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Copa do Brasil

The Copa do Brasil (English: Brazil Cup) is a knockout football competition played by 92 teams, representing all 26 Brazilian states plus the Federal District. It is the Brazilian domestic cup and it is the Brazilian equivalent of the FA Cup, Taça de Portugal, Copa del Rey, Scottish Cup and Copa Argentina, even though it has much more prestige and is considered almost as important as the Brazilian League, as the prize money is higher then the Brasileirão's.[1] The Copa do Brasil is an opportunity for teams from smaller states to play against the big teams. The winner of the cup automatically qualifies for the following edition of the Copa Libertadores de América, the most prestigious continental football tournament contested by top clubs in South America organized by CONMEBOL.

Copa do Brasil
Founded1989
RegionBrazil
Number of teams92
Qualifier forCopa Libertadores
Supercopa do Brasil
Current championsSão Paulo
(1st title)
Most successful club(s)Cruzeiro
(6 titles)
Television broadcastersDomestic
Rede Globo
SporTV
Premiere
Amazon Prime Video
International
OneFootball
Websitecbf.com.br
2024 Copa do Brasil

Initially the Copa do Brasil was contested by 32 clubs. The field increased to 40 in 1996, increased to 69 by the year of 2000, and stabilized at 64 after 2001 which it remained at until 2012. Clubs from all 26 Brazilian states and the Federal District participate.

From 2001 to 2012, the Copa do Brasil was played in the first half of the year and in those seasons, due to busy scheduling, teams playing in the Copa Libertadores did not participate in the Copa do Brasil in the same year. Thus, the Copa do Brasil champion never defended their title in the next edition, since they would be qualified for the Copa Libertadores that year.

From 2013 to 2015, 87 teams participate in the cup and the teams that compete in the Copa Libertadores join the Copa do Brasil directly in the Round of 16. Also, the best 8 teams from the previous year's Campeonato Brasileiro Série A eliminated up to the third round qualify for Copa Sudamericana. In 2016, the competition was played by 86 clubs. From 2017 to 2020 the cup was contested by 91 teams but in 2021 the number of participants was increased to 92.

Starting in 2023, the tournament has been sponsored by Betano and is thus currently known as the Copa Betano do Brasil for sponsorship reasons.[2]

Cruzeiro is the most successful club, having won the competition six times, followed by Grêmio with 5 titles, Palmeiras and Flamengo with 4, Corinthians with 3, and Atlético Mineiro with 2. Another 10 clubs have won one edition of the competition, resulting in a total of 16 champions. The state with the highest number of titles is São Paulo , with 10. Only two states have champions from more than one city: São Paulo (Jundiaí, Santo André, Santos and São Paulo) and Rio Grande do Sul (Caxias do Sul and Porto Alegre). Rio de Janeiro (Flamengo, Fluminense and Vasco da Gama) and São Paulo (Palmeiras, Corinthians and São Paulo) are the only cities with more than two champion clubs.

Format edit

The competition is a single elimination knockout tournament featuring two-legged ties (in the third round onwards). In the first two rounds, the winner is known after a single leg. The first round is played in the lowest ranked team stadium, with the away team having a draw advantage to qualify.

Since the tournament's creation in 1989, the winner of the tournament qualifies for the next year's Copa Libertadores de América.

Teams edit

Round Clubs remaining Clubs involved From previous round Entries in this round Teams entering at this round
First round 80 none none none
Second round 40 40
Third round 32 32 20 12

Non-random slots

Random slots

Round of 16 16 16 8 none
Quarter-finals 8 8 8
Semi-finals 4 4 4
Final 2 2 2

State championships, cups and qualifiers edit

State Clubs qualified Teams entering
  Acre 2
  Alagoas 3
  Amapá 2
  Amazonas 2
  Bahia 3
  Ceará 3
  Distrito Federal 2
  Espírito Santo 2
  Goiás 3
  Maranhão 3
  Mato Grosso 3
  Mato Grosso do Sul 2
  Minas Gerais 5
  Pará 3
  Paraíba 2
  Paraná 5
  Pernambuco 3
  Piauí 2
  Rio de Janeiro 6

Non-random slots

Random slots

The champion can choose to compete in the Copa do Brasil or Série D. The runner-up will take the remaining spot.)

