2010 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Grêmio Prudente 4–1 Goiás
(November 7)[1]
Average attendance14,839[1]
2009

The 2010 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A was the 54th edition of the

Flamengo came as the defending champion having won the 2009 season
.

Format

For the eighth consecutive season, the tournament was in a double round-robin system. The team with most points was declared the champion. The bottom-four teams were relegated for the following season.

International qualification

The Série A served as a qualifier to

Internacional won the 2010 Copa Libertadores, the top-two teams in the standings qualified to the Second Stage of the 2011 Copa Libertadores
.

The format used then also specified that the next two best teams in the standings qualify to the First Stage, if the 2011 Copa Sudamericana isn't conquered by a Brazilian club. If that happens, the fourth placed team will not qualify to the Libertadores. Santos, as the winner of the 2010 Copa do Brasil, has an automatic berth to the Second Stage of the competition. The next eight best teams in the standings earn berths to the Second Stage of the 2011 Copa Sudamericana.[2]

Team information

Guarani, Ceará, and Atlético Goianiense, the top-four finishers of the 2009 Série B
.

During the off-season,

Grêmio Prudente Futebol
.

During the championship, some clubs' venues were transferred to secondary stadia as their home venues are being reformed in preparations for the 2014 FIFA World Cup to be held in Brazil.

Team City Stadium Capacity
Atlético Goianiense Goiânia Serra Dourada 45,000
Atlético Mineiro Belo Horizonte
Ipatingão
75,783
25,000
20,500
Atlético Paranaense
Curitiba
Arena da Baixada
28,327
Avaí
Florianópolis Ressacada 19,000
Botafogo Rio de Janeiro
Engenhão
46,931
Ceará Fortaleza Castelão 60,326
Corinthians São Paulo
Pacaembu
37,952
Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte 75,783
25,000
20,500
50,000
Flamengo
Rio de Janeiro
Engenhão
87,238
21,000
46,931
Fluminense
Rio de Janeiro
Engenhão
87,238
46,931
Goiás Goiânia Serra Dourada 45,000
Grêmio
Porto Alegre Olímpico 45,000
Grêmio Prudente
Presidente Prudente
Prudentão
44,414
Guarani
Campinas Brinco de Ouro 40,988
Internacional
Porto Alegre Beira-Rio 56,000
Palmeiras
São Paulo
Pacaembu
29,876
16,417
37,952
Santos Santos
Pacaembu
20,120
37,952
São Paulo São Paulo
Morumbi
67,428
Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro
São Januário
20,150
Vitória Salvador Barradão 32,000

Personnel and kits

Team Manager Kit manufacturer Main sponsor
Atlético Goianiense
Renê Simões
Super Bolla Banco BMG
Atlético Mineiro Dorival Júnior Topper Banco BMG
Atlético Paranaense
Sérgio Soares Umbro Philco
Avaí
Vagner Benazzi
Fanatic Intelbras
Botafogo Joel Santana Fila
Neo Química Genéricos
Ceará Dimas Filgueiras (caretaker) Penalty
Neo Química Genéricos
Corinthians Tite Nike
Neo Química Genéricos
Cruzeiro
Cuca
Reebok Banco BMG
Flamengo
Vanderlei Luxemburgo Olympikus Batavo
Fluminense
Muricy Ramalho Adidas Unimed
Goiás Artur Neto Lotto
Neo Química Genéricos
Grêmio
Renato Gaúcho Puma Banrisul
Grêmio Prudente
Fábio Giuntini Kanxa Grupo Localfrio
Guarani
Vágner Mancini
Lupo Sport CPN Engenharia
Internacional
Celso Roth Reebok Banrisul
Palmeiras
Luiz Felipe Scolari Adidas Fiat
Santos Marcelo Martelotte (caretaker) Umbro Seara Alimentos
São Paulo Paulo César Carpegiani Reebok Banco BMG
Vasco da Gama
PC Gusmão
Penalty Eletrobras
Vitória Antônio Lopes Penalty Grupo OAS

