quota, with Corinthians, São Paulo, Palmeiras, Flamengo and Vasco in group 1, Santos in group 2, Fluminense, Botafogo, Atlético Mineiro, Cruzeiro, Internacional and Grêmio in group 3, and Bahia, Goiás, Sport Recife, Portuguesa, Coritiba, Athletico Paranaense, and Vitória in group 4.[84] In 2003, the value was expanded by a considerable amount, for the first time surpassing the three digits, after the adoption of the new format of accrued points. The contract of $130 million per year was signed again by TV Globo.[85] In 2005, C13 renews with Globo for the 2006–09 period in a deal worth $300 million.[86]

In 2009, for the first time, the sale of broadcasting rights of the Brazilian Championship were made via open bidding. Media organisations were invited to bid for TV packages open, closed, PPV, internet and broadcast abroad.[87] Rede Globo subsequently won the largest TV contract in the history of Brazilian football; $1.4 billion for 2009–2011.[88]

In the early part of 2011, the majority of Clube dos 13 indicated they would be negotiating the 2012–2014 league rights independently.[89][90][91][92][93]

In 2012, the final league rights amounts are uncertain. However, it is known that the clubs were divided into four groups: Group 1: Flamengo and Corinthians receiving 84 to 120 million reals; Group 2: São Paulo, Palmeiras, Santos and Vasco receiving 70 to 80 million reais; Group 3: Gremio, Cruzeiro, Atlético Mineiro VAR, Fluminense and Botafogo (45 to 55 million reais); Group 4: other first division clubs (18 to 30 million reais).[94]

In 2013, SporTV made a deal with Fox Sports, giving up the rights of Campeonato Brasileiro in exchange for live coverage of the Copa Libertadores.[95]

In 2016, Bandeirantes ended the partnership with Globo and ceased showing league matches, leaving Globo with exclusive rights.[96] However, the channel of Turner Group, Esporte Interativo made a deal with Atlético-PR, Bahia, Ceará, Coritiba, Internacional, Joinville, Paysandu, Sampaio Corrêa, Santos, Criciúma, Fortaleza, Paraná, Ponte Preta and Santa Cruz for the broadcasting rights on cable television between 2019 and 2024, opposing Globo's SporTV channel. A decision on whether Palmeiras will be joining these teams is awaited.[97]

In February 2021 the streaming service Paramount+ announced it will broadcast 350 matches[98]

Flamengo and Corinthians, the two most supported teams in Brazil, receive approximately 25% (1/4) of all revenue from television.[99] Flamengo has the biggest budget, (R$115.1 million), and Figueirense the smallest (R$18.5 million).[100]

Match ball edit

Since 1999 the Brazilian league's official ball has been manufactured by Nike, Before this exclusive supply of balls, some brands like Umbro and Topper had supplied balls for the championship. The most recent ball is called CBF Nike Brasil Flight 2023, Being based on Nike Flight ball's model of the 2023 season

 
2019 Nike Merlin CBF

Attendance edit

The audience of the Campeonato Brasileiro Série A is low if put into consideration the popularity of football in the country. Since the first data record, in 1967, each year the average attendance has fluctuated, more down than up, having the season of 1983 as the largest, averaging 22,953, and 2004 as the smallest, with a very low average of 7,556.[101] The league is the second largest in attendance in South America, behind Argentina, with 18,817.

In comparison to other football league attendance, the Campeonato Brasileiro Série A figure only in fourteenth position, being overcome by the lower divisions in England and Germany. The smallest attendance ever was a game between Juventude and Portuguesa in 1997 with 55 fans, the largest was Flamengo and Santos in 1983 with 155,523.[102]

The attendance of 2014 season was 16,337 with average occupation of 40%.[103] In this same year, the average price of the ticket was $12.82, taking the games with an average income of $204,799.[104]

The spectator figures for the league since 2009:

Season Overall Average Best supported club Average Highest attendance
2009 6,764,380 17,801 Flamengo 41,553[105] 78,639 (Flamengo 2–1 Grêmio)
2010 5,638,806 14,839 Corinthians 27,446 76,205 (Vasco da Gama 2–2 Fluminense)
2011 5,572,673 14,664 29,328 63,871 (São Paulo 1–2 Flamengo)
2012 4,928,827 13,148 25,222 62,207 (São Paulo 2–1 Náutico)
2013 5,681,551 14,951 Cruzeiro 28,911 63,501 (Santos 0–0 Flamengo)
2014 6,208,190 16,337 29,678 58,627 (São Paulo 2–0 Cruzeiro)
2015 6,376,693 17,050 Corinthians 34,150 67,011 (Flamengo 0–2 Coritiba)
2016 5,975,926 15,809 Palmeiras 32,684 54,996 (São Paulo 2–2 Chapecoense)
2017 6,238,797 16,418 Corinthians 40,043 50,116 (Grêmio 0–1 Corinthians)
2018 7,584,444 19,959 Flamengo 50,965 62,994 (Flamengo 1–2 Athletico Paranaense)
2019 8,067,663 21,230 55,025 65,649 (Flamengo 1–0 CSA)

Players edit

Player records edit

Notes:

  • All players are Brazilian unless otherwise noted,
  • Italics denotes players still playing professional football, and bold denotes players still playing in the Brazilian Série A.[109]
  • Sources: Placar magazine - Guia do Brasileirão 2010[110] and GloboEsporte.com Website.[111]

