Ceará Sporting Club

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Ceará
Ceará Sporting Club logo
Full nameCeará Sporting Club
Nickname(s)Vozão (Big Grandpa)
Vovô (Grandpa)
Alvinegro Cearense (Black and White from Ceará)
O Mais Querido (The Dearest)
FoundedJune 2, 1914; 110 years ago (1914-06-02)
GroundCastelão
Capacity63,903[1]
PresidentRobinson de Castro
Head coachLucho González[2]
LeagueCampeonato Brasileiro Série A
Campeonato Cearense
2021
2021
Série A, 11th of 20
Cearense, 2nd of 10
WebsiteClub website
Current season
Team photo from the 1915 season

Ceará Sporting Club, or Ceará, as they are usually called, is a Brazilian football team from the city of Fortaleza, capital city of the Brazilian state of Ceará, founded on June 2, 1914 by Luís Esteves and Pedro Freire. Ceará is one of the most traditionally successful clubs[citation needed] in the Northeast region of Brazil alongside Bahia, Santa Cruz, Sport, Náutico, Vitória and their city rivals Fortaleza.

History

On June 2, 1914, the club was founded as Rio Branco Football Club by Luiz Esteves Junior and Pedro Freire. Later, some of their friends also joined: Gilberto Gurgel, Walter Barroso, Raimundo Justa, Newton Rôla, Bolívar Purcell, Aluísio Mamede, Orlando Olsen, José Elias Romcy, Isaías Façanha de Andrade, Raimundo Padilha, Rolando Emílio, Meton Alencar Pinto, Gotardo Morais, Artur de Albuquerque, Cincinato Costa, Carlos Calmon and Eurico Medeiros. As Rio Branco Football Club, the team colors were white and lilac. In 1915, on their first birthday, the club changed its name to Ceará Sporting Club.

In 1941, Ceará won the Campeonato Cearense, the same year of the inauguration of Presidente Vargas stadium. From 1961 to 1963, the club was three times consecutive state champion. In 1969, Ceará won the Northeast Cup.

In 1970, ended the seven-year titleless state championship period. In 1971, Ceará was the last placed team in Campeonato Brasileiro Série A first edition. From 1975 to 1978, the club was four times in a row state champion.

In 1985, Ceará finished 7th in the Brazilian League. This is the best league position of a team from Ceará State in the Brazilian Championships. In 1994, the club finished Brazilian Cup runners-up, beaten by Grêmio in the final. In 1995, Ceará participated in the Copa CONMEBOL, the club's first international championship, becoming the only club of Ceará State to play an international tournament. In 1996, the team administrator was Forró bands businessman Emanuel Gurgel. The team changed its home shirt color to all black. Because of this, the team was nicknamed "Urubu do Nordeste" (Northeast Vulture). From 1996 to 1999, the club was state champion four times in a row .

In 2002, Ceará won the state championship, for the first time in three years. In 2005, Ceará reached the Copa do Brasil semifinals. The club was defeated by Fluminense. In 2006, the club won the state championship after 4 years without winning the competit

In 2010, after a 17-year absence, Ceará was promoted back to the Brazilian League, after finishing third in the 2009 Campeonato Brasileiro Série B. They finished in 12th position, achieving a place in the 2011 Copa Sudamericana.

In 2011, Ceará reached the 2011 Copa do Brasil semi-finals. Ceará ended Ronaldinho's Flamengo's unbeaten streak in the previous round winning the away game, and drew the home game, eliminating the Rio de Janeiro team in a notorious upset. Ceará, however, was defeated by Coritiba in the semi-finals.

Honours

Winners (2): 2015, 2020
Winners (1): 1969
Winners (45): 1922, 1925, 1931, 1932, 1939, 1941, 1942, 1948, 1951, 1957, 1958, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1971, 1972, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1980, 1981, 1984, 1986, 1989, 1990, 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2002, 2006, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2017, 2018

Stadium

Ceará at the Estádio Governador Plácido Aderaldo Castelo (Castelão)

Ceará's home venue is Estádio Carlos de Alencar Pinto, capacity 3,000, but the team also plays at Castelão Stadium which has a capacity of 60,326,[3] and at Presidente Vargas Stadium, which has a 22,228 capacity.

Rivals

Ceará's greatest rival is Fortaleza. It is the biggest derby in Fortaleza city. It has been played 574 times, with Ceará winning 193 times, Fortaleza winning 176 times and 205 draws. [4][circular reference] Ceará's second biggest rival is Ferroviário, the third biggest club of Fortaleza city. This derby has been played 297 times, with 138 wins for Ceará, 69 wins for Ferroviário and 90 draws. [5][circular reference]

Mascot

The team mascot, an old man known as "Vovô" ("Grandpa") dressing Ceará uniform was designed by Cearense cartoonist Mino for the "Ceará: Paixão Total" Project ("Ceará: Full Passion" Project).

The team mascot appeared in late 1919, when Meton de Alencar Pinto, former president of Ceará SC, coached young players of America Football Club, a small club from the city, in the Porangabussu training center. Meton, who used to call the kids as "my grandsons", asked them to "go easy on grandpa". Afterwards, the nickname started to apply to the team of Ceará as well, helped by the seniority of the club; Ceará Sporting Club was the first football team founded in the state.

Logo evolution

File:Ceara logo history.png

The first logo was the club's first as Ceará Sporting Club, and was used from 1915–54.