  Rio Grande do Norte 2
  Rio Grande do Sul 5
  Rondônia 2
  Roraima 2
  Santa Catarina 3
  São Paulo 6

Non-random slots

Random slots

The champion can choose to compete in the Copa do Brasil or Série D. The runner-up will take the remaining spot.)

  Sergipe 2
  Tocantins 2

Eligible teams edit

The eligible teams to compete in the Copa do Brasil are the previous year's Copa do Brasil champion, the 70 best-placed clubs in the state championships (in which the number of spots per state range from one to five clubs), the top six clubs from the previous year's Campeonato Brasileiro Série A, the Copa do Nordeste (Northeast Cup) champion, the Copa Verde (Green Cup) champion, the ten highest-ranked clubs in CBF's ranking not already qualified, and two of the following: the Brazilian champion of the most recent Copa Libertadores (if there is one), the Brazilian champion of the most recent Copa Sudamericana (if there is one), the 7th place team of Campeonato Brasileiro Série A, or the champion of Campeonato Brasileiro Série B.[3]

The 7 Brazilians teams in the Copa Libertadores da América, the best placed teams in the previous year's Série A and Série B (or the champion of Copa Libertadores and/or Copa Sudamericana, if it is a Brazilian team) and Copa do Nordeste and Copa Verde's Title Holders will join the Copa do Brasil directly in Round of 16.

History edit

The Copa do Brasil was created in 1989 to appease the state soccer federations with fewer large and traditional clubs on the national stage, whose representatives would hardly have the opportunity to face big clubs during the year. This concern arose after a decrease in the number of participants in the 1987 Campeonato Brasileiro, when 13 of the biggest clubs in Brazil broke away to form the Copa União (Union Cup) in response to the CBF's financial difficulties.

The creation of this competition was designed to promote the state championships in the North, Northeast and Central West regions of Brazil, which were no longer represented in the Brazilian Championship. Copa do Brasil is of high importance for the medium and small clubs in these regions who now, at least theoretically, have a path to qualify for the Copa Libertadores.

The first edition of the Copa do Brasil took place in 1989. The first goal in the cup's history was scored by Alcindo Sartori in a 2–0 victory by Flamengo over Paysandu. Gremio were the first champion, qualifying to compete in the 1990 Copa Libertadores.

From 1989 to 1993, the champion of that year took home the trophy. In 1994 it was determined that the club that won the Copa do Brasil three times would have final possession of the cup. This happened in 2001 with Grêmio (after winning in 1994, 1997 and 2001).

Thus, for the 2002 Copa do Brasil a new trophy was contested, which remained until 2007 with no club earning its final possession.

By winning the 2003 Copa do Brasil and the 2003 Campeonato Brasileiro, Cruzeiro won both the domestic cup and domestic league in the same year, a feat that was matched only once in Brazilian football by Atlético Mineiro in 2021. Atlético has also won the 2021 Campeonato Mineiro, their state championship, as Cruzeiro did in 2003, completing the domestic treble (State league, national league and cup).

In 2008, a new trophy was instituted for the Copa do Brasil. In that same year Sport Recife became the first and so far only club from outside the Southeast Region or the South Region to win the competition. The North Region and Center-West regions have had no representative win the cup so far.

Grêmio's victory over Atletico Mineiro in the first leg of the 2016 Copa do Brasil final was the first time ever that a visiting club won the first leg of the Copa do Brasil final, in the 28 editions of the competition.

The number of participating teams has varied during the competition's history, based on the number of teams that qualify through their state federation's league tournament. From 1989 to 1994, 32 teams participated. That number was increased in 1995 to 36 teams, in 1996 to 40 teams, and in 1997 to 45 teams. 42 teams participated in 1998, 65 in 1999 and 69 in 2000.

From 2001 to 2012, the format was consolidated to 64 teams, without teams that participated in the Copa Libertadores that year due to conflict of dates.