Assists per season edit

Awards and trophies edit

Prêmio Craque do Brasileirão is the league's official award. Placar magazine's Bola de Ouro is the oldest award, while the Troféu Osmar Santos and the Troféu João Saldanha are awards given by the newspaper Lance!.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ IFFHS world's best national league in the world 2021. IFFHS.
  2. ^ "MUDA, CALENDÁRIO: 'Sem charme, Estaduais têm de ser repensados'". lance.com.br (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 28 August 2023.
  3. ^ a b c Garcia, Diego. "Autor de dossiê rechaça unificação do Rio-São Paulo: "não tem chance"". Terra. Retrieved 30 January 2022.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "Pura bagunça: Com regulamento esdrúxulo e virada de mesa, Copa João Havelange levou Brasileirão ao caos e iniciou nova era". www.uol.com.br (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  5. ^ Confederación Brasileña de Fútbol, ed. (22 December 2010). "Muita taça na bagagem de campeão" (in Portuguese).
  6. ^ a b "É tri! CBF reconhece Atlético-MG como campeão brasileiro de 1937". ge (in Brazilian Portuguese). 25 August 2023. Retrieved 28 August 2023.
  7. ^ a b Assessoria CBF (27 November 2016). "Palmeiras: nove vezes campeão brasileiro". CBF.com.br (in Portuguese).
  8. ^ a b c "Campeões brasileiros em cenário do tri" (in Portuguese). CBF. 22 December 2010. Retrieved 23 July 2014.
  9. ^ a b Folha de S.Paulo (26 November 2018). "Por que o Palmeiras é decacampeão? Veja os títulos nacionais do clube" (in Portuguese).
  10. ^ "The strongest Leagues of the World of the 21st Century", Iffhs.de, retrieved 12 August 2013 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ [1] 3 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ Campeonato Paulista - História, UOL Esporte, 1999
  13. ^ "MUDA, CALENDÁRIO: 'Fim dos estaduais se faz necessário'". www.lance.com.br (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 29 August 2023.
  14. ^ a b c Janeiro, Por GLOBOESPORTE COM Rio de (13 December 2010). "Entenda como eram a Taça Brasil e o Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa". globoesporte.com. Retrieved 28 August 2023.
  15. ^ Enciclopédia do Futebol Brasileiro Lance Volume 2. Rio de Janeiro: Aretê Editorial S/A. 2001. p. 378. ISBN 85-88651-01-7.
  16. ^ a b El Mundo Deportivo, 14/06/1951, página 3.
  17. ^ Quais as competições que antecederam o Brasileirão? (in Portuguese). Revista Placar; Editora Abril. October 2002.
  18. ^ Ribeiro, Fred (25 August 2023). "É tri! CBF reconhece Atlético-MG como campeão brasileiro de 1937". Globo Esporte (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 25 August 2023.
  19. ^ a b c "Resumidamente, lá em 1959, a Confederação Brasileira de Desportos (CBD) - órgão que depois se desmembrou e formou a Confederação Brasileira de Futebol (CBF) - realizou a primeira competição nacional entre os times de futebol, a Taça Brasil". bets.com.br (in Portuguese). 30 August 2021.
  20. ^ Brazil 1959 Championship - Taça Brasil "tabela - brasileirão série a - GloboEsporte.com". globoesporte.com. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  21. ^ gazetaesportiva. "Confira detalhes do título do Bahia na Taça Brasil de 1959". Terra (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  22. ^ Abril, Editora (October 1994). "História dos 100 Anos". Placar (1094): 47, 60.
  23. ^ Julio Bovi Diogo (27 December 2015). "Brazil - List of Champions". RSSSF. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  24. ^ a b c "Futebol e política: a criação do Campeonato Nacional de Clubes de Futebol" (PDF). Fundação Getúlio Vargas. Retrieved 9 June 2016.
  25. ^ a b . 21 October 2017. Archived from the original on 21 October 2017. Retrieved 21 October 2023.
  26. ^ a b Neto, Fausto (16 October 1970). "Exclusivo: Vai Mudar Tudo em Nosso Futebol". Placar (1094). Editora Abril: 47, 60.
  27. ^ Abril, Editora (11 December 2001). "Placar Magazine". Editora Abril. Retrieved 16 October 2017 – via Google Books.
  28. ^ "Guarani comemora 42 anos do título brasileiro: "Único campeão do interior". Veja íntegra da final". ge (in Brazilian Portuguese). 13 August 2020. Retrieved 2 March 2024.
  29. ^ "Notícias". Museu do Futebol (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 19 February 2024.
  30. ^ "A história dos campeonatos nacionais - Anos 80: Tempo de mudanças e reformulação" (in Portuguese). RCB. Retrieved 30 June 2016.
  31. ^ "Acervo Folha" (in Portuguese). Folha de S.Paulo. Retrieved 30 June 2016.
  32. ^ "CBF volta a reconhecer Sport como único campeão brasileiro de 1987". Globoesporte (in Portuguese). 15 June 2011. Retrieved 28 April 2019.
  33. ^ "Sport celebra 113 anos neste domingo". CBF (in Portuguese). Acessoria CBF. 13 May 2018. Retrieved 28 April 2019.
  34. ^ "Após derrota no STF, Flamengo estuda ir à Fifa por título de 1987". Folha de S.Paulo (in Brazilian Portuguese). 17 March 2018. Retrieved 28 April 2019.
  35. ^ . 8 April 2023. Archived from the original on 8 April 2023. Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  36. ^ "Ricardo Teixeira na CBF: 23 anos de títulos e polêmicas". O Globo (in Brazilian Portuguese). 12 March 2012. Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  37. ^ a b "Conheça a história da Copa do Brasil". MRV No Esporte. 26 November 2015. Retrieved 20 July 2016.
  38. ^ "Brasileiro tem início hoje com 22 clubes". Folha de S.Paulo. 6 September 1989. p. 2. Retrieved 30 March 2017.
  39. ^ a b Jarinu, Por Julyana Travaglia; SP (22 February 2011). "'Gato arrependido', Sandro Hiroshi sonha esquecer 'erro' e voltar à elite". globoesporte.com. Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  40. ^ "Ministro do STJ mantém Gama na primeira divisão". Superior Tribunal de Justiça. 31 May 2000. Retrieved 30 March 2017.
  41. ^ a b "Folha de S.Paulo - Clubes vetam o mata - mata, e Brasileiro terá pontos corridos". www1.folha.uol.com.br. Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  42. ^ "Com empate, Palmeiras perde chance de igualar recorde de pontos do Flamengo de 2019". ge (in Brazilian Portuguese). 11 October 2022. Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  43. ^ "CBF cria a Série D para o Brasileiro em 2009". Terra Esportes. 9 April 2008. Retrieved 9 March 2017.
  44. ^ [2013 Serie A of Brazilian Championship - Specific Regulations of the Competition]. Confederação Brasileira de Futebol (in Portuguese). Archived from the original on 9 July 2013. Retrieved 3 August 2013.
  45. ^ Abril, Editora (June 2000). "30 Anos de Pura Confusão". Placar: 17.
  46. ^ "Petrobrás Brasileirão 2009". Culturafutebolistica.wordpress.com. 30 August 2009. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  47. ^ "Documentários Brasileirão Petrobras virarão filme". Amambai Notícias. 6 December 2010. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  48. ^ Lance!NET - Petrobrás pagará R$ 18 milhões ao ano até 2013 por Brasileirão 17 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  49. ^ "CBF divulga novo logotipo da Série A do Brasileirão com detalhes do troféu". Globoesporte.globo.com. 6 May 2015. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  50. ^ "CBF apresenta logomarca do Brasileirão 2015 - Confederação Brasileira de Futebol". Cbf.com.br. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  51. ^ "Brasileirão tem novo title sponsor: Assaí Atacadista". Cbf.com.br. Retrieved 17 July 2018.
  52. ^ "European football market grows by 11% to €19.4 billion in 2011/12". Mynewsdesk.com. 6 June 2013. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  53. ^ "O Valor de mercado dos 20 Clubes que disputam o Brasileirão – Série A 2013" [The marketing value of the 20 clubs disputing the 2013 Brasileirão]. Advanced Television (in Portuguese). 21 May 2013. Retrieved 3 August 2013.
  54. ^ [Coxa has the 13th most valued club in Serie A; Furacão is 14th]. Banda B (in Portuguese). 21 May 2013. Archived from the original on 21 September 2013. Retrieved 3 August 2013.
  55. ^ "Football rights make record prices in LatAm". Advanced Television. 26 February 2013. Retrieved 6 May 2016.
  56. ^ Ozanian, Mike (17 April 2013). "Soccer's Most Valuable Teams: At $3.3 Billion, Real Madrid Knocks Manchester United From Top Spot". Forbes. Retrieved 17 April 2013.
  57. ^ "The Business Of Soccer". Forbes. Retrieved 2 March 2023.
  58. ^ "Brazil 1982". RSSSF. Retrieved 25 May 2023.
  59. ^ "Brazil 1983". RSSSF. Retrieved 25 May 2023.
  60. ^ "Brazilian Championship 1987". RSSSF. Retrieved 25 May 2023.
  61. ^ "Os não-rebaixamentos de Flamengo, Santos e São Paulo inspiram chuva de fake news". ESPN (in Portuguese). 10 May 2022. Retrieved 25 May 2023.
  62. ^ "Brazil 1993 Championship". RSSSF. Retrieved 25 May 2023.
  63. ^ "CBF rompe regra e salva Fluminense". Folha de São Paulo (in Portuguese). 21 June 1997. from the original on 25 September 2021. Retrieved 25 May 2023.
  64. ^ "Flu é rebaixado em um Brasileiro pela quarta vez e se torna 1º campeão a cair no ano seguinte". ESPN (in Portuguese). 8 December 2013. from the original on 1 March 2021. Retrieved 25 May 2023.
  65. ^ "Portuguesa é punida e rebaixada, e Flu fica na Série A, mas cabe recurso". GloboEsporte (in Portuguese). 16 December 2013. from the original on 7 April 2023. Retrieved 25 May 2023.
  66. ^ "Após rebaixar Portuguesa, STJD aplica punição idêntica ao Flamengo, que perde 4 pontos". ESPN (in Portuguese). 16 December 2013. from the original on 23 May 2022. Retrieved 25 May 2023.
  67. ^ . El País (in Portuguese). 27 December 2013. Archived from the original on 20 July 2022. Retrieved 25 May 2023.
  68. ^ "Caso Heverton, que rebaixou Lusa no Brasileirão-2013, é arquivado de vez". UOL (in Portuguese). 23 December 2016. from the original on 15 November 2022. Retrieved 25 May 2023.
  69. ^ "Roberto Gomes Pedrosa Tournament All-Time Ranking". RSSSF Brasil (in Portuguese). 20 January 2011. Retrieved 3 August 2018.
  70. ^ "São Paulo segue como o líder do ranking de pontos no Brasileirão". UOL/extrapolated using 2021, 2022, and 2023 tables (in Portuguese). 28 February 2021. Retrieved 7 December 2023.
  71. ^ Lagos, Rogério (17 September 2015). . torcedores.com. Archived from the original on 11 June 2016.
  72. ^ Barbosa, Danielle (13 May 2016). . torcedores.com. Archived from the original on 16 May 2016.
  73. ^ "Octávio diz que CBF está 'quebrada', Brasileiro 87 pode ser regionalizado – Página 17". Acervo.folha.com.br.
  74. ^ "Campeonato começa sob o signo da confusão – página: 27".
  75. ^ "Baú da TV: Relembre como era o futebol no SBT". Torcedores.com. 3 September 2014. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  76. ^ "Nabi na presidência desafia Clube dos 13 – Página 32". 15 July 1987.
  77. ^ "Clube dos 13. A UDR do futebol. – Página 28". 16 July 1987.
  78. ^ "Brazilian Championship 1987". Rsssfbrasil.com.
  79. ^ a b O Curioso do Futebol - Corinthians 1 x 0 São Paulo, final do Campeonato Brasileiro de 1990 (Rede Bandeirantes)
  80. ^ Folha de S. Paulo (9 August 1997) - Rodada do Brasileiro inaugura sistema pay-per-view dos jogos
  81. ^ Trivela (UOL) - O que aconteceu quando o Campeonato Brasileiro foi dividido entre duas emissoras 3 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  82. ^ "Vasco e SBT, tudo a ver - ISTOÉ Independente". Istoe.com.br. 24 January 2001. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  83. ^ "FUTEBOL". Terra.com.br. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  84. ^ "Folha de S.Paulo - Futebol: Grandes do Clube dos 13 vão receber mais da TV - 11/04/2001". 1.folha.uol.com.br. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  85. ^ . Douradosnews.com.br. Archived from the original on 20 December 2016. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  86. ^ "Globo fecha contrato exclusivo para o Brasileirão até 2009 :: Futebol do Norte". futeboldonorte.com. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  87. ^ "Olhar Crônico Esportivo » O dinheiro da TV em 2009 » Arquivo". globoesporte.globo.com. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  88. ^ "Globo garante direitos de transmissão do Brasileirão de 2009 a 2011". Propmark.com.br. 12 May 2008. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  89. ^ . Gazeta Esportiva.Net. 23 February 2011. Archived from the original on 3 October 2013.
  90. ^ "Botafogo pede desfiliação do Clube dos 13 | globoesporte.com". Globoesporte.globo.com. 25 March 2011.
  91. ^ "Clubes do RJ anunciam rompimento, e o Corinthians deixa o Clube dos 13". Globoesporte.globo.com. 23 February 2011. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  92. ^ "Clubes adotam cautela a respeito da licitação dos direitos do Brasileirão". Globoesporte.globo.com. 26 February 2011. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  93. ^ "Ex-aliado do Clube dos 13, Bahia acerta com a Globo". Esportes.terra.com.br. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  94. ^ "PVC: Pobre futebol rico". Folha.com. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  95. ^ "SporTV fecha acordo com Fox Sports, transmitirá a Libertadores e cede direitos do Brasileirão". 4 December 2012. 4 December 2012.
  96. ^ . VEJA.com. Archived from the original on 6 May 2016. Retrieved 16 May 2016.
  97. ^ "Futebol na TV: Esporte Interativo acerta com mais cinco clubes – e ainda quer o Palmeiras | VEJA.com". VEJA.com. Retrieved 16 May 2016.
  98. ^ "Paramount+ "Doubling Down" on Soccer, NFL & More Sports in Clear Challenge to Peacock". 24 February 2021.
  99. ^ "A clubes, Globo nega 'espanholização' do futebol brasileiro". Espn.uol.com.br. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  100. ^ "Espanholização? Como receitas com TV são divididas nas maiores ligas do mundo - Blog Dinheiro em Jogo". globoesporte.com. 22 May 2015. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  101. ^ "MÉDIAS DE PÚBLICO EM CAMPEONATOS NACIONAIS". Rsssbrasil.com. Retrieved 21 July 2015.
  102. ^ "Os recordes do Campeonato Brasileiro da Série A". Campeoesdofutebol.com. Retrieved 21 July 2015.
  103. ^ "Público do Brasileirão". Globesporte.globo.com. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
  104. ^ "Números interessantes de público e ingresso médio no Brasileirão - Blog Olhar Crônico Esportivo". globoesporte.com. November 2014. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  105. ^ "Torcida empurra, e Fla é campeão com melhor média de público desde 1987 - 08/12/2009 - UOL Esporte - Futebol". esporte.uol.com.br. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  106. ^ "Danilo entre os dez que mais atuaram no Brasileirão desde 1971 - Esporte - UOL Esporte". Futebolemnumeros.blogosfrea.uol.com. 30 June 2015. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  107. ^ "Roberto Dinamite é o maior artilheiro isolado da história do Brasileirão; veja ranking". GloboEsporte (in Portuguese). 10 January 2023.
  108. ^ "Teste de fogo para o "novo" Campeonato Brasileiro" (in Portuguese). UOL. 2003. Retrieved 1 August 2012.
  109. ^ "Futpédia statistics". Placar. Archived from the original on 31 December 2012. Retrieved 20 June 2010.
  110. ^ (May 2010) Guia Brasileirão 2010. Placar n. 1342. Editora Abril, pg. 121
  111. ^ "Unificação de titles traz mudanças importantes nas estatísticas" (in Portuguese). globoesporte.com. 16 December 2010. Retrieved 6 August 2012.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Assista todos jogos Aqui
  • CBF - Brazilian Football Confederation
  • Brazil All-time topscorers
  • RSSSF Brazil links
  • Futpedia 4 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine The Brazilian Football Encyclopedia, with historical statistics about championships, clubs, games, athletes, and more (Portuguese).
  • Champions Squads
  • Most Assists 2003–2019

