Brazil Independence Cup Explained

Tourney Name:Brazil Independence Cup
Year:1972
Dates:11 June – 9 July
Other Titles:Taça Independência
Country:Brazil
Confederations:5
Num Teams:20
Venues:15
Cities:12
Champion:Brazil
Champion-Flagvar:1968
Second:Portugal
Third:Yugoslavia
Fourth:Argentina
Fourth-Flagvar:alt
Matches:44
Goals:136
Top Scorer: Dušan Bajević (13 goals)

The Brazil Independence Cup was an international football tournament held in Brazil, from 11 June to 9 July 1972, to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Brazilian Declaration of Independence. It was called the Minicopa by the Brazilians and the final was between Brazil and Portugal, in the Maracanã Stadium. Brazil won 1–0, with Jairzinho scoring in the 89th minute.

Brazil no longer had Pelé but still had Tostão, Jairzinho and Rivellino, the later two also played in the 1974 FIFA World Cup, in West Germany.

Despite Portugal's quality results and team, including Benfica players such as Eusébio, Jaime Graça, José Henrique, Humberto Coelho, Rui Jordão, and Toni, the team missed the World Cup 1974 and 1978 qualifying matches, so this tournament was their best result until the 1984 European Football Championship.

Format

Twenty teams competed; 18 national teams as well as two representative sides from Africa and CONCACAF (North and Central America and the Caribbean).

First round

15 teams competed in the first round, while 5 teams (Brazil, Czechoslovakia, Scotland, Soviet Union, Uruguay) received byes to the final stage.

The teams are drawn into three groups of 5 teams. Each team plays each other team in its group once, earning 2 points for a win and 1 for a draw. The three first-placed teams advance to the final stage.

Final stage

The 8 teams are drawn into two groups of 4 teams. Each team plays each other team in its group once, earning 2 points for a win and 1 for a draw.

The two group runners-up play each other in the third-place playoff.

The two group winners play each other in the final.

Venues

The tournament was played in 12 cities: Aracaju, Belo Horizonte, Campo Grande, Curitiba, Maceió, Manaus, Natal, Porto Alegre, Recife, Rio de Janeiro, Salvador and São Paulo.

Campo Grande
Morenão
Capacity: 45,000 Capacity: 110,000 Capacity: 23,000 Capacity: 45,000
Natal
Machadão
Capacity: 37,182 Capacity: 20,551 Capacity: 31,000 Capacity: 42,000
Salvador
Estádio Fonte Nova
Capacity: 106,000 Capacity: 60,000 Capacity: 200,000 Capacity: 80,000
Estádio do Morumbi
Capacity: 40,000 Capacity: 120,000

Squads

See main article: Brazil Independence Cup squads.

Group stage

Group A

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Group B

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Group C

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Final stage

Group A

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Group B

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Final

Statistics

Goalscorers

Hat-tricks

Brazil Independence Cup hat-tricks
scope=colscope=colPlayerscope=colscope=colTime of goalsscope=colForscope=colResultscope=colAgainstscope=colPhasescope=colDatescope=col class="unsortable"FIFA
report
.Hervé Revelli3', 21', 69' 5-0CONCACAFGroup stageReport
.Dušan Bajević5', 7', 48', 68', 74' 10-0Report
.Rodolfo Fischer4', 68', 81', 86' 7-0CONCACAFReport
.Carlos Bianchi3', 49', 62' 4-1Report
.Saturnino Arrúa3', 59', 67' 6-1Report

References

External links