Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa

Known from 1968 as Taça de Prata ( " silver cup " ) known and often Robertão ( " great Roberto " ) - - The Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa is a 1967-1970 four times been transmitted Brazilian football competition for club teams and is, together with the Taça Brasil forerunner of today's Brazilian national championship, the Campeonato Brasileiro de Futebol. The winners of the tournament were contemporary, regarded as Champ, as a champion of Brazil and found as such by the Confederação Brasileira de Desportos (CBD ) recognition. After the reorganization of the national sports system in the 1970s, the Confederação Brasileira de Futebol (CBF ) became the highest organ of Brazilian football. This denied the winners of Taça Brasil and Taça de Prata and 2010 recognition as a national champion.

History

The tournament emerged from the Torneio Rio - São Paulo, the since 1933 discharged at irregular intervals competition of the best club teams from Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, in 1954 officially after the deceased in the same year the former Brazilian national team and Botafogo FR- keeper and later chairman of the Association of São Paulo was named. In the absence of a national competition - such was not before the beginning of affordable flights in that great country really feasible - the Rio - São Paulo was probably the most important regional tournament in Brazil. After the introduction of a national competition with the Taça Brasil ( "Brazil Cup "), a cup competition, which was created in 1959 primarily for the determination of the Brazilian participants in the 1960 Copa Libertadores introduced, the tournament but lost noticeable importance.

To broaden the base of the host associations of São Paulo Guanabara and 1967 also invited clubs from the states of Minas Gerais, Paraná and Rio Grande do Sul to participate. The winner of the tournament was promised a participant place in the Libertadores. As this was now no longer just a competition between clubs of Rio and São Paulo, the official name of Roberto Gomes Pedrosa Torneio was successfully propagated.

Following the success of the first tournament, which the the time leading club team in Brazil, the SE Palmeiras won from São Paulo, became now the Brazilian Football Federation, the Confederação Brasileira de Futebol, the lead and the top clubs from the states of Pernambuco and Bahia were invited to participate invited. The second Robertão was due to the neugestifteten trophy also Taça de Prata ( " silver cup " ) called. Winner was the Santos FC, thus import the last great success of Pelé era.

After the tournament was conducted again in 1968 with great success, presented the Brazilian Association of a competition for the Taça Brasil and both Libertadores participants who tion states in Brazil at that time, were now determined via the Robertão. 1969 Palmeiras won the tournament for a second time in 1970 and won with the Fluminense FC, ​​a club from Rio de Janeiro, the silver cup. The Cruzeiro EC from Belo Horizonte and Palmeiras qualified in those years respectively for the second Libertadores place.

After 1970, the association opened clubs from all states of Brazil and access under the name Campeonato Nacional de Clubes the first official national football championship of the country was held in 1971.

The winner of the Roberto Gomes Pedrosa Torneio, as well as the Taça Brasil have since endeavored to be football historically assimilated by the Association with the masters of Brazil from 1971, but this was denied them by 2010. These clubs referenced happy that they were finally reported as a champion for the Copa Libertadores and contemporary also commonly referred to as a champion of Brazil, as well as on various official publications of the CBD where they were also explicitly described as Campeão as champion. Finally took place on 21 December 2010 in a festive ceremony in Itanhangá Golf Club in the west of Rio de Janeiro, the long-awaited Unificação Títulos dos brasileiros, the official recognition by the CBF as a Master. Federation President Ricardo Teixeira presented representatives of the organizations which have won the Taça Brasil, and the Taça de Prata official diplomas, championship sashes and miniature versions of the current championship trophy engraved with club name and year of the title gain. The clubs each 20 medals were handed over to forwarding to the players involved; Pele were handed out his six championship medals already in the ceremony. Since that day, lists of champions Brazil are officially incomplete without the winner of Taça Brasil and Taça de Prata.

Mode

The tournament began in 1967 with 15 participants. Five came from Rio de Janeiro, which changed its name back then as Guanabara State, and the State of São Paulo. Two participants came from Minas Gerais and Rio Grande do Sul, as well as one from the Paraná. Starting in 1968, a club from the states of Pernambuco and Bahia were each added yet.

The participants were divided into two groups, the 1967 7 or 8 participants, and in the following years included 8 or 9 teams. The individual teams played once each against the teams from their own and also the other group. The two winners of the two groups qualified for the final group in the 1967 round robin once both at home and took away. In the following years, each occurred only once against all the others. The first of the final group was the contest winner.

1967 points and gates of the first round were added to the results of the final round. In later years, this was no longer the case, and in the final group included nurmehr the results of the finals matches.

Overview

The main sortable table shows all the participants in the four payouts of Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa and their Platziereungen to. Main results of the first four from 1967 based on the total score of the first and second round, in the other years on the results of the final round.

Season details

Roberto Gomes Pedrosa torneio 1967

The champion team: Perez; Djalma Santos, Baldochi, Minuca, Ferrari; Dudu, Ademir da Guia; Dario, Zico, Servilio, César Maluco, Tupãzinho, Reinaldo. Coach: Mário Travaglini

Roberto Gomes Pedrosa torneio 1968

The Champion Team: Cláudio, Laércio; Carlos Alberto Torres, Ramos Delgado, Marcal, Rildo, Clodoaldo, Lima, Edu, Tonhinho Guerreiro, Douglas, Pele, Abel. Coach: Antonio Fernandes ( Antoninho )

Roberto Gomes Pedrosa torneio 1969

The champion team: Émerson Leão; Eurico, Baldochi, Nélson, Zeca, Dudu, Ademir da Guia, Cardoso, Copeu, Jaime, César, Pio, Serginho. Coach: Rubens Minelli

Roberto Gomes Pedrosa torneio 1970

The champion team: Félix; Oliveira, Galhardo, Assis, Marco Antônio Feliciano, Toninho; Denilson, Didi; Cafuringa, Mickey, Cláudio Garcia, Lula. Coach: Paulo Amaral.

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