Showing posts with label Brazilian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brazilian. Show all posts

Friday, January 2, 2015

Brazilian legend Ronaldo promises great things for Ft Lauderdale Strikers

MIAMI, Florida (AFP) — Brazilian football legend Ronaldo is promising great things for the Fort Lauderdale Strikers after becoming part owner of the North American Soccer League club.

“I will be very involved with the management of the team and have already started to make introductions that will certainly help us to turn the Strikers into a global powerhouse,” Ronaldo said in a statement last week, when his ownership stake was announced.

“There are no doubts the beautiful game is growing exponentially in the United States, and I guarantee you that the NASL will play a key role in the rise of professional soccer here.”

The NASL, now a second-tier league behind Major League Soccer, enjoyed its heyday in the 1970s, when such global icons as Pele, Franz Beckenbauer, George Best and Giorgio Chinaglia were lured Stateside to spread the gospel of soccer.

A match between the Strikers and the New York Cosmos drew a crowd of 77,691, and the Cosmos last year launched their own reincarnation with a 2-1 win over the Strikers in a match attended by a host of the Cosmos’ 1970s stars.

In October, the Cosmos announced the signing of Real Madrid legend Raul, but it remains to be seen just how much celebrity ownership and the presence of brilliant, if aging, names on the squads will boost the NASL’s influence.

In New York, the re-booted Cosmos will compete for fans with MLS’s New York Red Bulls and a new MLS rival owned by English Premier League side Manchester City and baseball’s New York Yankees.

The Strikers could eventually face MLS competition in South Florida as well, although England icon David Beckham is still trying to get his planned Miami MLS club off the ground.


View the original article here



Brazilian legend Ronaldo promises great things for Ft Lauderdale Strikers

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

"Time for a Brazilian football revolution"

With 85% of teams inactive for more than six months of the year, leaving 16,000 players unemployed, Brazil’s professional football clubs are effectively in intensive care.

So far they have been sustained by the drip-drip-drip of money from investors keen to buy a stake in players potentially destined for big-money European moves. But with world governing body Fifa’s recent announcement that it is banning third-party ownership, that lifeline is about to be withdrawn.

That poses a major problem for Brazilian clubs, but it could be a decisive moment and one which prompts a much-needed revolution in the country’s domestic game.

Marcos Rojo scores World Cup winner for Argentina

The banning of third-party ownership – the practice whereby all or part of a player’s economic rights belong to investment groups or agents – will shake the very foundations of football finance in Brazil.

The ban comes after an investigation by a Fifa commission into an issue which has become increasingly high-profile, with the protracted sale of Marcos Rojo to Manchester United and Neymar’s controversial move to Barcelona just two examples where it has led to significant complications.

One Fifa member anonymously told the Brazilian media that “for an English club bankrolled by a Russian or Arab billionaire it might be easy to do without investors, but it’s a different reality in Brazil”.

It certainly is. Third-party ownership was already banned in England, but in Brazil more than 80% of first division players are not entirely owned by the club they represent. Some of them are wholly in the hands of investors, while others have had their economic rights cut into slices and divided like a pizza.

Even allowing for a three or four-year transition period, the ban is likely to have a huge effect on club finances. And yet, if sensible steps are taken, Brazil’s clubs might even have cause to celebrate Friday, 26 September 2014 (when the ban was announced) as the day they were finally forced to get their act together.

“The ban cannot be implemented immediately and we are discussing the number of transfer windows we have to wait for before this ban can come in.

“It’s a matter of whether we are talking about six transfer windows, meaning three years, or eight, meaning four years. This is what we will be discussing in this working group.”

Third-party ownership brings with it all sorts of ethical issues over possibilities of match-fixing, money laundering and conflicts of interest. But even if all of these problems were regulated out of existence, the practice would continue to contain a sinister truth for football – that the money paid in transfer fees is leaving the game.

Football produces the talented players that the world will stop to watch – but when a player owned by third parties is transferred, the proceeds line the pockets of those not directly involved in the process of this production. There is an expression for this – asset stripping.