The second logo was used from 1955–69 and was inspired by the Santos logo.

The third logo was used from 1970–03.

The fourth logo is the current team logo, and was adopted in 2003. The logo is a restylized version of the previous logo created by Adman Orlando Mota. This logo introduced the white stars and the foundation date.

First-team squad

As of 27 July 2022[6]

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 João Ricardo
2 DF Brazil BRA Nino Paraíba
3 DF Brazil BRA Messias
6 DF Brazil BRA Bruno Pacheco
7 MF Brazil BRA Richardson
8 MF Brazil BRA Fernando Sobral
9 FW Brazil BRA Jael
10 FW Colombia COL Stiven Mendoza
11 FW Brazil BRA Erick
13 DF Brazil BRA Luiz Otávio
14 DF Brazil BRA Lucas Ribeiro (on loan from 1899 Hoffenheim)
15 DF Brazil BRA Gabriel Lacerda
19 MF Brazil BRA Rodrigo Lindoso (on loan from Internacional)
20 FW Colombia COL Jhon Vásquez (on loan from Deportivo Cali)
21 MF Brazil BRA Geovane
22 FW Brazil BRA Zé Roberto
25 MF Brazil BRA Richard Coelho
No. Pos. Nation Player
27 DF Brazil BRA Buiú
28 FW Brazil BRA Matheus Peixoto (on loan from Metalist Kharkiv)
29 MF Brazil BRA Vina
33 DF Brazil BRA Victor Luis (on loan from Palmeiras)
37 MF Brazil BRA Diego Rigonato
40 MF Brazil BRA Guilherme Castilho
44 DF Brazil BRA Marcos Victor (on loan from Floresta)
45 MF Brazil BRA Lima
50 GK Brazil BRA Vinicius Machado
67 GK Brazil BRA André Luiz
70 DF Brazil BRA Kelvyn
77 FW Brazil BRA
80 MF Brazil BRA Léo Rafael
88 DF Brazil BRA Michel Macedo
89 FW Brazil BRA Cléber
91 GK Brazil BRA Richard
99 FW Brazil BRA Iury Castilho

Reserve team

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
12 GK Brazil BRA Davi Schneider
18 MF Brazil BRA Guthierres
23 DF Brazil BRA David Ricardo (on loan from Fluminense-PI)
37 MF Brazil BRA David
52 FW Brazil BRA João Victor
No. Pos. Nation Player
54 MF Brazil BRA Da Guia
77 DF Brazil BRA Atila
82 FW Brazil BRA Pedro Igor
92 MF Brazil BRA Rubens

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 Alan Uchôa (on loan at CRB until 30 November 2022)
DF Brazil BRA Alessandro (on loan at Botafogo-PB until 30 November 2022)
DF Brazil BRA Igor (on loan at CSA until 30 November 2022)
DF Brazil BRA Natan (on loan at Figueirense until 30 November 2022)
MF Brazil BRA Matheus Índio (on loan at São Luiz-RS until 30 November 2022)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Brazil BRA Pedro Naressi (on loan at Sport Recife until 30 November 2022)
MF Brazil BRA William Oliveira dos Santos (on loan at Sport Recife until 31 December 2022)
MF Brazil BRA Willian Oliveira Silva (on loan at Cruzeiro until 31 December 2022)
FW Brazil BRA Felipe Micael (on loan at FC Cascavel until 30 November 2022)
FW Brazil BRA Leandro Carvalho (on loan at Remo until 30 November 2022)

Staff

Current staff

As of 25 August 2022.[7]
Position Name
Coaching staff
Head coach Argentina Lucho González
Assistant head coach Argentina Emmanuel Depaoli
Assistant head coach Argentina Walter Scarinci
Assistant head coach Brazil Juca Antonello
Goalkeepers trainer Brazil Everaldo Santana
Goalkeepers trainer Brazil Handerson Santos de Souza
Performance analyst Brazil Alcino Rodrigues
Performance analyst Brazil Tadeu Alves
Performance analyst Brazil Hugo Leonardo
Medical staff
Fitness coach Argentina Diego Giachino
Fitness coach Brazil Eduardo Ballalai
Fitness coach Brazil Edy Carlos
Fitness coach Brazil Roberto Farias
Doctor Brazil Gustavo Pires
Doctor Brazil Joaquim Garcia
Doctor Brazil Leandro Rêgo
Doctor Brazil Daniel Gomes
Doctor Brazil Pedro Guilme
Physiotherapist Brazil Wellington Alencar
Physiotherapist Brazil João Paulo Frota
Physiotherapist Brazil Adolfo Bernardo
Physiotherapist Brazil Lucas Freire

Managers

Ultras groups

References

  1. ^ "CNEF - Cadastro Nacional de Estádios de Futebol" (PDF) (in Portuguese). January 18, 2016. Retrieved June 6, 2016.
  2. ^ "Lucho González é o novo técnico do Ceará" [Lucho González is the new coach of Ceará] (in Brazilian Portuguese). ge. August 24, 2022. Retrieved August 24, 2022.
  3. ^ "Estádio Castelão". SESPORTE. Archived from the original on October 10, 2008. Retrieved September 12, 2008.
  4. ^ pt:Clássico-Rei
  5. ^ pt:Clássico da Paz (Fortaleza)
  6. ^ "Elenco Profissional". Ceara. Retrieved March 11, 2021.
  7. ^ "Comissão Técnica Profissional". cearasc.com (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved August 25, 2022.

External links