AVANTE MEU TRICOLOR
·05 de novembro de 2025
São Paulo’s first home game at Vila Belmiro in 1937 v Santos

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsAVANTE MEU TRICOLOR
·05 de novembro de 2025

São Paulo faces Flamengo on the night of this Wednesday (5) in a rather unusual stadium for the Tricolores: Vila Belmiro. Although they played as the home team at the rival Santos’ ground three years ago, in a victory over Bragantino in the same Brazilian Championship, tonight’s clash against the Cariocas will be only the third time the club has acted as host at the traditional coastal stadium.
The first time was in the 1936 Paulista Championship. And the opponent was precisely Santos, the home team. Those were different times, with a more modest Tricolor, still without its own stadium and who agreed to switch home advantage due to scheduling issues of the era, in a story we will tell in detail below.
Although it was already April 1937, the 1936 Paulista Championship had not yet ended. The last round of the second half was merely procedural for São Paulo, who aspired to nothing more than second place in the round, which had already been won by Palestra Itália — the Alviverde would decide the tournament title against Corinthians, champions of the first round. In any case, for the Tricolor, the position was already a big step forward, after having shared the runner-up spot from the bottom with the weak Lusitano in the first half of the competition, ahead only of Paulista. It’s worth remembering that this was the first championship played by São Paulo after its refounding.
Without a stadium of their own, São Paulo had been hosting several matches at their opponents’ grounds, which had already happened that season against Portuguesa Santista, Paulista, Corinthians, Palestra Itália, and, a week earlier, España. In this case, the Liga Paulista de Futebol’s schedule listed the club as the home team against Santos and, in the official document for the round, confirmed this, even though the San-São was set for Vila Belmiro.
The match began with dominance by the “visitors playing at home.” They managed to open the scoring at five minutes, with a run by Taveirinha, who crossed for Araken Patusca to apply the “Law of the Ex” and score with a header. The Tricolores tried to respond right after, but created no real danger and still saw Nicolau Moran lead a counterattack that ended with a shot from Araken, which went so close to the left post that it got stuck in the net, giving many fans the impression it had gone in. Only after a closer look did referee Sylvio Stucchi award a goal kick.
Even so, Santos didn’t take long to get their second goal, which came at 12 minutes, this time from a play by Ítalo on the left, with another cross, now finding Viveiros’ head. São Paulo took a while to recover from the blow, but eventually improved, forcing goalkeeper Wálter to work on shots from Carioca (twice) and Ministrinho. The opponent, however, kept creating chances. After some were missed due to lack of accuracy, almost at the end of the first half Viveiros had what would have been the third goal disallowed for offside.
After the break, the game resumed more slowly, with thrusts that posed little danger, until Moran unleashed a rocket that King saved with difficulty. The Tricolor goalkeeper also stopped Araken at another moment, and the striker still wasted another chance before Carioca pulled one back, after a one-two with Tino. The Alvinegro remained better, but kept missing the target when attacking, although they also ran some risks at the back, especially from Ministrinho’s runs. At eighteen minutes, the game was stopped for Wálter to receive treatment after being hit by Tino’s knee while trying to take the ball from him. In another accidental collision, Moran and Felipelli bumped into each other, and the ball fell to Gradim, who shot from medium range to score the third goal.
Both teams kept the goalkeepers busy, until Aurélio received the ball in a doubtful position and lofted it for Ministrinho to head in and reduce Santos’ lead at 36 minutes. But, with only four minutes left before the final whistle, there was hardly any time for the Tricolor to chase what would have been a heroic draw.
The team tried, especially down the right wing, occupied by Ministrinho, but was unsuccessful. The match was finally ended when Felipelli fouled Taveirinha, and Stucchi didn’t even allow the free kick to be taken before blowing the final whistle.
This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇧🇷 here.









































