Corinthians São Paulo
Corinthians São Paulo | |||
Basic data | |||
---|---|---|---|
Surname | Sports Club Corinthians Paulista | ||
Seat | São Paulo , Brazil | ||
founding | September 1, 1910 | ||
Colours | White and black | ||
Members | 139,212 (February 5, 2016) | ||
president | Andrés Sanchez | ||
Website | corinthians.com.br | ||
First soccer team | |||
Head coach | tbn | ||
Venue |
Arena Corinthians Estádio Alfredo Schürig |
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Places | 48,000 17,900 |
||
league | Série A | ||
2019 | 8th place | ||
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The Sports Club Corinthians Paulista , usually just called Timão or Corinthians for short and generally known in German-speaking countries as Corinthians São Paulo , is a Brazilian football club from São Paulo . Having won the Brazilian championship for the seventh time in 2017, the successes at the FIFA Club World Cup in 2000 and 2012 and winning the Copa Libertadores in 2012, the club is one of the most successful in Brazil.
General
Timão , the club's nickname, refers to the steering wheel that was included in the original club crest, and it is an enlargement of the Portuguese word "time" (team) and means "big team". The team plays in white shirts and black shorts today. The first set of toys was off-white and the pants were black. It wasn't until the mid-1910s that the Jersey changed and turned white.
history
1910–1919: Origin and first years
On September 1, 1910, Joaquim Ambrósio, Antônio Pereira, Rafael Perrone, Anselmo Corrêa and João da Silva met in Rua dos Imigrantes (now Rua José Paulino) in São Paulo and founded the Corinthians Paulista Sports Club . At the time, football in Brazil was an elite sport and was played mainly by descendants of British immigrants and employees of British companies. In contrast, Corinthians should be a club for all football enthusiasts and to this day it has the (self-cultivated) image of a workers' club (nickname clube dos operários ). The club is named after the English amateur team Corinthian FC , which toured Brazil that year and won all six games against Brazilian teams.
On September 10, 1910, the Corinthians players played for the first game in the club's history. The game against União da Lapa ended 1-0 for the visiting club. Four days later it was Luis Fabi who scored the first goal for the new club, making club history in the 2-0 win against Estrela Polar . They soon joined the regional Paulista League . In order to participate, however, it took two qualifying games, which the club won. Thus, the team went to the league competition for the first time in 1913. In 1914, the club won the São Paulo state championship for the first time . The outstanding player at this time was striker Neco , who also became the league's top striker this year. In the following year they defended the success of 1914 in front of the São Paulo FC . In the following period, however, the Club Athletico Paulistano took over the dominance of the competition and won the championship five times in a row between 1916 and 1921. In 1918, Neco's team became runner-up. He himself managed to win the top scorer title for the second time in 1920. The center forward improved to 24 hits in one season. Along with Arthur Friedenreich, he was the first attacker since the league was introduced in 1902 to break the 20-goal mark.
1920–1939: Golden decades and rise to the top team
In 1922 Corinthians replaced Athletico Paulistano as champions and was able to celebrate the third national championship success. In addition to Neco, it was now Gambarotta who led the team to victory with his goals. In 1923 and 1924 the club defended this triumph and achieved three titles in a row for the first time. From 1928 to 1930 and from 1937 to 1939 the team repeated this masterpiece. This gave the Timão a great reputation and rose to become one of the top teams in Brazil. After the second triple title , Corinthians legend Neco ended his active career. However, he should stay with the club as a coach and supervised this u. a. in the successes of 1937 and 1938. In the 1930s it was Teleco who made Neco forget as a striker. In 1935, 1936, 1937, 1939 and 1941 he scored the most goals in the league and was the best attacker of all clubs. In 1939 he scored a total of 32 goals, making him the first Corinthians player to score more than 30 goals per season. Until then, only Arthur Friedenreich (1921; 33 hits), Araken (1927; 31 hits) and Feitiço (1930; 37 hits / 1931; 39 hits) had achieved this.