campeonato, brasileiro, série, this, article, about, brazilian, football, league, other, uses, serie, disambiguation, portuguese, pronunciation, pjoˈnatu, bɾaziˈlejɾu, ˈsɛɾii, english, brazilian, championship, series, commonly, referred, brasileirão, pronounce. This article is about the Brazilian football league For other uses see Serie A disambiguation The Campeonato Brasileiro Serie A Portuguese pronunciation kɐ pjoˈnatu bɾaziˈlejɾu ˈsɛɾii ˈa English Brazilian Championship A Series commonly referred to as the Brasileirao pronounced bɾazilejˈɾaw English Big Brazilian and also known as Brasileirao Betano due to sponsorship with Betano is a Brazilian professional league for men s football clubs At the top of the Brazilian football league system it is the country s primary football competition Contested by 20 clubs it operates on a system of promotion and relegation with the Campeonato Brasileiro Serie B In 2021 the competition was chosen by the IFFHS as the strongest national league in South America as well as the strongest in the world 1 Campeonato Brasileiro Serie AOrganising bodyBrazilian Football ConfederationFounded1971 53 years ago 1971 CountryBrazilConfederationCONMEBOLNumber of teams20 since 2006 Level on pyramid1Relegation toSerie BDomestic cup s Copa do BrasilSupercopa do BrasilInternational cup s Copa LibertadoresCopa SudamericanaCurrent championsPalmeiras 12th title 2023 Most championshipsPalmeiras 12 titles Most appearancesFabio 665 Top goalscorerRoberto Dinamite 190 TV partnersList of broadcastersWebsitebrasileiraobetano wbr com wbr brCurrent 2024 Campeonato Brasileiro Serie A Due to historical peculiarities and the large geographical size of the country Brazil has a relatively short history of nationwide football competitions The main and most prestigious competitions were the state championships run in each of the Brazilian states 2 with occasional inter state tournaments such as the Torneio Rio Sao Paulo 3 In 1959 advancements in civil aviation and air transport and the need to appoint a Brazilian representative to the first edition of the Copa Libertadores led to the creation of a regular nationwide tournament the Taca Brasil In 1967 the Torneio Rio Sao Paulo was expanded to include teams from other states becoming the Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa which was also considered a national tournament The first tournament downright called a national championship was held in 1971 also won by Atletico Mineiro although it was only referred to as Campeonato Brasileiro starting in 1989 One of the historical characteristics of the Brazilian Championship was the lack of standardization in the competition system the rules and the number of participants which changed almost every season Because of this in several seasons there was no promotion and relegation system to the Second Division and sometimes there weren t different tiers Number of clubs also fluctuated with the 1979 edition reached its peak with 92 participants The various formats already adopted include a knockout tournament system 1959 1968 and a mixed system with a group stage followed by playoffs 1967 2002 The championship s competition formula was standardized only in 2006 when the round robin system with 20 clubs was adopted with all teams facing each other in home and away games 4 In 2010 the champions of national tournaments from 1959 to 1970 Taca Brasil and Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa have been declared official winners of the Brazilian championship or champions of Brazil not winners of Brasileirao or Serie A by the Brazilian Football Confederation 5 In August 2023 the CBF declared the 1937 Torneio dos Campeoes retroactively a Brazilian championship 6 The titles of old tournaments cited in the Brazilian championship history are equated to the title of Serie A but the tournaments are cataloging with their original name in the statistics 7 despite being different competitions they confer the same title 8 9 The Campeonato Brasileiro is one of the strongest leagues in the world it contains the second most club world champions titles with 10 championships won among six clubs and the second most Copa Libertadores titles with 22 titles won among 10 clubs The IFFHS ranked the league fourth in strength for the 2001 12 period after the Premier League England La Liga Spain and Serie A Italy 10 The Campeonato Brasileiro is the most watched football league in the Americas and one of the world s most exposed broadcast in 155 nations It is also one of the world s richest championships ranked as the sixth most valuable with a worth of over US 1 43 billion generating an annual turnover of over US 1 17 billion in 2012 Since 1959 a total of 156 clubs have played in the Campeonato Brasileiro 11 Seventeen clubs have been crowned Brazilian football champions thirteen of which have won the title more than once Palmeiras is the most successful club of the Campeonato Brasileiro having won the competition twelve times followed by Santos with eight titles and Corinthians and Flamengo with seven titles each Santos Os Santasticos won five consecutive titles between 1961 and 1965 a feat that remains unequalled The state of Sao Paulo is the most successful amassing 34 titles among five clubs Contents 1 History 1 1 Early competition and attempts to create a national championship 1 2 Taca Brasil and Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa 1 3 Campeonato Nacional de Clubes and Copa Brasil 1 4 Creation of the CBF new reformulations and crises 1 5 Changes to CBF and transitional period 1 6 Modern championship round robin format stabilization and growth 2 Competition format 2 1 Competition 2 2 Qualification for international competitions 3 Champions 4 Nomenclature and sponsorship 5 Finances 6 Clubs 6 1 Most appearances 6 2 Clubs relegated from Serie A 7 All time Campeonato Brasileiro table 1937 1959 2023 8 Media coverage 9 Match ball 10 Attendance 11 Players 11 1 Player records 11 2 Assists per season 12 Awards and trophies 13 See also 14 References 15 External linksHistory editEarly competition and attempts to create a national championship edit nbsp Sao Paulo Athletic Club and CA Paulistano in the final of the first Sao Paulo State Championship in 1902 Anglo Brazilian Charles Miller introduced Brazil to football association rules to Brazil in 1894 upon his return from England where he attended college and discovered the sport and it soon became popular in the country In 1902 Miller helped to organize the Liga Paulista de Foot Ball current Campeonato Paulista Brazil s first football league The league only played in the area of the State of Sao Paulo 12 Due the size of Brazil economic and geographical challenges and lack of transport infraestructure the creation of a fully national league or championship was almost impossible Instead the rest of Brazil followed Sao Paulo s example and founded state football leagues for each of the federative units of Brazil 13 The state leagues remained the main and most prestigious championships and were considered the equivalent of national leagues of other countries nbsp The Taca Brasil trophy As the sport grew in size the local state federations and the recently created Confederacao Brasileira de Desportos CBD started to organize a number of different interstate and regional tournaments 14 The most popular form of competition in a national level was the Campeonato Brasileiro de Selecoes Estaduais Brazilian Championship of State Teams a tournament formed by Selecoes teams formed by the best representatives from each state of Brazil a concept similar to national teams Originally the nomenclature Brazilian Championship belonged to this tournament 15 While the most prestigious club tournament outside the state championships was the Torneio Rio Sao Paulo organized jointly by the Federacao Paulista de Futebol FPF and Federacao Carioca de Futebol FCF current FERJ and competed between clubs from the Campeonato Paulista and Campeonato Carioca 3 Since the two championships had the best teams of Brazil at the time this tournament was considered sometimes a de facto Brazilian championship 3 16 for example in 1951 the Spanish newspaper El Mundo Deportivo called the Rio Sao Paulo Tournament the unofficial Brazilian championship stating that the two states had the best teams in Brazil 16 One of the first experiences of organizing a club championship at national level was the Torneio dos Campeoes de 1920 pt competed between the winners of the Campeonato Paulista Paulistano Campeonato Carioca Fluminense and Campeonato Gaucho Brasil de Pelotas 17 A second edition was done in the 1937 Torneios dos Campeoes won by Atletico Mineiro It was the first with fully professional clubs In August 2023 the Brazilian Football Confederation CBF officially recognized the tournament as a Brazilian championship thus conferring to Atletico Mineiro the status of first national champions of Brazil 18 Taca Brasil and Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa edit nbsp The 1970 Taca de Prata awarded to Fluminense The Taca Brasil Brazil Cup was introduced in 1959 19 and ran until 1968 20 The Taca Brasil was created to select a representative for the newly created Copa Libertadores de America and it was intended to become Brazil s new national competition replacing the Campeonato Brasileiro de Selecoes Estaduais 19 The Taca Brasil was a pure knockout tournament with the participants selected from the champions of the state championships 19 The first champion was Bahia which defeated Pele s Santos in a remarkable underdog victory Breaking the Rio de Janeiro Sao Paulo hegemony in national football 21 In 1967 the Federacao Paulista de Futebol and Federacao Carioca de Futebol decided to expand the Torneio Rio Sao Paulo to include teams from other states of Brazil Thus becoming the Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa nicknamed the Robertao by fans and media 14 Differently from the Taca Brasil the Robertao was competed with a round robin system with two groups in the first stage and a quadrangular with the two best teams of each group on the final stage 14 It was competed between 1967 and 1970 In 1968 the delay in closing the 1968 Taca Brasil made CBD use the Robertao to determine the Libertadores representatives The Confederation took over the organization of the Robertao officially renaming it to the Taca de Prata Silver Cup and extinguished the Taca Brasil after the end of that year s edition The Robertao remained the top Brazilian championship the following two years 22 In 2010 the CBF announced that these were to be regarded as Brazilian championships Because the Robertao and the Taca Brasil ran at the same time for two years 1967 and 1968 the 1968 season has two separate simultaneous Brazilian champions the 1968 Taca Brasil was won by Botafogo and the 1968 Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa was won by Santos In contrast the 1967 season saw Palmeiras champion of both competitions 23 Campeonato Nacional de Clubes and Copa Brasil edit nbsp