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Fluminense Football Club

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Fluminense
Image:Fluminense logo.svg
Full name Fluminense Football Club
Nickname(s) Tricolor carioca
(Three Colors)

Fluzão (Big Flu)
Nense
Pó-de-Arroz
Founded July 21, 1902
Ground Laranjeiras, Rio de Janeiro
Maracanã, Rio de Janeiro
(Capacity 8,000 (Laranjeiras)
92,000 (Maracanã))
Chairman Flag of Brazil Roberto Horcades
Manager Flag of Brazil Renato Gaúcho
League Campeonato Brasileiro Série A
2007 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A, 4th
Image:Kit left arm whitelines.png Team colours Image:Kit right arm whitelines.png
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Image:Kit left arm linesonwhite.png Image:Kit body bowonwhite.png Image:Kit right arm linesonwhite.png
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours

Fluminense Football Club is a sports club based in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It was founded on July 21, 1902. The word Fluminense derives from Latin fluvium, "river", rio in Portuguese. It is also the name for a native of the state of Rio de Janeiro.

Football is the most heralded sport among fans and the management. Fluminense won once the national championship, in 1984, and won in 1970 the Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa, which was a predecessor of the national championship. The club also won the Brazil Cup in 2007, and won two Rio-São Paulo Tournaments, the major football competition in Brazil before a national league was formed. Fluminense is also the record holder for Rio de Janeiro State Championship (known as Campeonato Carioca) titles.

Fluminense FC is, together with Botafogo FR, CR Vasco da Gama and CR Flamengo, one of the four major football clubs of the city. Other noteworthy clubs in Rio include Bangu AC, Voltaco, and América FC.

Contents

Origins

Oscar Cox introduced football to Rio. He played in Switzerland during his studies in Lausanne. When he returned to Rio, aged 22, he gathered a group of men who also wanted to play this as-yet relatively unknown sport. After playing some matches in Rio and in São Paulo, they decided to found a club.

The foundation meeting took place on 21 July 1902, at the home of Horácio da Costa Santos on Rua Marques de Abrantes 51. Oscar Cox was elected the first president.

The first match was on 19 October 1902 on the Paysandu Cricket Club field against Rio FC. Fluminense won 8-0 and the first goal was scored by Horácio da Costa Santos. The team won the first championship they played, in 1906, the Campeonato Carioca, the State Championship of Rio de Janeiro. They also won the next three competitions in 1907, 1908 and 1909.

In 1911, they were again champions, and won all matches in Campeonato Carioca. However, a huge crisis took place at the end of this year, when nine players from the main team quit the club after quarreling over who should manage the team. These nine players decided to join Flamengo, which hitherto had only been engaged in rowing. By founding the football section of Flamengo, they started one of the most famous rivalries in Brazilian football: the Fla-Flu. The first of these derbies took place on 17 July 7 1912. Although Flamengo had nearly all the players who had won the championship the previous year, Fluminense, which retained only Oswaldo Gomes and James Calvert from that side, prevailed with the final score being 3-2.

On 27 July 1914, Fluminense hosted the first match of the Brazilian national team which faced the visiting English club side Exeter City F.C. at Laranjeiras Stadium. Brazil won 2-0 and Flamengo's own Oswaldo Gomes scored the first goal [1] .

Stadium

Fluminense's own stadium is Estádio das Laranjeiras, built in 1905. The maximum capacity is 8,000 people but it was previously 25,000 [2]. Public interest in refurbishment of the stadium took place in the sixties, when the club sold a part of its grounds for the construction of what is now the Rua Pinheiro Machado. Laranjeiras is the oldest stadium in Brazil, and is heritage listed. The club is planning to build a new one outside the traditional Laranjeiras district (Rio de Janeiro's South Zone). Generally, Fluminense hosts matches at the Maracanã stadium.

The average attendance for league matches per 2007 is 17,071.

Total Atendance of Fluminense in Titles Won in Maracanã Era.

Matches when Fluminense won titles out from Maracanã

Matches when Fluminense won titles in Maracanã

Fans

Fans are called "tricolores", a reference to the team's three colours (claret, white and green).

One of the team's most famous chants is "A Bênção, João de Deus" ("Bless us, John of God"), a song that was composed in honour of the pope John Paul II on his first visit to Brazil in 1980. The tradition is that Fluminense fans spontaneously started singing the famous song when the team was to decide the 1980 state championship on a penalty shootout against their arch-rivals Vasco da Gama. Fluminense won the championship.

Fluminense's supporters are usually related to Rio de Janeiro's upper classes, in opposition to those who support Flamengo. However, the popularity of the club reaches beyond the city limits. There are an estimated 9 million Fluminense supporters all over Brazil and abroad. Only one-third of the fans actually live in Rio.

