1993 São Paulo FC Season
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1993 São Paulo FC Season
The 1993 in Brazilian football, 1993 season was São Paulo FC, São Paulo's 64th season in the club's existence. Statistics Scorers Managers performance Overall {, class="wikitable" , - , Games played , , 98 (36 Campeonato Paulista, 6 Copa do Brasil, 8 Copa Libertadores, 2 Copa de Oro, 20 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A, Campeonato Brasileiro, 2 Recopa Sudamericana, 8 Supercopa Sudamericana, 1 Intercontinental Cup (1960–2004), Intercontinental Cup, 15 Friendly match) , - , Games won , , 46 (20 Campeonato Paulista, 2 Copa do Brasil, 4 Copa Libertadores, 0 Copa de Oro, 9 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A, Campeonato Brasileiro, 0 Recopa Sudamericana, 2 Supercopa Sudamericana, 1 Intercontinental Cup (1960–2004), Intercontinental Cup, 8 Friendly match) , - , Games drawn , , 30 (7 Campeonato Paulista, 2 Copa do Brasil, 2 Copa Libertadores, 1 Copa de Oro, 8 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A, Campeonato Brasileiro, 2 Recopa Sudamericana, 5 Supercopa Sudamericana, 0 Intercontinental C ...
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São Paulo FC
São Paulo Futebol Clube () is a professional Association football, football club in the Morumbi, São Paulo, Morumbi district of São Paulo, Brazil. It plays in Campeonato Paulista, São Paulo (state), São Paulo's premier State football leagues in Brazil, state league and Campeonato Brasileiro Série A, the top tier of Brazilian football. Despite being primarily a football club, São Paulo competes in a List of São Paulo FC records and statistics, wide variety of sports. Its home ground is the multipurpose 72,039-seater Estádio do Morumbi, MorumBIS Stadium, the biggest private-owned field in Brazil. São Paulo is part of the G-12 (Brazilian football), Big Twelve of brazilian football, South America’s biggest worldwide champion — with three world titles, along Boca Juniors, Peñarol, and Club Nacional de Futbol, Nacional — and one of the only two clubs that have List of unrelegated association football clubs, never been relegated from Brazil's top division, the other b ...
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1993 Copa Do Brasil
The Copa do Brasil 1993 was the 5th staging of the Copa do Brasil. The competition started on March 2, 1993, and concluded on June 3, 1993, with the second leg of the final, held at the Mineirão Stadium in Belo Horizonte, in which Cruzeiro lifted the trophy for the first time with a 2-1 victory over Grêmio. Gílson, of Grêmio, with 8 goals, was the competition's topscorer. Format The competition was disputed by 32 clubs in a knock-out format where all rounds were played over two legs and the away goals rule The away goals rule is a method of tiebreaking in association football and other sports when teams play each other twice, once at each team's home ground. Under the away goals rule, if the total goals scored by each team are equal, the team that ... was used. Competition stages References Copa do Brasil 1993 at RSSSF
*''Enciclopédia do Futebol Brasileiro'', Volume 2 - Lance, Rio de Janeiro: Aretê Editorial S/A, 2001. {{DEFAULTSORT:Copa Do Brasil 1993 Co ...
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Gustavo Matosas
Gustavo Cristian Matosas Paidón (born 25 May 1967) is an Argentine-born Uruguayan former professional footballer who played as a midfielder. Playing career Club The son of former footballer Roberto Matosas, Gustavo was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina in 1967, as his father was playing for River Plate at the time. Matosas made his debut in 1985 playing for Peñarol in Uruguay, with whom he won the Copa Libertadores in 1987, as well as two league titles, and went on to play for Málaga in Spain, San Lorenzo in Argentina, São Paulo in Brazil, Tianjin Teda in China, as well as having brief stints with other clubs in Argentina, Brazil, and Spain before retiring in 2001, last playing for Querétaro of the Mexican Primera División. International An Uruguayan international, Matosas gained his first cap in 1987. That year, he won the Copa América title with Uruguay after defeating Chile 1–0 in the Final. Matosas was capped seven times in his career. Managerial career In 201 ...