1940–1969: ups and downs
With attacker Teleco in the striker row, the Bando de Loucos made their twelfth success in the national championship in 1941. However, the club then had to wait ten years to be able to hold the trophy again. This only succeeded again in 1951 when the team dominated the league and the team scored a total of 103 goals in 30 games. Striker Rodolfo Carbone alone scored 30 goals. Other important players of the championship year of 1951 were Cláudio, Luisinho, Baltazar and Mário. Also in 1952 and 1954, the club placed first in the league. From then on, however, the team only ran behind and did not manage to win a major title for years. The only notable successes were the vice championships in 1955, 1962, 1966 and 1968. After Baltazar in 1952, it was not until 1967 that a Corinthians striker would again become the best attacker in the league.
1970–1989: Returning success
In 1974, the club only finished second behind rivals Palmeiras São Paulo , and the fans longed for another national success. In 1977 it was that time again, the team raised the regional championship cup for the 16th time. In 1978, FC Santos replaced the Corinthians-Kicker as the title holder, but in 1979 they won the coveted championship again. In 1979, 1982, 1983 and 1988 the national championship successes followed seventeen to twenty.
In 1971 the all-Brazilian football championship was held for the first time . In two groups of ten teams each, the first six teams each qualified for the second round. Corinthians was the clear first in season A ahead of Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte . But in the three-group intermediate round, in which only the group winners made it to the final round, the club remained behind São Paulo FC . The following year the mode changed and Corinthians moved into the semi-finals. In the sixth edition of this competition, the Todo Poderoso made it to the final for the first time. On December 12, 1976, the opponent was in the Estádio Beira-Rio SC Internacional . But Dario in the first half and Valdomiro in the second helped Internacional to win 2-0. Thus, Corinthinas missed the first championship success. Major players this season were Givanildo Oliveira , Moisés and Zé Maria . In the following years, the team remained without much attention in the fight for the national championship. In 1979 they did not even take part in the event, but returned impressively in 1980 and finished fifth of 44 teams in the overall settlement. In 1982 the club advanced to the semi-finals, but where they failed because of Gremio Porto Alegre . Also in 1984 the semi-final game was over after 2-0 and 0-0 against eventual champions Fluminense Rio de Janeiro .
1990–1999: First Brazilian championship and cup victory
In 1990, the club was the first time Brazilian overall football champions . A total of twenty teams started the season, with the first eight teams qualifying for the title round. In addition to Corinthians, these were São Paulo FC , Grêmio Porto Alegre , EC Bahia , Atlético Mineiro , Palmeiras São Paulo , Santos FC and CA Bragantino . So five of the eight participating clubs came from the São Paulo region. With wins against Mineiro and Bahia, the club moved into the final, where they faced their big rivals São Paulo FC. The Corinthians won the first leg in front of over 85,000 spectators 1-0. The goal scorer of the day was Wilson Carlos Mano , who scored in the fourth minute of the game. Three days later, on December 16, 1990, the clubs met for the second time. Again the match ended 1-0 for the Timão and the first all-Brazilian championship title was won. Tupãzinho scored in the second leg in the Morumbi Stadium in front of over 100,000 visitors . The coach was Nelsinho Baptista , who had played more than 250 games for the final opponent FCSP during his playing days . Shortly afterwards, the Supercopa do Brasil was won against Flamengo with a 1-0 victory .
In 1991, the team missed participation in the play-offs. In the 1994 season, the club won the finals for the national title for the third time in the club's history. But against Palmeiras São Paulo with the later world stars Roberto Carlos , Flávio Conceição and Rivaldo , who played on loan for Corinthians last year, they had no success after 1: 3 and 1: 1. From the championship team from 1991 only goalkeeper Ronaldo was in the Corinthians team. Marques scored both goals for the losing team . Rivaldo scored three times for Palmeiras, as did Edmundo . The second leg was particularly hard fought and referee Márcio Rezende de Freitas had to show three red cards: two for Corinthians ( Branco , Luisinho) and one for Palmeiras ( Zinho ).
