Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
With a capacity of up to 3,000 people, the party was led by DJs Make U Sweat, formed by Pedro Almeida, Dudu Linhares and Gustavo Guizeline, the Jetlag, with Thiago Mansur and Paulo Velloso, the duet M.O.N., with Mario Velloso and Pietra Bertolazzi, The Juns, with Jun Honda & Caio Jun, the Az Project of Ivan Arcuschin and Gabriel Salvia and also ...
São Paulo; 1993 season; Chairman: José Eduardo Mesquita Pimenta: Manager: Telê Santana Márcio Araújo (at Copa do Brasil) Campeonato Brasileiro: 4th (in 1994 Copa CONMEBOL) Intercontinental Cup: Champions (2nd title) Copa Libertadores: Champions (2nd title) (in 1994 Copa Libertadores, 1993 Supercopa Libertadores and 1994 Recopa Sudamericana ...
Beach soccer, also known as beach football, sand football or beasal (a portmanteau of "beach" and "futsal"), is a variant of association football played on a beach or some form of sand.
The foundations of the team in 1930 and 1935 at the memorial Cássio Luiz dos Santos Werneck. The championship team of 1931. The São Paulo Futebol Clube was founded on 25 January 1930 by 60 former officials, players, members, and friends of the football clubs Club Athletico Paulistano and Associação Atlética das Palmeiras of São Paulo ...
According to the Brazilian Olympic Committee, twenty-two nations sent competitors to São Paulo, but only twenty-one were listed. [3] Barbados took part in the Pan American Games for the first time. [4] Costa Rica, Haiti, Nicaragua and the Dominican Republic competed in 1959 but did not participate in the 1963 Games. [5]
As the current champions of Copa Libertadores, São Paulo played the Recopa Sudamericana versus Boca Juniors and was defeated by 4–3 on aggregate. Tricolor won the Campeonato Brasileiro fifteen years after their last title, in 1991 and became national champions for the fourth time, securing the title in 36th matchweek against Atlético ...
The ATP São Paulo, also referred to by its sponsored names Ford Cup, Banespa Open and Sul America Open, is a defunct men's tennis tournament that was played on the Grand Prix tennis circuit from 1987 through 1989 and on the ATP Tour from 1991 through 1993.
The new Rádio Eldorado ESPN used Eldorado's radio assets and the team of commentators from ESPN Brasil. It was renamed Rádio Estadão ESPN in 2007 due to a partnership agreement with the O Estado de S. Paulo newspaper. [1] In 2005 the company incorporated ESPN International coverage, starting to broadcast in two channels.