The practice is rife in Brazil because of the weak financial position of the clubs. Investors use this to get a stake in the part of the chain where the big money can be made – the ownership of a promising player bound for Europe.

It started in the 1990s as a consequence of two developments. One was the introduction of freedom of contract for Brazilian players, the other was the opening up of the global market in transfers. The clubs were left in a more precarious position with their players, whose sale could generate huge profits. Investors swooped to take advantage. They put the money up front and the clubs soon became addicted to the fix.

Local journalist Martin Fernandez  reported that in the course of a few recent days one investment group was approached by seven different first division clubs, all of them seeking to sell a share in one of their best young players.

The rationale is simple; payday is approaching, and they need a quick influx of cash to ensure they can meet their commitments. If a player goes unpaid for three months he can become a free agent. This money from the investors, then, keeps the clubs going – but it does so at a price.

Marcos Rojo Rojo’s representatives at Sporting, Doyen Sports, said they were owed 75% of the defender’s transfer fee

The club may have got themselves through the short-term problem – but at the expense of harming the long term, because the big influx of cash could come when they manage to sell their player to Europe. But, of course, by then it is too late. The investor pockets the cash and the club, as Fifa’s study concluded, can be trapped “in a vicious cycle of debt and dependence”.

The situation of the clubs, though, need not be so bleak. Brazilian domestic football is operating absurdly short of its potential, and one of the key causes is a ridiculously outdated calendar. The big clubs are overburdened with an excess of meaningless fixtures – they can be forced to play 85 games in a year. There is no time to stop for Fifa dates, so international call-ups mean that the best players miss league games.

This happens because the strength of the big clubs in Brazil’s football association, the CBF, is relatively limited. Brazil is divided into 27 states. Each state has a football federation, and power in the CBF rests with the 27 federation presidents.

Their power base is the small clubs within their own state. In effect, the entire system is based on domination of clubs with a handful of supporters.

For the state presidents, the main source of prestige and revenue is their local, state championship – usually held between January and May – when the big clubs waste their time and clutter their calendar taking on these tiny rivals.

Control of the entire system, then, is based on control of the small clubs – but even these hardly benefit.

Of the country’s 684 professional clubs, 583 are not active for periods of the year. Come May, when the state championships are over and the little clubs have run out of games, some 16,000 players are unemployed.

Brazilian championship: 38 games

Sao Paulo State Championship: 23

Libertadores: 16 (assumes two in qualifying round)

Total: 85 (could rise to 87 with World Club Cup)

The time is long overdue for the big clubs to take a move along the lines of the step made by their English counterparts in 1992 – they should break away from a structure which does not act in their interests and form their own league.

A well organised Brazilian first division has massive potential. As Jose Luiz Portella, one of the wisest voices in the local press, argued last month: “It would be enough for five or six big clubs to get together and define guidelines of organisation and management, and our football would be different.” The old guard of federations, he continues, “would not be able to prevent change if the clubs really wanted it”.

Up until now, the big clubs have been ludicrously passive. Instead, the hard work is being done by the players. Veterans with European experience have become acutely aware of the deficiencies of Brazilian football. They know much more about how their industry works than the people who actually run it.

Organised into a movement known as bom senso (common sense), they have support from specialists and academics and are putting proposals on the table. Indeed, the statistics cited above on the number and inactivity of clubs are from a bom senso study. They have outlined a calendar which would guarantee all clubs a minimum 34 games a year.

Flamengo v Vasco da Gama Some of the big clubs in Brazil could break away and form their own league

The key, though, is forcing the big clubs out of their lethargy. With the tradition of the teams, the size of some of the fan-bases and the quality of players produced, a well-organised Brazilian championship could be a money spinner – with no need for the clubs to go cap in hand to the local version of the loan sharks. “If the clubs wanted,” wrote Portella, “football would change. They don’t want it.”