The national championship season 1995, however, went badly again. But the club knew how to convince in the other competitions. First the team won the national championship and then they prevailed in the Copa do Brasil , the national cup. This has been carried out since 1989. But Corinthians could not reach the final or the semifinals until 1995. As the winner of the Copa Bandeirantes in 1994, the club was one of three clubs from the state of São Paulo, which was allowed to start in the 1995 Copa do Brasil. Via Operário FC , Rio Branco FC , Paraná Clube and CR Vasco da Gama , the team reached the final, where Grêmio Porto Alegre waited as an opponent. In the first game, on June 14, 1995, it was Viola who gave Corinthians the lead before Goiano equalized. But then it was Marcelinho Carioca who scored the 2-1 final for Corinthians. In the second leg, another goal from Marcelinho Carioca was enough to win 1-0, so that the Copa do Brasil was won for the first time in the club's history.
In 1998 the second national championship was won, which was defended in 1999. Crucial players for this success were Marcelinho Carioca, Dida , Vampeta , Luizão , Sylvinho , Edílson , Freddy Rincón , Índio and Ricardinho . Both finals had to be decided in three games each.
In 1997 and 1999 you could also win the state championship again.
2000 – today: Current development
SC Corinthians celebrated their greatest success so far in 2000 and 2012 when they won the FIFA Club World Cup . As the Brazilian champion in 1998 you qualified for the first staging of this competition. In the final at the Maracanã Stadium in Rio de Janeiro, CR Vasco da Gama was defeated on penalties. The club had previously beaten teams like Raja Casablanca and Al-Nasr and defeated Real Madrid 2-2. Edílson scored twice and was later awarded the Golden Ball for the tournament's best player. When asked whether SC Corinthians can call themselves “the best club in the world” because of this title, people in Brazil regularly heat up. Supporters of opposing teams hold the Corinthians against the fact that they have never won the Copa Libertadores and are therefore not a legitimate champion.
In 2002 the club won the national cup for the second time. With thirteen goals, Deivid became the tournament's top scorer. Never since 1989 has a player scored more hits in this competition. The record was beaten by one goal two years later by Fred . In the final on May 8th and 15th, 2002, Brasiliense FC were beaten 2-1 and 1-1. Deivid scored all goals for Corinthians.
Corinthians São Paulo | Brasiliense FC | |||
May 8, 2002 Morumbi Stadium ( São Paulo ) Result: 2: 1 (0: 0) Spectators: 65,725 Referee: Carlos Simon ( Brazil ) |
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Dida - Rogério , Fábio Luciano , Anderson , Kléber - Vampeta , Fabrício , Ricardinho - Gil , Leandro ( Renato ), Deivid Trainer: Carlos Alberto Parreira |
Donizetti - Moisés, Aldo, Tiago, Emerson - Evandro , Carioca, Maurício , Gil Baiano - Wellington Dias , Jackson ( Weldon ). Coach: Péricles Chamusca |
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1: 0 Deivid (53rd) 1: 1 Maurício (60th) 2: 1 Deivid (80th) |
Brasiliense FC | Corinthians São Paulo | |||
May 15, 2002 Estádio Elmo Serejo Farias ( Taquaritinga ) Result: 1: 1 (1: 0) Spectators :? Referee: Wilson de Souza Mendonça ( Brazil ) |
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Donizetti - Moisés (Rodrigo Ayres), Aldo, Tiago, Emerson - Evandro , Carioca, Maurício (Lê), Gil Baiano - Wellington Dias , Jackson ( Weldon ). Coach: Péricles Chamusca |
Dida - Rogério , Fábio Luciano , Anderson , Kléber - Vampeta , Fabrício ( Fabinho ), Ricardinho - Gil , Leandro ( Renato ), Deivid Trainer: Carlos Alberto Parreira |
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1: 0 Wellington Dias (42nd) 1: 1 Deivid (65th) |
In 2004 the club signed a contract with the international investor group MSI (Media Sports Investment) , which MSI secured control of the club for ten years in return for large investments. With the money, Carlos Tévez , the star of CA Boca Juniors , and coach Daniel Passarella were signed up . Passarella had to leave the club after just a few games.
In 2005 Corinthians became Brazilian soccer champions for the fourth time, but since then the club has encountered difficulties, not only in championships in which the club participates, but also and above all in the political field. In 2007, after so many bad results and corruption charges against the president Alberto Dualib , the fans founded the Movimento Fora Dualib , a movement against the president of the club. After a few months, Dualib was provisionally replaced by Clodomil Orsi . On October 9, 2007, Andrés Sanchez was selected as the new president. This year, the low point for the club was reached with the relegation to the Série B.
