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'''Fluminense Football Club''' ({{IPA-pt|flumiˈnẽsi ˈfu̇t-ˌbȯl ˈkləb|br}}), known simply as '''Fluminense''', is a Brazilian sports club best known for its [[association football|football]] team that plays in the [[Campeonato Brasileiro Série A]]{{refn|group=nb|Also known by its nickname Brasileirão.}}, the top tier of [[Brazilian football league system|Brazilian football]] and the [[Campeonato Carioca]],{{refn|group=nb|Also known by its nickname Cariocão.}} the [[State football leagues in Brazil|state league]] of [[Rio de Janeiro (state)|Rio de Janeiro]]. The club is based in the [[Laranjeiras]] neighbourhood of [[Rio de Janeiro]]. Fluminense play their home games at the [[Maracanã Stadium]], which currently holds up to 78,838 spectators.
'''Fluminense Football Club''' ({{IPA-pt|flumiˈnẽsi ˈfu̇t-ˌbȯl ˈkləb|br}}), known simply as '''Fluminense''', is a Brazilian sports club best known for its [[association football|football]] team that plays in the [[Campeonato Brasileiro Série A]]{{refn|group=nb|Also known by its nickname Brasileirão.}}, the top tier of [[Brazilian football league system|Brazilian football]] and the [[Campeonato Carioca]],{{refn|group=nb|Also known by its nickname Cariocão.}} the [[State football leagues in Brazil|state league]] of [[Rio de Janeiro (state)|Rio de Janeiro]]. The club is based in the [[Laranjeiras]] neighbourhood of [[Rio de Janeiro]]. Fluminense play their home games at the [[Estádio Giulite Coutinho]] currently holds up to 13,544 <ref>http://nl.soccerway.com/teams/brazil/fluminense-football-club/312/</ref> spectators.


The club was founded on July 21, 1902 by the sons of ''[[Carioca]]'' aristocrats, being led by [[Oscar Cox]], a Brazilian sportsman, in the ''bairro'' of [[Flamengo, Rio de Janeiro|Flamengo]], a direct contrast between the [[Aristocracy (class)|aristocratic]] founders and the modest ground it was founded on. Cox was elected as the club's first president. Fluminense has been state champions on 31 occasions, second only to [[Clube de Regatas do Flamengo|Flamengo]] with 33. The team has been national champions four times, most recently in [[2012 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A|2012]], and won the [[Copa do Brasil]] in [[2007 Copa do Brasil|2007]].
The club was founded on July 21, 1902 by the sons of ''[[Carioca]]'' aristocrats, being led by [[Oscar Cox]], a Brazilian sportsman, in the ''bairro'' of [[Flamengo, Rio de Janeiro|Flamengo]], a direct contrast between the [[Aristocracy (class)|aristocratic]] founders and the modest ground it was founded on. Cox was elected as the club's first president. Fluminense has been state champions on 31 occasions, second only to [[Clube de Regatas do Flamengo|Flamengo]] with 33. The team has been national champions four times, most recently in [[2012 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A|2012]], and won the [[Copa do Brasil]] in [[2007 Copa do Brasil|2007]].

Revision as of 18:09, 11 January 2017

File:Fluminense fc logo.svg
Full nameFluminense Football Club
Nickname(s)Flu
Fluzão
"Tricolor"
Guerreiros (Warriors)
FoundedJuly 21, 1902; 122 years ago (1902-07-21)
GroundEstádio Giulite Coutinho
PresidentPedro Abad
Current coachAbel Braga
LeagueCampeonato Brasileiro Série A
Campeonato Carioca
Primeira Liga do Brasil
Copa Sul-Americana
2015
2015
2016
Brasileirão, 13th
Cariocão, 4th
Primeira Liga, 1st
Websitehttp://www.fluminense.com.br/

Fluminense Football Club (Portuguese pronunciation: [flumiˈnẽsi ˈfu̇t-ˌbȯl ˈkləb]), known simply as Fluminense, is a Brazilian sports club best known for its football team that plays in the Campeonato Brasileiro Série A[nb 1], the top tier of Brazilian football and the Campeonato Carioca,[nb 2] the state league of Rio de Janeiro. The club is based in the Laranjeiras neighbourhood of Rio de Janeiro. Fluminense play their home games at the Estádio Giulite Coutinho currently holds up to 13,544 [1] spectators.