In 2013, CBF presented a new cup trophy to replace the trophy in dispute since 2008. The champion gets permanent possession of the trophy and an identical trophy will be produced for the following year. Also in 2013, the tournament format was expanded again to 87 teams, which remained through 2014 and 2015. Under the new format, teams participating in Copa Libertadores again competed in the Copa do Brasil, entering the tournament directly into the Round of 16. In 2016 the number of participants was increased to 86, in 2017 to 91 and in 2021 to 92.

Sponsorship edit

Years Official Sponsor Name
2009–2012 Kia Motors Copa Kia do Brasil
2013 Perdigão Copa Perdigão do Brasil
2014–2015 Sadia Copa Sadia do Brasil
2016–2020 Continental Copa Continental do Brasil
2021–2022 Intelbras Copa Intelbras do Brasil
2023- Betano Copa Betano do Brasil

Records and statistics edit

Finalists edit

Club Winners Runners-up Years won Years runner-up
  Cruzeiro 6 2 1993, 1996, 2000, 2003, 2017, 2018 1998, 2014
  Grêmio 5 4 1989, 1994, 1997, 2001, 2016 1991, 1993, 1995, 2020
  Flamengo 4 5 1990, 2006, 2013, 2022 1997, 2003, 2004, 2017, 2023
  Palmeiras 4 1 1998, 2012, 2015, 2020 1996
  Corinthians 3 4 1995, 2002, 2009 2001, 2008, 2018, 2022
  Atlético Mineiro 2 1 2014, 2021 2016
  Internacional 1 2 1992 2009, 2019
  Fluminense 1 2 2007 1992, 2005
  Athletico Paranaense 1 2 2019 2013, 2021
  Sport 1 1 2008 1989
  Santos 1 1 2010 2015
  Vasco da Gama 1 1 2011 2006
  São Paulo 1 1 2023 2000
  Criciúma 1 0 1991
  Juventude 1 0 1999
  Santo André 1 0 2004
  Paulista 1 0 2005
  Coritiba 0 2 2011, 2012
  Goiás 0 1 1990
  Ceará 0 1 1994
  Botafogo 0 1 1999
  Brasiliense 0 1 2002
  Figueirense 0 1 2007
  Vitória 0 1 2010

Performance by State edit

State Won Runner-up
  São Paulo 11 7
  Minas Gerais 8 3
  Rio Grande do Sul 7 6
  Rio de Janeiro 6 9
  Paraná 1 4
  Pernambuco 1 1
  Santa Catarina 1 1
  Bahia 0 1
  Ceará 0 1
  Distrito Federal 0 1
  Goiás 0 1

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Por que a premiação da Copa do Brasil é maior que a do Brasileiro?". UOL (in Brazilian Portuguese). September 25, 2023. Retrieved March 27, 2024.
  2. ^ Esporte, Redação Máquina do (December 6, 2022). "Copa do Brasil oficializa Betano como dona do title sponsor da competição a partir de 2023 - Futebol". Máquina do Esporte. Retrieved February 8, 2023.
  3. ^ (in Portuguese) (PDF) (in Portuguese). Brazilian Football Confederation. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 6, 2013. Retrieved October 30, 2013.

External links edit

  • Copa do Brasil at CBF.com
  • CBF - Brazilian Football Confederation
  • Brazil Cup History, RSSSF.com

