2017 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A

Campeonato Brasileiro Série A
Season 2017
Champions Corinthians (7th title)
Relegated Coritiba
Avaí
Ponte Preta
Atlético Goianiense
Copa Libertadores Corinthians
Palmeiras
Santos
Grêmio
Cruzeiro
Flamengo
Vasco da Gama
Chapecoense
Copa Sudamericana Atlético Mineiro
Botafogo
Atlético Paranaense
Bahia
São Paulo
Fluminense
Matches played 380
Goals scored 923 (2.43 per match)
Top goalscorer Henrique Dourado
(18 goals)
Biggest home win Atlético Paranaense 5–0 Avaí
(3 August 2017)
Biggest away win Chapecoense 3–6 Grêmio
(8 June 2017)
Longest winning run Corinthians (6 matches)
Longest unbeaten run Corinthians (19 matches)
Longest winless run Coritiba (9 matches)
Longest losing run Vitória, Coritiba, and Atlético Goianiense (4 matches)
Highest attendance 50,116
Grêmio 0–1 Corinthians
(25 June)
2016
2018

The 2017 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A was the 61st season of the Campeonato Brasileiro Série A, the top level of professional football in Brazil, and the 14th edition in a double round-robin since its establishment in 2003. The season began on 13 May 2017 and ended on 3 December 2017. The top six teams qualified to Copa Libertadores and the last four were relegated to Série B of 2018.

Corinthians won their seventh title and was the first team in the history of the tournament, since the double round-robin system was established in 2003, to finish the first round undefeated.[1][2]

Format

For the fifteenth consecutive season, the tournament was played in a double round-robin system. The team with most number of points at the end of the season was declared champion. The bottom four teams were relegated and will play the 2018 Série B.

International qualification

The Série A served as a qualifier to CONMEBOL's 2018 Copa Libertadores. The top four teams in the standings qualified to the group stage of the competition, while the fifth and the sixth placed in the standings qualified to the second stage.

And this change also impacted on Copa Sudamericana qualification, whose vacancies were again distributed through league placement instead of the Copa do Brasil.

Tiebreakers

In case of a tie on points between two or more clubs, tiebreakers were applied in the following order:[3]

  1. Number of wins;
  2. Goal difference;
  3. Goals pro;
  4. Head to Head;
  5. Fewer red cards;
  6. Less number of yellow cards;
  7. Draw.

With respect to the fourth criterion (direct confrontation), it is considered the result of the combined game, or the result of 180 minutes. Staying tie, the tie will be made by the greatest number of goals scored in the opponent's field. The fourth criterion is not considered in the case of a tie between more than two clubs.[3]

Teams

Twenty teams competed in the league – the top sixteen teams from the previous season, as well as four teams promoted from the Série B.

Atlético Goianiense became the first club to be promoted after a 5–3 win against Tupi MG on 12 November 2016 meant they were guaranteed an automatic place.[4] Avaí became the second club to be promoted, Vasco da Gama became the third club to be promoted, and Bahia became the fourth club to be promoted

Pos. Relegated from 2016 Série A
17º Internacional
18º Figueirense
19º Santa Cruz
20º América Mineiro
Pos. Promoted from 2016 Série B
Atlético Goianiense
Avaí
Vasco da Gama
Bahia

Number of teams by state

Number of teams State Team(s)
5  São PauloCorinthians, Palmeiras, Ponte Preta, Santos and São Paulo
4  Rio de JaneiroBotafogo, Flamengo, Fluminense and Vasco da Gama
2  BahiaBahia and Vitória
 Minas GeraisAtlético Mineiro and Cruzeiro
 ParanáAtlético Paranaense and Coritiba
 Santa CatarinaAvaí and Chapecoense
1  GoiásAtlético Goianiense
 PernambucoSport
 Rio Grande do SulGrêmio