Managerial changes

Team Outgoing manager Manner of
departure
Date of
vacancy
Position
in table
Replaced by Date of
appointment
Vasco da Gama
Vágner Mancini
Sacked March 25 Pre-season
Gaúcho
(caretaker)
March 26
Goiás
Jorginho
Sacked April 19 Pre-season Émerson Leão April 24
Flamengo
Andrade
Sacked April 23 Pre-season Rogério Lourenço April 24
Palmeiras
Antônio Carlos Zago Sacked May 18 7th Jorge Parraga (caretaker) May 19
Vasco da Gama
Gaúcho
(caretaker)
Replaced May 18 16th Celso Roth May 18
Atlético Paranaense
Leandro Niehues Sacked May 25 17th Leandro Niehues (caretaker) May 25
Internacional
Jorge Fossati Sacked May 28 18th Enderson Moreira (caretaker) May 29
Atlético Paranaense
Leandro Niehues (caretaker) Replaced May 31 19th Paulo César Carpegiani May 31
Cruzeiro
Adílson Batista
Resigned June 2 6th
Cuca
June 8
Atlético Goianiense Geninho Resigned June 7 20th Roberto Fernandes June 14
Vasco da Gama Celso Roth Left to sign with
Internacional
June 12 19th
PC Gusmão
June 13
Internacional
Enderson Moreira (caretaker) Replaced June 12 16th Celso Roth June 12
Ceará
PC Gusmão
Left to sign with Vasco da Gama June 13 2nd Estevam Soares June 13
Palmeiras
Jorge Parraga (caretaker) Replaced June 13 10th
Luis Felipe Scolari
June 13
Avaí
Péricles Chamusca Left to sign with Al-Arabi July 1 12th Antônio Lopes July 5
Corinthians Mano Menezes Left to sign with Brazil July 24 2nd
Adílson Batista
July 24
Atlético Goianiense Roberto Fernandes Sacked July 30 20th
Renê Simões
August 1
São Paulo Ricardo Gomes Contract expired August 5 9th Sérgio Baresi August 10
Grêmio
Silas Sacked August 8 18th Renato Gaúcho August 10
Ceará Estevam Soares Sacked August 8 3rd Mário Sérgio August 9
Vitória Ricardo Silva Sacked August 9 16th Toninho Cecílio August 9
Grêmio Prudente
Toninho Cecílio Left to sign with Vitória August 9 14th Antônio Carlos Zago August 17
Goiás Émerson Leão Sacked August 27 20th Jorginho August 29
Flamengo
Rogério Lourenço Sacked August 27 10th Silas August 29
Ceará Mário Sérgio Sacked September 8 11th Dimas Filgueiras (caretaker) September 10
Vitória Toninho Cecílio Sacked September 8 15th Ricardo Silva September 9
Grêmio Prudente
Antônio Carlos Zago Sacked September 10 19th Marcelo Rospide September 10
Avaí
Antônio Lopes Sacked September 20 16th
Vagner Benazzi
October 10
Santos Dorival Júnior Sacked September 21 6th Marcelo Martelotte (caretaker) September 21
Atlético Mineiro Vanderlei Luxemburgo Sacked September 23 18th Dorival Júnior September 25
Grêmio Prudente
Marcelo Rospide Resigned September 27 20th Fábio Giuntini October 5
Atlético Paranaense
Paulo César Carpegiani Left to sign with São Paulo October 3 5th Sérgio Soares October 4
São Paulo Sérgio Baresi Replaced October 3 11th Paulo César Carpegiani October 3
Flamengo
Silas Sacked October 4 15th Vanderlei Luxemburgo October 5
Vitória Ricardo Silva Sacked October 7 14th Antônio Lopes October 7
Corinthians
Adílson Batista
Mutual consent October 10 3rd Tite October 17
Goiás Jorginho Sacked November 8 19th Artur Neto November 8

Foreign players

The match squad must have no more than 3 Foreign Players

Club Player 1 Player 2 Player 3 Player 4 Dual Nationality Player Former Players
Atlético Goianiense
Atlético Mineiro Ecuador Édison Méndez Ecuador Jayro Campos Paraguay Julio César Cáceres Paraguay Pedro Benítez
Atlético Paranaense Argentina Federico Nieto Ecuador Joffre Guerrón Paraguay Iván González Argentina Javier Toledo
Colombia Edwin Valencia
Avaí
Botafogo Argentina Germán Herrera Uruguay Sebastián Abreu
Ceará
Corinthians Argentina Matías Defederico
Cruzeiro Argentina Ernesto Farías Argentina Walter Montillo Colombia Javier Reina
Ecuador Joffre Guerrón
Flamengo Chile Claudio Maldonado Chile Gonzalo Fierro Colombia Cristian Martinez Serbia Dejan Petković
Fluminense Argentina Darío Conca Argentina Ezequiel González Colombia Edwin Valencia Portugal Deco Qatar Emerson Sheik
Goiás
Grêmio
Grêmio Prudente
Guarani
Internacional Argentina Andrés D'Alessandro Argentina Pablo Guiñazú Argentina Roberto Abbondanzieri Uruguay Bruno Silva Uruguay Gonzalo Sorondo
Palmeiras Chile Jorge Valdivia Colombia Pablo Armero
Santos Italy Rodrigo Possebon
São Paulo
Vasco da Gama Paraguay Julio Irrazábal
Vitória Colombia Julián Viáfara

