Campeonato Brasileiro de Futebol Feminino

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Campeonato Brasileiro de Futebol Feminino
Série A1
logo
Association Confederação Brasileira de Futebol (CBF)
First edition 2013
hierarchy 1st League
Teams 16
Game mode Round
-robin tournament knockout system (from quarter-finals)
Title holder Ferroviária (2nd title)
Record winner Ferroviária (2 tracks)
Record scorer BrazilBrazil Millene (46 goals)
Website www.cbf.com.br
Qualification for Copa Libertadores Feminino

The Campeonato Brasileiro de Futebol Feminino (port. For Brazilian football championship for women ) is that of the National Football Association of Brazil CBF discharged since 2013 national championship of women's football clubs . Since the 2017 season, the championship has been held in the top division Série A1 , which was officially launched on November 1, 2016.

history

Beginnings

Since the 1980s, several attempts have been made in Brazil to establish national football competitions for women's teams. The first was the cup tournament of the Taça Brasil de Futebol Feminino , played between 1984 and 1988, all of which could be won by Esporte Clube Radar from Rio de Janeiro . In the following years, various amateur and regional associations organized other football tournaments. Between 1994 and 2001, the CBF even organized an elimination tournament which, according to its name, was supposed to be a football championship, but today this claim is only given an unofficial character. With the establishment of the CBF Association Cup (Copa do Brasil) in 2007, the first national soccer competition was finally launched, which is open to participation for all women's teams from all national associations with the appropriate qualifications. By 2013, the Copa had therefore also taken on the status of an unofficial championship.

With the financial support of the Caixa Econômica Federal , the CBF finally played the first championship season of 20 teams in 2013. From the beginning, the women's teams of São Paulo have been the mainstays of the national championship, which has been playing Brazil's top national championship for a number of years and which therefore has well-developed professional structures.

The winner of the Brazilian championship will receive the starting place reserved for Brazil for the CONMEBOL Copa Libertadores da América Feminino of the following year.

Ranking list

The CBF publishes a ranking list of the clubs every year. The top 10 clubs for 2020 are:

rank club Points Diff.
1 São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) Ferroviária 9,936
2 Rio de Janeiro (State)Rio de Janeiro (State) CR Flamengo 9,800 -136
3 São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) SC Corinthians 9.424 -376
4th São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) Santos FC 9,360 -64
5 São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) São José EC 9,352 -8th
6th ParanáParaná Foz Cataratas FC 8,894 -458
7th PernambucoPernambuco Acadêmica Vitória 8,578 -316
8th Amazonas (Brazilian state)Amazonas (Brazil) EC Iranduba 8,512 -66
9 BahiaBahia São Francisco EC 8,512 ± 0
10 Santa CatarinaSanta Catarina AE Kindermann 7,920 -592

League system

In the absence of a national league system of its own, the eligibility to participate in the women's championship in its first four events until 2016 was determined from the CBF internal point ranking. On November 1, 2016, the CBF finally announced the introduction of league operations for professional women's football for the 2017 season. Since then, the national championship has been held in the top division of the Série A1. The participants for their inaugural season 2017 were once again determined from the CBF ranking. In the future, however, their participation will require reaching one of the two promotion places of the newly established second division Série A2.

The participants in the first second division season 2017 have also been determined from the CBF ranking. From 2018, however, the clubs must qualify for this entry into the national championship via their performance in the championship competitions of the states. The Série A2 has two promotion places, its two finalists, ready for the Série A1, from which the last two places in the qualification phases are determined as relegated.

mode

In contrast to the men's championship , which has been decided in its two highest divisions in a European mode with an overall rating for several years, the women's championship in its two leagues is still determined in the modus operandi, which is traditional for Brazil .

First, the participating clubs compete against each other in a first phase of the game, divided into groups, determining the participants in a final round and, in Série A1, the relegated teams in the second division of the following season. The final rounds will then be played up to and including the final in a knockout system with a return leg, in which the away goals rule applies.

The first three championships were played in the second half of the calendar year, in 2016 the championship was moved to the first half of the year for the first time.