The club was founded on July 21, 1902 by the sons of Carioca aristocrats, being led by Oscar Cox, a Brazilian sportsman, in the bairro of Flamengo, a direct contrast between the aristocratic founders and the modest ground it was founded on. Cox was elected as the club's first president. Fluminense has been state champions on 31 occasions, second only to Flamengo with 33. The team has been national champions four times, most recently in 2012, and won the Copa do Brasil in 2007.

Fluminense is a demonym for people who reside in the State of Rio de Janeiro. Although football is the club's original endeavor, the club is today an umbrella organization for several teams in more than 16 different sport activities. Fluminense's home kit is dark red-and-green vertical striped shirts, with white shorts, accompanied by white socks; this combination has been used since 1920. Dryworld are the kit manufacturers. Fluminense holds many long-standing rivalries, most notably against Flamengo (Fla-Flu), as well as with Botafogo and Vasco da Gama. It has contributed the fifth-most players to Brazil's national football team.

History

Oscar Cox, founder of Fluminense.
The team that won its first Campeonato Carioca, in 1906.
Laranjeiras Stadium, the Brazilian national team's first ground.
The Fluminense team in 1908, posing with the trophies won.

Fluminense Football Club was founded on July 21, 1902 in Rio de Janeiro by Oscar Cox, a Brazilian of English heritage,[2] in the then aristocratic neighborhood of Laranjeiras.[3] Fluminense was formed by sons of the elite who had come into contact with football while studying in Europe.[4]

The first official match was played against now defunct Rio FC, and ended 8–0 to Fluminense.[2] The club's first title came in 1906, when Fluminense won the Campeonato Carioca.[2]

In 1911, disagreement between Fluminense players led to the formation of Flamengo's football team.[2] The so-called Fla-Flu derby is considered one of the biggest in the history of Brazilian football.[5] Three years later, in Fluminense's stadium, the Brazilian national football team debuted, against touring English club Exeter City.[2] It was also there that they won their first title, in the 1919.[6]

Preguinho, a Fluminense notable player.

By 1924, Fluminense had 4,000 members, a stadium for 25,000 people, and facilities that impressed clubs in Europe.,[7]

In an unfortunate event in 1914, Carlos Alberto, a mulatto playing for Fluminense, decided to cover himself in face powder to disguise the color of his skin. This ultimately led to one of the club's nicknames, pó de arroz, which is the Portuguese for 'white powder'.[8][9] Although, like almost all football teams in Brazil at the time, racism was common among Fluminense supporters, Fluminense has a long history of black players even before the football became a professional sport.[10] [11] [12]

The following years saw an expansion of the club's hegemony in Rio. Fluminense would remain unsurpassed in terms of state championships until 2009.[13] International acclaim came in 1949 with the awarding of the Olympic Cup, and was further fostered in 1952 with Fluminense's first intercontinental honor, the Copa Rio.[2][14] The club established itself regionally with victory in two Torneio Rio-São Paulo cups in 1957 and 1960.[2] National honors followed in 1970, 1984, 2010 and 2012 with Taça de Prata and Série A cups, respectively.,[2] also taking the Cup in Brazil in 2007.

From the 1950s, with the creation of the Rio-São Paulo Tournament, the forerunner of what eventually would become the national championship, Fluminense established itself regionally by winning the tournament title in the years of 1957 and 1960.

From the 1960s, the first national championships began to be played in Brazil. Fluminense's first national title came in 1970, in that time, Brazil had the best players in world football, and all of them played in Brazilians clubs. Although not counted in its squad with the main players of the season in Brazil, Fluminense won the Brazilian champion surpassing the great strengths of the time in Santos, Palmeiras and Cruzeiro.

In the 1970s, Fluminense signed up several famous players like Roberto Rivellino. This time, called as "maquina tricolor", it won the state championship in the years of 1975 and 1976. In the national championship, Fluminense lost in the semifinal matches to Internacional in 1975 and Corinthians in 1976.