But that was in August. Now, after 26 September, the rules have changed and the flow of investors’ money will stop – or at least be greatly restricted.

The end of easy money means that the time has come for hard choices – which could turn out to be one of the best things that ever happened to Brazilian football.


View the original article here



"Time for a Brazilian football revolution"

Thursday, October 2, 2014

Hulk actor"s foray into Brazilian politics

2 October 2014 Last updated at 00:11 BBC Trending By BBC Trending What’s popular and why The incredible hulk attacking a plane in which Marina Silva is the pilot Images which joked about the incident began circulating on social media Mark Ruffalo – the Hollywood actor best known for playing the Hulk – has waded into Brazilian politics to endorse a presidential candidate, only to reverse his position the following day.

As star of the 2012 film based on the Incredible Hulk comic books, Ruffalo isn’t a regular pundit on South American electoral races. But on Sunday he chose to join the debate in Brazil, kick-starting an unusual chain of events that played out over social media.

“Marina Silva is probably one of the most interesting and exciting politicians on the world stage today,” he said in a YouTube video, endorsing the presidential candidate.

The video touched a nerve with legions of gay rights campaigners in Brazil. They started tweeting Ruffalo urging him not to back a candidate they said did not support gay marriage. “I hope you’re just misinformed. Read more about it please,” asked one.

Ruffalo soon replied. “Thank you, I am looking into it. I can not support a homophobic,” he said, and asked Silva directly on Twitter: “Are you pro marriage equality?”

An aide tweeted back from her account to say that she was, posting a link to her manifesto which pledges support for they gay community. But many of her political opponents chose to keep the conversation going. “Nope,” and “NÃO,” they tweeted back. Some claimed that they doubted the manifesto reflected her true intentions. The actor’s name began trending in Brazil, and has appeared some 20,000 times in the last two days.

Eventually, Ruffalo declared his position. “It has come to my attention that the Brazilian Candidate for President, Marina Silva, may be against gay marriage… It is a little bit murky and unclear presently,” he said on his Tumblr blog. “I have to apologise for not doing a better job of vetting this decision.” Until Silva clarified her views, he wrote, “my support is null and void.”

Silva is one of three leading candidates for the presidency in Sunday’s election. Born into a poverty in a small village, she worked on a rubber tree plantation and as a housemaid before making her way into politics. She hopes to usurp the country’s current president – Dilma Rousseff – whose incumbent left-wing Workers Party has held power for almost 12 years, but has recently been beset by a string of corruption scandals. Along with Aecio Neves – who leads the centrist PSDB party – all the candidates have signalled their support for gay rights, though doubts remain about whether they will prioritise the issue after the election.

Reporting by Sam Judahand Bruno Garcez

You can follow BBC Trending on Twitter @BBCtrending

All our stories are at bbc.com/trending


View the original article here



Hulk actor"s foray into Brazilian politics

Monday, December 30, 2013

Brazilian football faces courtroom drama

World Cup year in Brazil could hardly be more fascinating.


No other society gears itself up so much for international football’s main event, painting and decorating its streets as if for a jubilee.


But no other society has also seemed set to protest about World Cup spending on the scale that could happen in a few months. We are living in interesting times.


For the diehard, week-in week-out fan, though, the club game is the main driver of passions, in Brazil as elsewhere.


And how to get excited about 2014 if 2013 shows no signs of ending? After 38 rounds, the Brazilian Championship has had two more in the courtroom – and there will probably be more to come.


At the centre of the hurricane is a traditional yet modest club from Sao Paulo, Portuguesa, gamely getting by on crowds often as low as 2,000.


Seen as relegation certainties, they battled their way through the campaign to finish 12th in Brazil’s 20-strong first division. But, as it stands, they are still going down.

Brilliant Brazil at the World Cup

In the last game,  with safety seemingly assured, Portuguesa fielded an ineligible player  – they have been found guilty by the sports justice system, and their appeal was unsuccessful.


The penalty handed out to them is the loss of the point gained in the (drawn) match, plus the docking of a further three points. This is enough to drop them into the relegation zone.