Corinthians managed in the 2008 season under the new coach Mano Menezes to rise again as the leaders of the Série B. The club clearly dominated the league and with 85 points had a total of 17 points more than the runner-up EC Santo André . With the attackers Dentinho and Germán Herrera, Menezes formed a strong duo that put the team on the road to success. The team remained successful in the period that followed. With transfers like the signing of players like the former world footballer Ronaldo and the Europe experienced Edu , the club drew international attention again. After winning the São Paulo state championship in 2009 , the team made it to the final of the Copa do Brasil. After 2-0 and 2-2 against SC Internacional , the competition was decided in favor of Corinthians. It was the club's third title win in this tournament.
Corinthians São Paulo | SC Internacional | ||
June 17, 2009 Estádio do Pacaembu ( São Paulo ) Result: 2: 0 (1: 0) Spectators: 36,614 Referee: Héber Roberto Lopes ( Brazil ) |
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Felipe - Chicão , William , Alessandro ,? - Elias , Douglas , Marcelo Oliveira - Ronaldo , Jorge Henrique , Dentinho Trainers: Mano Menezes |
Lauro - Danilo Silva , Índio , Álvaro -?,?,?, Sandro - Alecsandro ,?,? Trainer: Tite |
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1-0 Jorge Henrique (26th) 2-0 Ronaldo (53rd) |
SC Internacional | Corinthians São Paulo | ||
July 1, 2009 Estádio Beira-Rio ( Porto Alegre ) Result: 2: 2 (0: 2) Spectators: 50,286 Referee: Ricardo Marques Ribeiro ( Brazil ) |
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Lauro -?, Índio , Álvaro -?,?,?, Sandro - Alecsandro ,?,? Trainer: Tite |
Felipe - Chicão , William , Alessandro ,? - Elias , Douglas , André Santos - Ronaldo , Jorge Henrique , Dentinho Trainers: Mano Menezes |
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0: 1 Jorge Henrique (23rd) 0: 2 André Santos (27th) 1: 2 Alecsandro (69th) 2: 2 Alecsandro (74th) |
In the league it was only enough to rank ten, but they still managed to qualify for the Copa Libertadores 2010 due to the cup win. The squad was further upgraded for the new season. Roberto Carlos , Aldo Bobadilla , Danilo and Iarley were the best-known additions. In the group stage of the Copa Libertadores, they gave up only two points in a 1-1 draw against Independiente Medellín , otherwise the team remained clear. But then it was the end of the last sixteen. In July 2010 it was announced that Menezes would be the new coach of the Brazilian national team to succeed Dunga . The club reacted quickly and signed Adílson Batista , who had previously coached Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte .
On March 14, 2010 Corinthians won 2-1 on matchday 14 of the São Paulo state championship against EC Santo André . The 1-0 in the third minute for Corinthians by Dentinho was the 10,000 in the club's history.
In 2011 the Brazilian championship could be won again. In 2012 he finally won the Copa Libertadores for the first time and then again the World Cup . In the final, Chelsea were defeated 1-0.
In 2015, the club won the championship in Brazil for the sixth time and in 2017 for the seventh time.
useful information
The arch rival
Inspired by visiting two Italian football clubs, some Corinthians supporters of Italian descent decided to found their own club in 1914, the Palestra Itália (now Palmeiras São Paulo ). The Corinthian supporters, consisting largely of immigrants, were subsequently divided between the two clubs. The former Corinthians fans were described as "traitors". To date, the two clubs remain São Paulo's fiercest rivals.
The mascot
The club's official mascot is a musketeer . This is supposed to symbolize pride, courage and loyalty. The history of the mascot goes back to the first few years since the club was founded in 1910.