Fluminense again became the Brazilian champion in 1984. This time, they won the state Championship in the years of 1983, 1984 and 1985 with players like Romerito, Ricardo Gomes, Deley, and the "Casal Vinte": Assis and Washington.

At the end of the 1980s, Copa do Brasil was created, inspired by the Cups tournament played in European countries. Fluminense reached the final of the Copa do Brasil for the first time in 1992, losing the final match to Internacional de Porto Alegre.

Stained glass windows in Fluminense's headquarters

A disastrous campaign led to the club's relegation from Série A in 1996. A set of off-field political maneuvers (cheats), however, not performed by Fluminense, allowed Fluminense to remain in Brazil's top domestic league,[15] only to be relegated the next year.[16] Completely out of control, the club was relegated from Série B to Série C in 1998.[17] In 1999, Fluminense won the Série C championship and was to be promoted to Série B when it was invited to take part in Copa João Havelange,[18] a championship that replaced the traditional Série A in 2000. In 2001, it was decided that all clubs which took part in Copa João Havelange's so-called Blue Group should be kept in Série A,[19]

In 2002, 2005 and 2012, Fluminense won again the Campeonato Carioca. In 2005 Fluminense reached the final of the Copa do Brasil again, having lost the final match to Paulista Futebol Clube.

In 2007, Fluminense won the Copa do Brasil, after beating Figueirense in the final match, and was admitted in the Copa Libertadores again after 23 years.[2][20] The club's campaign led it into the finals and included remarkable matches against Arsenal de Sarandí, São Paulo and Boca Juniors.[21][22][23] Fluminense lost the cup to LDU Quito in a penalty shootout.[24]

After signing up 27 players and going through 5 different managers in 2009, Fluminense found itself struggling to avoid another relegation from Série A.[25] With less than one-third of the championship left, the mathematical probability of the club's relegation was of 98%.[26] At this point, manager Cuca decided to sack some of the more experienced players and gave Fluminense's youngsters a chance.[27] That, along with Fred's recovery from a serious injury and substantial support from the fans, allowed not only a sensational escape from relegation, but also placed Fluminense in the final of the Copa Sudamericana.[28][29] For the second year in a row, the club contested a continental cup. In a repeat of the previous year's Copa Libertadores, Fluminense lost the cup to LDU Quito.[30]

The Flu players before playing the 2008 Copa Libertadores final match.

In 2010, Fluminense won the Brazilian championship for the third time in its history, marking their third national championship after 1970 and 1984). It was also the fourth title for coach Muricy Ramalho in a decade: Ramalho had won the title three times in a row with São Paulo from 2006 to 2008. Darío Conca was named the Brazilian Championship's Player of Season, while Fred and Washington were decisive players in Fluminense's winning campaign.

On May 23, 2012, Fluminense lost the semifinal qualification match to Boca Juniors from Argentina, for the continental club football cup, Copa Libertadores.[31] Later that year, on November 11, they won their fourth Brazilian championship after defeating the near-relegated Palmeiras 3–2.[32] Fluminense won the Série A for the fourth time on November 11, 2012.[33]

In December 2013, a tie with Bahia in the last round of the 2013 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A had Fluminense mathematically relegated to the Série B. However, an irregular lineup by Portuguesa in the match against Grêmio in the previous round, which included midfielder Héverton, suspended for the affair, caused the Sâo Paulo side to lose 4 points after a trial in STJD (Brazil's governing football jury). That allowed Fluminense to stay in Série A, with Portuguesa being relegated instead. The move was widely criticized by fans and reporters alike, mainly because it marked the second time in 15 years that Fluminense was relegated but did not play the following year's Série B due to a legal decision.