There are two problems here. The first is that the team who benefit from this situation are Fluminense, the politically powerful club of the Rio elite.


The 2012 champions lost Deco to retirement,  sold some important players and had an awful run of injuries, including one to international centre forward Fred.


Fluminense have twice benefited from behind-the-scenes manoeuvres. In 1996 they were saved when, as a consequence of a refereeing scandal, all relegation was cancelled, and four years later they were allowed to jump straight from the third to the first division.


Now, only the fact that the full penalty has been handed out to Portuguesa has saved Fluminense from another trip to the second division. That makes three off-the-field actions in their favour.


At least on this occasion the rulebook has been followed. But this brings us to the second problem. The punishment handed out to Portuguesa seems disproportionate to the crime; begging the question, although due process may have been carried out, has justice really been administered?


The circumstances are as follows. At the end of the 36th round, Portuguesa attacking midfielder Heverton, angry at the lack of stoppage time, swore at the referee. He was given the red card, and automatically suspended from the next match.


On the eve of the 38th and final round, he was judged and, based on the gravity of his offence, his suspension was extended to two games. It seems at this point that Portuguesa had gone to sleep.


They had – apparently – made sure of first division survival in their penultimate match, and it could well be that their legal department was not in a full state of concentration. But they were not the only ones.


The CBF (Brazil’s FA) has recently started an internet service aimed at informing clubs of disciplinary decisions. Heverton’s suspension was increased on Friday afternoon, and the match was on Saturday – at which time the information on the site had not been updated.


Diogo of Portuguesa Portuguesa, from Sao Paulo, finished 12th in Brazil’s 20-strong first division – but, as it stands, they are still going down.

All but two of the matches in the last round were played simultaneously on Sunday. Portuguesa’s game was brought forward a day precisely because there was nothing resting on it; barring a mathematical miracle they were guaranteed survival, while opponents Gremio had made sure of their place in the 2014 Libertadores.


Heverton came off the bench for the last 15 minutes of a tame goalless draw. And this has proved enough to relegate a club who finished 12th.


Portuguesa, in slightly confusing circumstances, were guilty of no more than an administrative lapse. No sporting advantage was sought, nor gained from their actions. Is the full penalty really appropriate in these circumstances?


Should their punishment really be exactly the same as one dished out to a club which knowingly fields an ineligible player in a crunch game and hopes to get away with it?


The STJD, Brazilian football’s sports tribunal, says that it cannot take any of these factors into account. The rules were broken and the penalty has been applied.


But there is a glaring contradiction in their position. In the opinion of the STJD, Heverton’s red card offence was sufficiently grave to warrant an extra punishment. So they can take into account the prevailing circumstances when punishing the player for the red card.


Why, then, are they utterly unable to take into account any of the circumstances when punishing his erroneous selection for the game against Gremio?


This leads to a further question. If they really believe that circumstances cannot be taken into account, how do they profess to administer justice?


Surely the principle of proportionality should apply – that the punishment should be proportional to the severity of the offence.


This principle is certainly part of the conventional justice system – and it would seem sure that is where this case is heading.


Any private individual can bring this case before the law courts, and many Portuguesa supporters are preparing to do just that. The whole thing could drag on for months.


At the turn of the year it is not entirely clear which, or how many, teams will contest the 2014 Brazilian Championship or what format will be used. These, then, are not just fascinating times for the World Cup.


Manchester United Will Manchester United’s Rafael feature in Brazil’s World Cup squad?

Send questions on South American football to vickerycolumn@hotmail.com, and I’ll pick out a couple for next week.