Garrincha playing for Botafogo in the 1960s Following Brazil s third world title at the 1970 FIFA World Cup president Emilio Medici decided to better organize Brazilian football The Brazilian military government had become heavily involved in football as a way to promote the legitimization of the military regime national unity and patriotism as well as part of the Programa de Integracao Nacional pt which sought the geographical integration of Brazil 24 25 In a meeting with the CBD and the club presidents in October 1970 it was decided to create the following year a Brazilian championship contested by twenty teams inspired by the national tournaments in the European nations The first edition was named Campeonato Nacional de Clubes National Championship of Clubs was held in 1971 and won by Atletico Mineiro 26 The top division was named Divisao Extra Extra Division while a newly created second division earned the Primeira Divisao First Division name The second division was a fusion of the already existing Torneio Centro Sul and the Copa Norte Nordeste with teams from regions with less expression in national football and weaker teams from the main footballing states of Brazil The first champion was Villa Nova Atletico Clube from the town of Nova Lima Minas Gerais 27 There wasn t however a system of promotion and relegation The clubs were instead selected to participate in either division according to their performances at their respective state championships 26 nbsp Group photo of the 1978 Guarani squad from the city of Campinas winners of the 1978 Campeonato Nacional de Clubes Together with Santos they are the only teams not belonging to a state capital to become national champions 28 In the next few years due to the influence of the military regime the number of clubs that participated in the competition steadily increased 24 Each subsequent edition added teams to garner support to the military government specially from regions were ruling party ARENA had less support This was epitomized by a common aphorism at the time Onde a ARENA vai mal mais um time no Nacional Where ARENA is doing badly another team in the National championship 24 29 The inaugural edition inspired in the European leagues had 20 teams The second edition in 1972 expanded to 26 clubs The 1973 edition saw the second division dissolved and its clubs were now participating in an unified national championship with 40 clubs By the 1979 edition the number of clubs participating peaked with a total of 92 teams From 1975 onwards the competition was officially named Copa Brasil Brazil Cup Creation of the CBF new reformulations and crises edit nbsp Zico playing for Flamengo at the 1981 Taca de Ouro In 1980 the CBD was dissolved and on its place was created the Brazilian Football Confederation CBF This coincided with the 1980s financial crisis in Brazil which together with the previous decade s oil crisis and the gradual end of the military dictatorship led to major reorganization of Brazilian football 25 The Championship was downsized and a new format was introduced The 1980 edition was named Taca de Ouro Gold Cup The second division was also reintroduced now with the name Taca de Prata Silver Cup 30 A mechanism of promotion also first appeared in this edition the four best ranked teams in the first phase of the Taca Prata would go on to compete in the second phase of the Taca Ouro The Taca de Bronze Bronze Cup was also created as a third division in 1981 with the inaugural champion being Olaria Atletico Clube a club from the neighbourhood of Olaria in the city of Rio de Janeiro But citing financial issues the CBF announced shortly after the end of the first edition that the tournament would be discontinued 31 The third division would later return in one off editions in 1988 1990 1992 until it became regularly competed from 1994 onwards In 1987 CBF announced it was not financially able to organize the Brazilian football championship a mere few weeks before it was scheduled to begin As a result the thirteen most popular football clubs in Brazil created an association called Clube dos 13 to organize a championship of their own This tournament was called Copa Uniao and was run by the 16 clubs that eventually took part in it Santa Cruz Coritiba and Goias were invited to join CBF initially stood by the Club of the 13 decision However weeks later with the competition already underway and under pressure from football clubs excluded from the Copa Uniao CBF adopted a new set of rules which considered the Copa Uniao part of a larger tournament comprising another 16 teams According to that new set of rules the Copa Uniao would be dubbed the Green Module of the CBF championship whereas the other 16 teams would play the Yellow Module In the end the first two teams of each Module would play each other to define the national champions and the two teams that would represent Brazil in the Copa Libertadores in 1988 However that new set of rules was never recognized by the Club of the 13 and largely ignored by most of the Brazilian media who concentrated their attention in the independent league eventually won by Clube de Regatas do Flamengo The eventual final tourney was set to have Sport and Guarani from the yellow module and Flamengo and Internacional from the green one It never materialized however as Flamengo and Internacional refused to partake in it As a result Sport and Guarani played each other with the first one winning the Championship for 1987 and both going on to represent Brazil in the 1988 Copa Libertadores Although Flamengo has attempted to gain ownership of the championship multiple times through the justice system Sport remains recognized by both CBF and FIFA as 1987 Champions 32 33 Part of the football fans in Brazil still consider Flamengo as the Brazilian Champion of 1987 or at least co champions 34 After the chaos caused by the 1987 edition the CBF and Club of the 13 reached an agreement on how to organize the next year s edition of the Copa Uniao The 1988 Campeonato Brasileiro reduced the number of participants to hold a more competitive championship with just 24 teams Furthermore for the first time the competition had a true promotion and relegation system as required by FIFA The last four placed in the first division Bangu Santa Cruz Criciuma and America fell to the second division in 1989 being replaced by Inter de Limeira and Nautico respectively champion and runner up of the 1988 Special Division 35 The 1989 edition was the first to use the terminology Serie A inspired by the Italian league system Changes to CBF and transitional period edit On January 16 1989 Ricardo Teixeira assumed the presidency of the CBF He came to command the Confederation at a time when it was facing serious financial problems Teixeira managed to turn it into a profitable operation through millionaire contracts involving the Brazilian national team During his management the Brazilian Championship became more reorganized and the revenue generated by the clubs was increased both in television quotas and sponsorships However since the first decade of his administration Ricardo Teixeira has been involved in several allegations of corruption 36 The Brazilian Championship had already been tested with countless different formulas and names being quite bloated and confusing in several editions However from 1987 onwards with the creation of the Copa Uniao there was a decrease in the number of participants in the championship As a result several clubs from less popular regions that entered the national competition because they were state champions no longer faced clubs considered big and traditional and as a result some associations were even at risk of becoming extinct To calm the discontent of these clubs and smaller federations the CBF was forced to create a national cup along the lines of the European ones In 1989 the entity created a secondary national competition the Copa do Brasil which allowed clubs from all states to enter The first champion of the Copa do Brasil was Gremio 37 With the creation of this new tournament the CBF decided for the first time to officially name the country s main national football tournament the Campeonato Brasileiro to make it clear which was the national tournament in Brazil that would give its winner the title of Brazilian champion and also to avoid confusion between Copa do Brasil and Copa Brasil one of the old names used by the Brasileirao between 1975 and 1980 37 38 In the 1999 edition a new relegation system was adopted similar to that used in the Argentine football league The two clubs with the worst campaigns in the first phase and in the previous season were relegated However this system only lasted a single season During the first phase of the competition it was discovered that the player Sandro Hiroshi of Sao Paulo was registered irregularly Botafogo at the risk of being relegated to Serie B requested a 6 1 loss to Sao Paulo to be annulled Later Internacional also successfully appealed to have a match result voided a 2 2 draw on the same grounds 39 The Supreme Court of Sporting Justice STJD ruled in favor of Internacional and Botafogo and they both gained points Botafogo was saved from relegation and the change made SE Gama from the Federal District to be relegated instead 39 Gama together with the Distrito Federal Football Coaches Union and political party PFL immediately sued the CBF to return to the Serie A The common courts decided in favor of Gama going against the STJD s decision 4 By June 2000 the trial was not solved and CBF could not organize the 2000 edition of the Brasileirao 4 40 Without the CBF the Clube dos 13 decided to organize the Brazilian Championship which became known as the Copa Joao Havelange To avoid further legal problems the championship would encompass all divisions This edition became controversial for its organization 116 clubs from all the three divisions divided in four modules organized as the championships before the Sandro Hiroshi case The Blue Module equivalent to the Serie A Yellow Module equivalent to the Serie B with some Serie C clubs and the Green and White Modules from Serie C clubs the former from the North Northeast and Central West regions of Brazil and the latter from South and Southeast of Brazil Although equivalents to different tiers the best placed teams from the all modules would qualify for the play offs 4 Another controversy was the choice of clubs for the Blue Module Fluminense which had played in 1999 Campeonato Brasileiro Serie C and obtained promotion to Serie B was included in the Blue Module of the new competition where the elite of Brazilian football was without having to go through the second division Similarly Bahia playing at the 1999 Campeonato Brasileiro Serie B failed to promote back to the top division was included in the Blue Module 4 Modern championship round robin format stabilization and growth edit nbsp Tifo organized by Corinthians supporters to celebrate its 6th title after winning the 2015 Campeonato Brasileiro Serie AOne of the historical