São Paulo
·2 juillet 2026
1989 Paulista champions

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Yahoo sportsSão Paulo
·2 juillet 2026

On July 2, 1989, São Paulo drew 0-0 with São José at Morumbis and, having won the first leg 1-0 (with an own goal by André Luis) at the same venue, was crowned the 1989 Paulista champion — the 16th state title in the club’s history.
The Tricolor side coached by Cilinho began the 1989 Paulistão inconsistently. They opened with a win over XV de Jaú at Pacaembu (3-1), but then lost away to the other XV, XV de Piracicaba, 1-0. Even after three straight wins against Mogi Mirim, Noroeste, and América de São José do Rio Preto, calm did not last: the team went through a rather frustrating and troublesome run of four draws (with two defeats in the post-match penalty shootouts — a new rule that season).
In that context, the São Paulo board brought in coach Carlos Alberto Silva to replace the creator of the Menudos. Even then, the squad did not really click. In the new manager’s first six matches, there was only one win (4-0 over Juventus). In the derbies, the performances also left a lot to be desired: a draw against Palmeiras at Morumbis (1-1) and defeats to Corinthians (2-0 at home) and Santos (2-1 at Pacaembu).
Wins over Guarani, São Bento, and Santo André, however, allowed Tricolor to qualify for the second phase of the tournament through the overall technical ranking across the competition’s two groups (the eighth-best campaign, so to speak, among the 12 successful teams).
The second phase was made up of four groups of three clubs each, and São Paulo was placed in Group 4 alongside Guarani and Inter de Limeira. They came through without major scares, recording two wins and two draws to finish first. It was at this stage that the competition produced its first major shock, with Bragantino eliminating Palmeiras. São José also surprised many and knocked out Portuguesa. The last team to qualify for the semifinals was Corinthians, who had to get past Santos.
In the knockout round, São Paulo found great difficulty against the rising Bragantino side, but won both matches, home and away (2-0 — featuring a stunning no-angle goal by Mário Tilico — and 1-0). Corinthians, meanwhile, after winning the first leg at home 2-0, somehow managed to lose the return leg to São José 1-0 in regular time and 2-0 in extra time.
Thus, on June 28, São Paulo and São José played the first match of the final at Morumbis. The team from the countryside held the advantage of a draw over the two-leg final, as they had the better overall campaign. However, they would only be champions in that case if they also drew both periods of extra time. Tricolor needed to win.
In the middle of the São Paulo capital’s winter, just over 50,000 fans turned up at Morumbis that Wednesday night to witness what was truly a dramatic match. Not so much because of the excitement or technical battle, but because of the chances wasted by Tricolor, especially in the first half, against a gritty but heavily defensive side — which, with every passing minute, became even more shut down at the back.
However, when there was very little left in the match, in the 41st minute of the second half, São Paulo was rewarded for being the only side truly pushing for the game. In a chaotic play inside the São José box, the defender himself touched the ball and sent it into the net, opening and closing the scoring in Tricolor’s favor. Thanks to that goal, they would need only a draw in the second leg.

For the final clash, São Paulo would have Ney back in the starting lineup — he had missed the previous match due to suspension for a third yellow card, with Mazinho taking his place. And despite muscle pain in Vizolli’s case and knee pain in Bobô’s, both would play, even if they had to gut it out.
On Sunday, at 5 p.m., Morumbis was packed. Nearly 98,000 fans anxiously awaited the chance to witness another São Paulo title: it would be the club’s fifth state championship of the 1980s, a decade that had also brought the club’s second Brazilian title, in the 1986 competition. Success there would represent another crown for Tricolor: king of the decade.
Since São Paulo had turned the issue of the advantage around, the game scenario also flipped compared to the first meeting. Tricolor, more at ease on the field, prioritized the midfield, while keeping the team’s main weapon — overlapping runs down the flanks with Nelsinho and Zé Teodoro — in reserve.







Because the São Paulo squad was more technically gifted and well fitted into a solid defensive system, São José offered very little danger. After all, the countryside side also did not want to leave its center-backs exposed. The situation changed, however, in the second half. Going all or nothing, the Águia do Vale pushed forward, giving Tricolor exactly what they wanted most: space to counterattack, especially through Mário Tilico out wide.
In the 21st minute, from a free kick, Edivaldo struck dangerously, bending it over the wall, but the stubborn ball hit the goalkeeper’s left post. São José responded in kind and, four minutes later, hit Tricolor goalkeeper Gilmar’s crossbar after a thunderous long-range strike by Delacir.
That was the cue for Tricolor to take full control of the game’s rhythm for good. With the draw in hand, São Paulo won the 1989 Paulista championship!
THE FIRST LEG OF THE FINAL
06/28/1989São Paulo (SP)Estádio Cícero Pompeu de Toledo – Morumbis
SÃO PAULO Futebol Clube 1 x 0 SÃO JOSÉ Esporte Clube
SPFC: Gilmar; Zé Teodoro, Adílson, Ricardo Rocha and Nelsinho; Vizolli, Bobô and Raí ©; Mário Tilico, Mazinho Loiola (Paulo César) and Edivaldo. Coach: Carlos Alberto Silva. Goal: André Luís (own goal), 41/2.
SJEC: Luiz Henrique; Marcelo, Juninho ©, André Luís and Joãozinho; Delacir, Tita (Henrique) and Vânder Luís; Donizete, Tôni and Marcinho (Tonho). Coach: Ademir Mello.
Referee: Dulcidio Wanderley Boschilla. Gate: NCz$261,514.00. Attendance: 50,366 paid.