Sponsors and outfitters
Corinthians has had a major shirt sponsor since the 1980s, which graces the chest of home and away jerseys. Since 1982 these have been various global companies. One, like Ford , was printed on Corinthians jerseys for just one batch. Since 2003 the club has also been selling other areas of the shirts to sponsors. You can find prints on the sleeves, shoulders or trousers. The current main sponsor is Caixa Econômica Federal . Nike has been a clothing supplier since 2003 . Previously, the teams were only dressed by Brazilian sporting goods manufacturers.
Period | Outfitter | sponsor |
---|---|---|
1982 | Topper | Bombril |
1983 | Cofap | |
1984 | Citizen Watch | |
BIC Group | ||
corona | ||
1985-1994 | Kalunga | |
1987-1994 | Finta | |
1995-1996 | Penalty | Suvinil |
1996-1998 | Excel-Econômico | |
1998 | Embratel | |
1999-2000 | Topper | Batavo |
2000-2003 | Pepsi | |
2003-2004 | Nike | |
2005-2007 | Samsung Electronics | |
2008-2009 | Medial Saúde | |
2010–2012 | Neo Química Genéricos | |
2012-2017 | Caixa |
Followers and rivals
Corinthian's fans are called O bando de loucos (The Pack of the Crazy). Together with Flamengo Rio de Janeiro , Corinthinas forms the largest fan base in Brazil. The number of following fluctuates between 30 and 35 million. The fans are known for their expressions of loyalty and loyalty. Well-known supporters are the ex-President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva , the Formula 1 drivers Ayrton Senna , Emerson Fittipaldi and Rubens Barrichello and the musician Paul Di'Anno .
Stadion
Before the 2014 World Cup
The official home stadium of the Corinthians was the Alfredo Schürig Stadium (called Fazendinha , pt. Small Fazenda ), named after a club president in the 1920s , until the 2014 World Cup . The stadium was inaugurated on July 22, 1928 and only holds 18,000 seats. Today it is only used by the professional team for training, by the second team for match operations. Until 2014, Corinthians did not have a real stadium, which corresponded to first division or even international level. Home games were therefore played in the Pacaembu Stadium (officially "Estádio Municipal Paulo Machado de Carvalho") in the city of São Paulo, which was opened in 1940 and has a capacity of 40,260 seats. Important encounters with more spectators were played in the Morumbi stadium of São Paulo FC with 80,000 seats. Curiously, the black and white striped club Corinthians, which according to surveys has the most supporters of the three big clubs (Corinthians, São Paulo FC and Palmeiras) in São Paulo, has won the most titles in the stadium of the red, white and black local rivals São Paulo FC .
Arena Corinthians
A new stadium was built in São Paulo's Itaquera district for the 2014 World Cup in Brazil . During the tournament it held 68,000 visitors and was named by the FIFA Arena São Paulo . After the tournament, the previously attached additional grandstands were dismantled so that the new design of the stadium can now accommodate around 48,000 visitors. It is called Arena Corinthians and has been used exclusively by Corinthians since the end of the 2014 World Cup. The construction was carried out by the Brazilian construction giant Construtora Norberto Odebrecht . In the Corinthians arena, u. a. the opening game (Brazil against Croatia (3: 1)) and the opening ceremony of the 2014 World Cup.
