Coluna do Fla
·31 de marzo de 2026
Father and son? Journo warns Palmeiras, Vasco of “conflict of interest”

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Yahoo sportsColuna do Fla
·31 de marzo de 2026

Vasco is close to being sold and managed by businessman Marcos Lamacchia, son of the owner of Crefisa. As a result, discussions about a conflict of interest in Brazilian football have come to the surface, since Leila Pereira, president of Palmeiras, is a partner in the company. Thus, journalist Rodrigo Capelo issued a warning to clubs.
Their great expectation is to close a deal with the Lamacchia family, who own Crefisa. Before Pedrinho got to where he is now, as president, managing to regain control of the SAF, Crefisa was already close, already looking into it. The point is that they have their own internal division, and the one handling this Vasco matter was José Roberto Lamacchia, not Leila. Leila, because of her role at Palmeiras, stepped away. That’s the version I heard officially and behind the scenes. Now, they are married, they are a family. So a point of attention from now on is the conflict of interest, with the same family owning two clubs, owning one club, presiding over another, competing in the same competition, signing the same players. I honestly don’t think the biggest risk is a match between Palmeiras and Vasco, although that is an issue too. I think the main point is how you are going to explain it to both fan bases. The group is going to put R$ 500 million into Vasco for the renovation of São Januário, to sign players, whatever. Palmeiras fans will say: “Why didn’t you do that at Palmeiras? Why aren’t you doing that at Palmeiras now?” Or Palmeiras goes and signs the best player in Italy. And Vasco… you see? I think that’s an interesting point. And it’s hard for fans to get used to this world. And for organizing bodies, CBF, Conmebol, FIFA, UEFA, this is indeed a concern. The integrity of the championship has to be maintained,” he said in an interview with the ‘Duda Garbi’ channel.
News of Marcos Lamacchia’s progress in buying Vasco sparked jokes on social media. After all, the businessman is the son of José Roberto Lamacchia, owner of Crefisa, and the stepson of Leila Pereira, president of Palmeiras. So fans are teasing their Rio rivals about the possible influence of people from São Paulo at São Januário.
Vasco and Marcos Lamacchia, in fact, are in advanced talks to close the SAF deal. Thus, the businessman’s investment in Flamengo’s rival could exceed R$ 2 billion, an amount that the Rubro-Negro earned in 2025.
Despite the progress of the Sociedade Anônima do Futebol model in Brazilian football, that is not Flamengo’s reality. The club’s president, Luiz Eduardo Baptista, has already stated that the Most Beloved will never become an SAF.
That’s an excellent question. I have absolutely nothing against SAFs. Nothing. What I think is this: what is the principle of an SAF? You have a football club that is unable to take on its debts, a club that is practically bankrupt from a management standpoint, and someone decides to take over,” he said, before concluding: “That person takes on the debts and makes new investments. That is the principle. I am absolutely in favor of that. No problem at all. Flamengo will never be an SAF. Flamengo is like Real Madrid (ESP): it does not need to become an SAF,” Bap concluded in an interview with ‘Diario AS’.
Meanwhile, Flamengo continues preparing to face Red Bull Bragantino this Thursday (02), after the FIFA international break. On that occasion, the ball starts rolling at 9:30 p.m. (Brasília time), at Estádio Cicero de Souza Marques, in the ninth round of the Brasileirão.
As tradition dictates, Coluna do Fla will bring all the details of the match between Flamengo and Bragantino through YouTube, the website, and social media. However, Globo (free-to-air) and Premiere (pay-per-view) will broadcast the Brasileirão clash.
This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇧🇷 here.









































