Associação Atlética Ponte Preta

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Ponte Preta
Associação Atlética Ponte Preta logo
Full nameAssociação Atlética Ponte Preta
Nickname(s)Ponte
Macaca (Female Monkey)
Alvinegra de Campinas (Campinas' White & Black)
A Veterana (The Veteran)
FoundedAugust 11, 1900; 123 years ago (1900-08-11)
GroundMoisés Lucarelli
Capacity19,722
PresidentMarco Antonio Eberlin
Head coachJoão Brigatti
LeagueCampeonato Brasileiro Série B
Campeonato Paulista
2023
2023 [pt]
Série B, 15th of 20
Paulista Série A2, 1st of 16 (champions)
WebsiteClub website
Current season
Estádio Moisés Lucarelli

Associação Atlética Ponte Preta (Portuguese pronunciation:

Campeonato Paulista Série A1, the top tier of the São Paulo state football league
.

Ponte Preta is also known as Macaca. Ponte Preta's biggest rival is from the same city,

Guarani, against whom matches are known as derby campineiro (dérbi campineiro in Portuguese). They are known as "pontepretanos". Ponte Preta is the second oldest football team established in Brazil still in activity, founded on August 11, 1900, the oldest being Sport Club Rio Grande, of Rio Grande do Sul
.

History

Ponte Preta was founded on August 11, 1900, by Colégio Culto à Ciência students Miguel do Carmo (nicknamed "Migué"), Luiz Garibaldi Burghi, (nicknamed "Gigette") and Antonio de Oliveira (nicknamed "Tonico Campeão"), nearby a black painted wood railroad bridge, so the name Ponte Preta (which means "black bridge", in English). Ponte Preta's first president was Pedro Vieira da Silva.

The team's history is directly intertwined with the railroad business that was flourishing in its city of Campinas. Most of the people involved with the foundation of the team were residents of the working-class neighbourhood by the railroad. One of the team's first nicknames was the "Train of August 11th". Ponte's stadium, the Estádio Moisés Lucarelli, is located right by the railroad in a way where it is possible to see it when inside the stadium, and according to the fans, when the train passes by during a game, it is a sign of good luck to come for the team.

Ponte Preta is recognized, by FIFA, as one of the first teams in the Americas to accept black players, since its foundation in 1900. The club claims to be the first football team ever to have a black player in their roster, that player being the before mentioned Miguel do Carmo, who was part of their first squad.[1] It is also the first countryside team to play a national competition, in 1970.

Santos
defeated Ponte Preta 2–0.

Ponte Preta lost the Campeonato Paulista final to Corinthians in 1977 in a controversial game that ended in a 2–1 final score.[citation needed] Rui Rey, an important piece of the Ponte Preta team, was shown a red card early in the game. Ponte Preta were considered the favorites for the championship that year.

On November 27, 2013, at the

São Paulo
(4–2 on aggregate) in the semi-finals. It was a historical time for the club, which was playing its first international cup. The final was against Lanús, a Traditional Argentine team, with Ponte Preta finishing as runner-up.

Honours

Continental

National

State

Youth team

  • Copa São Paulo de Juniores
    :
    • Winners (2): 1981, 1982

Achievements time line

  • 1912: Champions – Liga Campineira de Futebol
  • 1928: ChampionsCampeonato Paulista da Divisão Principal – 2º quadro (L.A.F.)
  • 1929: Champions – Campeonato Paulista da Divisão Principal – 2º quadro (L.A.F.)
  • 1951: Champions – State Amateur Championship (45 games unbeaten)
  • 1969: Champions – Campeonato Paulista – Divisão de Accesso
  • 1970: Runner-up Campeonato Paulista
  • 1977: Runner-up Campeonato Paulista
  • 1979: Runner-up Campeonato Paulista
  • 1981: Champions – Campeonato Paulista Championship First Stage
  • 1981: Runner-up – Campeonato Paulista
  • 1981: Third placed – Campeonato Brasileiro Série A
  • 1981: Champions
    Copa São Paulo de Juniores
  • 1982: Champions – Copa São Paulo de Juniores
  • 1991: Champions – Campeonato Paulista de Aspirantes

Stadium

Ponte Preta's stadium is Estádio Moisés Lucarelli, also known as "Majestoso", or "Estádio Majestoso" (Portuguese for Majestic Stadium), built in 1948, by its own fan's material and work.

Its maximum capacity is of 19,722 people, nowadays. The biggest public in it was in a

Santos
, with an official public of 33,000, but it is said that there were about 40,000 people, as the gates were broken down.