Performance

Fluminense has taken part in 36 of the 38 official Serie A championships organized in Brazil since 1971.[34]

Year Position Participants Year Position Participants
1971 16 20 1981 11 44
1972 14 26 1982 5 44
1973 23 40 1983 18 44
1974 24 40 1984 1 41
1975 3 42 1985 22 44
1976 4 54 1986 6 48
1977 26 62 1987 7 16
1978 22 74 1988 3 24
1979 52 94 1989 15 22
1980 11 44 1990 15 20
Year Position Participants Year Position Participants
1991 4 20 2001 3 28
1992 14 20 2002 4 26
1993 28 32 2003 19 24
1994 15 24 2004 9 24
1995 4 24 2005 5 22
1996 23 24 2006 15 20
1997 25 26 2007 4 20
1998 Série B 2008 14 20
1999 Série C 2009 16 20
2000 3 25 2010 1 20
Year Position Participants Year Position Participants
2011 3 20
2012 1 20
2013 15 20
2014 6 20
2015 13 20

Sponsors

Companies that Fluminense Football Club currently has sponsorship deals with include:

  • Adidas – kit supplier from 1996 until 2015.
  • Dryworld – kit supplier since 2016.

Records

Fans of Fluminense at the Maracanã
Fluminense luminous mosaic arises, by fans in Maracanã.

Highest attendances – Maracanã[35]

  • 1. Fluminense 0–0 Flamengo, 1963 194,603 ¹
  • 2. Fluminense 3–2 Flamengo, 1969 171,599
  • 3. Fluminense 1–0 Botafogo, 1971 160,000
  • 4. Fluminense 0–0 Flamengo, 1976 155,116
  • 5. Fluminense 1–0 Flamengo, 1984 153,520
  • 6. Fluminense 1–1 Corinthians, 1976 146,043

¹: paying 177,656, a record of persons present at Maracanã stadium.

Highest means of public competition for Fluminense

  • Largest average attendance in the Copa Libertadores (RJ): 52,801 (49,011 pags., 2008)
  • Largest average attendance in the Copa Sudamericana (RJ): 29,357 (27,318 pags., 2009)
  • Largest average attendance in international tournaments (RJ): 48,797 (37,541 pags., Copa Rio, 1952)
  • Largest average attendance in national championships (RJ): 43,541 pags. (1976)
  • Largest average attendance in the Tournament Roberto Gomes Pedrosa (RJ): 40,408 pags. (1970)
  • Largest average attendance in the Brazil Cup (RJ): 27,123 pags. (2007)
  • Largest average attendance in the Rio-São Paulo Tournament (RJ): 33,018 pags. (1960)
  • Largest average attendance in the state championship: 47,814 pags. (1969, all stages)
  • Largest average attendance in the state championship in the Maracana Stadium: 93,560 pags. (1969, 10 Matches)

Support

The supporters of Fluminense Football Club are usually related to the upper classes of Rio de Janeiro.[36] However, the popularity of the club reaches beyond the city limits. Recent polls have estimated the number of supporters to be between 1.3% and 3.7% of the Brazilian population.[37] Considering a population of 185 million people,[38] that would account for numbers between 2.73 and 6.84 million.

The best attendance ever observed in a match of Fluminense was registered on December 15, 1963 in a rally against Flamengo. On that day, an impressive amount of 194,000 people showed up at the Maracanã stadium.[39] This occasion remains as the stadium's record for a match between clubs.[40]

Notable supporters of Fluminense include composers Cartola and Chico Buarque,[41][42] FIFA president of honor João Havelange,[5] musician Ivan Lins,[43] poet and actor Mário Lago,[44] journalist and songwriter Nelson Motta[45] and dramatist, journalist and writer Nelson Rodrigues.,[45] 1970 FIFA World Cup winner Gérson, Paris Saint-Germain's top defense player Thiago Silva, former Minister of Culture and international artist Gilberto Gil,[46] Silvio Santos, the owner of SBT, the second largest Brazilian television network,[47] and the Academy Award nomenee Fernanda Montenegro.[48]

Titles

Some of the trophies won by Fluminense, exhibited at the club: (left): Campeonato Brasileiro Série A and Copa Rio amongst others; (right) The Copa do Brasil won in 2007.