copa, brasil, confused, with, taça, brasil, english, brazil, knockout, football, competition, played, teams, representing, brazilian, states, plus, federal, district, brazilian, domestic, brazilian, equivalent, taça, portugal, copa, scottish, copa, argentina, . Not to be confused with Taca Brasil The Copa do Brasil English Brazil Cup is a knockout football competition played by 92 teams representing all 26 Brazilian states plus the Federal District It is the Brazilian domestic cup and it is the Brazilian equivalent of the FA Cup Taca de Portugal Copa del Rey Scottish Cup and Copa Argentina even though it has much more prestige and is considered almost as important as the Brazilian League as the prize money is higher then the Brasileirao s 1 The Copa do Brasil is an opportunity for teams from smaller states to play against the big teams The winner of the cup automatically qualifies for the following edition of the Copa Libertadores de America the most prestigious continental football tournament contested by top clubs in South America organized by CONMEBOL Copa do BrasilFounded1989RegionBrazilNumber of teams92Qualifier forCopa LibertadoresSupercopa do BrasilCurrent championsSao Paulo 1st title Most successful club s Cruzeiro 6 titles Television broadcastersDomesticRede GloboSporTVPremiereAmazon Prime VideoInternationalOneFootballWebsitecbf com br2024 Copa do Brasil Initially the Copa do Brasil was contested by 32 clubs The field increased to 40 in 1996 increased to 69 by the year of 2000 and stabilized at 64 after 2001 which it remained at until 2012 Clubs from all 26 Brazilian states and the Federal District participate From 2001 to 2012 the Copa do Brasil was played in the first half of the year and in those seasons due to busy scheduling teams playing in the Copa Libertadores did not participate in the Copa do Brasil in the same year Thus the Copa do Brasil champion never defended their title in the next edition since they would be qualified for the Copa Libertadores that year From 2013 to 2015 87 teams participate in the cup and the teams that compete in the Copa Libertadores join the Copa do Brasil directly in the Round of 16 Also the best 8 teams from the previous year s Campeonato Brasileiro Serie A eliminated up to the third round qualify for Copa Sudamericana In 2016 the competition was played by 86 clubs From 2017 to 2020 the cup was contested by 91 teams but in 2021 the number of participants was increased to 92 Starting in 2023 the tournament has been sponsored by Betano and is thus currently known as the Copa Betano do Brasil for sponsorship reasons 2 Cruzeiro is the most successful club having won the competition six times followed by Gremio with 5 titles Palmeiras and Flamengo with 4 Corinthians with 3 and Atletico Mineiro with 2 Another 10 clubs have won one edition of the competition resulting in a total of 16 champions The state with the highest number of titles is Sao Paulo with 10 Only two states have champions from more than one city Sao Paulo Jundiai Santo Andre Santos and Sao Paulo and Rio Grande do Sul Caxias do Sul and Porto Alegre Rio de Janeiro Flamengo Fluminense and Vasco da Gama and Sao Paulo Palmeiras Corinthians and Sao Paulo are the only cities with more than two champion clubs Contents 1 Format 1 1 Teams 1 2 State championships cups and qualifiers 1 3 Eligible teams 2 History 3 Sponsorship 4 Records and statistics 4 1 Finalists 4 2 Performance by State 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksFormat editThe competition is a single elimination knockout tournament featuring two legged ties in the third round onwards In the first two rounds the winner is known after a single leg The first round is played in the lowest ranked team stadium with the away team having a draw advantage to qualify Since the tournament s creation in 1989 the winner of the tournament qualifies for the next year s Copa Libertadores de America Teams edit Round Clubs remaining Clubs involved From previous round Entries in this round Teams entering at this round First round 80 none none none 70 best placed state championships cups and qualifiers teams if not qualified for third round see below 10 best placed teams