characteristics of the Brazilian Championship was the lack of standardization and constant change in the competition system as well as the rules and the number of participants Changes to the format started being discussed in favor of a regular and stable form of competition ever since Ricardo Teixeira s election in 1989 but the chaos of the 2000 edition made it even more apparent that change was necessary 4 41 In 2002 the Clube dos 13 voted in favor of adopting a European style round robin format The matches are divided into two rounds and the team that scores the most points is declared champion The tiebreaker criteria vary from goal sequence to number of victories Rede Globo the Brasileirao s main broadcasting partner was against the removal of playoffs arguing for a loss of revenue and audience without decisive games 41 24 clubs disputed the 2003 Campeonato Brasileiro Serie A the first one with the round robin system and Cruzeiro won Brazil s first domestic treble after winning that year s Serie A Copa do Brasil and Campeonato Mineiro The next years saw the number of clubs later scaled down to 22 in 2005 and 20 in 2006 In what the CBF itself confirmed as a definitive format with the four best teams qualifying for the Copa Libertadores and the four worst teams being relegated to Serie B with the season being between May and December This was the last change to the competition s format which has remained stable ever since 42 In 2008 the CBF announced the creation the Serie D as a fourth division In 2009 the number of clubs in the Serie C was downsized from 63 to 20 teams The 2009 Campeonato Brasileiro Serie D had 39 teams and its first champion was Sao Raimundo from Santarem Para 43 Currently the Serie D has 64 teams and serves as the lowest national tier In 2010 CBF decided to recognize the champions of both Taca Brasil 1959 68 and Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa 1967 70 as Brazilian Champions creating some controversy as there was a two year period when both tournaments were held thus Palmeiras was awarded two times for winning both in 1967 and both Santos and Botafogo were recognized as champions in 1968 as each tournament was won by one of them 8 In August 2023 the CBF declared the Torneio dos Campeoes 1937 retroactively a Brazilian championship giving a Brazilian title to Atletico Mineiro 6 The titles of old tournaments cited in the Brazilian championship history are equated to the title of Serie A but the tournaments are cataloging with their original name in the statistics 7 despite being different competitions they confer the same title 8 9 Competition format editCompetition edit There are 20 clubs in the Brasileirao During the course of a season from May to December each club plays the others twice a double round robin system once at their home stadium and once at that of their opponents for a total of 38 games Teams receive three points for a win and one point for a draw No points are awarded for a loss Teams are ranked by total points victories goal difference and goals scored At the end of each season the club with the most points is crowned champion If points are equal between two or more clubs the rules are 44 If the tie is between more than two clubs not competing for the national title or relegation then the tie is broken using the total number of games won and total goal difference during the league The following criteria are goals scored and points in head to head matches If the tie is still not broken the winner will be determined by Fair Play scales Fewest red cards Fewest yellow cards If there is a tie for the championship for relegation or for qualification to other competitions the Fair Play scales will not be taken into account a play off match at a neutral venue decides rank Otherwise a drawing of lots will determine the final positions A system of promotion and relegation exists between the Brasileirao and the Serie B The four lowest placed teams in the Brasileirao are relegated to Serie B and the top four teams from the Serie B promoted to the Brasileirao Qualification for international competitions edit nbsp Penarol vs Santos in the Centenario Stadium of Montevideo during the 2011 Copa Libertadores Finals Since 2016 the top six clubs in the Brasileirao qualify for the following Copa Libertadores The top four clubs directly enter the group stage whilst the fifth and sixth placed clubs enter in the second round The number of teams qualifying for the Libertadores may increase depending on who wins the Copa do Brasil Copa Sudamericana or Copa Libertadores Clubs from seventh to twelfth place qualify for the following Copa Sudamericana although as above the numbers can depend on other competitions Champions editMain article List of Brazilian football champions Seventeen clubs are officially recognized to have been the Brazilian football champions In bold those competing in Serie A as of 2024 season In italic the clubs who have never been relegated to any lower division Club Titles Runn Years won Years runner up nbsp Palmeiras 12 4 1960 1967 1967 1969 1972 1973 1993 1994 2016 2018 2022 2023 1970 1978 1997 2017 nbsp Santos 8 8 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1968 2002 2004 1959 1966 1983 1995 2003 2007 2016 2019 nbsp Corinthians 7 3 1990 1998 1999 2005 2011 2015 2017 1976 1994 2002 nbsp Flamengo 7 3 1980 1982 1983 1992 2009 2019 2020 1964 2018 2021 nbsp Sao Paulo 6 6 1977 1986 1991 2006 2007 2008 1971 1973 1981 1989 1990 2014 nbsp Cruzeiro 4 5 1966 2003 2013 2014 1969 1974 1975 1998 2010 nbsp Vasco da Gama 4 4 1974 1989 1997 2000 1965 1979 1984 2011 nbsp Fluminense 4 1 1970 1984 2010 2012 1937 nbsp Internacional 3 8 1975 1976 1979 1967 1968 1988 2005 2006 2009 2020 2022 nbsp Atletico Mineiro 3 5 1937 1971 2021 1977 1980 1999 2012 2015 nbsp Gremio 2 4 1981 1996 1982 2008 2013 2023 nbsp Botafogo 2 3 1968 1995 1962 1972 1992 nbsp Bahia 2 2 1959 1988 1961 1963 nbsp Guarani 1 2 1978 1986 1987 nbsp Athletico Paranaense 1 1 2001 2004 nbsp Coritiba 1 0 1985 nbsp Sport Recife 1 0 1987 nbsp Fortaleza 0 2 1960 1968 nbsp Sao Caetano 0 2 2000 2001 nbsp Nautico 0 1 1967 nbsp Bangu 0 1 1985 nbsp RB Bragantino 0 1 1991 nbsp Vitoria 0 1 1993 nbsp Portuguesa 0 1 1996 Note although some consider Flamengo as champion of the Brazilian Championship in 1987 Sport is officially the only champion of this competition Nomenclature and sponsorship editThe Campeonato Brasileiro had its official name changed often before settling on Campeonato Brasileiro in 1989 45 Identity English name Years Official Sponsor Copa dos Campeoes Estaduais State Champions Cup 1937 None Taca Brasil Brazil Cup 1959 1968 Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa Roberto Gomes Pedrosa Tournament 1967 1970 Campeonato Nacional National Championship 1971 1973 Copa Brasil Brazil Cup 1974 1979 1984 1986 Taca de Ouro Golden Cup 1980 1983 1985 Copa Brasil Brazil Cup 1987 88 Copa Joao Havelange Joao Havelange Cup 2000 Campeonato Brasileiro Brazilian Championship 1989 1999 2001 2001 LATAM Brasileirao TAM 2002 Visa Trofeu VISA Electron 2005 Nestle Taca Nestle Brasileirao 46 2009 2012 Petrobras Brasileirao Petrobras 47 48 2014 2017 Chevrolet Brasileirao Chevrolet 49 50 2018 2023 Assai Atacadista Brasileirao Assai 51 2024 Betano Brasileirao Betano The official name was Copa Brasil Brazil Cup but it became known as Copa Uniao Union Cup Finances editThe Brasileirao had total club revenues of US 1 17 billion in 2012 This makes the Brasileirao the highest revenue football league in the Americas and the highest outside of Europe s big five 52 The Brasileirao is also one of the world s most valuable football leagues having a marketing value and worth over US 1 24 billion in 2013 53 The total worth of every club in the 2013 Brasileirao is US 1 07 billion 54 The Brasileirao s television rights were worth over US 610 million in 2012 that accounts for over 57 of Latin America as a whole 55 In 2013 Corinthians was the 16th most valuable club in the world worth over US 358 million 56 As of 2021 no Brazilian club enters the list of the most valuable football clubs 57 Clubs editThe following 20 clubs are competing in the Serie A during the 2024 season Club Positionin 2023 First season intop division Number of seasonsin top division First season ofcurrent spell Number of seasonsof current spell Top divisiontitles Last top division title Athletico Paranaense 8th 1959 48 2013 12 1 2001 Atletico Goianiense 4th Serie B 1965 14 2024 1 0 N A Atletico Mineiro 3th 1959 62 2007 18 3 2021 Bahia 16th 1959 51 2023 2 2 1988 Botafogo 5th 1962 59 2022 3 2 1995 Corinthians 13th 1967 56 2009 16 7 2017 Criciuma 3rd Serie B 1979 14 2024 1 0 N A Cruzeiro 14th 1960 61 2023 2 4 2014 Cuiabaa 12th 2021 4 2021 4 0 N A Flamengoa b 4th 1964 59 1967 57 7 2020 Fluminense 7th 1960 59 2000 25 4 2012 Fortaleza 10th 1959 26 2019 6 0 N A Gremio 2nd 1959 64 2023 2 2 1996 Internacional 9th 1962 58 2018 7 3 1979 Juventude 2nd Serie B 1977 19 2024 1 0 N A Palmeiras 1st 1960 61 2014 11 12 2023 Red Bull Bragantino 6th 1990 14 2020 5 0 N A Sao Pauloa b 11th 1967 57 1980 45 6 2008 Vasco da Gama 15th 1959 55 2023 2 4 2000 Vitoria 1st Serie B 1965 40 2024 1 0 N A a Unrelegated clubs b Clubs that never played outside the top division Most appearances edit As of 2024 season after 1937 Copa dos Campeoes Estaduais recognition Below is the list of clubs that have more appearances in the Campeonato Brasileiro There are 159 teams that have taken part in 1 Copa dos Campeoes Estaduais 10 Taca Brasil 4 Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa and 53 Campeonato Brasileiro editions The teams in bold compete in Serie A currently The year in parentheses represents the most recent year of participation at this level 64 seasons Gremio 2024 63 seasons Santos 2023 62 seasons Atletico Mineiro 2024 61 seasons Cruzeiro 2024 Palmeiras 2024 59 seasons Botafogo 2024 Flamengo 2024 Fluminense 2024 58 seasons Internacional 2024 57 seasons Sao Paulo 2024 56 seasons Corinthians 2024 55 seasons Vasco da Gama 2024 51 seasons Bahia 2024 48 seasons Athletico Paranaense 2024 43 seasons Goias 2023 42 seasons Coritiba 2023 Sport Recife 2021 40 seasons Vitoria 2024 36 seasons Portuguesa 2013 34 seasons Nautico 2013 29 seasons Guarani 2010 27 seasons Paysandu 2005 26 seasons Ceara 2022 Fortaleza 2024 24 seasons Ponte Preta 2017 Santa Cruz 2016 19 seasons America MG 2023 America RJ 1988 CSA 2019 Juventude 2024 17 seasons Figueirense 2016 16 seasons Desportiva 1993 Nacional AM 1986 Parana 2018 Remo 2000 15 seasons America RN 2007 14 seasons ABC 1985 Atletico Goianiense 2024 Criciuma 2024 Red Bull Bragantino 2024 13 seasons Rio Branco ES 1987 12 seasons Joinville 2015 Sampaio Correa 1986 Sergipe 1986 11 seasons Avai 2022 Bangu 1988 Campinense 1981 CRB 1984 Moto Club 1984 10 seasons Operario MS 1986 9 seasons Chapecoense 2021 Treze 1987 Vila Nova 1985 8 seasons Americano 1983 Confianca 1984 Mixto 1985 River 1982 7 seasons Botafogo PB 1986 Brasilia 1985 Flamengo PI 1985 Inter de Limeira 1990 Londrina 1982 Rio Negro AM 1983 Sao Caetano 2006 6 seasons Botafogo