Torneio Rio–São Paulo Explained

Torneio Rio–São Paulo
Organiser:FPF
Founded:
(reestablished in 1993)
Region:Rio de Janeiro (state) and São Paulo (state), Brazil
Qualifier For:Copa dos Campeões (2000–2002)
Most Successful Club: Palmeiras (5)
Corinthians (5)
Santos (5)

The Torneio Rio–São Paulo (English: Rio–São Paulo Tournament) was a traditional Brazilian football competition contested between São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro teams from 1933 to 1966, in 1993 and from 1997 to 2002.

Organized by the state football associations of the state of São Paulo and the city of Rio de Janeiro (after unification of the states of Guanabara and Rio de Janeiro), the official name of the tournament became the Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa in 1954, named after former goalkeeper of the Brazilian national team and president of the São Paulo Football Association who died in that year. This name was not broadly popularized used until 1967 when the tournament was first opened to teams from the states of Minas Gerais, Paraná and Rio Grande do Sul, and later also from Pernambuco and Bahia. The Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa, also often referred to as Taça de Prata (Silver Cup) and contested until 1970, is generally considered the predecessor of the Brazilian Football Championship which started in 1971.

Due to its continental size and historical peculiarities, Brazil has a short history of national competitions, with the modern Campeonato Brasileiro starting in 1971 supported by the military regime and only made possible due to the improvements in civil aviation and air transport. In 2010, the CBF officially recognized the expanded Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa from 1967 to 1970 as a legitimate national championship, although as of 2022, the CBF does not officially recognize the pre-1967 Torneio Rio–São Paulo as a national championship. In the era prior to officially recognized national competition, given that the majority of Brazil's strongest teams were located in São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, some historians consider that up until 1959, despite its schedule irregularity, the Torneio Rio–São Paulo was the most prestigious title for any team to claim outside of state championships.

From 2000 to 2002, the Torneio Rio–São Paulo champions were granted qualification to the Copa dos Campeões.

List of champions

Round-robin format

SeasonChampionsRunners-up
1933 Palestra Itália (1) São Paulo
1934Not finished
1935–1939Not held
1940Interrupted in the first half, there was no champion(1)
1941–1949Not held
1950 Corinthians (1) Vasco da Gama
1951 Palmeiras (2)
1952 Portuguesa (1) Vasco da Gama
1953 Corinthians (2) Vasco da Gama
1954 Corinthians (3) Fluminense
1955 Portuguesa (2)
1956Not held
1957 Fluminense (1) Flamengo
Vasco da Gama
1958 Vasco da Gama (1)
1959 Santos (1) Vasco da Gama
1960 Fluminense (2) Botafogo
1961 Flamengo (1) Botafogo
1962 Botafogo (1) São Paulo
1963 Santos (2) Corinthians
1964 Botafogo (2)
Santos (3)
1965 Palmeiras (3) Vasco da Gama
1966 Botafogo (3)
Corinthians (4)
Santos (4)
Vasco da Gama (2)

(1) In 1940 the competition was interrupted with Flamengo and Fluminense in the lead, without the CBD making the title official, however, the clubs and newspapers at the time considered the result definitive and declared the Flamengo and Fluminense as the legitimate champions of the competition.[1] [2] Both Clubs currently consider themselves champions of the Competition and include this title among their achievements.[3] [4]

Knockout format

SeasonChampionsRunners-up
1993 Palmeiras (4) Corinthians
1994–1996Not held
1997 Santos (5) Flamengo
1998 Botafogo (4) São Paulo
1999 Vasco da Gama (3) Santos
2000 Palmeiras (5) Vasco da Gama
2001 São Paulo (1)
2002 Corinthians (5)

Titles by team

RankClubWinnersWinning yearsRunners-upRunners-up years
1 Corinthians51950, 1953, 1954, 1966 (shared), 200231951, 1963, 1993
Palmeiras1933, 1951, 1965, 1993, 2000 11955
Santos1959, 1936, 1964 (shared), 1966 (shared), 19971999
4 Botafogo41962, 1964 (shared), 1966 (shared), 199831960, 1961, 2001
5 Vasco da Gama31958, 1966 (shared), 199971950, 1952, 1953, 1957, 1959, 1965, 2000
6 Fluminense21957, 196011954
Portuguesa1952, 19550
8 São Paulo1200141933, 1962, 1998, 2002
Flamengo196131957, 1958, 1997