on the CBF ranking Second round 40 40 Third round 32 32 20 12 Non random slots Defending champions Last year Serie A champions Last year Serie A runners up Last year Serie A 3rd place Last year Serie A 4th place Last year Serie A 5th place Last year Serie A 6th place Last year Serie B champions Last year Copa do Nordeste champions Last year Copa Verde champions Random slots Last year Brazilian Copa Libertadores champions Last year Brazilian Copa Sudamericana champions Last year Serie A 7th place Last year Serie A 8th place Last year Serie A 9th place Round of 16 16 16 8 none Quarter finals 8 8 8 Semi finals 4 4 4 Final 2 2 2 State championships cups and qualifiers edit State Clubs qualified Teams entering nbsp Acre 2 Last year Campeonato Acreano champions Last year Campeonato Acreano runners up nbsp Alagoas 3 Last year Campeonato Alagoano champions Last year Campeonato Alagoano runners up Last year Campeonato Alagoano 3rd place nbsp Amapa 2 Last year Campeonato Amapaense champions Last year Campeonato Amapaense runners up nbsp Amazonas 2 Last year Campeonato Amazonense champions Last year Campeonato Amazonense runners up nbsp Bahia 3 Last year Campeonato Baiano champions Last year Campeonato Baiano runners up Last year Campeonato Baiano 3rd place nbsp Ceara 3 Last year Campeonato Cearense champions Last year Campeonato Cearense runners up Last year Copa Fares Lopes champions nbsp Distrito Federal 2 Last year Campeonato Brasiliense champions Last year Campeonato Brasiliense runners up nbsp Espirito Santo 2 Last year Campeonato Capixaba champions Last year Copa Espirito Santo champions nbsp Goias 3 Last year Campeonato Goiano champions Last year Campeonato Goiano runners up Last year Campeonato Goiano 3rd place nbsp Maranhao 3 Last year Campeonato Maranhense champions Last year Campeonato Maranhense runners up Last year Campeonato Maranhense 3rd place nbsp Mato Grosso 3 Last year Campeonato Mato Grossense champions Last year Campeonato Mato Grossense runners up Last year Copa FMF champions nbsp Mato Grosso do Sul 2 Last year Campeonato Sul Mato Grossense champions Last year Campeonato Sul Mato Grossense runners up nbsp Minas Gerais 5 Last year Campeonato Mineiro champions Last year Campeonato Mineiro runners up Last year Campeonato Mineiro 3rd place Last year Campeonato Mineiro 4th place Last year Trofeu Inconfidencia champions nbsp Para 3 Last year Campeonato Paraense champions Last year Campeonato Paraense runners up Last year Campeonato Paraense 3rd place nbsp Paraiba 2 Last year Campeonato Paraibano champions Last year Campeonato Paraibano runners up nbsp Parana 5 Last year Campeonato Paranaense champions Last year Campeonato Paranaense runners up Last year Campeonato Paranaense 3rd place Last year Campeonato Paranaense 4th place Last year Campeonato Paranaense 5th place nbsp Pernambuco 3 Last year Campeonato Pernambucano champions Last year Campeonato Pernambucano runners up Last year Campeonato Pernambucano 3rd place nbsp Piaui 2 Last year Campeonato Piauiense champions Last year Campeonato Piauiense runners up nbsp Rio de Janeiro 6 Non random slots Last year Campeonato Carioca champions Last year Campeonato Carioca runners up Last year Campeonato Carioca 3rd place Last year Campeonato Carioca 4th place Last year Taca Rio champions Random slots Last year Copa Rio champions Last year Copa Rio runners up The champion can choose to compete in the Copa do Brasil or Serie D The runner up will take the remaining spot nbsp Rio Grande do Norte 2 Last year Campeonato Potiguar champions Last year Campeonato Potiguar runners up nbsp Rio Grande do Sul 5 Last year Campeonato Gaucho champions Last year Campeonato Gaucho runners up Last year Campeonato Gaucho 3rd place Last year Campeonato Gaucho 4th place Last year Copa FGF champions nbsp Rondonia 2 Last year Campeonato Rondoniense champions Last year Campeonato Rondoniense runners up nbsp Roraima 2 Last year Campeonato Roraimense champions Last year Campeonato Roraimense runners up nbsp Santa Catarina 3 Last year Campeonato Catarinense champions Last year Campeonato Catarinense runners up Last year Copa Santa Catarina champions nbsp Sao Paulo 6 Non random slots Last year Campeonato