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Guilherme De Cássio Alves
Guilherme de Cássio Alves (born 8 May 1974), known simply as Guilherme, is a Brazilian football coach and former player. He is the current head coach of Amazonas. A stiker, Guilherme played with eight clubs with different fortunes in his country, and also competed professionally in Spain and Saudi Arabia during a 13-year career, most notably for Rayo Vallecano and Atlético Mineiro. Over the course of 11 Série A seasons, he amassed totals of 155 games and 68 goals. Guilherme appeared with the Brazil national team at the 2001 Copa América. In 2011, he started working as a coach. Club career Born in Marília, São Paulo, Guilherme started his professional career at age 18 with local Marília AC. After a few games, São Paulo FC manager Telê Santana signed him, and he played a relatively important part in the club's conquests in the following two years: the Supercopa Sudamericana, the Copa Libertadores, the Intercontinental Cup, the Copa CONMEBOL and the Recopa Sud ...
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Cláudio Moura
Claudio is an Italian and Spanish first name. In Portuguese, it is accented Cláudio. In Catalan and Occitan, it is Claudi, while in Romanian it is Claudiu. Origin and history Claudius was the name of an eminent Roman gens, the most important members of which were: * Claudius, Emperor Tiberius Claudius Caesar Augustus Germanicus * Appius Claudius Sabinus Regillensis (), founder of the family, originally a Sabine known as Attius Clausus. * Appius Claudius Crassus (), public official, decemvir in 451 BC, appointed to codify the laws * Appius Claudius Caecus (), official orator, consul in 307 BC and 296 BC, known for the Appian Way * Claudius Gothicus (210–270), officer in the Roman army and a provincial governor First name: Claudio Claudio became a popular first name due to the spread of Christianity during the Middle Ages. Claudio is also used in Spanish and in Portuguese, accented as Cláudio. Notable people with the name include: * Claudio Abarca (born 1994), Chilean fo ...
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Dinho (Brazilian Footballer)
Edi Wilson José dos Santos (born 15 October 1966), better known as Dinho, is a former football manager and player. As a player, he played as a centre-back or defensive midfielder, most notably for São Paulo and Grêmio. Started a manager career with Luverdense in 2005-2006 and with Grêmio youth sectors. Personal life Dinho also acted in politics, being councilor of the city of Porto Alegre between 2014 and 2016. International career Dinho just called up once time, in the friendly match against Mexico, 16 December 1993. Honours Confiança *Campeonato Sergipano: 1986 Sport Recife * Campeonato Brasileiro: 1987 *Campeonato Pernambucano 1988, 1990 *Campeonato Brasileiro Série B: 1990 São Paulo *Campeonato Paulista: 1992 *Copa Libertadores: 1993 * Intercontinental Cup: 1992, 1993 *Supercopa Libertadores: 1993 *Recopa Sudamericana: 1993 Grêmio *Copa do Brasil: 1994, 1997 *Campeonato Gaúcho: 1995, 1996 *Copa Libertadores: 1995 * Sanwa Bank Cup: 1995 *Recopa Sudameric ...
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Catê
Marco Antônio Lemos Tozzi (7 November 1973 – 27 December 2011), commonly known as Catê, was a Brazilian professional footballer who played for clubs of Brazil, Chile, Italy, the United States and Venezuela. Career Born in Cruz Alta, Rio Grande do Sul, Catê began his football career with local side Guarany. He had a brief spell with Grêmio before finding success with São Paulo under manager Telê Santana. Catê signed with the New England Revolution of Major League Soccer on March 28, 2001, ahead of the 2001 season. He made his Revolution debut on April 28, 2001, coming on as a substitute in the 83rd minute for Alan Woods in a 1-0 loss to the Miami Fusion. He made his first start for the Revolution on May 5, 2001 in a 3-2 loss to the San Jose Earthquakes. Catê scored his first goal for the club (converting a penalty) against the Chicago Fire on May 12, 2001. The following week he recorded a brace in a 2-1 win over the Columbus Crew on May 16, 2001. Catê was n ...
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Müller (footballer, Born 1966)
Müller may refer to: Companies * Müller (company), a German multinational dairy company ** Müller Milk & Ingredients, a UK subsidiary of the German company * Müller (store), a German retail chain * GMD Müller, a Swiss aerial lift manufacturing company Places * Müller Glacier, Antarctica * Müller Mountains, Borneo * Müller Point, on the east coast of South Georgia * Müller (lunar crater) * Müller (Martian crater) * Müller House, a historic house in Arlington Heights, Illinois, U.S. People and characters * Müller (surname), a German surname * Müller (footballer, born 1957), José Edmur Lucas Corrêa, Brazilian footballer * Müller (footballer, born 1966), Luís Antônio Corrêa da Costa, Brazilian footballer * Müller Brothers, two 19th-century string quartets * Doctor Müller, a fictional character in ''The Adventures of Tintin'' by Hergé See also * * * Mueller (other) * Muller, a surname {{DEFAULTSORT:Muller ...