Adílson, Gilmar, Vizolli, Ricardo Rocha, Nelsinho and Zé Teodoro; Hélio Santos (masseur), Mário Tilico, Bobô, Mazinho Loiola, Raí and Edivaldo
THE SECOND LEG OF THE FINAL
07/02/1989São Paulo (SP)Estádio Cícero Pompeu de Toledo – Morumbis
SÃO JOSÉ Esporte Clube 0 X 0 SÃO PAULO Futebol Clube
SJEC: Luis Henrique; Marcelo, Juninho, Andre Luis and Joãozinho; Delacir, Fabiano (Wilson) and Vander Luis; Donizetti (Henrique), Toni and Tita. Coach: Ademir Mello.
SPFC: Gilmar; Zé Teodoro, Adílson, Ricardo Rocha and Nelsinho; Vizolli, Bobô (Benê) and Raí ©; Mário Tilico, Ney Bala (Bernardo) and Edivaldo. Coach: Carlos Alberto Silva

Tião (kit man), Adílson, Gilmar, Vizolli, Ricardo Rocha, Nelsinho and Zé Teodoro; Jairo (kit man), Hélio Santos (masseur), Mário Tilico, Bobô, Ney Bala, Raí and Edivaldo
THE CAMPAIGN
First Phase02/20/1989 – 3 X 1 – Esporte Clube XV de Novembro (Jaú – SP)02/23/1989 – 0 X 1 – Esporte Clube XV de Novembro (Piracicaba – SP)03/01/1989 – 3 X 0 – MOGI MIRIM Esporte Clube (SP)03/04/1989 – 3 X 1 – Esporte Clube NOROESTE (SP)03/12/1989 – 4 X 1 – AMÉRICA Futebol Clube (São José do Rio Preto – SP)03/22/1989 – 0 X 0 – UNIÃO SÃO JOÃO Esporte Clube (SP) 2 X 4 pens.03/26/1989 – 0 X 0 – Grêmio Esportivo CATANDUVENSE (SP) 4 X 2 pens.03/29/1989 – 0 X 0 – Grêmio Esportivo NOVORIZONTINO (SP) 8 X 7 pens.04/02/1989 – 0 X 0 – Associação Atl. INTERNACIONAL (Limeira – SP) 0 X 3 pens.04/05/1989 – 1 X 0 – BOTAFOGO Futebol Clube (Ribeirão Preto – SP)04/09/1989 – 1 X 1 – Associação FERROVIÁRIA de Esportes (SP)04/15/1989 – 0 X 0 – SÃO JOSÉ Esporte Clube (SP) 3 X 5 pens.04/19/1989 – 4 X 0 – Clube Atlético JUVENTUS (SP)04/23/1989 – 1 X 1 – Associação PORTUGUESA de Desportos (SP)04/30/1989 – 1 X 1 – Sociedade Esportiva PALMEIRAS (SP)05/04/1989 – 0 X 1 – Clube Atlético BRAGANTINO (SP)05/07/1989 – 0 X 2 – Sport Club CORINTHIANS Paulista (SP)05/14/1989 – 1 X 0 – GUARANI Futebol Clube (SP)05/18/1989 – 1 X 2 – SANTOS Futebol Clube (SP)05/21/1989 – 3 X 0 – Esporte Club SÃO BENTO (SP)05/27/1989 – 1 X 0 – Esporte Clube SANTO ANDRÉ (SP)
Second Phase06/03/1989 – 1 X 1 – GUARANI Futebol Clube (SP)06/08/1989 – 1 X 1 – Associação Atlética INTERNACIONAL (Limeira – SP)06/14/1989 – 1 X 0 – Associação Atlética INTERNACIONAL (Limeira – SP)06/17/1989 – 3 X 2 – GUARANI Futebol Clube (SP)
Semifinals06/21/1989 – 2 X 0 – Clube Atlético BRAGANTINO (SP)06/24/1989 – 1 X 0 – Clube Atlético BRAGANTINO (SP)

By Michael Serra / João Farah Historical Archive
This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇧🇷 here.







