Intercontinental

National

Regional

Local

  • Campeonato Carioca: (31) 1906, 1907¹, 1908, 1909, 1911, 1917, 1918, 1919, 1924, 1936, 1937, 1938, 1940, 1941, 1946, 1951, 1959, 1964, 1969, 1971, 1973, 1975, 1976, 1980, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1995, 2002, 2005, 2012

Fluminense main derbies

According to the fluzao.info site, the average public paying the principal classics of Fluminense played in the Estádio do Maracanã is 60,107 against Flamengo, Vasco against the 43,735 of 34,359 against Botafogo of 25,127 against America and of 22,527 against Bangu, medium plus the public that these gifts could be about 20% higher, given the issues of the distribution of gratuities in the Maracanã .[50]

Corinthians vs Fluminense, the great Fluminense interstate derby

Considering the interstate clashes, the derby against Corinthians is perhaps the most representative among the various confrontations with big Brazilian clubs played by Fluminense, given the fact that these clubs often intersect at decisive moments in their stories, either by the end Rio Cup, the direct contest in several Tournaments Rio-São Paulo since 1940, or by the qualifying rounds of the Championship or Cup of Brazil,[51][52] in the great struggle of the 2010 Série A when the two clubs contending for the title from the early stages of the championship with Corinthians been beaten for the Championship by Fluminense in the final round, as was the case in 2011, when Corinthians were crowned champions and the Tricolor, considered the best team during second round of the league, were placed third after the final match day.

Players

Current squad

As of 4 January 2017[53]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Brazil BRA Marcos Felipe
3 DF Brazil BRA Gum (captain)
5 MF Brazil BRA Pierre
6 DF Brazil BRA Giovanni
11 FW Brazil BRA Wellington
12 GK Brazil BRA Diego Cavalieri
13 MF Brazil BRA Douglas
16 MF Brazil BRA Mateus Norton
17 FW Brazil BRA Osvaldo
18 FW Brazil BRA Marquinhos Calazans
20 FW Brazil BRA Magno Alves
21 MF Brazil BRA Danilinho
22 GK Brazil BRA Júlio César
31 DF Brazil BRA Renato Chaves
32 FW Brazil BRA Pedro
33 DF Brazil BRA Henrique
34 GK Brazil BRA Matheus
35 FW Brazil BRA Marcos Júnior
39 MF Brazil BRA Maranhão
No. Pos. Nation Player
40 MF Brazil BRA Gustavo Scarpa
44 DF Brazil BRA Nogueira
70 FW Brazil BRA Richarlison
77 MF Brazil BRA Marquinho
89 FW Brazil BRA Henrique Dourado
DF Brazil BRA Léo
DF Brazil BRA Lucas (on loan from Palmeiras)
DF Brazil BRA Reginaldo
DF Brazil BRA Renato
DF Brazil BRA Wesley Frazan
MF Brazil BRA Daniel
MF Brazil BRA Higor Leite
MF Ecuador ECU Jefferson Orejuela
MF Ecuador ECU Junior Sornoza
MF Brazil BRA Luiz Fernando
FW Brazil BRA Lucas Fernandes
FW Brazil BRA Matheus Alessandro
FW Brazil BRA Michael

Reserve team

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
DF Brazil BRA Artur
MF Brazil BRA Felipe Amorim
MF Brazil BRA Pablo Dyego
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Brazil BRA Willian
FW Brazil BRA Matheus Alves