From last week’s postbag;


With such an array of midfield talent at his disposal, who will be left out when coach Scolari names Brazil’s World Cup Squad? Paulinho, Fernandinho, Luiz Gustavo, Lucas and Sandro can all play the anchor man role but two or three of them will surely have to miss out. JJ Williams


Paulinho is not the anchor man – he’s the one with more freedom to bomb into the opposing area. The holding role is Luiz Gustavo’s – putting him in the side in June was a crucial part of Scolari’s jigsaw, and barring injury he is a certainty. At the moment his back up is Lucas Leiva, who has taken over from young Fernando, who recently moved to Shakhtar.  Sandro and Fernandinho are on the outside looking in – clearly the latter has an opportunity to push his claims in the Champions League, and he is aware that the Premier League is giving him much more visibility than he had in Ukraine.


But the problem is lack of time – there is only one game (5 March v South Africa) before the squad is announced. And with everything going so well for the national team in 2013, it is not easy for anyone to force his way in.


Do you think that Man United’s Rafael will get in the Brazil team soon? He is playing very well now. I think he is a real threat going forward and has become an accomplished defender. David Crompton


Same problem as Fernandinho (above) – not enough time. Daniel Alves is first choice right-back, and, perhaps surprisingly, Maicon looked good when he was recalled in the last few months. Barring injury, it is hard to see them being displaced – and the competition has become fiercer now Rafinha is getting a game at Bayern Munich.


View the original article here



Brazilian football faces courtroom drama

Thursday, August 29, 2013

Brazilian states hit by power cut

28 August 2013 Last updated at 20:19 ET Map A major power cut in Brazil has left nine states in the dark for nearly three hours.


All the state capitals in the north-east of the country were hit by the blackout, including four cities that will be hosting the 2014 World Cup.


More than two-and-a-half hours later power was restored to the state capitals, but smaller cities remained without electricity for longer.


Tens of millions of people across the region were affected.


The government said a fire in Piaui state had caused several transmission lines to go down.


The mines and energy minister, Edson Lobao, said this led to the entire north-eastern region being disconnected from the national grid.


The cause of the fire is unknown.


A spokesman for the country’s electricity regulator Aneel, reportedly said that officials had focused on restoring power before trying to determine what caused the blaze.


The states affected were Pernambuco, Bahia, Rio Grande do Norte, Piaui, Alagoas, Ceara, Paraiba, Sergipe and Maranhao.


Power cuts in Brazil are less frequent than in the past, but still happen a few times a year, particularly in the north-east.


Two major power cuts hit the region in 2012 despite recent improvements in energy infrastructure.


View the original article here



Brazilian states hit by power cut

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Local beach volleyballers get Brazilian help

Sport

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

THE National Olympic Committee (NOC) of Brazil has gone above and beyond the call of duty in its efforts to assist Jamaica’s U-19 beach volleyball teams to prepare for competition at the FIVB World U-19 Beach Volleyball Championship in Portugal from July 11-14 .In its latest move, NOC Brazil has decided to cover all expenses to have Jacqueline Cruz Silva accompany the team to Portugal.The decision comes after NOC Brazil, in collaboration with the Jamaica Olympic Association (JOA) and the Jamaica Volleyball Association (JaVA), arranged to send the world-renowned winner of the first women Olympic beach volleyball championship to Jamaica to provide technical assistance to the teams from May 29 to June 6. This was followed by assistance to cover the accommodation, meals and ground transportation expenses of the teams’ visit to Brazil from June 29-July 6 for preparatory training.Commenting on the new development, president of JaVA Major Warrenton Dixon, said: “I could not have planned a better script. The kindness that we have received from Brazil, to include their NOC, National Volleyball Federation and Embassy in Jamaica, knows no bounds.”Rojey Hutchinson and Shavar Bryan make up the boys’ team, while Tionna Graham and Lisanne Roofe comprise the girls’ team. They will carry Jamaica’s flag, which will be making its first appearance at a beach volleyball event at this level.They are due to depart Jamaica today and return next week Tuesday. O’Neil Ebanks will travel with the team as head of delegation.From left) Lisanne Roofe, Shavar Bryan, Tionna Graham, O’Neil Ebanks, Jackie Silva, Rojey Hutchinson with beach volleyball players in Brazil.

View the original article here



Local beach volleyballers get Brazilian help