SP 2001 Comercial MS 1986 Ferroviario CE 1984 Gama 2002 Goytacaz 1979 Gremio Maringa 1982 Uberaba 1983 5 seasons Colorado PR 1983 Itabaiana 1982 Metropol SC 1968 Tiradentes PI 1983 4 seasons Anapolina 1984 Brasil de Pelotas 1985 Caxias 1979 Cuiaba 2024 Fluminense de Feira 1979 Goiania 1979 Operario MT 1986 Piaui 1986 Tuna Luso 1986 Uberlandia 1985 Uniao Sao Joao 1997 3 seasons Alecrim 1986 CEUB 1975 Dom Bosco 1979 Fast Clube 1979 Ferroviario PR 1967 Fonseca 1963 Leonico 1985 Maranhao 1980 Pinheiros PR 1985 Rabello 1969 Sao Paulo RS 1982 Villa Nova MG 1985 Volta Redonda 1978 XV de Piracicaba 1979 2 seasons America SP 1980 Campo Grande RJ 1983 Capelense 1962 Central 1986 Comercial SP 1979 Galicia 1983 Gremio Barueri 2010 Itabuna 1979 Olaria 1974 Santa Cruz SE 1961 Santo Andre 2009 Santo Antonio ES 1962 Sao Jose SP 1990 XV de Jau 1982 1 season Allianca de Campos 1937 America CE 1967 America de Propria 1967 Anapolis 1966 ASA 1979 Auto Esporte PB 1959 Auto Esporte PI 1984 Brasiliense 2005 Caldense 1979 Catuense 1984 AA Colatina 1979 Comercial PR 1962 Corumbaense 1973 Cruzeiro do Sul DF 1964 Defele 1963 Eletrovapo RJ 1965 Estrela do Mar PB 1960 Ferroviaria 1983 Ferroviario MA 1959 Francana 1979 Guanabara DF 1965 Guara 1979 Hercilio Luz 1959 Inter de Lages 1966 Inter de Santa Maria 1982 Ipatinga 2008 Itumbiara 1979 J Malucelli 2000 Juventus SP 1983 Liga da Marinha 1937 AD Niteroi 1959 Noroeste 1978 Novo Hamburgo 1979 Olimpico AM 1968 Olimpico SC 1965 Operario Ferroviario 1979 Paula Ramos 1960 Perdigao 1967 Potiguar de Mossoro 1979 Rio Branco RJ 1962 Sao Bento 1979 Siderurgica 1965 Sobradinho 1986 Taguatinga 1982 Vitoria ES 1977 Clubs relegated from Serie A edit Taca de Ouro era Clubs are relegated from Taca de Ouro to Taca de Prata of the same year likewise happens today in international club competitions 3rd place of Copa Libertadores to Copa Sudamericana knock out playoff The last place of each group and the four clubs that lost in the repechage play off were sent to the dispute of Taca de Prata 58 59 Year Clubs 1982 Nacional AM Group A River Group B Ferroviario Group C Itabaiana Group D Mixto Group E Vitoria Group F Taguatinga Group G Joinville Group H America de Natal Play off loser CSA Play off loser Goias Play off loser Desportiva Play off loser 1983 Moto Club Group A Joinville Group B Galicia Group C Fortaleza Group D Mixto Group E Rio Branco ES Group F Brasilia Group G Treze Group H Paysandu Play off loser CSA Play off loser Juventus Play off loser Ferroviario Play off loser Copa Uniao Year Clubs 1987 Santos Corinthians According to the regulation The 15th Santos and 16th Corinthians placed teams would play the 1988 Second Level 60 However the Clube dos 13 organizer of the Copa Uniao and the Confederacao Brasileira de Futebol put an end to the litigation between the associations and the 1988 championship was again organized entirely by the CBF making the relegations invalid 61 Knock out tournament Year Clubs 1988 Bangu Santa Cruz Criciuma America RJ 1989 Atletico Paranaense Guarani Sport 1990 Sao Jose SP Inter de Limeira 1991 Gremio Vitoria 1992 None 1993 America Mineiro a Ceara Coritiba Atletico Paranaense Santa Cruz Goias Fortaleza Desportiva 1994 Remo Nautico 1995 Paysandu Uniao Sao Joao 1996 Canceled b 1997 Bahia Criciuma Fluminense Uniao Sao Joao 1998 America Mineiro Goias Bragantino America de Natal 1999 See Copa Joao Havelange 2000 None 2001 Santa Cruz America Mineiro Botafogo SP Sport 2002 Portuguesa Palmeiras Gama Botafogo Round robin tournament Year Clubs points 2003 Fortaleza 49 Bahia 46 2004 Criciuma 50 Guarani 49 Vitoria 49 Gremio 39 2005 Coritiba 49 Atletico Mineiro 47 Paysandu 41 Brasiliense 41 2006 Ponte Preta 39 Fortaleza 38 Sao Caetano 36 Santa Cruz 28 2007 Corinthians 44 Parana 43 Juventude 41 America de Natal 17 2008 Figueirense 44 Vasco da Gama 40 Portuguesa 38 Ipatinga 35 2009 Coritiba 45 Santo Andre 41 Nautico 38 Sport 31 2010 Vitoria 42 Guarani 37 Goias 33 Gremio Prudente 28 2011 Atletico Paranaense 41 Ceara 39 America Mineiro 37 Avai 31 2012 Sport 41 Palmeiras 34 Atletico Goianiense 30 Figueirense 30 2013 Portuguesa c 44 Vasco da Gama 44 Ponte Preta 37 Nautico 20 2014 Vitoria 38 Bahia 37 Botafogo 34 Criciuma 32 2015 Avai 42 Vasco da Gama 41 Goias 38 Joinville 31 2016 Internacional 43 Figueirense 37 Santa Cruz 31 America Mineiro 28 2017 Coritiba 43 Avai 43 Ponte Preta 39 Atletico Goianiense 36 2018 America Mineiro 40 Sport 39 Vitoria 37 Parana 23 2019 Cruzeiro 36 CSA 32 Chapecoense 32 Avai 20 2020 Vasco da Gama 41 Goias 37 Coritiba 31 Botafogo 27 2021 Gremio 43 Bahia 43 Sport 38 Chapecoense 15 2022 Ceara 37 Atletico Goianiense 36 Avai 35 Juventude 22 2023 Santos 43 Goias 38 Coritiba 30 America Mineiro 24 America MG was suspended for 2 years in 1994 because they contested their relegation in a civil court instead the sports court In 1996 the team would return to the Serie B 2nd level 62 Sports court STJD canceled all relegations in 1996 season sparing Fluminense and Bragantino 63 Fluminense is spared from relegation after the end of championship 64 Sports court deducted 3 points from Portuguesa 65 and 4 points for Flamengo 66 for fielding an ineligible players Heverton and Andre Santos respectively 67 68 All time Campeonato Brasileiro table 1937 1959 2023 editThe All time Campeonato Brasileiro table is an overall record of all match results points and goals of every team that has played in the Brazilian League The table is accurate as of the end of the 2023 season and includes the recently recognized 1937 Copa dos Campeoes Estaduais and all editions since 1959 Teams in bold will take part in the top division in 2024 69 70 Team Pts GP W D L GF GA GD 1 Sao Paulo 2368 1614 703 478 433 2323 1667 656 2 Internacional 2308 1595 695 448 452 2156 1633 523 3 Atletico Mineiro 2295 1616 697 443 476 2347 1873 474 4 Palmeiras 2294 1541 708 424 409 2286 1640 646 5 Flamengo 2281 1622 688 451 483 2267 1832 435 6 Santos 2278 1630 681 461 488 2368 1850 518 7 Corinthians 2267 1597 678 471 448 2085 1659 426 8 Gremio 2223 1589 679 433 477 2134 1697 437 9 Cruzeiro 2133 1519 647 417 455 2166 1710 456 10 Fluminense 2051 1555 609 422 524 2077 1866 211 11 Vasco da Gama 1852 1447 543 436 468 1967 1763 204 12 Botafogo 1819 1462 531 418 513 1842 1784 58 13 Athletico Paranaense 1715 1291 488 341 462 1676 1578 98 14 Goias 1428 1169 401 325 443 1477 1523 46 15 Coritiba 1351 1145 396 303 446 1329 1413 84 16 Bahia 1337 1168 386 359 423 1318 1423 105 17 Sport Recife 1161 1010 335 277 398 1133 1252 119 18 Vitoria 1107 972 319 259 394 1165 1360 195 19 Portuguesa 900 787 260 249 278 961 973 12 20 Guarani 889 709 269 215 225 898 797 101 Campeonato Brasileiro table from 1971 to 1979 citation needed Pos Team GP W D L Pts 1 Internacional 122 66 38 18 188 2 Gremio 122 63 38 21 176 3 Palmeiras 120 61 41 18 174 4 Corinthians 121 58 46 17 173 5 Cruzeiro 121 56 47 18 171 6 Atletico Mineiro 121 58 36 27 168 7 Flamengo 122 59 32 31 164 8 Sao Paulo 121 54 43 24 163 9 Vasco da Gama 121 41 27 158 750 10 Botafogo 120 44 49 27 147 Campeonato Brasileiro table from 1980 to 1989 citation needed Pos Team GP W D L Pts 1 Flamengo 228 112 70 46 308 2 Vasco da Gama 214 101 64 49 287 3 Atletico Mineiro 209 100 67 42 281 4 Sao Paulo 206 98 65 43 274 5 Gremio 216 95 65 56 267 6 Fluminense 203 203 87 61 248 7 Santos 201 82 67 52 241 8 Internacional 199 77 65 57 237 9 Corinthians 201 79 65 57 234 10 Cruzeiro 179 67 62 50 205 Campeonato Brasileiro table from 1990 to 1999 citation needed Pos Team GP W D L Pts 1 Palmeiras 235 123 59 53 368 2 Corinthians 235 106 65 64 329 3 Santos 235 99 67 69 320 4 Sao Paulo 235 98 64 73 305 5 Atletico Mineiro 224 90 63 71 300 6 Vasco da Gama 225 86 70 69 297 7 Cruzeiro 218 86 57 75 282 8 Flamengo 231 85 64 82 280 9 Botafogo 225 87 58 80 276 10 Internacional 217 80 62 75 274 Campeonato Brasileiro table from 2000 to 2009 citation needed Pos Team GP W D L Pts 1 Sao Paulo 365 185 95 85 650 2 Santos 368 162 92 114 578 3 Cruzeiro 362 167 73 122 574 4 Internacional 362 161 81 120 564 5 Athletico Paranaense 366 151 85 130 538 6 Fluminense 368 140 104 124 524 7 Flamengo 362 139 94 129 511 8 Palmeiras 316 134 78 104 480 9 Gremio 325 132 77 116 473 10 Corinthians 330 126 85 119 463 Campeonato Brasileiro table from 2010 to 2019 citation needed Pos Team GP W D L Pts 1 Corinthians 380 170 113 97 623 2 Gremio 380 174 100 106 622 3 Flamengo 380 161 111 108 594 4 Sao Paulo 380 163 101 116 590 5 Santos 380 163 99 118 588 6 Atletico Mineiro 380 160 93 127 573 7 Cruzeiro 380 158 98 124 572 8 Fluminense 380 153 94 133 553 9 Palmeiras 342 145 89 108 524 10 Internacional 342 140 96 106 516Media coverage editMain article List of Campeonato Brasileiro Serie A broadcasters Value of television rights Season s Price TV 1987 89 3 4 million Globo 1990 94 not available Globo 1994 96 31 4 million Globo 1997 2003 50 million Globo 2003 05 390 million Globo 2005 08 900 million Globo 2009 11 R 1 9 billion Globo 2012 15 R 2 96 billion 71 Globo 2016 19 R 4 11 billion 72 Globo Currently the money of television represent a significant share in the finances of clubs in Brazil The league broadcasting rights are total exclusivity of Grupo Globo which distributes the live matches for its television stations TV Globo terrestrial and satellite SporTV pay and the Premiere FC through the system pay per view where subscribers have the privilege to follow all 380 annual league matches Globo first cited displays the League first time in 1987 when was created the Clube dos 13 trading tool of clubs with the television The first television contract was negotiated in 1987 with only conveying the Green Module of the Copa Uniao organized by the Clube dos 13 the television rights were sold for 3 4 million to Rede Globo 73 74 And only with the conveying of the championship final SBT broadcast the game instead 75 a blow to the Rede Globo who says today that the Green Module would be the league itself and then was prevented from entering the Ilha do Retiro 76 77 78 In 1990 only Rede Bandeirantes acquired the broadcast rights This edition marked the first national title of Corinthians second most popular team in the country Both the final transmission as the other games attracted the attention of the public causing the network to acquire an Ibope Rating of 53 points in the deciding game 79 This led to the Rede Globo prioritize the League from the next edition in 1991 79 In 1997 began to be restricted games live in cities where the matches are held except finals The Clube dos 13 closed the contract with Rede Globo s television rights as the holder of the Brasileirao for 50 million including editions of 1998 and 1999 and resolves itself split the rights with Rede Bandeirantes during this period It was the first edition to be shown on pay per view via Premiere 80 In addition the first games shown on pay television were courtesy of SporTV after a controversial signing contract of Clube dos 13 with Globosat Previously in 1993 the Club of the 13 an CBF had signed a contract with TVA a company in which ESPN Brazil was part However that decision was declined 81 