1991 Brazilian champions | OneFootball

1991 Brazilian champions | OneFootball

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·9 Juni 2026

1991 Brazilian champions

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In 1991, São Paulo won the country’s main national competition for the third time

On June 9, 1991, São Paulo won the third Campeonato Brasileiro title in the club’s history. Remembering this huge achievement, the Historical Archive brings information, photos, and period documents to the official website.


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THE START OF THE JOURNEY

Two years earlier, in 1989, they came close. The following year, in 1990, it slipped away again. Tricolor finished as Brazilian runners-up in both seasons. The title so eagerly sought by the fans would have to be won in 1991.

Telê Santana, who had arrived at São Paulo during the 1990 Brasileirão and led the team to the final of that tournament – even after a forgettable first half of the year, in which the club finished the Paulista Championship in 15th place – agreed to a new contract with the club, remaining in charge of the team in 1991.

The squad was practically the same as in the previous half-season, since the Brasileirão began right after the previous edition had ended. Only two new forwards were signed: Rinaldo, who came from Fluminense, and Macedo, a breakout player from Rio Branco de Americana, precisely to take the places of Alcindo and Aguirre, who left Tricolor. Carrasco, a midfielder, also did not renew: for that position, Telê bet on the “homegrown talents.”

Gambar artikel:1991 Brazilian champions

Photo: Historical Archive. Lined up: Rinaldo, Macedo, Sídnei, Zé Teodoro, Amadeu, Elivélton, Cafu, Vítor, Menta and Gilmar; Antônio Carlos, Ricardo Rocha, Flávio, Márcio Flores, Gefferson, Alexandre, Zetti, Marcos, Raí, Vizolli, Ronaldão, Eliel, Ivan and Bernardo; Mário Tilico, Marcelo Conte, Cláudio, Altair Ramos, Moraci Sant’Anna, Telê Santana, Valdir Joaquim de Moraes, Hélio Santos, Jairinho, Leonardo and Müller

THE CHAMPIONSHIP

The 1991 Brasileirão was contested by 20 clubs in a single round-robin format, with the top four teams advancing to the semifinals, played as two-legged knockout ties. The winners then advanced to the final, also over two matches. The advantage of a draw, or of identical reversed results, belonged to the club with the better overall campaign.

After a short preseason in Paraná (in which they beat Apucarana 1–0 and Foz do Iguaçu 2–1 in friendlies), Tricolor started the championship well, defeating Atlético Mineiro – who would also reach the semifinals – 3–0, even playing at Mineirão! But in the next five rounds São Paulo stumbled three times, with defeats to Flamengo (0–1 at Gávea), Santos (1–2 at Morumbi), and Náutico (1–2 at Aflitos). The inconsistency, however, ended there.

Gambar artikel:1991 Brazilian champions

Placar magazine

Raí, Müller, and Macedo led São Paulo’s recovery, which kept the club unbeaten for 12 matches (8 wins and 4 draws), only tasting defeat again in the last round of the opening stage of the tournament (0–1 to Internacional at Beira-Rio). Even so, Tricolor finished that stage in first place with 26 points – the same number as Bragantino, but with two more wins – inheriting the “draw advantage” in the semifinal matchup against Atlético Mineiro.

And that is exactly what happened. São Paulo drew both matches against the team from Minas Gerais. The first leg ended 1–1, with a goal by Mário Tilico – the winger’s first great decisive goal. Tricolor played with one man less for almost the entire match (Antônio Carlos had been sent off in the 16th minute of the first half). In the second leg, it was 0–0 at Morumbi, and Tricolor were in the final!

But qualifying through two draws came at a cost. Tricolor, who had been the best team during the “round-robin” stage, were overtaken in total points from the overall campaign by Bragantino, who reached the final with a win and a draw against Fluminense. The advantage of two draws, or two identical reversed results, now belonged to the team from the countryside, which would also host the second leg of the final.

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Stickers from the 1991 Brazilian Championship – Abril/Panini

THE DECIDER

At Morumbi, with 67,759 paying fans present for the first leg of the 1991 Brazilian final, Tricolor came out blazing, wasting two good opportunities in the opening minutes, with Bernardo, who shot straight at goalkeeper Marcelo, and with Macedo, in an incredible chance after a fine play by Raí. The striker calmly rounded the keeper, but hit the post with his finish!