Stadiums and locations

Team Location State Stadium Capacity
Atlético Goianiense Goiânia  Goiás Olímpico Pedro Ludovico
Serra Dourada (4 matches)
13,500
41,574
Atlético Mineiro Belo Horizonte  Minas Gerais Independência
Mineirão (one match)
23,018
61,846
Atlético Paranaense Curitiba  Paraná Arena da Baixada 42,370
Avaí Florianópolis  Santa Catarina Ressacada 17,826
Bahia Salvador  Bahia Arena Fonte Nova
Pituaçu (one match)
47,907
32,157
Botafogo Rio de Janeiro  Rio de Janeiro Olímpico Nilton Santos 44,661
Chapecoense Chapecó  Santa Catarina Arena Condá 20,089
Corinthians São Paulo  São Paulo Arena Corinthians 47,605
Coritiba Curitiba  Paraná Couto Pereira
Vila Capanema (one match)
40,502
17,140
Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte  Minas Gerais Mineirão 61,846
Flamengo Rio de Janeiro  Rio de Janeiro Luso-Brasileiro
Maracanã (3 matches)
Raulino de Oliveira (one match)
20,215
78,838
18,230
Fluminense Rio de Janeiro  Rio de Janeiro Maracanã
Giulite Coutinho (2 matches)
78,838
13,544
Grêmio Porto Alegre  Rio Grande do Sul Arena do Grêmio
Alfredo Jaconi (one match)
55,662
19,924
Palmeiras São Paulo  São Paulo Allianz Parque
Pacaembu (4 matches)
43,713
37,730
Ponte Preta Campinas  São Paulo Moisés Lucarelli 17,728
Santos Santos  São Paulo Vila Belmiro
Pacaembu (6 matches)
16,068
37,730
São Paulo São Paulo  São Paulo Morumbi
Pacaembu (5 matches)
72,039
37,730
Sport Recife  Pernambuco Ilha do Retiro
Arena Pernambuco (2 matches)
32,983
44,300
Vasco da Gama Rio de Janeiro  Rio de Janeiro São Januário
Maracanã (3 matches)
Raulino de Oliveira (3 matches)
Olímpico Nilton Santos (one match)
24,584
78,838
18,230
44,661
Vitória Salvador  Bahia Barradão
Arena Fonte Nova (2 matches)
34,535
47,907

Personnel and kits

Team Manager Captain Kit manufacturer Shirt main sponsor
Atlético Goianiense Brazil João Paulo Sanches Brazil Roger Carvalho Brazil Numer Brazil Caixa
Atlético Mineiro Brazil Oswaldo de Oliveira Brazil Leonardo Silva Brazil Topper Brazil Caixa
Atlético Paranaense Brazil Fabiano Soares Brazil Weverton England Umbro Brazil Caixa
Avaí Brazil Claudinei Oliveira Brazil Marquinhos England Umbro Brazil Caixa
Bahia Brazil Paulo César Carpegiani Brazil Tiago England Umbro Brazil Caixa
Botafogo Brazil Jair Ventura Argentina Joel Carli Brazil Topper Brazil Caixa
Chapecoense Brazil Gilson Kleina Brazil Wellington Paulista England Umbro Brazil Aurora
Corinthians Brazil Fábio Carille Brazil Fagner United States Nike None
Coritiba Brazil Marcelo Oliveira Brazil Kléber Germany Adidas Brazil Caixa
Cruzeiro Brazil Mano Menezes Brazil Fábio England Umbro Brazil Caixa
Flamengo Colombia Reinaldo Rueda Brazil Réver Germany Adidas Brazil Caixa/Carabao
Fluminense Brazil Abel Braga Brazil Henrique United States Under Armour None
Grêmio Brazil Renato Gaúcho Brazil Maicon England Umbro Brazil Banrisul
Palmeiras Brazil Alberto Valentim Brazil Dudu Germany Adidas Brazil Crefisa
Ponte Preta Brazil Eduardo Baptista Brazil Aranha Germany Adidas Brazil Caixa
Santos Brazil Elano Brazil Ricardo Oliveira Italy Kappa Brazil Caixa
São Paulo Brazil Dorival Júnior Brazil Hernanes United States Under Armour Brazil Banco Inter
Sport Brazil Daniel Paulista (caretaker) Brazil Durval Germany Adidas Brazil Caixa
Vasco da Gama Brazil Zé Ricardo Brazil Luís Fabiano England Umbro Brazil Caixa
Vitória Brazil Vágner Mancini Brazil Willian Farias Brazil Topper Brazil Caixa