Out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
DF Brazil BRA Ailton (on loan at Portugal Estoril Praia)
DF Brazil BRA Alan Fialho (on loan at Slovakia Flu Šamorín)
DF Brazil BRA Ayrton (on loan at Londrina)
DF Brazil BRA Elivelton (on loan at Tupi)
DF Brazil BRA Igor Julião (on loan at United States Sporting Kansas City)
DF Brazil BRA Marlon Santos (on loan at Spain Barcelona B)
DF Brazil BRA Wellington Silva (on loan at Bahia)
MF Brazil BRA Bonilha (on loan at Tupi)
MF Brazil BRA Dudu (on loan at Nautico)
MF Brazil BRA Edson (on loan at Bahia)
MF Brazil BRA Eduardo (on loan at Portugal Estoril Praia)
MF Brazil BRA Kassiano (on loan at Inter de Lages)
MF Brazil BRA Levi (on loan at Slovakia Flu Šamorín)
MF Brazil BRA Luquinha (on loan at Slovakia Flu Šamorín)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Brazil BRA Marlon Freitas (on loan at Slovakia Flu Šamorín)
MF Brazil BRA Robert (on loan at Boavista-RJ)
MF Brazil BRA Willian (on loan at Slovakia Flu Šamorín U19)
FW Brazil BRA Danilo Mariotto (on loan at Portuguesa)
FW Brazil BRA Estevão (on loan at Slovakia Flu Šamorín U19)
FW Brazil BRA Euller (on loan at Londrina)
FW Argentina ARG Leonel (on loan at Slovakia Flu Šamorín)
FW Brazil BRA Matheus Pato (on loan at Tupi)
FW Brazil BRA Peu (on loan at Slovakia Flu Šamorín)
FW Brazil BRA Samuel (on loan at United Arab Emirates Hatta Club)
FW Brazil BRA Thiago André (on loan at Tupi)
FW Brazil BRA Wellington Paulista (on loan at Chapecoense)
FW Brazil BRA Zé Lucas (on loan at Poland Stal Mielec)

Youth team

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK Brazil BRA Hans
GK Brazil BRA Leo Lang
DF Brazil BRA Breno Caetano
DF Brazil BRA Diogo
DF Brazil BRA Eduardo
DF Brazil BRA Guilherme Crepaldi
DF Brazil BRA Kadu
DF Brazil BRA Mascarenhas
DF Brazil BRA Renner
MF Brazil BRA Guilherme
MF Brazil BRA Hernandes
MF Brazil BRA Nascimento
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Brazil BRA Paulinho
MF Brazil BRA Pedrinho
MF Brazil BRA Rafael Resende
MF Brazil BRA Romûlo
MF Brazil BRA Ruan
MF Brazil BRA Vinícius
MF Brazil BRA Wendel
FW Brazil BRA Evanilson
FW Brazil BRA Fernando
FW Brazil BRA Patrick
FW Brazil BRA Schutz
FW Brazil BRA Talles

First-team staff

As of June 2014.
Position Name Nationality
Head coach Marcão  Brazilian
Assistant coach Matheus Costa  Brazilian
Fitness coaches Flávio Vignoli  Brazilian
Jefferson Souza  Brazilian

Head coaches

Statistics

Players with most appearances

Name Matches
Brazil Castilho 699
Brazil Pinheiro 603
Brazil Telê Santana 556
Brazil Altair 549
Brazil Escurinho 490
Brazil Rubens Galaxe 462
Brazil Denílson 433
Brazil Assis (Defender) 424
Brazil Waldo 403
10º Brazil Marcão (Midfielder) 397

Top goalscorers

Name Goals Years
Brazil Waldo 319 1954–61
Brazil Orlando Pingo de Ouro 188 1945–55
Brazil Fred 172 2009–16
Brazil Hércules 165 1935–42
Brazil Telê Santana 164 1950–61
England Welfare 163 1913–23
Russia Russo 149 1933–44
Brazil Preguinho 128 1925–39
Brazil Washington 124 1983–89
10º Brazil Magno Alves 121 1998–2002 / 2015-

Coaches with most appearances

Name Matches
Brazil Zezé Moreira 467
Uruguay Ondino Viera 300
Brazil Abel Braga 202
Brazil Renato Gaúcho 178
Brazil Tim 166
Brazil Nelsinho Rosa 156
Brazil Carlos Alberto Parreira 146
Brazil Sylvio Pirillo 138
Brazil Luís Vinhaes 137
10º Brazil Paulo Emílio 126

Notes

  1. ^ Also known by its nickname Brasileirão.
  2. ^ Also known by its nickname Cariocão.