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Cafu
Marcos Evangelista de Morais (born 7 June 1970), known as Cafu (), is a Brazilian former professional Association football, footballer who played as a Defender (association football)#Full-back, right-back. Widely regarded as one of the greatest full-backs of all time, he is known for his pace and energetic attacking runs along the right flank. He is the Brazil national football team#Most capped players, most-capped player for the Brazil national football team, Brazil national team with 142 appearances. At club level, Cafu won several domestic and international titles while playing in Brazil, Spain, and Italy; he is best known for his spells at São Paulo FC, São Paulo (1989–1995), AS Roma, Roma (1997–2003), and AC Milan (2003–08), teams with which he made history, although he also played briefly for Real Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Esporte Clube Juventude, Juventude, and Sociedade Esportiva Palmeiras, Palmeiras during a two-year spell from 1995 to 1997. In 1994, Cafu was crowned ...
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1994 São Paulo FC Season
The 1994 season was São Paulo's 65th season since club's existence. Statistics Scorers Managers performance Overall {, class="wikitable" , - , Games played , , 92 (30 Campeonato Paulista, 1 Recopa Sudamericana, 8 Copa Libertadores, 6 Copa Bandeirantes, 27 Campeonato Brasileiro, 6 Supercopa Libertadores, 8 Copa CONMEBOL, 6 Friendly match) , - , Games won , , 42 (16 Campeonato Paulista, 1 Recopa Sudamericana, 4 Copa Libertadores, 1 Copa Bandeirantes, 12 Campeonato Brasileiro, 3 Supercopa Libertadores, 3 Copa CONMEBOL, 2 Friendly match) , - , Games drawn , , 26 (9 Campeonato Paulista, 0 Recopa Sudamericana, 2 Copa Libertadores, 1 Copa Bandeirantes, 8 Campeonato Brasileiro, 1 Supercopa Libertadores, 3 Copa CONMEBOL, 2 Friendly match) , - , Games lost , , 24 (5 Campeonato Paulista, 0 Recopa Sudamericana, 2 Copa Libertadores, 4 Copa Bandeirantes, 7 Campeonato Brasileiro, 2 Supercopa Libertadores, 2 Copa CONMEBOL, 2 Friendly match) , - , Goals scored , , 159 , - , Goal ...
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1992 São Paulo FC Season
The 1992 season was São Paulo's 63rd season since club's existence. Statistics Scorers Managers performance Overall {, class="wikitable" , - , Games played , , 84 (25 Campeonato Brasileiro, 14 Copa Libertadores, 34 Campeonato Paulista, 4 Supercopa Sudamericana, 1 Intercontinental Cup, 6 Friendly match) , - , Games won , , 45 (10 Campeonato Brasileiro, 8 Copa Libertadores, 21 Campeonato Paulista, 1 Supercopa Sudamericana, 1 Intercontinental Cup, 4 Friendly match) , - , Games drawn , , 21 (7 Campeonato Brasileiro, 3 Copa Libertadores, 9 Campeonato Paulista, 1 Supercopa Sudamericana, 0 Intercontinental Cup, 1 Friendly match) , - , Games lost , , 18 (8 Campeonato Brasileiro, 3 Copa Libertadores, 4 Campeonato Paulista, 2 Supercopa Sudamericana, 0 Intercontinental Cup, 1 Friendly match) , - , Goals scored , , 133 , - , Goals conceded , , 73 , - , Goal difference , , +60 , - , Best result , , 6–0 (H) v Noroeste - Campeonato Paulista - 1992.10.15 , - , Worst result , ...
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Raí
Raimundo Souza Vieira de Oliveira (born 15 May 1965), popularly known as Raí (), is a Brazilian former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder. The younger brother of Sócrates,Where are they now? Rai
, 22 June 2008
who played in the same position as him, Raí represented for more than a decade and was part of the country's victorious 1994 World Cup squad. He spent most of his 15-year career with < ...
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