Paulista champions Last year Campeonato Paulista runners up Last year Campeonato Paulista 3rd place Last year Campeonato Paulista 4th place Last year Taca Independencia champions Random slots Last year Copa Paulista champions Last year Copa Paulista runners up The champion can choose to compete in the Copa do Brasil or Serie D The runner up will take the remaining spot nbsp Sergipe 2 Last year Campeonato Sergipano champions Last year Campeonato Sergipano runners up nbsp Tocantins 2 Last year Campeonato Tocantinense champions Last year Campeonato Tocantinense runners up Eligible teams edit The eligible teams to compete in the Copa do Brasil are the previous year s Copa do Brasil champion the 70 best placed clubs in the state championships in which the number of spots per state range from one to five clubs the top six clubs from the previous year s Campeonato Brasileiro Serie A the Copa do Nordeste Northeast Cup champion the Copa Verde Green Cup champion the ten highest ranked clubs in CBF s ranking not already qualified and two of the following the Brazilian champion of the most recent Copa Libertadores if there is one the Brazilian champion of the most recent Copa Sudamericana if there is one the 7th place team of Campeonato Brasileiro Serie A or the champion of Campeonato Brasileiro Serie B 3 The 7 Brazilians teams in the Copa Libertadores da America the best placed teams in the previous year s Serie A and Serie B or the champion of Copa Libertadores and or Copa Sudamericana if it is a Brazilian team and Copa do Nordeste and Copa Verde s Title Holders will join the Copa do Brasil directly in Round of 16 History editMain article List of Copa do Brasil winners WinnersCopa do Brasil Season Winners 1989 nbsp Gremio 1990 nbsp Flamengo 1991 nbsp Criciuma 1992 nbsp Internacional 1993 nbsp Cruzeiro 1994 nbsp Gremio 2 1995 nbsp Corinthians 1996 nbsp Cruzeiro 2 1997 nbsp Gremio 3 1998 nbsp Palmeiras 1999 nbsp Juventude 2000 nbsp Cruzeiro 3 2001 nbsp Gremio 4 2002 nbsp Corinthians 2 2003 nbsp Cruzeiro 4 2004 nbsp Santo Andre 2005 nbsp Paulista 2006 nbsp Flamengo 2 2007 nbsp Fluminense 2008 nbsp Sport Recife 2009 nbsp Corinthians 3 2010 nbsp Santos 2011 nbsp Vasco da Gama 2012 nbsp Palmeiras 2 2013 nbsp Flamengo 3 2014 nbsp Atletico Mineiro 2015 nbsp Palmeiras 3 2016 nbsp Gremio 5 2017 nbsp Cruzeiro 5 2018 nbsp Cruzeiro 6 2019 nbsp Athletico Paranaense 2020 nbsp Palmeiras 4 2021 nbsp Atletico Mineiro 2 2022 nbsp Flamengo 4 2023 nbsp Sao Paulo The Copa do Brasil was created in 1989 to appease the state soccer federations with fewer large and traditional clubs on the national stage whose representatives would hardly have the opportunity to face big clubs during the year This concern arose after a decrease in the number of participants in the 1987 Campeonato Brasileiro when 13 of the biggest clubs in Brazil broke away to form the Copa Uniao Union Cup in response to the CBF s financial difficulties The creation of this competition was designed to promote the state championships in the North Northeast and Central West regions of Brazil which were no longer represented in the Brazilian Championship Copa do Brasil is of high importance for the medium and small clubs in these regions who now at least theoretically have a path to qualify for the Copa Libertadores The first edition of the Copa do Brasil took place in 1989 The first goal in the cup s history was scored by Alcindo Sartori in a 2 0 victory by Flamengo over Paysandu Gremio were the first champion qualifying to compete in the 1990 Copa Libertadores From 1989 to 1993 the champion of that year took home the trophy In 1994 it was determined that the club that won the Copa do Brasil three times would have final possession of the cup This happened in 2001 with Gremio after winning in 1994 1997 and 2001 Thus for the 2002 Copa do Brasil a new trophy was contested which remained until 2007 with no club earning its final possession By winning the 2003 Copa do Brasil and the 2003 Campeonato Brasileiro Cruzeiro won both the domestic cup and domestic league in the same year a feat that was matched only once in Brazilian football by Atletico Mineiro in 2021 Atletico has also won the 2021 Campeonato