Current squad
No. | Nat. | Surname | birthday | in the team since | Contract until |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
goal | |||||
1 | Matheus Vidotto | April 10, 1993 | 2012 | 2018 | |
12 | Cássio | June 6, 1987 | 2012 | 2019 | |
27 | Walter | November 18, 1987 | 2013 | 2019 | |
40 | Caíque | June 3, 1995 | 2015 | 2020 | |
Defense | |||||
2 | Léo Principe | August 13, 1996 | 2016 | 2019 | |
3 | Pablo | June 21, 1991 | 2017 | 2017 | |
4th | Fabián Balbuena | 23rd August 1991 | 2015 | 2018 | |
6th | Moisés | March 11, 1995 | 2015 | 2017 | |
13 | Guilherme Arana | April 14, 1997 | 2014 | 2021 | |
14th | Léo Santos | December 9, 1998 | 2016 | 2018 | |
15th | Vilson | April 3, 1989 | 2016 | 2018 | |
23 | Fagner | June 11, 1989 | 2014 | 2018 | |
34 | Pedro Henrique | October 2, 1995 | 2014 | 2019 | |
midfield | |||||
5 | Gabriel | July 10, 1992 | 2017 | 2020 | |
10 | Guilherme | October 22, 1988 | 2016 | 2019 | |
16 | Cristian | June 25, 1983 | 2015 | 2017 | |
17th | Giovanni Augusto | 5th September 1989 | 2016 | 2019 | |
19th | Rodrigo Figueiredo | March 27, 1996 | 2016 | 2018 | |
20th | Danilo | June 11, 1979 | 2010 | 2017 | |
21st | Fellipe Bastos | February 1, 1990 | 2017 | 2019 | |
22nd | Marciel | March 8, 1995 | 2015 | 2020 | |
26th | Rodriguinho | March 27, 1988 | 2013 | 2019 | |
28 | Paulo Roberto | March 6, 1987 | 2017 | 2017 | |
29 | Camacho | March 2, 1990 | 2016 | 2019 | |
30th | Maycon | July 15, 1997 | 2016 | 2021 | |
31 | Marquinhos Gabriel | July 21, 1990 | 2016 | 2020 | |
33 | Warian | June 14, 1996 | 2016 | 2019 | |
35 | Guilherme Mantuan | 2nd August 1997 | 2016 | 2018 | |
38 | Pedrinho | April 13, 1998 | 2017 | 2018 | |
77 | Jádson | 5th October 1983 | 2017 | 2018 | |
Storm | |||||
7th | Jô | March 20, 1987 | 2017 | 2019 | |
9 | Clayton | October 23, 1995 | 2017 | 2017 | |
11 | Ángel Romero | 4th July 1992 | 2014 | 2019 | |
18th | Kâzım-Richards | August 26, 1986 | 2017 | 2018 | |
36 | Bruno Paulo | February 14, 1990 | 2016 | 2019 | |
37 | Léo Jabá | August 2, 1998 | 2016 | 2018 | |
39 | Carlinhos | February 12, 1997 | 2016 | 2020 | |
92 | Stiven Mendoza | June 27, 1992 | 2015 | 2018 | |
Léo Arthur | March 23, 1995 | 2017 | 2018 |
successes
Official title
- FIFA Club World Champions : 2000 , 2012
- CONMEBOL-Copa Libertadores : 2012
- CONMEBOL-Recopa Sudamericana : 2013
- Brazilian champion : 1990 , 1998 , 1999 , 2005 , 2011 , 2015 , 2017
- Brazilian Cup Winner : 1995 , 2002, 2009
- Brazilian Super Cup winner : 1991
- State champion of São Paulo : (30 x) 1914, 1916, 1922, 1923, 1925, 1928, 1929, 1930, 1937, 1938, 1939, 1941, 1951, 1952, 1954, 1977, 1979, 1982, 1983, 1988, 1995 , 1997, 1999, 2001, 2003, 2009, 2013, 2017, 2018, 2019
- Torneio Rio-São Paulo : 1950, 1953, 1954, 1966, 2002
Beach soccer
Friendship tournaments
- Apollo V Cup (USA): 1969
- Atlantic Cup: 1956
- Bandeirantes Cup: 1994
- Brasília competition: 1958
- Costa del Sol Tournament (Spain): 1969
- Gold Quinela: 1942
- International Charles Miller Competition: 1954, 1955
- International summer tournament of the city: 1986, 1987
- Laudo Natel Cup: 1973
- Missões Tournament: 1953
- Nations Cup (USA): 1985
- People's Tournament: 1971
- Pequeña Copa del Mundo (Venezuela): 1953
- Cup of the Mayor of São Paulo: 1953
- Ramón de Carranza Trophy (Spain): 1996
- Recife Cup: 1965
- São Paulo Cup: 1962, 1975
- City Cup of Porto Alegre: 1983
- São Paulo City Cup: 1942, 1943, 1947
- Turin City Tournament (Italy): 1966
- Tournament in honor of the independence of Mexico: 1981
Well-known former players