The Olympic Cup

Fluminense's greatest honour was not won on a football pitch. Among its collection of national and international trophies stands the diploma received in 1949 regarding the award of the IOC's Olympic Cup ("Coupe Olympique").

The Cup is a non-competitive award, instituted by Pierre de Coubertin in 1906, for distinguished service in upholding the ideals of the Olympic Movement and to recognise the particular merits of institutions or associations and their services rendered to sport. The Cup is on permanent exhibition at the Olympic Museum in Lausanne.

Titles

Current squad

First Team

As of February 29, 2008.

No. Position Player
1 Flag of Brazil GK Fernando Henrique
2 Flag of Brazil DF Gabriel
3 Flag of Brazil DF Thiago Silva
4 Flag of Brazil DF Luiz Alberto
5 Flag of Brazil MF Ygor
6 Flag of Brazil DF Júnior César
7 Flag of Brazil FW Leandro Amaral
8 Flag of Brazil MF Arouca
9 Flag of Brazil FW Washington
10 Flag of Brazil MF Thiago Neves
11 Flag of Brazil FW Dodô
12 Flag of Brazil GK Diego
13 Flag of Brazil DF Roger
14 Flag of Brazil MF Fabio
15 Flag of Brazil MF Maurício
No. Position Player
16 Flag of Brazil MF Romeu
17 Flag of Brazil MF Cícero
18 Flag of Argentina MF Darío Conca
19 Flag of Brazil FW Rafael
20 Flag of Brazil DF Carlinhos
21 Flag of Brazil MF David
22 Flag of Brazil GK Ricardo Berna
23 Flag of Brazil DF Gustavo Nery
24 Flag of Brazil MF Tartá
25 Flag of Brazil DF Anderson
27 Flag of Brazil MF Thiaguinho
Flag of Brazil GK Gustavo
Flag of Brazil DF Fernando
Flag of Brazil FW Somália
Transfers In
No. Position Player
11 Flag of Brazil FW Dodô (from Botafogo)
9 Flag of Brazil FW Washington (from Urawa Reds)
5 Flag of Brazil MF Ygor (from Start)
No. Position Player
7 Flag of Brazil FW Leandro Amaral (from Vasco)
23 Flag of Brazil DF Gustavo Nery (from Corinthians)
18 Flag of Brazil MF Darío Conca (from Vasco)
Transfers Out
No. Position Player
Flag of Brazil FW Alex Dias (to Goiás)
Flag of Brazil FW Jean (to Saturn)
Flag of Brazil FW Adriano Magrão (to Belenenses)
No. Position Player
Flag of Brazil FW Soares (on loan to Grêmio)
Flag of Brazil MF Fábio (to Manchester United)
Flag of Brazil MF Rafael (to Manchester United)

Best attendances in Matches of Fluminense

  1. 0x0 vs. Flamengo 194.603 (177.656 p.),15/12/1963 .
  2. 3x2 vs. Flamengo, 171.599, 15/06/1969 .
  3. 0x0 vs. Flamengo, 155.116, 16/05/1976 .
  4. 1x0 vs. Flamengo, 153.520, 16/12/1984 .
  5. 1x1 vs. Corínthians, 146.043, 05/12/1976 .
  6. 1x0 vs. Botafogo,142.339, 27/06/1971 .
  7. 2x0 vs. América, 141.689 (120.178 p.), 09/06/1968 .
  8. 2x0 vs. Flamengo, 138.599, 02/08/1970 .
  9. 1x1 vs. Flamengo, 138.557, 22/04/1979 .
  10. 2x5 vs. Flamengo,137.002, 23/04/1972 .
  11. 1x2 vs. Flamengo, 136.829, 07/09/1972 .
  12. 3x3 vs. Flamengo, 136.606, 18/10/1964 .
  13. 2x0 vs. Bonsucesso, 131.256, 08/06/1969 .
  14. 0x0 vs. Vasco, 128.781, 27/05/1984 .
  15. 2x2 vs. Vasco, 127.123, 29/08/1976 .
  16. 1x0 vs. Vasco, 127.052, 03/10/1976 .
  17. 0x3 vs. Vasco, 126.619, 21/03/1999 .
  18. 0x1 vs. Flamengo, 124.432, 23/09/1979 .
  19. 1x0 vs. Vasco, 123.083 (109.325 p.), 21/09/1952 .
  20. 1x2 vs. Flamengo, 122.434 (100.749 p.), 06/12/1953 .

Famous players

Sponsorship

Companies that Fluminense Football Club currently has sponsorship deals with include

External links


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