List of Masters

season master Runner-up Third Top scorer
2013
(details)
São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) AD Centro Olímpico São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) Sao José EC ParanáParaná Foz Cataratas FC BrazilBrazil Gabi Zanotti ( COTP ) 12
2014
(details)
São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) Ferroviária Santa CatarinaSanta Catarina AE Kindermann São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) AD Centro Olímpico BrazilBrazil Raquel Fernandes ( FER ) 17th
2015
(details)
São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) Rio Preto EC São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) Sao José EC São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) AD Centro Olímpico BrazilBrazil Gabi Nunes ( COTP ) 14th
2016
(details)
Rio de Janeiro (State)Rio de Janeiro (State) CR Flamengo São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) Rio Preto EC São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) Ferroviária BrazilBrazil Millene ( RPR ) 10
2017
(details)
São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) Santos FC São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) SC Corinthians Paulista São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) Rio Preto EC ArgentinaArgentina Florencia Soledad Jaimes ( SAN ) 18th
2018
(details)
São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) SC Corinthians Paulista São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) Rio Preto EC Rio de Janeiro (State)Rio de Janeiro (State) CR Flamengo BrazilBrazil Danyelle ( FLA ) 15th
2019
(details)
São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) Ferroviária São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) SC Corinthians Paulista Santa CatarinaSanta Catarina AE Kindermann BrazilBrazil Millene ( COR ) 19th

statistics

Championships by club and state

rank club master Runner-up Third
1 São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) Ferroviária 2 / 1
2 São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) Rio Preto EC 1 2 1
3 São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) SC Corinthians Paulista 1 2 /
4th São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) AD Centro Olímpico 1 / 2
5 Rio de Janeiro (State)Rio de Janeiro (State) CR Flamengo 1 / 1
6th São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) Santos FC 1 / /
7th São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) São José EC / 2 /
8th Santa CatarinaSanta Catarina AE Kindermann / 1 1
9 ParanáParaná Foz Cataratas FC / / 1
rank State master Runner-up Third
1 São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) São Paulo 6th 6th 4th
2 Rio de Janeiro (State)Rio de Janeiro (State) Rio de Janeiro 1 / 1
3 Santa CatarinaSanta Catarina Santa Catarina / 1 1
4th ParanáParaná Paraná / / 1

Eternal table of the top scorers

rank Player Period Last club Gates Games (Ø goals)
1 BrazilBrazil Millene 2015– SC Corinthians 46 81 (Ø 0.57)
2 BrazilBrazil Gabi Nunes 2014– SC Corinthians 45 62 (Ø 0.73)
3 BrazilBrazil Byanca Brasil 2013-2017 SC Corinthians 38 52 (Ø 0.73)
4th BrazilBrazil Ketlen Wiggers 2013– Santos FC 37 70 (Ø 0.53)
5 BrazilBrazil Darlene 2013-2017 Rio Preto EC 36 47 (Ø 0.77)
6th BrazilBrazil Larissa 2013– CR Flamengo 35 73 (Ø 0.48)
7th BrazilBrazil Raquel Fernandes 2014-2018 Ferroviária 33 48 (Ø 0.69)
8th BrazilBrazil Gabi Zanotti 2013– SC Corinthians 31 52 (Ø 0.60)
9 BrazilBrazil Danyelle 2014– CR Flamengo 30th 56 (Ø 0.54)
10 BrazilBrazil Adriana 2013– SC Corinthians 28 60 (Ø 0.47)
11 ArgentinaArgentina Florencia Soledad Jaimes 2015– Santos FC 25th 35 (Ø 0.71)
12 BrazilBrazil Gláucia 2016– Santos FC 24 28 (Ø 0.86)
13 BrazilBrazil Giovanna Crivelari 2016– SC Corinthians 23 54 (Ø 0.43)
BrazilBrazil Alanna Larissa 2013– Santos FC 23 55 (Ø 0.42)
15th BrazilBrazil Chú 2015– Santos FC 21st 47 (Ø 0.45)
BrazilBrazil Bárbara Chagas 2013-2018 Esportiva 3B 21st 61 (Ø 0.34)
17th BrazilBrazil Djenifer Becker 2014– EC Iranduba 20th 82 (Ø 0.24)
18th BrazilBrazil Letícia 2013-2018 Rio Preto EC 19th 68 (Ø 0.28)
BrazilBrazil Carol 2013-2018 Rio Preto EC 19th 36 (Ø 0.53)
20th BrazilBrazil Patrícia Sochor 2013– Santos FC 17th 76 (Ø 0.22)
21st BrazilBrazil Mariana Neiva 2013– SC Internacional 16 58 (Ø 0.78)
BrazilBrazil Pingo 2013-2018 Pinheirense EC 16 33 (Ø 0.48)
BrazilBrazil Tipa 2013– São José EC 16 55 (Ø 0.29)
BrazilBrazil Nenê 2013– Ferroviária 16 86 (Ø 0.19)
25th BrazilBrazil Cristiane 2013-2014 São Paulo FC 15th 13 (Ø 1.15)
BrazilBrazil Tábatha 2014-2017 Ferroviária 15th 34 (Ø 0.44)
BrazilBrazil Rita 2013– Santos FC 15th 48 (Ø 0.31)
BrazilBrazil Pâmela 2013– CR Flamengo 15th 50 (Ø 0.30)
BrazilBrazil Michele Carioca 2013– São José EC 15th 66 (Ø 0.23)
Status: End of season 2019, September 29th