Its nickname is "Majestoso", meaning the "Majestic One" because it was the third largest stadium in Brazil at the time of its inauguration (only smaller than

São Januário, in Rio de Janeiro
).

In Majestoso's entrance hall there is a bust of the stadium's founder, Moisés Lucarelli (after whom the venue is named) facing the outside. In 2000, after a long series of defeats some superstitious fans argued that the founder ought to see the team playing and the bust was rotated 180 degrees. As the team's performance did not improve noticeably, the statue was put back in its original position.[citation needed]

Supporters

Ponte Preta supporters are known as "pontepretanos". A club from Maceió, Alagoas, adopted a similar name and colors as the Campinas club. There is a Norwegian futsal club named after Ponte Preta.[2]

Rivalry

Associação Atlética Ponte Preta's biggest rival is from the same city:

Guarani. The games between Ponte Preta and Guarani, known as derby (dérbi in Portuguese), are usually preceded by a week of tension, provocations and also fights in the city of Campinas
.

It is a centenary rivalry (the first being held on March 24, 1912), the greatest in Brazil's countryside and one of the most intense in the whole country.

Symbols

The club's

Palmeiras
fans, who adopted the pig as their mascot instead of taking offense from it, and other teams.

Ultras

Placar magazine's Silver Ball Prize winners while playing on Ponte Preta

Basketball

Ponte Preta had one of the most powerful teams in the history of Brazilian female Basketball during the early 1990s, winning the World Club Championship twice.[3]

Current squad

As of 22 April 2024

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Brazil BRA
Pedro Rocha
2 DF Brazil BRA Igor Inocêncio
3 DF Brazil BRA Edson
4 DF Brazil BRA Mateus Silva
5 MF Brazil BRA Dudu Vieira
6 DF Brazil BRA Sérgio Raphael
7 MF Brazil BRA Dodô (on loan from Coimbra)
8 MF Brazil BRA Emerson Santos
9 FW Brazil BRA Jeh
10 MF Brazil BRA Élvis
11 FW Brazil BRA Iago Dias
12 GK Brazil BRA Vinicius Ferrari
13 DF Brazil BRA Joílson
14 DF Brazil BRA Luiz Felipe
15 DF Brazil BRA
Castro
17 FW Brazil BRA Kauê (on loan from CEOV)
19 FW Brazil BRA Renato
20 DF Brazil BRA João Gabriel
No. Pos. Nation Player
21 MF Brazil BRA Ramon Carvalho
23 DF Bolivia BOL Luis Haquín
25 MF Brazil BRA Lucas Buchecha
29 FW Brazil BRA Éverton Brito
30 GK Brazil BRA Luan
31 DF Brazil BRA Zé Mário
33 DF Argentina ARG Gabriel Risso Patrón
35 FW Brazil BRA Gabriel Novaes (on loan from Red Bull Bragantino)
44 DF Brazil BRA Nilson Júnior
77 FW Brazil BRA Matheus Régis (on loan from São Bernardo)
98 FW Brazil BRA Venícius (on loan from Inter de Lages)
GK Brazil BRA Guilherme Viana
GK Brazil BRA William Assmann
DF Brazil BRA Emerson
DF Brazil BRA Guilherme Nicolodi
DF Brazil BRA Jean Carlos
MF Brazil BRA Diego Domene
FW Brazil BRA Guilherme Beléa (on loan from Cianorte)

Other players under contract

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK Brazil BRA Hayran

Out on loan

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
DF Brazil BRA Euller (to Linense until 30 April 2024)
DF Brazil BRA Thiago Lopes (to CSA until 30 November 2024)
MF Brazil BRA André Henrique (to Santo André until 30 November 2024)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Brazil BRA Dudu Scheit (to Operário Ferroviário until 30 November 2024)
MF Brazil BRA Eduardo Processo (to Linense until 30 April 2024)
FW Colombia COL Paul Villero (to Athletic-MG until 30 November 2024)

Head coaches

See also

References

Websites

  1. ^ "Folha de S.Paulo – Clube quer que Fifa reconheça "democracia" – 12/12/2010". www1.folha.uol.com.br. Retrieved September 26, 2018.
  2. ^ "Ponte Preta Norway". Indoor Football. Retrieved December 7, 2011.
  3. ^ Ponte Preta Official Website Archived December 21, 2009, at the Wayback Machine

Books

  1. O Início de uma Paixão: a fundação e os primeiros anos da Associação Atlética Ponte Preta, José Moraes dos Santos Neto, Editora Komedi, 2000
  2. História da Associação Atlética Ponte Preta, em sete volumes: 1900–2000, Sérgio Rossi, R. Vieira Gráfica, 2001

External links