1989 in Brazilian football

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Football in Brazil
Season1989
← 1988 Brazil 1990 →

The following article presents a summary of the 1989

football (soccer) season in Brazil
, which was the 88th season of competitive football in the country.

Campeonato Brasileiro Série A

Second stage

Group A
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1
São Paulo
18 7 9 2 25 15 +10 23 Qualified to the final
2 Botafogo 18 9 4 5 20 16 +4 22
3 Corinthians 18 8 5 5 15 13 +2 21
4 Atlético Mineiro 18 6 7 5 21 13 +8 19
5
Flamengo
18 6 7 5 16 13 +3 19
6 Náutico 18 5 5 8 27 34 −7 15
7 Internacional-SP 18 4 7 7 13 19 −6 15
8
Internacional-RS
18 4 5 9 14 19 −5 13
Source: [citation needed]

Group B
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 Vasco 18 8 8 2 26 16 +10 24 Qualified for the final
2 Cruzeiro 18 9 5 4 23 14 +9 23
3
Palmeiras
18 8 6 4 21 13 +8 22
4 Portuguesa 18 7 6 5 21 13 +8 20
5 Goiás 18 6 6 6 17 21 −4 18
6
Grêmio
18 6 5 7 19 19 0 17
7
Santos
18 5 6 7 13 16 −3 16
8
Fluminense
18 5 4 9 15 25 −10 14
Source: [citation needed]

As Vasco da Gama had a better season record than São Paulo, the club earned a bonus point to the final and the right to choose where the first leg of the final would be played.

Final


São Paulo0–1Vasco da Gama

Vasco da Gama declared as the Campeonato Brasileiro champions after reaching 3 points.

Relegation

The three worst placed teams in the relegation stage, which are

Coritiba
was also relegated, after being excluded from the competition in the first stage.

Campeonato Brasileiro Série B

Quarterfinals

Team 1
Agg.
Tooltip Aggregate score
Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Ceará 1-2 Catuense 1-1 0-1
Itaperuna 1-2 Remo 0-0 1-2
São José 0-0 Juventude 0-0 0-0 (6-5
pen
)
Criciúma 1-3
Bragantino
1-0 0-3

Semifinals

Team 1
Agg.
Tooltip Aggregate score
Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Remo 0-0
Bragantino
0-0 0-0 (1-4
pen
)
Catuense 1-2 São José 0-1 1-1

Final


Bragantino

Bragantino
2–1São José
Marcelo Stéfani

aggregate score
of 3–1.

Promotion

The champion and the runner-up, which are

Bragantino and São José
, were promoted to the following year's first level.

Copa do Brasil

The Copa do Brasil final was played between

.



Grêmio
2–1Sport

aggregate score
of 1–0.

State championship champions

State Champion State Champion
Acre Juventus-AC Paraíba Treze
Alagoas
Capelense
Paraná Coritiba
Amapá Independente Pernambuco Náutico
Amazonas Rio Negro Piauí River
Bahia Vitória Rio de Janeiro Botafogo
Ceará Ceará Rio Grande do Norte América-RN
Distrito Federal Taguatinga Rio Grande do Sul
Grêmio
Espírito Santo
Desportiva
Rondônia Ferroviário-RO
Goiás Goiás Roraima
Ríver-RR
Maranhão Moto Club Santa Catarina Criciúma
Mato Grosso
Mixto São Paulo
São Paulo
Mato Grosso do Sul
Operário Sergipe Sergipe
Minas Gerais Atlético Mineiro Tocantins -
Pará Remo

Youth competition champions

Competition Champion
Copa Santiago de Futebol Juvenil Nacional (Uruguay)
Copa São Paulo de Juniores
Fluminense
Taça Belo Horizonte de Juniores Atlético Mineiro

Other competition champions

Competition Champion
Torneio de Integração da Amazônia Trem

Brazilian clubs in international competitions

Team
Copa Libertadores 1989
Supercopa Sudamericana 1989
Bahia Quarterfinals Did not qualify
Cruzeiro Did not qualify Quarterfinals
Flamengo
Did not qualify Round of 16
Grêmio
Did not qualify Semifinals
Internacional
Semifinals Did not qualify
Santos
Did not qualify Round of 16

Brazil national team

The following table lists all the games played by the Brazil national football team in official competitions and friendly matches during 1989.

Date Opposition Result Score Brazil scorers Competition
March 15, 1989  Ecuador W 1–0
Washington
International Friendly
March 27, 1989   Rest of the World L 1–2 Dunga International Friendly (unofficial match)
March 29, 1989
Al-Ahli
W 3–1
Washington
International Friendly (unofficial match)
April 12, 1989  Paraguay W 2–0 Cristóvão, Vivinho International Friendly
May 10, 1989  Peru W 4–1
Charles Baiano
(2)
International Friendly
May 24, 1989  Peru D 1–1 Cristóvão International Friendly
June 8, 1989  Portugal W 4–0
Charles Baiano
International Friendly
June 16, 1989  Sweden L 1–2 Cristóvão Tournament of Denmark
June 18, 1989  Denmark L 0–4 - Tournament of Denmark
June 21, 1989   Switzerland L 0–1 - International Friendly
June 22, 1989
Milan
D 0–0 - International Friendly (unofficial match)
July 1, 1989  Venezuela W 3–1
Baltazar
Copa América
July 3, 1989  Peru D 0–0 -
Copa América
July 7, 1989  Colombia D 0–0 -
Copa América
July 9, 1989  Paraguay W 2–0 Bebeto (2)
Copa América
July 12, 1989  Argentina W 2–0 Bebeto, Romário
Copa América
July 14, 1989  Paraguay W 3–0 Bebeto (2), Romário
Copa América
July 16, 1989  Uruguay W 1–0 Romário
Copa América
July 23, 1989  Japan W 1–0
Bismarck
International Friendly
July 30, 1989  Venezuela W 4–0
Branco, Romário, Bebeto
(2)
World Cup Qualifying
August 13, 1989  Chile D 1–1 Gonzalez (own goal) World Cup Qualifying
August 20, 1989  Venezuela W 6–0 Careca (4), Silas, Acosta (own goal) World Cup Qualifying
September 3, 1989  Chile W 2–0(1) Careca World Cup Qualifying
October 14, 1989  Italy W 1–0
André Cruz
International Friendly
November 14, 1989  Yugoslavia D 0–0 - International Friendly
December 20, 1989  Netherlands W 1–0 Careca International Friendly

(1)Chile abandoned the match at 1–0. After an investigation, FIFA awarded Brazil a 2–0 win.

Women's football

National team

The Brazil women's national football team did not play any matches in 1989.

Domestic competition champions

Competition Champion
Taça Brasil
Radar
Troféu Brasil
Saad

References