Gambar artikel:1991 Brazilian champions
Gambar artikel:1991 Brazilian champions

Tickets from Paulo Padilha

In the 27th minute came the moment that would decide the title: Mário Tilico, the lucky charm, came on in place of the injured Elivélton. The first half, however, ended the same way it began – 0–0 – with Bragantino controlling midfield better and stopping the pace of the attacks led by Müller, Macedo, and Tilico. In fact, they even missed clear scoring chances, denied by Zetti and Ricardo Rocha, the latter right on the line.

The second half began much like the first, with Tricolor on the front foot and pushing hard. Bragantino’s defense cracked and gave way to the pressure after four minutes. The ball was lofted into the São Paulo attacking area and Bernardo headed it onto the crossbar. Müller tried a volley, but the ball went straight through, reaching the precise feet of Mário Tilico, who smashed it into the net – driving the ball right inside the goalkeeper’s right-hand post – scoring the goal that would give São Paulo the victory. Mário Tilico’s ecstatic celebration reflected the feeling that this would be the title-winning goal!

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Nelson Coelho/Abril Imagens

Gambar artikel:1991 Brazilian champions

Abril Imagens

Gambar artikel:1991 Brazilian champions

Nelson Coelho/Abril Imagens

It is worth noting that by the time the first leg of the final was played, the venue for the second match had still not been decided. In the end, it was confirmed that the decisive clash would indeed be held at the modest Marcelo Stéfani Stadium – now Nabi Abi Chedid – on June 9, 1991. Despite having the opposing fans practically on top of the pitch, the Tricolor players were not intimidated. Without the injured Elivélton, Telê moved Cafu up to right midfield and placed Zé Teodoro at full-back, preventing Bragantino from finding any room to play. Curiously, the decision to play on a small field did nothing to help the home side.

In fact, the best chances of the match fell to Tricolor. In the 11th minute of the first half, Cafu sent Zé Teodoro through, and he hit a powerful shot. From the goalkeeper’s rebound, Leonardo crossed for Bernardo to head against the post, and Müller blasted the loose ball over the goal. Bragantino only breached São Paulo’s fortress in the 30th minute of the second half, when Luiz Müller shot, Zetti parried, and Sílvio nearly scored on the rebound. Near the end of the game (44 min.), the final nail in Bragantino’s hopes came after a fine pass from Raí to Flávio, who struck hard from the edge of the box and hit the crossbar!

But there was nothing to regret. At the final whistle from referee José Roberto Wright, São Paulo Futebol Clube were crowned the 1991 Brazilian Champions – then Tricolor do Morumbi’s third national title! – an achievement that opened the gates to a new and unforgettable winning era under the command of Telê Santana, which would culminate in conquering the world two years in a row!

THE FIRST LEG

06/05/1991Brazilian Championship: Final (First Leg)São Paulo (SP), Cícero Pompeu de Toledo Stadium – Morumbi

SÃO PAULO 1 X 0 BRAGANTINO

SPFC: Zetti; Cafu, Antônio Carlos, Ricardo Rocha and Leonardo; Ronaldão, Bernardo and Raí; Müller, Macedo and Elivélton (Mário Tilico). COACH: Telê Santana. GOAL: Mário Tilico, 4/2

OPPONENT: Marcelo; Gil Baiano, Junior, Nei © and Biro Biro; Mauro Silva, Ivair (Luiz Müller), Alberto and Ronaldo Alfredo (Franklin); Mazinho and Silvio. COACH: Carlos Alberto Parreira

REFEREE: Marcio Rezende de FreitasGATE RECEIPTS: CR$ 149,165,000.00PAID ATTENDANCE: 67759

Gambar artikel:1991 Brazilian champions

Photo: Historical Archive; Lined up: Zetti, Ronaldão, Leonardo, Cafu, Ricardo Rocha and Antônio Carlos; Hélio Santos (masseur), Müller, Macedo, Raí, Elivélton and Bernardo

THE TITLE MATCH

06/09/1991Brazilian Championship: Final (Second Leg)Bragança Paulista (SP), Marcelo Stéfani Stadium

BRAGANTINO 0 X 0 SÃO PAULO 

SPFC: Zetti; Zé Teodoro, Antônio Carlos, Ricardo Rocha and Leonardo; Ronaldão, Bernardo, Cafu and Raí; Macedo and Müller (Flávio, 34/2). COACH: Telê Santana.