Managerial changes

Team Outgoing manager Manner of departure Date of vacancy Position in table Incoming manager Date of appointment
Atlético Paranaense Brazil Paulo Autuori Mutual consent 23 May[5] 19th Brazil Eduardo Baptista 23 May[5]
Sport Brazil Ney Franco Sacked 25 May[6] 18th Brazil Vanderlei Luxemburgo 29 May[7]
Bahia Brazil Guto Ferreira Signed by Internacional 29 May 13th Brazil Jorginho 1 June
Vitória Serbia Dejan Petković Mutual consent 3 June 17th Brazil Alexandre Gallo 3 June
Santos Brazil Dorival Júnior Sacked 4 June 16th Brazil Levir Culpi 6 June
Atlético Goianiense Brazil Marcelo Cabo Sacked 5 June 20th Brazil Doriva 7 June
São Paulo Brazil Rogério Ceni Sacked 3 July 17th Brazil Dorival Júnior 5 July
Chapecoense Brazil Vagner Mancini Sacked 4 July 15th Brazil Vinícius Eutrópio 5 July
Atlético Paranaense Brazil Eduardo Baptista Sacked 11 July 14th Brazil Fabiano Soares 12 July
Coritiba Brazil Pachequinho Sacked 19 July 13th Brazil Marcelo Oliveira 20 July[8]
Atlético Mineiro Brazil Roger Machado Sacked 20 July 11th Brazil Rogério Micale 21 July[9]
Vitória Brazil Alexandre Gallo Sacked 20 July 19th Brazil Vágner Mancini 22 July
Atlético Goianiense Brazil Doriva Sacked 21 July 20th Brazil João Paulo Sanches
Bahia Brazil Jorginho Sacked 31 July[10] 14th Brazil Preto Casagrande
Flamengo Brazil Zé Ricardo Sacked 6 August[11] 5th Colombia Reinaldo Rueda 14 August[12]
Vasco da Gama Brazil Milton Mendes Sacked 21 August[13] 17th Brazil Zé Ricardo
Chapecoense Brazil Vinícius Eutrópio Sacked 11 September 18th Brazil Gilson Kleina 17 October
Ponte Preta Brazil Gilson Kleina Sacked 16 September 13th Brazil Eduardo Baptista 20 September
Atlético Mineiro Brazil Rogério Micale Sacked 24 September 11th Brazil Oswaldo de Oliveira 26 September
Bahia Brazil Preto Casagrande Sacked 10 October 13th Brazil Paulo César Carpegiani
Palmeiras Brazil Cuca Sacked 13 October 5th Brazil Alberto Valentim 13 October

Foreign players

The clubs can have a maximum of five foreign players in their Campeonato Brasileiro squads per match.

Club Player 1 Player 2 Player 3 Player 4 Player 5 Player 6 Player 7 Player 8
Atlético Goianiense
Atlético Mineiro Ecuador Frickson Erazo Ecuador Juan Cazares Venezuela Rómulo Otero
Atlético Paranaense Argentina Lucho González Croatia Eduardo da Silva1 Chile Esteban Pavez
Avaí Colombia Luis Salazar Colombia Bryan Urueña Japan Toshi Cameroon Joel Tagueu
Bahia Colombia Pablo Armero Argentina Agustín Allione Colombia Stiven Mendoza Bolivia Bolívia1
Botafogo Argentina Joel Carli Paraguay Junior Fernández Chile Leonardo Valencia
Chapecoense Uruguay Emilio Zeballos Venezuela Luis Manuel Seijas Ecuador Cristian Penilla Ecuador Fernando Guerrero Argentina Héctor Canteros
Corinthians Paraguay Ángel Romero Paraguay Fabián Balbuena Turkey Colin Kazim-Richards
Coritiba Colombia Yílmar Filigrana Germany Alexander Baumjohann
Cruzeiro Uruguay Giorgian De Arrascaeta Argentina Ariel Cabral Argentina Lucas Romero
Flamengo Peru Paolo Guerrero Argentina Federico Mancuello Colombia Gustavo Cuéllar Peru Miguel Trauco Colombia Orlando Berrío Argentina Dario Conca
Fluminense Ecuador Jefferson Orejuela Ecuador Junior Sornoza
Grêmio Argentina Walter Kannemann Peru Beto da Silva1 Paraguay Lucas Barrios Ecuador Michael Arroyo
Palmeiras Colombia Yerry Mina Venezuela Alejandro Guerra Colombia Miguel Borja
Ponte Preta Portugal Fábio Braga1 Qatar Emerson1 Bolivia Luis Alí Paraguay Jorge Mendoza
Santos Colombia Jonathan Copete Argentina Emiliano Vecchio Argentina Fabián Noguera Colombia Vladimir Hernández
São Paulo Uruguay Diego Lugano Peru Christian Cueva Argentina Julio Buffarini Argentina Lucas Pratto Argentina Jonathan Gómez Ecuador Robert Arboleda
Sport Colombia Oswaldo Henríquez Colombia Reinaldo Lenis Chile Eugenio Mena
Vasco da Gama Uruguay Martín Silva Argentina Damián Escudero Colombia Andrés Escobar Argentina Andrés Ríos
Vitória Colombia Santiago Tréllez
  • 1 Players holding Brazilian dual nationality.