In 2000 the broadcasting rights of the Copa Joao Havelange organized by the Clube dos 13 were sold to Rede Globo for 50 million However the final of this competition in 2001 was marked by an unusual situation Vasco da Gama a finalist against Sao Caetano graced the logo of SBT the second largest television station of Brazil a direct rival to Globo This situation was somewhat embarrassing for Globo which transmitted the final exclusively and which was seen by an estimated audience of 60 million people 82 Despite the large number of spectators in the final match this edition was marked by low ratings what did the Rede Globo to cancel the broadcast of a few matches 83 In 2001 Clube dos 13 defines four divisions of transmission quota with Corinthians Sao Paulo Palmeiras Flamengo and Vasco in group 1 Santos in group 2 Fluminense Botafogo Atletico Mineiro Cruzeiro Internacional and Gremio in group 3 and Bahia Goias Sport Recife Portuguesa Coritiba Athletico Paranaense and Vitoria in group 4 84 In 2003 the value was expanded by a considerable amount for the first time surpassing the three digits after the adoption of the new format of accrued points The contract of 130 million per year was signed again by TV Globo 85 In 2005 C13 renews with Globo for the 2006 09 period in a deal worth 300 million 86 In 2009 for the first time the sale of broadcasting rights of the Brazilian Championship were made via open bidding Media organisations were invited to bid for TV packages open closed PPV internet and broadcast abroad 87 Rede Globo subsequently won the largest TV contract in the history of Brazilian football 1 4 billion for 2009 2011 88 In the early part of 2011 the majority of Clube dos 13 indicated they would be negotiating the 2012 2014 league rights independently 89 90 91 92 93 In 2012 the final league rights amounts are uncertain However it is known that the clubs were divided into four groups Group 1 Flamengo and Corinthians receiving 84 to 120 million reals Group 2 Sao Paulo Palmeiras Santos and Vasco receiving 70 to 80 million reais Group 3 Gremio Cruzeiro Atletico Mineiro VAR Fluminense and Botafogo 45 to 55 million reais Group 4 other first division clubs 18 to 30 million reais 94 In 2013 SporTV made a deal with Fox Sports giving up the rights of Campeonato Brasileiro in exchange for live coverage of the Copa Libertadores 95 In 2016 Bandeirantes ended the partnership with Globo and ceased showing league matches leaving Globo with exclusive rights 96 However the channel of Turner Group Esporte Interativo made a deal with Atletico PR Bahia Ceara Coritiba Internacional Joinville Paysandu Sampaio Correa Santos Criciuma Fortaleza Parana Ponte Preta and Santa Cruz for the broadcasting rights on cable television between 2019 and 2024 opposing Globo s SporTV channel A decision on whether Palmeiras will be joining these teams is awaited 97 In February 2021 the streaming service Paramount announced it will broadcast 350 matches 98 Flamengo and Corinthians the two most supported teams in Brazil receive approximately 25 1 4 of all revenue from television 99 Flamengo has the biggest budget R 115 1 million and Figueirense the smallest R 18 5 million 100 Match ball editSince 1999 the Brazilian league s official ball has been manufactured by Nike Before this exclusive supply of balls some brands like Umbro and Topper had supplied balls for the championship The most recent ball is called CBF Nike Brasil Flight 2023 Being based on Nike Flight ball s model of the 2023 season nbsp 2019 Nike Merlin CBFAttendance editMain article Campeonato Brasileiro Serie A attendance The audience of the Campeonato Brasileiro Serie A is low if put into consideration the popularity of football in the country Since the first data record in 1967 each year the average attendance has fluctuated more down than up having the season of 1983 as the largest averaging 22 953 and 2004 as the smallest with a very low average of 7 556 101 The league is the second largest in attendance in South America behind Argentina with 18 817 In comparison to other football league attendance the Campeonato Brasileiro Serie A figure only in fourteenth position being overcome by the lower divisions in England and Germany The smallest attendance ever was a game between Juventude and Portuguesa in 1997 with 55 fans the largest was Flamengo and Santos in 1983 with 155 523 102 The attendance of 2014 season was 16 337 with average occupation of 40 103 In this same year the average price of the ticket was 12 82 taking the games with an average income of 204 799 104 The spectator figures for the league since 2009 Season Overall Average Best supported club Average Highest attendance 2009 6 764 380 17 801 Flamengo 41 553 105 78 639 Flamengo 2 1 Gremio 2010 5 638 806 14 839 Corinthians 27 446 76 205 Vasco da Gama 2 2 Fluminense 2011 5 572 673 14 664 29 328 63 871 Sao Paulo 1 2 Flamengo 2012 4 928 827 13 148 25 222 62 207 Sao Paulo 2 1 Nautico 2013 5 681 551 14 951 Cruzeiro 28 911 63 501 Santos 0 0 Flamengo 2014 6 208 190 16 337 29 678 58 627 Sao Paulo 2 0 Cruzeiro 2015 6 376 693 17 050 Corinthians 34 150 67 011 Flamengo 0 2 Coritiba 2016 5 975 926 15 809 Palmeiras 32 684 54 996 Sao Paulo 2 2 Chapecoense 2017 6 238 797 16 418 Corinthians 40 043 50 116 Gremio 0 1 Corinthians 2018 7 584 444 19 959 Flamengo 50 965 62 994 Flamengo 1 2 Athletico Paranaense 2019 8 067 663 21 230 55 025 65 649 Flamengo 1 0 CSA Players editMain article Campeonato Brasileiro Serie A top scorers Player records edit Most appearances citation needed Rank Player Apps 1 Fabio 652 106 2 Rogerio Ceni 575 3 Diego Souza 503 4 Leonardo Moura 490 5 Wellington Paulista 431 6 Paulo Baier 429 7 Fabio Santos 418 8 Zinho 371 9 Clemer 368 Ramon 368 Top scorers 107 Rank Player Goals 1 Roberto Dinamite 108 190 2 Fred 158 3 Romario 154 4 Edmundo 153 5 Diego Souza 144 6 Zico 135 7 Tulio 129 8 Serginho Chulapa 127 9 Washington 126 10 Luis Fabiano 117 Notes All players are Brazilian unless otherwise noted Italics denotes players still playing professional football and bold denotes players still playing in the Brazilian Serie A 109 Sources Placar magazine Guia do Brasileirao 2010 110 and GloboEsporte com Website 111 Assists per season edit 2023 Hulk footballer Atletico MG amp Luis Suarez Gremio 11 2022 Gustavo Scarpa Palmeiras 12 2021 Gustavo Scarpa Palmeiras 13 2020 Arrascaeta Flamengo Keno Atletico MG amp Vinicius Ceara 9 2019 Arrascaeta Flamengo 14 2018 Dudu Palmeiras 13 2017 Gustavo Scarpa Fluminense 12 2016 Dudu Palmeiras amp Gustavo Scarpa Fluminense 10 2015 Jadson Corinthians 14 2014 Everton Ribeiro Cruzeiro 11 2013 Everton Ribeiro Cruzeiro 11 2012 Ronaldinho Atletico MG 13 2011 Danilo Corinthians amp Elkeson Botafogo 11 2010 Dario Conca Fluminense 19 2009 Cleiton Xavier Palmeiras 14 2008 Julio Cesar Goias Marquinho Figueirense amp Patricio Portuguesa 11 2007 Jorge Wagner Sao Paulo 15 2006 Tcheco Gremio 12 2005 Edmundo Figueirense Jadison amp Paulo Baier Goias 11 2004 Cicinho Sao Paulo 13 2003 Alex Cruzeiro 15Awards and trophies editPremio Craque do Brasileirao is the league s official award Placar magazine s Bola de Ouro is the oldest award while the Trofeu Osmar Santos and the Trofeu Joao Saldanha are awards given by the newspaper Lance See also editCampeonato Brasileiro tournament scheduling historical development of Campeonato Brasileiro from 1971 until today Campeonato Brasileiro Serie B the second division of Brazilian football Campeonato Brasileiro Serie C the third division of Brazilian football Campeonato Brasileiro Serie D the fourth division of Brazilian football Campeonato Brasileiro Sub 20 the official U 20 national football tournament Campeonato Brasileiro de Selecoes Estaduais the tournament contested by state teams between 1922 1962 and in 1987 List of foreign Campeonato Brasileiro Serie A players Torneio Rio Sao Paulo the inter state competition between Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro the two strongest football states at the era held from 1950 to 1966 in 1993 and 1997 to 2002 Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa the national tournament from 1967 to 1970 Copa do Brasil the main knockout football competition of Brazilian football History of football in BrazilReferences edit IFFHS world s best national league in the world 2021 IFFHS MUDA CALENDARIO Sem charme Estaduais tem de ser repensados lance com br in Brazilian Portuguese Retrieved 28 August 2023 a b c Garcia Diego Autor de dossie rechaca unificacao do Rio Sao Paulo nao tem chance Terra Retrieved 30 January 2022 a b c d e f Pura bagunca Com regulamento esdruxulo e virada de mesa Copa Joao Havelange levou Brasileirao ao caos e iniciou nova era www uol com br in Brazilian Portuguese Retrieved 22 October 2023 Confederacion Brasilena de Futbol ed 22 December 2010 Muita taca na bagagem de campeao in Portuguese a b E tri CBF reconhece Atletico MG como campeao brasileiro de 1937 ge in Brazilian Portuguese 25 August 2023 Retrieved 28 August 2023 a b Assessoria CBF 27 November 2016 Palmeiras nove vezes campeao brasileiro CBF com br in Portuguese a b c Campeoes brasileiros em cenario do tri in Portuguese CBF 22 December 2010 Retrieved 23 July 2014 a b Folha de S Paulo 26 November 2018 Por que o Palmeiras e decacampeao Veja os titulos nacionais do clube in Portuguese The strongest Leagues of the World of the 21st Century Iffhs de retrieved 12 August 2013 Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine 1 Archived 3 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine Campeonato Paulista Historia UOL Esporte 1999 MUDA CALENDARIO Fim dos estaduais se faz necessario www lance com br in Brazilian Portuguese Retrieved 29 August 2023 a b c Janeiro Por GLOBOESPORTE COM Rio de 13 December 2010 Entenda como eram a Taca Brasil e o Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa globoesporte com Retrieved 28 August 2023 Enciclopedia do Futebol Brasileiro Lance Volume 2 Rio de Janeiro Arete Editorial S A 2001 p 378 ISBN 85 88651 01 7 a b El Mundo Deportivo 14 06 1951 pagina 3 Quais as competicoes que antecederam o Brasileirao in Portuguese Revista Placar Editora Abril October 2002 Ribeiro Fred 25 August 2023 E tri CBF reconhece Atletico MG como campeao brasileiro de 1937 Globo Esporte in Brazilian Portuguese Retrieved 25 August 2023 a b c Resumidamente la em 1959 a Confederacao Brasileira de Desportos CBD orgao que depois se desmembrou e formou a Confederacao Brasileira de Futebol CBF realizou a primeira competicao nacional entre os times de futebol a Taca Brasil bets com br in Portuguese 30 August 2021 Brazil 1959 Championship Taca Brasil tabela brasileirao serie a GloboEsporte com globoesporte com Retrieved 16 October 2017 gazetaesportiva Confira detalhes do titulo do Bahia na Taca Brasil de 1959 Terra in Brazilian Portuguese Retrieved 22 October 2023 Abril Editora October 1994 Historia dos 100 Anos Placar 1094 47 60 Julio Bovi Diogo 27 December 2015 Brazil List of Champions RSSSF Retrieved 17 March 2018 a b c Futebol e politica a criacao do Campeonato Nacional de Clubes de Futebol PDF Fundacao