Gates

Goals per season
season Gates Summa
2013 267 ---
2014 262 529
2015 258 787
2016 215 1002
2017 382 1384
2018 376 1760
2019 386 2146
The first goal of the championship
Luize Nery Novaes on September 18, 2013 in the Estádio de Los Larios in Duque de Caxias after 5 minutes for the AD Centro Olímpico against Duque de Caxias FC .
The 1000th goal of the championship
Larissa Pereira da Cruz on May 20, 2016 in the Estádio Anísio Haddad in São José do Rio Preto after 6 minutes to the interim 1-0 for the CR Flamengo in the second final game of the 2016 season against the Rio Preto EC .
The 2000th goal of the championship
Laíssa Nascimento Santos on July 13, 2019 at the Estádio José Bastos Padilha in Rio de Janeiro for the 3-4 subsequent goal for the Minas Brasília TC on the eleventh match day of the 2019 season against the CR Flamengo (final score 3: 6).
Most goals by a player in a game
Raquel Fernandes with eight goals on October 16, 2014 at the Estádio Fonte Luminosa in Araraquara in Ferroviária's 16-1 victory over the Pinheirense EC .
The youngest goalscorer
Ana Vitória (* March 6, 2000) with 15 years and 166 days for the Mixto EC in the 1: 2 loss to Foz Cataratas FC on September 13, 2015 in the Arena Pantanal .
The most goal-scoring game
Seventeen goals on October 16, 2014 at the Estádio Fonte Luminosa in Araraquara in Ferroviária's 16-1 win over Pinheirense EC .

Eternal table

The eternal table of the Série A1 includes those of the football championship held from 2013 to 2016.