Standings

League table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Corinthians (C) 38 21 9 8 50 30 +20 72 Qualification for Copa Libertadores group stage
2 Palmeiras 38 19 6 13 61 45 +16 63
3 Santos 38 17 12 9 42 32 +10 63
4 Grêmio 38 18 8 12 55 36 +19 62
5 Cruzeiro 38 15 12 11 47 39 +8 57
6 Flamengo 38 15 11 12 49 38 +11 56
7 Vasco da Gama 38 15 11 12 40 47 7 56 Qualification for Copa Libertadores second stage
8 Chapecoense 38 15 9 14 47 49 2 54
9 Atlético Mineiro 38 14 12 12 52 49 +3 54 Qualification for Copa Sudamericana first stage
10 Botafogo 38 14 11 13 45 42 +3 53
11 Atlético Paranaense 38 14 9 15 45 43 +2 51
12 Bahia 38 13 11 14 50 48 +2 50
13 São Paulo 38 13 11 14 48 49 1 50
14 Fluminense 38 11 14 13 50 53 3 47
15 Sport 38 12 9 17 46 58 12 45
16 Vitória 38 11 10 17 50 58 8 43
17 Coritiba (R) 38 11 10 17 42 51 9 43 Relegation to Campeonato Brasileiro Série B
18 Avaí (R) 38 10 13 15 29 48 19 43
19 Ponte Preta (R) 38 10 9 19 37 52 15 39
20 Atlético Goianiense (R) 38 9 9 20 38 56 18 36
Source: CBF
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) wins; 3) goal difference; 4) goals scored; 5) head-to-head results; 6) least red cards received; 7) least yellow cards received; 8) draw.
(C) Champion; (R) Relegated.

Results

Home \ Away[1] ATG CAM CAPAVABAHBOTCHACORCTBCRUFLAFLUGREPALPONSANSPASPTVASVIT
Atlético Goianiense 12 01 31 11 11 11 01 10 12 03 11 01 13 30 11 01 20 01 12
Atlético Mineiro 32 01 10 02 00 23 02 30 31 20 12 43 11 22 01 10 22 12 13
Atlético Paranaense 22 02 50 41 00 00 01 11 02 11 31 02 30 02 02 10 21 31 41
Avaí 02 11 10 12 11 10 00 14 10 11 03 22 21 00 00 11 10 12 00
Bahia 30 22 62 11 12 01 20 11 10 01 11 10 24 20 31 21 13 30 21
Botafogo 12 11 01 02 10 21 21 22 22 20 12 10 12 20 20 34 21 31 23
Chapecoense 12 01 11 20 11 02 01 21 12 01 20 36 10 10 20 20 11 21 21
Corinthians 01 22 22 10 30 10 11 31 10 11 31 00 32 20 20 32 31 10 01
Coritiba 41 02 10 40 00 23 20 00 10 10 12 01 10 11 00 12 03 22 01
Cruzeiro 20 13 10 22 10 00 02 11 20 11 31 33 31 21 11 10 20 01 00
Flamengo 20 11 20 11 41 00 51 30 21 20 11 01 22 20 12 20 20 00 02
Fluminense 31 21 11 10 11 01 33 01 22 11 22 02 01 20 32 31 12 01 21
Grêmio 11 20 00 02 10 20 01 01 20 01 31 10 13 31 11 10 50 20 11
Palmeiras 10 00 01 20 22 20 02 02 10 22 20 31 10 20 01 42 51 40 42
Ponte Preta 13 12 21 12 03 21 32 10 40 10 10 00 01 12 11 10 40 00 23
Santos 10 31 10 11 30 10 10 20 10 01 32 00 10 10 00 32 01 12 22
São Paulo 22 12 21 20 11 00 22 11 12 32 20 11 11 20 22 21 10 10 20
Sport 40 11 10 01 10 12 30 10 34 11 20 22 43 02 00 11 00 11 13
Vasco da Gama 10 11 01 10 21 10 11 25 11 03 01 32 10 11 21 00 11 21 11
Vitória 11 20 23 01 00 22 12 01 01 11 12 22 13 31 31 02 12 12 14