Getulio Vargas Retrieved 9 June 2016 a b O futebol tambem foi uma obra faraonica dos militares e sofremos com isso ate hoje Trivela 21 October 2017 Archived from the original on 21 October 2017 Retrieved 21 October 2023 a b Neto Fausto 16 October 1970 Exclusivo Vai Mudar Tudo em Nosso Futebol Placar 1094 Editora Abril 47 60 Abril Editora 11 December 2001 Placar Magazine Editora Abril Retrieved 16 October 2017 via Google Books Guarani comemora 42 anos do titulo brasileiro Unico campeao do interior Veja integra da final ge in Brazilian Portuguese 13 August 2020 Retrieved 2 March 2024 Noticias Museu do Futebol in Brazilian Portuguese Retrieved 19 February 2024 A historia dos campeonatos nacionais Anos 80 Tempo de mudancas e reformulacao in Portuguese RCB Retrieved 30 June 2016 Acervo Folha in Portuguese Folha de S Paulo Retrieved 30 June 2016 CBF volta a reconhecer Sport como unico campeao brasileiro de 1987 Globoesporte in Portuguese 15 June 2011 Retrieved 28 April 2019 Sport celebra 113 anos neste domingo CBF in Portuguese Acessoria CBF 13 May 2018 Retrieved 28 April 2019 Apos derrota no STF Flamengo estuda ir a Fifa por titulo de 1987 Folha de S Paulo in Brazilian Portuguese 17 March 2018 Retrieved 28 April 2019 A historia do Campeonato Brasileiro de Futebol Ranking de Clubes Brasileiros 8 April 2023 Archived from the original on 8 April 2023 Retrieved 22 October 2023 Ricardo Teixeira na CBF 23 anos de titulos e polemicas O Globo in Brazilian Portuguese 12 March 2012 Retrieved 22 October 2023 a b Conheca a historia da Copa do Brasil MRV No Esporte 26 November 2015 Retrieved 20 July 2016 Brasileiro tem inicio hoje com 22 clubes Folha de S Paulo 6 September 1989 p 2 Retrieved 30 March 2017 a b Jarinu Por Julyana Travaglia SP 22 February 2011 Gato arrependido Sandro Hiroshi sonha esquecer erro e voltar a elite globoesporte com Retrieved 22 October 2023 Ministro do STJ mantem Gama na primeira divisao Superior Tribunal de Justica 31 May 2000 Retrieved 30 March 2017 a b Folha de S Paulo Clubes vetam o mata mata e Brasileiro tera pontos corridos www1 folha uol com br Retrieved 22 October 2023 Com empate Palmeiras perde chance de igualar recorde de pontos do Flamengo de 2019 ge in Brazilian Portuguese 11 October 2022 Retrieved 22 October 2023 CBF cria a Serie D para o Brasileiro em 2009 Terra Esportes 9 April 2008 Retrieved 9 March 2017 Campeonato Brasileiro da Serie A de 2013 Regulamento Especifico da Competicao 2013 Serie A of Brazilian Championship Specific Regulations of the Competition Confederacao Brasileira de Futebol in Portuguese Archived from the original on 9 July 2013 Retrieved 3 August 2013 Abril Editora June 2000 30 Anos de Pura Confusao Placar 17 Petrobras Brasileirao 2009 Culturafutebolistica wordpress com 30 August 2009 Retrieved 16 October 2017 Documentarios Brasileirao Petrobras virarao filme Amambai Noticias 6 December 2010 Retrieved 16 October 2017 Lance NET Petrobras pagara R 18 milhoes ao ano ate 2013 por Brasileirao Archived 17 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine CBF divulga novo logotipo da Serie A do Brasileirao com detalhes do trofeu Globoesporte globo com 6 May 2015 Retrieved 16 October 2017 CBF apresenta logomarca do Brasileirao 2015 Confederacao Brasileira de Futebol Cbf com br Retrieved 16 October 2017 Brasileirao tem novo title sponsor Assai Atacadista Cbf com br Retrieved 17 July 2018 European football market grows by 11 to 19 4 billion in 2011 12 Mynewsdesk com 6 June 2013 Retrieved 16 October 2017 O Valor de mercado dos 20 Clubes que disputam o Brasileirao Serie A 2013 The marketing value of the 20 clubs disputing the 2013 Brasileirao Advanced Television in Portuguese 21 May 2013 Retrieved 3 August 2013 Coxa tem 13 elenco mais valioso da Serie A Furacao e o 14 Coxa has the 13th most valued club in Serie A Furacao is 14th Banda B in Portuguese 21 May 2013 Archived from the original on 21 September 2013 Retrieved 3 August 2013 Football rights make record prices in LatAm Advanced Television 26 February 2013 Retrieved 6 May 2016 Ozanian Mike 17 April 2013 Soccer s Most Valuable Teams At 3 3 Billion Real Madrid Knocks Manchester United From Top Spot Forbes Retrieved 17 April 2013 The Business Of Soccer Forbes Retrieved 2 March 2023 Brazil 1982 RSSSF Retrieved 25 May 2023 Brazil 1983 RSSSF Retrieved 25 May 2023 Brazilian Championship 1987 RSSSF Retrieved 25 May 2023 Os nao rebaixamentos de Flamengo Santos e Sao Paulo inspiram chuva de fake news ESPN in Portuguese 10 May 2022 Retrieved 25 May 2023 Brazil 1993 Championship RSSSF Retrieved 25 May 2023 CBF rompe regra e salva Fluminense Folha de Sao Paulo in Portuguese 21 June 1997 Archived from the original on 25 September 2021 Retrieved 25 May 2023 Flu e rebaixado em um Brasileiro pela quarta vez e se torna 1º campeao a cair no ano seguinte ESPN in Portuguese 8 December 2013 Archived from the original on 1 March 2021 Retrieved 25 May 2023 Portuguesa e punida e rebaixada e Flu fica na Serie A mas cabe recurso GloboEsporte in Portuguese 16 December 2013 Archived from the original on 7 April 2023 Retrieved 25 May 2023 Apos rebaixar Portuguesa STJD aplica punicao identica ao Flamengo que perde 4 pontos ESPN in Portuguese 16 December 2013 Archived from the original on 23 May 2022 Retrieved 25 May 2023 No tapetao Fluminense se salva e Portuguesa cai para a segunda divisao El Pais in Portuguese 27 December 2013 Archived from the original on 20 July 2022 Retrieved 25 May 2023 Caso Heverton que rebaixou Lusa no Brasileirao 2013 e arquivado de vez UOL in Portuguese 23 December 2016 Archived from the original on 15 November 2022 Retrieved 25 May 2023 Roberto Gomes Pedrosa Tournament All Time Ranking RSSSF Brasil in Portuguese 20 January 2011 Retrieved 3 August 2018 Sao Paulo segue como o lider do ranking de pontos no Brasileirao UOL extrapolated using 2021 2022 and 2023 tables in Portuguese 28 February 2021 Retrieved 7 December 2023 Lagos Rogerio 17 September 2015 Brasileirao Saiba Quanto Seu Clube Ganha de Dinheiro da TV Globo torcedores com Archived from the original on 11 June 2016 Barbosa Danielle 13 May 2016 Brasileirao 2016 Veja quanto o seu Clube ira receber em dinheiro da TV Globo torcedores com Archived from the original on 16 May 2016 Octavio diz que CBF esta quebrada Brasileiro 87 pode ser regionalizado Pagina 17 Acervo folha com br Campeonato comeca sob o signo da confusao pagina 27 Bau da TV Relembre como era o futebol no SBT Torcedores com 3 September 2014 Retrieved 16 October 2017 Nabi na presidencia desafia Clube dos 13 Pagina 32 15 July 1987 Clube dos 13 A UDR do futebol Pagina 28 16 July 1987 Brazilian Championship 1987 Rsssfbrasil com a b O Curioso do Futebol Corinthians 1 x 0 Sao Paulo final do Campeonato Brasileiro de 1990 Rede Bandeirantes Folha de S Paulo 9 August 1997 Rodada do Brasileiro inaugura sistema pay per view dos jogos Trivela UOL O que aconteceu quando o Campeonato Brasileiro foi dividido entre duas emissoras Archived 3 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine Vasco e SBT tudo a ver ISTOE Independente Istoe com br 24 January 2001 Retrieved 16 October 2017 FUTEBOL Terra com br Retrieved 16 October 2017 Folha de S Paulo Futebol Grandes do Clube dos 13 vao receber mais da TV 11 04 2001 1 folha uol com br Retrieved 16 October 2017 Brasileirao 2003 Clube dos 13 e Globo fecham acordo Douradosnews com br Archived from the original on 20 December 2016 Retrieved 16 October 2017 Globo fecha contrato exclusivo para o Brasileirao ate 2009 Futebol do Norte futeboldonorte com Retrieved 16 October 2017 Olhar Cronico Esportivo O dinheiro da TV em 2009 Arquivo globoesporte globo com Retrieved 16 October 2017 Globo garante direitos de transmissao do Brasileirao de 2009 a 2011 Propmark com br 12 May 2008 Retrieved 16 October 2017 Corinthians rompe oficialmente com o Clube dos 13 Gazeta Esportiva Net 23 February 2011 Archived from the original on 3 October 2013 Botafogo pede desfiliacao do Clube dos 13 globoesporte com Globoesporte globo com 25 March 2011 Clubes do RJ anunciam rompimento e o Corinthians deixa o Clube dos 13 Globoesporte globo com 23 February 2011 Retrieved 16 October 2017 Clubes adotam cautela a respeito da licitacao dos direitos do Brasileirao Globoesporte globo com 26 February 2011 Retrieved 16 October 2017 Ex aliado do Clube dos 13 Bahia acerta com a Globo Esportes terra com br Retrieved 16 October 2017 PVC Pobre futebol rico Folha com Retrieved 16 October 2017 SporTV fecha acordo com Fox Sports transmitira a Libertadores e cede direitos do Brasileirao 4 December 2012 4 December 2012 So a Globo vai transmitir o Brasileirao 2016 Crise deixa a Band de fora VEJA com VEJA com Archived from the original on 6 May 2016 Retrieved 16 May 2016 Futebol na TV Esporte Interativo acerta com mais cinco clubes e ainda quer o Palmeiras VEJA com VEJA com Retrieved 16 May 2016 Paramount Doubling Down on Soccer NFL amp More Sports in Clear Challenge to Peacock 24 February 2021 A clubes Globo nega espanholizacao do futebol brasileiro Espn uol com br Retrieved 16 October 2017 Espanholizacao Como receitas com TV sao divididas nas maiores ligas do mundo Blog Dinheiro em Jogo globoesporte com 22 May 2015 Retrieved 16 October 2017 MEDIAS DE PUBLICO EM CAMPEONATOS NACIONAIS Rsssbrasil com Retrieved 21 July 2015 Os recordes do Campeonato Brasileiro da Serie A Campeoesdofutebol com Retrieved 21 July 2015 Publico do Brasileirao Globesporte globo com Retrieved 22 May 2016 Numeros interessantes de publico e ingresso medio no Brasileirao Blog Olhar Cronico Esportivo globoesporte com November 2014 Retrieved 16 October 2017 Torcida empurra e Fla e campeao com melhor media de publico desde 1987 08 12 2009 UOL Esporte Futebol esporte uol com br Retrieved 16 October 2017 Danilo entre os dez que mais atuaram no Brasileirao desde 1971 Esporte UOL Esporte Futebolemnumeros blogosfrea uol com 30 June 2015 Retrieved 16 October 2017 Roberto Dinamite e o maior artilheiro isolado da historia do Brasileirao veja ranking GloboEsporte in Portuguese 10 January 2023 Teste de fogo para o novo Campeonato Brasileiro in Portuguese UOL 2003 Retrieved 1 August 2012 Futpedia statistics Placar Archived from the original on 31 December 2012 Retrieved 20 June 2010 May 2010 Guia Brasileirao 2010 Placar n 1342 Editora Abril pg 121 Unificacao de titles traz mudancas importantes nas estatisticas in Portuguese globoesporte com 16 December 2010 Retrieved 6 August 2012 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Campeonato Brasileiro de Futebol Official website Assista todos jogos Aqui CBF Brazilian Football Confederation Brazil All time topscorers RSSSF Brazil links zerozero pt Futpedia Archived 4 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine The Brazilian Football Encyclopedia with historical statistics about championships clubs games athletes and more Portuguese Champions Squads Most Assists 2003 2019 Portals nbsp Association football nbsp Brazil Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Campeonato Brasileiro Serie A amp oldid 1220976550, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.