(Selection)
Name of the player | Period at Corinthians | comment |
---|---|---|
Sócrates | 1978-1984 | • Former captain of the national team |
Vladimir Rodrigues dos Santos | 1972-1985, 1987 | • Former national player and record player for the Corinthians (803 games) |
Dida | 1999-2000 | • in Europe and a. for AC Milan active |
Gilmar | 1951-1961 | • Over 450 games for Corinthians • World champions 1958 and 1962 |
Roberto Carlos | 2010-2011 | • in Europe and a. for Real Madrid , Inter Milan and Fenerbahce active • World Champion 2002 |
Domingos Antônio da Guia | 1936-1943 | |
Carlos Gamarra | 1998-1999 | • in Europe and a. for Atlético Madrid and Inter Milan active |
Marcelinho Carioca | 1998-2001 | • in Europe and a. active for Valencia CF. |
Ricardinho | 1998-2002 | • in Europe and a. for Besiktas active |
Roberto Rivelino | 1965-1974 | • 1970 World Champion |
Amílcar Barbuy | 1913-1922 | • Active in Europe for Lazio Rome |
Walter Casagrande | 1980-1981 1982-1984 1985-1986 1994-1995 |
• in Europe and a. for FC Porto active |
Neco | 1913-1930 | • Over 230 hits in over 300 games for Corinthians |
Ronaldo | 2009-2011 | • in Europe and a. Active for Real Madrid , FC Barcelona , Inter Milan and AC Milan • World champions 1994 and 2002 • World footballer 1996, 1997 and 2002 • European footballer of the year 1997 and 2002 |
Carlos Tévez | 2005-2006 | • in Europe and a. active for West Ham United , Manchester United , Manchester City and Juventus Turin |
Javier Mascherano | 2005-2006 | • in Europe and a. for West Ham United , the Liverpool FC and FC Barcelona active |
Sylvinho | 1995-1999 | • in Europe and a. for FC Arsenal and FC Barcelona active |
Carlos Alberto Gomes | 2005-2007 | • in Europe and a. for FC Porto and Werder Bremen active |
Edu | 1998-2000 2009-2010 |
• Active in Europe for Arsenal and Valencia CF |
Ronny | 2004-2006 | • in Europe and a. for Hertha BSC and Sporting Lisbon active |
Rivaldo | 1993-1994 | • in Europe and a. Active for FC Barcelona and AC Milan • World footballer 1999 • European footballer of the year 1999 |
Cris | 1995-1999 | • in Europe and a. for Bayer 04 Leverkusen and Olympique Lyon active |
Danilo "Zidanilo" | 2010-2018 | • Most successful club player in Brazil (22 titles including 2 × club world champions) after Pelé (26 titles) |
Zé Elias | 1993-1996 | • in Europe and a. for Bayer 04 Leverkusen and Inter Milan active |
Paulinho | 2010-2013 | • in Europe and a. for Tottenham Hotspur active |
Trainer
(incomplete)
Name of the trainer | Period | comment |
---|---|---|
Joreca | ? | |
Roberto Belangero | ? | |
Servilho | ? | |
Zé Maria | ? | |
Zezé Moreira | ? | |
Pedro Mazzulo | 1933-1934 | |
Neco | 1937 | |
Gentil Cardoso | 1948 | |
Joreca | 1949 | |
Rato | 1949-1953 | |
Osvaldo Brandão | 1954-1957 | |
Manuel Fleitas Solich | 1957 | |
Sylvio Pirillo | 1959-1960 | |
Osvaldo Brandão | 1964–1965 / 66 | |
Dino Sani | 1965 / 66–1968 | |
Osvaldo Brandão | 1968 | |
Lula | 1968 | |
Aymore Moreira | 1968 | |
Aymore Moreira | 1970-1971 | |
Yustrich | 1973-1974 | |
Duque | 1976 | |
Osvaldo Brandão | 1977 | |
Osvaldo Brandão | 1980-1981 | |
Mário Travaglini | 1982-1983 | • 1982: São Paulo State Championship |
Paulo Autuori | 1985 | |
Carlos Alberto | 1985-1986 | |
Rubens Minelli | 1986 | |
Jair Pereira | 1988 | • 1988: São Paulo State Championship |
Nelsinho Baptista | 1990-1991 | • 1990: Brazilian Champion • 1991: Brazilian Super Cup |
Mário Sérgio | 1993-1995 | |
Jair Pereira | 1994 | • 1994: Vice-Champion |
Carlos Alberto Torres | 1995-1996 | |
Valdyr Espinoza | 1996 | |