Titles by state

RankStateWins
1 São Paulo18
2 Rio de Janeiro10

Participations

width=150px Clubwidth=50px App
Corinthians26
Palmeiras
Vasco da Gama
Fluminense25
Flamengo
São Paulo
Botafogoalign=center 23
Santosalign=center 22
Portuguesaalign=center 21
Americaalign=center 14
Bangualign=center 8
Bonsucessoalign=center 2
AA São Bento1
Americano
Guarani
Olaria
Paulista de Jundiaí
Ponte Preta
São Caetano
São Cristóvão
Ypiranga

Top Scorers

Following is the list with all Torneio-Rio São Paulo top scorers:[5]

YearTop ScorerGoals
1933Waldemar de Brito (São Paulo)33
1940Leônidas (Flamengo)13
1950Baltazar (Corinthians)9
1951Ademir (Vasco da Gama)
Aquiles (Palmeiras)
Liminha (Palmeiras)
9
1952Pinga (Portuguesa)12
1953Vasconcelos (Santos)8
1954Dino da Costa (Botafogo)
Simões (America-RJ)
7
1955Edmur (Portuguesa)11
1957Waldo (Fluminense)13
1958Gino Orlando (São Paulo)12
1959Henrique Frade (Flamengo)9
1960Quarentinha (Botafogo)
Waldo (Fluminense)
11
1961Coutinho (Santos)
Pepe (Santos)
9
1962Amarildo (Botafogo)7
1963Pelé (Santos)14
1964Coutinho (Santos)11
1965Ademar Pantera (Palmeiras)
Flávio Minuano (Corinthians)
14
1966Parada (Botafogo)8
1993Renato Gaúcho (Flamengo)6
1997Romário (Flamengo)7
1998Dodô (São Paulo)5
1999Alessandro Cambalhota (Santos)
Bebeto (Botafogo)
Guilherme (Vasco da Gama)
5
2000Romário (Vasco da Gama)12
2001França (São Paulo)6
2002França (São Paulo)19

Winning managers

YearManagerClub
1933Humberto CabelliPalestra Itália
1950Christino CalafCorinthians
1951 Ventura CambónPalmeiras
1952 Jim LópezPortuguesa
1953Rato CastelliCorinthians
1954Osvaldo BrandãoCorinthians
1955Délio NevesPortuguesa
1957Sylvio PirilloFluminense
1958GradimVasco da Gama
1959LulaSantos
1960Zezé MoreiraFluminense
1961 Fleitas SolichFlamengo
1962Marinho RodriguesBotafogo
1963LulaSantos
1964Ephigênio de FreitasBotafogo
LulaSantos
1965 Filpo NúñezPalmeiras
1966Admildo ChirolBotafogo
LulaSantos
Osvaldo BrandãoCorinthians
Zezé MoreiraVasco da Gama
1993Vanderlei LuxemburgoPalmeiras
1997Vanderlei LuxemburgoSantos
1998Gílson NunesBotafogo
1999Antônio LopesVasco da Gama
2000Luiz Felipe ScolariPalmeiras
2001VadãoSão Paulo
2002Carlos Alberto ParreiraCorinthians

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Torneio Rio-São Paulo 1940. rsssfbrasil.com. August 26, 2008 . June 5, 2024.
  2. Web site: 1940 Rio-São Paulo Tournament: The divided trophy of Fla and Flu is forgotten. GloboEsporte.com. July 5, 2012 . June 5, 2024.
  3. Web site: Títulos. flamengo.com.br. April 7, 2024. June 5, 2024.
  4. Web site: Principais Títulos . fluminense.com.br. June 5, 2024.
  5. Web site: Torneio Rio São Paulo: História, Campeões e Artilheiros . Campeões do Futebol . 2 June 2023 . pt.