
It’s in the bag! Palmeiras conquer the Brazilian Championship for the tenth time, after an impressive performance under coach Luiz Felipe Scolari, a truly one-of-a-kind commander.
With every man at this disposal for the decisive away match against Vasco da Gama, Felipão lined up his strongest side possible: Weverton; Mayke, Luan, Gustavo Gómez and Diogo Barbosa; Felipe Melo, Bruno Henrique and Lucas Lima (Scarpa); Dudu, Willian (Jean) and Borja (Deyverson).
Adopting a more cautious style of play in the first half, not much happened on either side of the pitch. However, in the second half, and with Flamengo beating Cruzeiro 2-0, Palmeiras put out a much sharper performance, pressuring Vasco back and creating several opportunities. It all clicked when Scolari centralised Dudu and substituted Borja for Deyverson: in the 71st minute, Dudu passed the ball to Willian, who stretched out acrobatically to send it to Deyverson to score the goal of the title. The remaining 20 minutes seemed to last an eternity, although Palmeiras were in complete control.
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The title crowns Felipão’s excellent work since arriving at Palmeiras mid-season. The team features the best home campaign, the best away campaign, the most goals scored and the least goals suffered. Yesterday’s victory saw the unbeaten streak increasing to 22 games, a record in the history of the championship. A record that upcoming Sunday could reach 23, when Palmeiras receive already relegated Vitória at the Allianz Parque for the last round of the championship.
We were going to do a summing-up here of Scolari’s third spell at Palmeiras, but Brian Davidson at Brazilfooty has already done such a good job, it seems rather pointless. Below, excerpts from his article (read the full piece here).
“Palmeiras fans will always have a place in their hearts for Scolari after he guided the club to their first Libertadores title in 1999, but his appointment as coach for the third time earlier this year wasn’t without controversy.
After leaving the club in 2000, Scolari guided Brazil to the 2002 World Cup and he also went on to have a successful career abroad. He was therefore welcomed back to Palmeiras for a second spell as their manager in 2010. That period wasn’t nearly as successful as the first stint at the club, and although they won the Brazilian Cup, Felipão also oversaw a terrible league campaign in 2012, which ultimately led to him getting fired and Palmeiras getting relegated.
That failure, coupled with his overseeing of Brazil’s disastrous 7-1 humiliation against Germany at the 2014 World Cup, led many, including myself, to feel that he was past his best. So, although Palmeiras fans still held him in high regard for what he had done in the past, his appointment in August this year, wasn’t unanimously popular among fans.
But Scolari has made a mockery of all of those doubts now and is on the verge of achieving God like status among the Palmeiras faithful. When he took over, Palmeiras were sitting in sixth place, eight points behind the leaders Flamengo. Many felt that his predecessor Roger Machado was hastily fired, even if they admitted that he wasn’t getting the best out of his squad. But Scolari’s skillfull handling of the players has shown everybody just what the players were capable of (including themselves) and the potential of the team. Since he took over, the team are unbeaten in the league in 21 games: winning 15 and drawing 6.
I’m not sure if there has even been a team in Brazil that has been so good in the second half of a season. Everybody knew that Palmeiras had some good players but the way Scolari has led them and organised the team – especially his juggling of the squad, which was competing in three competitions – has been massively impressive.
The players deserve huge praise too. The best has been Dudu, who is favourite to be named the best player in the league. He may have only scored 6 goals – less than his fellow attackers Willian and Deyverson – but he has laid on a bunch of assists and is the team’s talisman. Bruno Henrique has scored eight goals in 26 starts from central midfield and deserves a special mention too. While Deyverson, who earlier this year was ridiculed for being rubbish, went on to score 9 league goals in just 11 starts (and 14 substitute appearances). He scored the winning goal yesterday against Vasco after coming on as a sub. He has limited ability, but his spirit and application have been superb this year.
It is a shame for Palmeiras that they fell short in the Brazilian Cup and Copa Libertadores – both at the semi-final stage – but they thoroughly deserve the league title for their consistency in the second half of the season. The likes of Grêmio and Cruzeiro threw in the towel in the league to focus on the cups, but the fact that Palmeiras made a first of all three competitions speaks volumes about the quality in their squad and skills of their coach. Well done Palmeiras and Big Phil Scolari.”
Scoppia che la vittoria è nostra!
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by Augusto Anteghini Oazi and Kristian Bengtson