Mineiro their state championship as Cruzeiro did in 2003 completing the domestic treble State league national league and cup In 2008 a new trophy was instituted for the Copa do Brasil In that same year Sport Recife became the first and so far only club from outside the Southeast Region or the South Region to win the competition The North Region and Center West regions have had no representative win the cup so far Gremio s victory over Atletico Mineiro in the first leg of the 2016 Copa do Brasil final was the first time ever that a visiting club won the first leg of the Copa do Brasil final in the 28 editions of the competition The number of participating teams has varied during the competition s history based on the number of teams that qualify through their state federation s league tournament From 1989 to 1994 32 teams participated That number was increased in 1995 to 36 teams in 1996 to 40 teams and in 1997 to 45 teams 42 teams participated in 1998 65 in 1999 and 69 in 2000 From 2001 to 2012 the format was consolidated to 64 teams without teams that participated in the Copa Libertadores that year due to conflict of dates In 2013 CBF presented a new cup trophy to replace the trophy in dispute since 2008 The champion gets permanent possession of the trophy and an identical trophy will be produced for the following year Also in 2013 the tournament format was expanded again to 87 teams which remained through 2014 and 2015 Under the new format teams participating in Copa Libertadores again competed in the Copa do Brasil entering the tournament directly into the Round of 16 In 2016 the number of participants was increased to 86 in 2017 to 91 and in 2021 to 92 Sponsorship editYears Official Sponsor Name 2009 2012 Kia Motors Copa Kia do Brasil 2013 Perdigao Copa Perdigao do Brasil 2014 2015 Sadia Copa Sadia do Brasil 2016 2020 Continental Copa Continental do Brasil 2021 2022 Intelbras Copa Intelbras do Brasil 2023 Betano Copa Betano do BrasilRecords and statistics editFinalists edit Main article List of Copa do Brasil winners Club Winners Runners up Years won Years runner up nbsp Cruzeiro 6 2 1993 1996 2000 2003 2017 2018 1998 2014 nbsp Gremio 5 4 1989 1994 1997 2001 2016 1991 1993 1995 2020 nbsp Flamengo 4 5 1990 2006 2013 2022 1997 2003 2004 2017 2023 nbsp Palmeiras 4 1 1998 2012 2015 2020 1996 nbsp Corinthians 3 4 1995 2002 2009 2001 2008 2018 2022 nbsp Atletico Mineiro 2 1 2014 2021 2016 nbsp Internacional 1 2 1992 2009 2019 nbsp Fluminense 1 2 2007 1992 2005 nbsp Athletico Paranaense 1 2 2019 2013 2021 nbsp Sport 1 1 2008 1989 nbsp Santos 1 1 2010 2015 nbsp Vasco da Gama 1 1 2011 2006 nbsp Sao Paulo 1 1 2023 2000 nbsp Criciuma 1 0 1991 nbsp Juventude 1 0 1999 nbsp Santo Andre 1 0 2004 nbsp Paulista 1 0 2005 nbsp Coritiba 0 2 2011 2012 nbsp Goias 0 1 1990 nbsp Ceara 0 1 1994 nbsp Botafogo 0 1 1999 nbsp Brasiliense 0 1 2002 nbsp Figueirense 0 1 2007 nbsp Vitoria 0 1 2010 Performance by State edit State Won Runner up nbsp Sao Paulo 11 7 nbsp Minas Gerais 8 3 nbsp Rio Grande do Sul 7 6 nbsp Rio de Janeiro 6 9 nbsp Parana 1 4 nbsp Pernambuco 1 1 nbsp Santa Catarina 1 1 nbsp Bahia 0 1 nbsp Ceara 0 1 nbsp Distrito Federal 0 1 nbsp Goias 0 1See also editCopa do Brasil de Futebol Feminino the women s version of Copa do Brasil History of football in BrazilReferences edit Por que a premiacao da Copa do Brasil e maior que a do Brasileiro UOL in Brazilian Portuguese September 25 2023 Retrieved March 27 2024 Esporte Redacao Maquina do December 6 2022 Copa do Brasil oficializa Betano como dona do title sponsor da competicao a partir de 2023 Futebol Maquina do Esporte Retrieved February 8 2023 in Portuguese Copa do Brasil de 2013 REC Regulamento Especifico da Competicao PDF in Portuguese Brazilian Football Confederation Archived from the original PDF on November 6 2013 Retrieved October 30 2013 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Copa do Brasil Copa do Brasil at CBF com CBF Brazilian Football Confederation Brazil Cup History RSSSF com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Copa do Brasil amp oldid 1222668467, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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