Pl. society Years Sp. S. U N T + T- Diff. Points Ø pt. Brasil-CBF.svg League 2019
 1. SC Corinthians 3  61  48  7th  6th 163 33 +130 151 2.48 1 Series A1
 2. Rio Preto EC 5  78  40  23  15th 152 76 +76 143 1.83 1 -
 3. São José EC 7th  89  39  24  26th 158 99 +59 141 1.58 0 Series A1
 4th CR Flamengo 5  77  43  12  22nd 162 80 +82 141 1.83 1 Series A1
 5. Ferroviária 6th  85  36  25th  24 159 95 +64 133 1.56 2 Series A1
 6th AE Kindermann (1) 6th  73  39  14th  20th 124 57 +67 128 1.75 0 Series A1
 7th Santos FC 5  57  40  7th  10 172 49 +123 127 2.23 1 Series A1
 8th. EC Iranduba 7th  71  28  15th  28 109 111  −2 99 1.39 0 Series A1
 9. Foz Cataratas FC 7th  73  26th  16  31 89 111 −22 94 1.29 0 Series A1
10. GO Audax 4th  67  20th  27  20th 80 81  −1 87 1.3 0 Series A1
11. AD Centro Olímpico 4th  42  25th  10  7th 121 45 +76 85 2.02 1 -
12. Acadêmica Vitória 7th  71  18th  19th  34 80 150 −70 73 1.03 0 Series A1
13. São Francisco EC 7th  71  15th  16  40 75 181 −106 61 0.86 0 Series A1
14th AA Ponte Preta 3  45  13  7th  25th 41 68 −27 46 1.02 0 Series A1
15th Sport Recife 4th  47  10  10  27 49 104 −55 40 0.85 0 Series A1
16. SE Tiradentes 3  26th  11  5  10 62 48 +14 38 1.46 0 Series A2
17th SC Internacional 1  17th  9  3  5 32 29  +3 30th 1.76 0 Series A1
18th Botafogo FR 1  12  6th  5  1 24 3 +21 23 1.92 0 Series A2
19th Pinheirense EC 5  36  6th  5  25th 49 144 −95 23 0.64 0 Series A2
20th Caucaia EC 4th  22nd  6th  4th  12 29 44 −15 22nd 1 0 -
21st EC Vitória 3  33  5  6th  22nd 30th 84 −54 21st 0.64 0 Series A1
22nd Portuguesa 4th  26th  5  5  16 30th 67 −37 20th 0.77 0 Series A2
23. Duque de Caxias FC 4th  22nd  5  3  14th 31 66 −35 18th 0.82 0 Series A2
24. Minas Brasília TC 1  15th  4th  3  8th 12 31 −19 15th 1 0 Series A1
25th America Mineiro 2  14th  4th  2  8th 17th 22nd  −5 14th 1 0 Series A2
26th Tuna Luso Brasileira 1  10  4th  0  6th 20th 21st  −1 12 1.2 0 -
27. Botafogo FC 2  14th  3  1  10 7th 38 −31 10 0.71 0 Series A2
28. EC Viana 4th  16  2  3  11 18th 63 −45 9 0.56 0 -
29 CR Vasco da Gama 3  12  1  4th  7th 8th 27 −19 7th 0.58 0 Series A2
30th Chapecoense 1  4th  2  0  2 14th 8th  +6 6th 1.5 0 Series A2
31. EC Bahia 1  4th  1  2  1 2 2  ± 0 5 1.25 0 -
32. Gremio FBPA 1  14th  1  1  12 5 34 −29 4th 0.29 0 Series A2
33. Aliança FC 1  4th  1  0  3 5 14th  −9 3 0.75 0 Series A2
34. Náutico capibaribe 1  4th  0  3  1 6th 9  −3 3 0.75 0 Series A2
35. AA Francana 1  4th  0  2  2 5 7th  −2 2 0.5 0 -
36. ASCOOP 1  4th  0  1  3 2 12 −10 1 0.25 0 -
37. Avaí FC 1  4th  0  0  4th 1 25th −24 0 0 0 -
38. Mixto EC 2  8th  0  0  8th 5 31 −26 0 0 0 -
Status: end of season 29.09.2019
(1) AE Kindermann: Deduction of three points in the 2017 season.

First place in the all-time table after the end of the season

year society Points
2019 São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) SC Corinthians (1) 151
2018 São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) Rio Preto EC (2) 143
2017 São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) Rio Preto EC (1) 110
2016 São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) AD Centro Olímpico (4) 85
2015 São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) AD Centro Olímpico (3) 80
2014 São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) AD Centro Olímpico (2) 56
2013 São Paulo (State)São Paulo (State) AD Centro Olímpico (1) 33

See also

Web links

Remarks

  1. Club Ranking 2020 , report on cbf.com.br from February 4, 2020, accessed on February 5, 2020. (Portuguese)
  2. See cbf.com.br - Novidades do Brasileiro Feminino 2017 (November 1, 2016) , accessed on November 7, 2016.