Nelsinho Baptista | 1996-1997 | • 1997: São Paulo State Championship |
Joel Santana | 1997 | |
Candinho | 1997 | |
Vanderlei Luxemburgo | 1998 | • 1998: Brazilian champion |
Evaristo de Macedo | 1999 | |
Oswaldo de Oliveira | 1999-2000 | • 1999: Brazilian champions • 2000: FIFA Club World Cup |
Vadão | 2000 | |
Dario Pereyra | 2001 | |
Vanderlei Luxemburgo | 2001 | |
Carlos Alberto Parreira | 2002-2003 | • 2002: Copa do Brasil • 2002: runner-up |
Junior | 2003 | |
Geninho | 2003-2004 | |
Tite | 2004-2005 | |
Daniel Passarella | 2005 | |
Márcio Bittencourt | May 2005 – September 2005 | |
Antônio Lopes | September 2005 – March 2006 | |
Ademar Braga | March 2006 – May 2006 | |
Geninho | 2006 | |
Émerson Leão | 2006-2007 | |
Zé Augusto | April 2007 | • Interim coach for three games |
Paulo César Carpeggiani | April-August 2007 | |
Zé Augusto | August – September 2007 | • Interim trainer |
Nelsinho Baptista | September – December 2007 | |
Mano Menezes | January 2008 – July 2010 | • 2008: Second division champions • 2009: São Paulo state championship • 2009: Copa do Brasil |
Adílson Batista | July 2010 – October 2010 | |
Tite | October 2010 – December 2013 | • 2011: Brazilian champions • 2012: Copa Libertadores • 2012: FIFA Club World Cup |
Mano Menezes | January 2014 – December 2014 | |
Tite | January 2015–15. June 2016 | • 2015: Brazilian champion |
Cristóvão Borges | June 4, 2016–17. September 2016 | |
Fábio Carille | September 17, 2016–11. October 2016 | |
Oswaldo de Oliveira | October 14, 2016–15. December 2016 | |
Fábio Carille | December 22, 2016 - May 22, 2018 | • 2017: Brazilian champion |
Osmar Loss | May 22, 2018 - September 5, 2018 | |
Jair Ventura | September 6, 2018 - December 2018 | |
Fábio Carille | since January 2019 |
Source: vertebrais.blogspot.com
More teams
Youth teams
The Corinthinas youth department has a long tradition. The club's youth footballers are called Chute Inicial , Timãozinho or Juniores do Corinthians . His most significant successes include the 1999 and 2000 victories in the Dallas Cup , the Nike Cup 2003, the Junior State Championships of São Paulo in 1969, 1970, 1995, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2009 and the Copa Sub-17 de Promissão in 2002, 2003 and 2007. The youth department regularly brings talented footballers into the professional field, who develop into stars there. Well-known players are Deco , Lulinha , Roberto Rivelino , Walter Casagrande , Cris and Willian .
Women's team
Corinthians' women's football division was founded in 1997 and is currently playing first class.
See also
Individual evidence
- ↑ mercado.com: Members
- ↑ Match report: Copa do Brasil 2002 first leg final
- ↑ Match report: Copa do Brasil 2002 second leg final
- ↑ Match log: Copa do Brasil 2009 first leg final ( page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Match log: Copa do Brasil 2009 second leg final ( page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ 10.000 Tor , report on memoriasdoesporte.com.br of September 4, 2018, page in portug., Accessed on September 4, 2018
- ↑ Arena Corinthians, the project ( Memento from June 2, 2013 in the Internet Archive ), accessed August 26, 2012 (pt)
- ↑ Live cam from the construction site ( Memento from January 16, 2013 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ a b José Augusto on acervosccp.com (Portuguese)
- ^ Todos os técnicos do Corinthians! ( Spanish ) Vertebrais. Retrieved February 13, 2019.
Web links
- Official Club Website (Portuguese)
- Memória Corinthiana
- Acervo SCCP