OPPONENT: Marcelo; Gil Baiano, Junior, Nei © and Biro Biro; Mauro Silva, Ivair (Luiz Müller), Alberto and João Santos (Franklin); Mazinho and Silvio. COACH: Carlos Alberto Parreira

REFEREE: Jose Roberto Ramiz Wright.GATE RECEIPTS: CR$64,650,000.00PAID ATTENDANCE: 12942

Gambar artikel:1991 Brazilian champions

Photo: Nelson Coelho/Abril Imagens; Lined up: Zetti; Ronaldão, Leonardo, Ricardo Rocha, Zé Teodoro and Antônio Carlos;

Müller, Raí, Macedo, Bernardo and Elivélton

Gambar artikel:1991 Brazilian champions

Abril Imagens

THE CAMPAIGN

First Phase02.02.1991 – 3 X 0 – Clube ATLÉTICO MINEIRO (MG)06.02.1991 – 0 X 1 – Clube Regatas do FLAMENGO (RJ)17.02.1991 – 1 X 2 – SANTOS Futebol Clube (SP)23.02.1991 – 1 X 0 – FLUMINENSE Football Club (RJ)03.03.1991 – 2 X 1 – Clube ATLÉTICO PARANAENSE (PR)06.03.1991 – 1 X 2 – Clube NÁUTICO Capibaribe (PE)09.03.1991 – 1 X 0 – Esporte Clube BAHIA (BA)16.03.1991 – 1 X 1 – GOIÁS Esporte Clube (GO)22.03.1991 – 2 X 0 – GRÊMIO Foot-Ball Porto Alegrense (RS)31.03.1991 – 2 X 1 – Clube Atlético BRAGANTINO (SP)04.04.1991 – 0 X 0 – Sociedade Esportiva PALMEIRAS (SP)07.04.1991 – 1 X 1 – Sport Club CORINTHIANS Paulista (SP)14.04.1991 – 1 X 0 – Associação PORTUGUESA de Desportos (SP)20.04.1991 – 2 X 2 – Club de Regatas VASCO DA GAMA (RJ)28.04.1991 – 2 X 0 – SPORT Clube do RECIFE (PE)01.05.1991 – 2 X 1 – Esporte Clube VITÓRIA (BA)05.05.1991 – 1 X 0 – BOTAFOGO de Futebol e Regatas (RJ)12.05.1991 – 3 X 1 – CRUZEIRO Esporte Clube (MG)18.05.1991 – 0 X 1 – Sport Club INTERNACIONAL (RS)Semifinals25.05.1991 – 1 X 1 – Clube ATLÉTICO MINEIRO (MG)02.06.1991 – 0 X 0 – Clube ATLÉTICO MINEIRO (MG)Finals05.06.1991 – 1 X 0 – Clube Atlético BRAGANTINO (SP)09.06.1991 – 0 X 0 – Clube Atlético BRAGANTINO (SP)

Also registered for the competition, but without making a single appearance, were: Gilmar Popoca (MC), Marcos (GK), Amadeu, Gefferson (CB), Alexandre (GK), Andrey (MC), Doriva (DM), Menta (CB), and Gilmar (CB). Although Marcelo Conte appears in the official champions’ photo, there is no record that he was officially registered (and eligible to play) in the tournament.

Gambar artikel:1991 Brazilian champions

Photo: Historical Archive; Ceremonial match for the champions’ sashes: Altair Ramos, Fernando Casal de Rey, Telê Santana, Antônio Carlos, Ronaldão, José Eduardo Mesquita Pimenta, Cafu, Sídnei, Nelsinho, Adílson, Marcos, Moraci Sant’Anna; doctor, kit man, Hélio Santos, Müller, Suélio, Raí, Elivélton and Baiano

By Michael Serra / João Farah Historical Archive

This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇧🇷 here.

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