League table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1
Fluminense
38 20 11 7 62 36 +26 71 2011 Copa Libertadores Second Stage
2 Cruzeiro 38 20 9 9 53 38 +15 69
3 Corinthians 38 19 11 8 65 41 +24 68 2011 Copa Libertadores First Stage
4
Grêmio
38 17 12 9 68 43 +25 63
5
Atlético Paranaense
38 17 9 12 43 45 −2 60 2011 Copa Sudamericana Second Stage
6 Botafogo 38 14 17 7 54 42 +12 59
7
Internacional
38 16 10 12 48 41 +7 58 2011 Copa Libertadores Second Stage[a]
8 Santos 38 15 11 12 63 50 +13 56 2011 Copa Libertadores Second Stage[b]
9 São Paulo 38 15 10 13 54 54 0 55 2011 Copa Sudamericana Second Stage
10
Palmeiras
38 12 14 12 42 43 −1 50
11 Vasco da Gama 38 11 16 11 43 45 −2 49
12 Ceará 38 10 17 11 35 44 −9 47
13 Atlético Mineiro 38 13 6 19 52 64 −12 45
14
Flamengo
38 9 17 12 41 44 −3 44
15
Avaí
38 11 10 17 49 58 −9 43
16 Atlético Goianiense 38 11 9 18 51 57 −6 42
17 Vitória 38 9 15 14 42 48 −6 42 Relegation to Série B
18
Guarani
38 8 13 17 33 53 −20 37
19 Goiás 38 8 9 21 41 68 −27 33
20
Prudente
38 7 10 21 39 64 −25 28[c]
Source: [3]
Rules for classification: 1st points; 2nd wins; 3rd goal difference; 4th goals scored; 5th head-to-head results; 6th least red cards received; 7th least yellow cards received; 8th draw
Notes:
  1. ^ Internacional qualified as the 2010 Copa Libertadores champion.
  2. ^ Santos qualified as the 2010 Copa do Brasil champion.
  3. ^ Grêmio Prudente was docked 3 points due to fielding a suspended player.


