Coluna do Fla
·16. Juli 2026
Flamengo's move to stop Vasco signing Leila Pereira's stepson

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Yahoo sportsColuna do Fla
·16. Juli 2026

Flamengo has filed a complaint with the National Agency for Football Regulation and Sustainability (ANRESF) against the deal between Vasco and Marcos Lamacchia. The Rubro-Negro expects the body, which belongs to the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF), to block the sale of the club’s Sociedade Anônima de Futebol (SAF) to the businessman.
Marcos is the son of Roberto Lamacchia, owner of Crefisa, who is married to Leila Pereira, Palmeiras’ president. Because of this, Fla points to one club influencing another, which violates the Financial Sustainability System (SSF).
“Any individual or legal entity is prohibited from directly or indirectly holding control or significant influence over more than one club,” says Article 86 of the SSF, Brazil’s financial fair play system.
Once notified, Vasco and Lamacchia were asked to provide clarification about the terms of the transaction in question. The response deadline remains open, but the club’s board has already stated that it has sufficient grounds to support the deal.
“No individual or legal entity that, directly or indirectly, holds a voting stake in the capital or, in any way, takes part in the management of any sports organization that promotes high-performance sports may simultaneously hold an interest in the share capital or management of another similar sports organization competing in the same competition involving high-performance sports.”
Luiz Eduardo Baptista, known as Bap, had already questioned the relationship between Vasco, Palmeiras and Crefisa. That is because the Flamengo president feels wronged for acting within the law while other teams break the rules and continue to go unpunished.
It is estimated that Leila’s stepson’s investment in Vasco could reach R$ 3.1 billion. Of the total, the idea behind the deal was to use R$ 1 billion to reduce the tax debt and judicial restructuring liabilities of the São Januário club.
Then, R$ 1.5 billion would cover the cash flow deficit projected by consultancy Alvarez & Marsal for the next five years. The remainder would be invested in the football department and in renovating the club’s training center.
This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇧🇷 here.







