Updated to games played on 3 December 2017.
Source: CBF
1 ^ The home team is listed in the left-hand column.
Colours: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.

Season statistics

References

  1. "Jô brilha, Corinthians vira para cima do Fluminense em 3 minutos e é heptacampeão brasileiro". ESPN. 15 November 2017. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  2. "Mais um recorde! Corinthians se torna primeiro time a virar de turno invicto". Goal. 5 August 2017. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  3. 1 2 "Regulamento específico da competição – Campeonato Brasileiro da Série A 2016" (PDF) (in Portuguese). CBF. 15 March 2016. Retrieved 7 October 2016.
  4. "Atlético Goianiense é campeão da Série B do Campeonato Brasileiro de 2016'". Jornal do Commercio. UOL. 12 November 2016.
  5. 1 2 Araújo, Fernando. "Autuori assume diretoria no Atlético-PR; Eduardo Baptista será novo técnico". globoesporte.com (in Portuguese). Retrieved 23 May 2017.
  6. "Ney Franco é demitido do Sport após vice na Copa do Nordeste". UOL Esporte. UOL. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  7. "Luxemburgo é o novo técnico do Sport" [Luxemburgo is new coach of Sport]. ESPN.com.br (in Portuguese). UOL. 29 May 2017. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  8. @Coritiba (20 July 2017). "Seja bem-vindo novamente, professor! Marcelo Oliveira é o novo técnico do Coritiba" (Tweet) via Twitter.
  9. @atletico (21 July 2017). "Rogério Micale é o novo técnico do Atlético. Vamos, #Galo!" (Tweet) via Twitter.
  10. @ECBahia (31 July 2017). "Jorginho não é mais o técnico do Tricolor www.esporteclubebahia.com.br/comunicado-57" (Tweet) via Twitter.
  11. "Fim da linha: após derrota na Ilha, Zé Ricardo deixa o comando do Flamengo". Amanda Kestelman-Globoesporte.com. 6 August 2017. Retrieved 21 August 2017.
  12. "Flamengo, enfim, anuncia colombiano Reinaldo Rueda como novo treinador". Globoesporte.com. 14 August 2017. Retrieved 21 August 2017.
  13. "Milton Mendes é demitido do Vasco". Felipe Schmidt and Fred Huber-Globoesporte.com. Retrieved 21 August 2017.
  14. Campeonato Brasileiro Série A
  15. "Estadísticas de la liga Futebol Brasileiro: Líderes en Asistencias - Brasileirao 2017" (in Spanish). ESPN Deportes. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  16. "Em noite de André, Sport vira para cima de reservas e tira Grêmio da liderança". globoesporte.com. 28 May 2017. Retrieved 30 May 2017.
  17. "Impiedoso no ataque, Grêmio joga com inteligência e goleia a Chape na Arena Condá". globoesporte.com. 8 June 2017. Retrieved 16 June 2017.
  18. "Festa na Ilha: Guerrero faz três, Diego dois, e Flamengo atropela a Chape" [Party on the Island: Guerrero scores three, Diego two, and Flamengo trample Chape]. globoesporte.com (in Portuguese). 22 June 2017. Retrieved 23 June 2017.
  19. "Copete faz três, Santos vence e derruba o São Paulo para a vice-lanterna". globoesporte.com (in Portuguese). 22 June 2017. Retrieved 9 July 2017.
  20. "Bruno Henrique faz três, e Santos bate o Bahia no Pacaembu lotado". globoesporte.com (in Portuguese). 23 July 2017. Retrieved 3 August 2017.
  21. "2017 Brazil Serie A Statistics and Leaders: Goalkeeping". FOX Sports. Retrieved 6 June 2017.
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