 Campeonato Brasileiro de Clubes da Série A
2010 champion 
Fluminense

Third title

Results

Home \ Away ACG CAM
CAP
AVA
BOT CEA COR CRU
FLA
FLU
GOI
GRE
GPR
GUA
INT
PAL
SAN SPA VAS VIT
Atlético Goianiense 2–3 1–2 2–2 0–2 1–1 3–1 2–1 0–1 2–1 1–3 0–0 3–0 1–1 2–2 3–0 1–2 1–1 2–0 4–1
Atlético Mineiro 3–2 3–1 2–0 0–2 0–1 2–1 0–1 4–1 1–3 3–1 1–2 1–0 3–1 1–2 1–2 2–2 2–3 2–1 2–3
Atlético Paranaense
2–1 2–1 1–0 3–2 2–1 1–1 0–2 1–0 2–2 2–1 1–1 2–1 2–2 1–0 1–0 2–0 1–1 0–0 1–0
Avaí
3–0 0–0 0–1 0–0 5–0 3–2 1–2 2–2 0–3 4–1 0–3 6–1 1–0 0–1 4–2 3–2 0–0 2–0 0–0
Botafogo 3–2 3–0 1–1 1–0 1–0 2–2 2–2 1–1 1–1 3–0 2–2 3–1 1–1 1–2 0–0 3–3 2–0 1–1 1–0
Ceará 0–0 0–0 1–1 2–0 2–2 0–0 1–0 2–2 1–0 1–1 2–1 2–2 2–0 1–0 0–0 2–1 2–0 0–2 1–0
Corinthians 3–4 1–0 2–1 4–0 1–1 2–2 1–0 1–0 1–0 5–1 0–1 3–0 3–1 2–0
1–0
4–2 3–0 2–0 2–1
Cruzeiro 3–0 3–4 0–0 2–2 1–0 2–0 1–0 1–0 1–0 1–0 2–2 0–0 4–2 1–0 2–1 0–0 0–2 3–1 0–1
Flamengo
2–0 0–0 0–1 1–1 1–0 1–0 1–1 1–2
3–3
1–2 1–1 3–1 2–1 3–0 1–3 0–0 1–1 0–0 2–2
Fluminense
1–0 5–1 3–1 1–0 0–0 3–1 1–2 1–0
2–1
1–1 2–0 1–1 1–0 3–0 1–1 0–3 2–2 1–0 2–1
Goiás 1–3 1–3 0–2 1–0 4–1 0–0 1–1 0–1 1–1 0–3 0–2 1–2 3–1 2–3 1–1 1–4 2–1 0–0 1–0
Grêmio
2–0 2–1 3–1 3–0 3–0 5–1 1–2 2–1 2–2 1–2 2–0 4–0 1–0
2–2
1–2 1–2 4–2 1–1 1–1
Grêmio Prudente
1–0 4–0 0–1 1–1 0–1 1–1 2–2 0–2 1–2 1–1 4–1 2–0 4–2 0–3 0–1 1–2 2–3 1–2 0–0
Guarani
0–1 0–0 1–0 4–1 1–1 1–1 0–0 2–2 2–1 2–1 1–0 0–3 1–0 0–3 0–0 0–0 0–0 1–0 1–1
Internacional
1–1 1–0 4–1 2–3 1–0 2–1 3–2 1–2 1–0 0–0 0–0
0–0
2–0 3–0 1–1 1–1 0–2 1–0 1–1
Palmeiras
0–3 0–2 2–0 4–1 2–2 1–1
1–1
2–3 0–1 1–2 3–2 4–2 0–0 1–0 2–0 2–1 0–2 0–0 1–0
Santos 4–2 2–0 2–0 2–1 0–1 1–1 2–3 4–1 0–0 0–1 2–0 0–0 2–3 3–1 1–0 1–1
1–0
4–0 1–1
São Paulo 2–1 4–0 2–1 1–2 1–2 2–1 0–2 2–2 2–0 1–4 0–3 3–1 1–1 2–1 1–3 1–0
4–3
0–0 2–0
Vasco da Gama 2–0 1–1 3–1 1–1 2–2 2–0 2–0 1–1 1–1 2–2 3–2 3–3 2–1 0–1 3–2 0–0 3–1 1–1 1–0
Vitória 0–0 4–3 1–0 3–0 1–3 0–0 1–1 0–1 1–1 1–2 2–2 0–3 2–0 1–1 0–0 1–1 4–2 3–2 4–2
Source: [4]
Legend: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.

Top goalscorers

Pos[5] Player Nationality Club Goals
1
Jonas
 Brazilian
Grêmio
23
2 Neymar  Brazilian Santos 17
3
Bruno César
 Brazilian Corinthians 14
4
Elias
 Brazilian Atlético Goianiense 12
Obina  Brazilian Atlético Mineiro 12
6 Sebastián Abreu  Uruguayan Botafogo 11
André Lima  Brazilian
Grêmio
11
8
Alecsandro
 Brazilian
Internacional
10
Diego Tardelli  Brazilian Atlético Mineiro 10
Kléber
 Brazilian
Palmeiras2
10
Washington
 Brazilian
Fluminense1
10
Wesley Morais
 Brazilian
Grêmio Prudente
10
Zé Eduardo
 Brazilian Santos 10

References

  1. ^ a b c "Estatísticas Campeonato Brasileiro Série A 2010" [2010 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A Statistics] (in Portuguese). Brazilian Football Confederation. Archived from the original on 2010-05-31. Retrieved December 9, 2010.
  2. ^ "Conmebol se redime, e Brasileiro volta a ter quatro vagas para a Libertadores-11" [Conmebol changes its mind, and the Brazilian League qualifies four teams to the Libertadores-11] (in Portuguese). October 18, 2010. Archived from the original on 22 October 2010. Retrieved October 18, 2010.
  3. ^ "Classificação Campeonato Brasileiro Série A 2010" [2010 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A Standings] (in Portuguese). Brazilian Football Confederation. Archived from the original on 2010-05-15. Retrieved December 5, 2010.
  4. ^ "Campeonato Brasileiro Série A 2010" [2010 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A] (in Portuguese). Brazilian Football Confederation. Archived from the original on 2010-05-28. Retrieved September 26, 2010.
  5. ^ "Artilharia" [Goalscorers] (in Portuguese). globoesporte.com. Archived from the original on 11 August 2010. Retrieved September 23, 2010.