References

  1. ^ http://nl.soccerway.com/teams/brazil/fluminense-football-club/312/
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Fluminense – Forever Flu". Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA). Retrieved 2009-06-07.
  3. ^ "Fluminense fiesta". British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). August 22, 2002. Retrieved 2009-06-11.
  4. ^ "How football conquered Brazil". May 18, 2009. Retrieved 2009-06-11.
  5. ^ a b "Passion, carnival and crazy goals". Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA). July 13, 2001. Retrieved 2009-06-10.
  6. ^ "Southamerican Championship 1919". Rec. Sport. Soccer Statistics Foundation (RSSSF). Retrieved 2009-06-11.
  7. ^ Mason, Tony (1995). Passion of the people? Football in South America. Verso. p. 54. ISBN 978-0-86091-403-7. Retrieved 2009-06-10.
  8. ^ Rodrigues, Mário (2003). O negro no futebol brasileiro (in Portuguese). Mauad. pp. 36, 37, 41, 44, 51, 60, 62, 63, 69, 70, 77, 210, 281. ISBN 978-85-7478-096-2. Retrieved 2009-06-13.
  9. ^ "Pó-de-arroz: provocação que virou símbolo" (in Portuguese). globoesporte.com. March 5, 2008. Retrieved 2009-06-13.
  10. ^ "No Dia da Consciência Negra, Fluminense põe os "pingos nos is" e desmistifica rótulos racistas" (in Portuguese). explosaotricolor.com. Nov 5, 2015. Retrieved 2016-04-13.
  11. ^ "Fluminense desmistifica origem do apelido "Pó de arroz"" (in Portuguese). netflu. May 13, 2015. Retrieved 2016-04-13.
  12. ^ "A mentira que ganhou ares verdadeiros, agora cai por terra" (in Portuguese). canelada. May 14, 2015. Retrieved 2016-04-13.
  13. ^ "Fla consolida supremacia com seis títulos na década" (in Portuguese). Jornal O Dia. May 4, 2009. Retrieved 2009-06-11.
  14. ^ "Fluminense Football Club – Conquistas" (in Portuguese). Fluminense Football Club. Archived from the original on November 26, 2009. Retrieved 2009-12-04. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  15. ^ "Santos and sinners". When Saturday Comes (WSC). February 2003. Retrieved 2009-06-12.
  16. ^ "Brazil 1997 Championship". Rec. Sport. Soccer Statistics Foundation (RSSSF). Retrieved 2009-12-04.
  17. ^ "Brazil 1998 Championship – Second Level (Série B)". Rec. Sport. Soccer Statistics Foundation (RSSSF). Retrieved 2009-12-04.
  18. ^ "Brazil 1999 Third Level (Série C)". Rec. Sport. Soccer Statistics Foundation (RSSSF). Retrieved 2009-12-04.
  19. ^ "Brazil 2001 Championship". Rec. Sport. Soccer Statistics Foundation (RSSSF). Retrieved 2009-12-04.
  20. ^ "Fluminense volta à Libertadores após 23 anos" (in Portuguese). UOL Esporte. June 6, 2007. Retrieved 2009-06-12.
  21. ^ "Flu massacra Arsenal em noite de gala" (in Portuguese). globoesporte.com. March 5, 2008. Retrieved 2009-06-12.
  22. ^ "Flu leva a melhor no Maraca e está na semifinal da Taça Libertadores" (in Portuguese). globoesporte.com. May 21, 2008. Retrieved 2009-06-12.
  23. ^ Leach, Conrad (June 6, 2008). "Flu flay Boca as Brazilians fly into final". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 2009-06-12.
  24. ^ Duarte, Fernando (July 4, 2008). "Fluminense in mourning after Maracana party turns to tears". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 2009-06-12.
  25. ^ "Balcão de negócios e alta rotatividade ajudam a explicar desespero do Flu" (in Portuguese). globoesporte.com. October 5, 2009. Retrieved 2009-12-14.
  26. ^ "Degola mais próxima: Fluminense tem 98% de chances de rebaixamento" (in Portuguese). globoesporte.com. October 9, 2009. Retrieved 2009-12-14.
  27. ^ "Por xeque-mate contra queda, Cuca celebra troca de peças no Tricolor" (in Portuguese). globoesporte.com. November 4, 2009. Retrieved 2009-12-14.
  28. ^ "Fred saves the day for Flu". Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA). Retrieved 2009-12-15.
  29. ^ "A média de público final do Campeonato Brasileiro 2009" (in Portuguese). Rio de Janeiro: O Globo. December 8, 2009. Retrieved 2009-12-14.
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