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Club Athletico Paranaense (commonly known as Athletico and formerly known as Atlético Paranaense) is a Brazilian football team from the city of Curitiba, capital city of the Brazilian state of Paraná, founded on March 26, 1924. The team won the Campeonato Brasileiro Série A, Brazil's top football division, in 2001, the Copa Sudamericana in 2018 and 2021, and the Copa do Brasil in 2019.

Athletico Paranaense
Full nameClub Athletico Paranaense
Nickname(s)Furacão (Hurricane)
Rubro-Negro (Red and Black)
FoundedMarch 26, 1924 (98 years ago) (1924-03-26)
GroundArena da Baixada
Capacity42,372
PresidentMario Celso Petraglia
ManagerLuiz Felipe Scolari
LeagueCampeonato Brasileiro Série A
Campeonato Paranaense
2021
2021
Série A, 14th of 20
Paranaense, 4th of 12
WebsiteClub website
Home colours
Away colours
Third colours

They are considered the strongest team in Brazil outside of the Big 12, at times even surpassing them. [1][2]


History


The club was founded in 1924 through the merger of International Football Club and América Futebol Clube, two traditional clubs in Curitiba.[3]

The club's first match, a friendly one, was played on April 6, when Athletico Paranaense beat Universal FC 4–2.[4]

Athletico Paranaense has participated in the Copa Libertadores, in 2000, 2002, 2005, 2014, 2017, 2019, 2020 and 2022. In 2005 and 2022, Athletico Paranaense was the runner-up of the competition being defeated in the finals by São Paulo and Flamengo respectively.[5][6]

A survey taken in 2005 by Paraná Pesquisas Institute showed that Athletico Paranaense has the largest number of supporters in Curitiba.[7]

In 2006 and 2018, Club Athletico Paranaense had a good performance in the Copa Sudamericana, reaching the semifinals after defeating high-profile teams like Argentina's River Plate and Uruguay's Nacional. They finally won the competition in 2018 defeating Colombia's Junior in the final.

In 2007, the team partnered with the American MLS club FC Dallas. In 2010 they also announced a partnership with Vitesse Arnhem in the Netherlands. [citation needed]

On 15 February 2015, the club signed Indian winger Romeo Fernandes on loan from Dempo and through this contract he became the first and only Indian footballer to play in a South American top-tier league.[8][9][10] Zico, then FC Goa coach played a key role behind this contract.


Team colors and uniform


Originally in 1924 Athletico used to play using a horizontally striped in red and black shirt, along with white shorts and red and black socks. [citation needed]

Former logo of Atlético Paranaense, used until December 2018
Former logo of Atlético Paranaense, used until December 2018

In 1989 Athletico's administrators wanted to differentiate the team's uniform from the other red and black teams in Brazil (mainly speaking of Flamengo, Sport Recife and Vitória), so they changed the home shirt to be vertically striped in red and black (the team kept playing with white socks and white shorts). In 1996 Athletico changed the color of the socks and the shorts from white to black. [citation needed]

In December 2018, Athletico's administrators changed the club's crest to be four alternating red and black diagonal stripes which decreased in size from top to bottom, resembling a hurricane, echoing the club's nickname. The club also changed their name from 'Clube Atlético Paranaense' to its original name in the Portuguese orthography when it was founded, 'Club Athletico Paranaense', which some[who?] believe to be a move in order to further differentiate themselves from Atlético Mineiro, another prominent Brazilian club. The club also changed the kits: the home kit, which had been a red and black vertically striped shirt, black shorts and black socks for twenty-two years became a predominantly red shirt, with a black collar, and the four diagonal stripes from the crest enlarged and going across both the front and back of the lower third of the shirt in black. The shorts and socks remain black. The away strip released with this kit was a white shirt with a black collar. In place of the four diagonal stripes were eight thin diagonal lines in the place of the outline of the larger ones seen on the home shirt; these too were black. The shorts and socks were white.[11]


Stadium


The home stadium is the Estádio Joaquim Américo Guimarães, built in 1914 and renovated several times is traditionally known as Arena da Baixada. Besides hosting important club games, Arena da Baixada also hosted 4 World Cup games in 2014 and other events like the 2017 FIVB Volleyball World League, the UFC 198: Werdum vs. Miocic and many music concerts. Arena da Baixada is also the only stadium in South America with a retractable roof and was the first to use artificial turf (with FIFA approval). [citation needed]


Partnerships



Current squad



First team


As of 9 August 2022[15]

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  BRA Bento
2 DF  COL Nicolás Hernández
5 MF  BRA Fernandinho
6 MF  BRA Matheus Fernandes (on loan from Palmeiras)
7 FW  BRA Marcelo Cirino
8 MF  BRA Vitor Bueno
9 FW  URU Agustín Canobbio
10 MF  UKR Marlos
11 FW  BRA Vitinho (on loan from Dynamo Kyiv)
13 DF  BRA Khellven
16 DF  BRA Abner Vinícius
17 MF  BRA Hugo Moura
18 MF  BRA Léo Cittadini
20 FW  URU David Terans
23 GK  BRA Leo Linck
No. Pos. Nation Player
24 DF  COL Luis Orejuela (on loan from São Paulo)
26 MF  BRA Erick
28 FW  ARG Tomás Cuello
30 MF  ECU Bryan García
34 DF  BRA Pedro Henrique
35 FW  BRA Rômulo
39 FW  BRA Vitor Roque
42 DF  BRA Matheus Felipe
44 DF  BRA Thiago Heleno (captain)
48 DF  BRA Pedrinho
77 MF  BRA Kawan
80 MF  BRA Alex Santana
88 MF  BRA Christian
92 FW  BRA Pablo
98 GK  BRA Anderson

Under-23 squad


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

No. Pos. Nation Player
4 DF  BRA João Vialle
14 DF  BRA Edu
21 DF  BRA Ataíde
22 DF  BRA Vinicius Kauê
36 DF  BRA Derik
40 MF  BRA Jader
41 GK  BRA Mycael
45 DF  BRA Léo Dourado
No. Pos. Nation Player
46 MF  BRA Juninho
47 MF  BRA Pierre (on loan from Tombense)
78 FW  BRA Julimar
90 FW  BRA Emersonn
91 FW  BRA Renan Viana
GK  BRA Gabriel Pereira
FW  BRA Dudu Scheit
FW  BRA Reinaldo

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  BRA Dani Bolt (at Vitória until 30 November 2022)
DF  COL Felipe Aguilar (at Lanús until 30 June 2023)
DF  BRA Kleiton (at Tombense until 30 November 2022)
DF  BRA Luan Patrick (at América Mineiro until 31 December 2022)
DF  BRA Lucas Halter (at Goiás until 31 December 2022)
DF  BRA Nicolas (at Grêmio until 30 November 2022)
DF  BRA Wálber (at Novorizontino until 30 November 2022)
DF  BRA Zé Ivaldo (at Cruzeiro until 30 November 2022)
MF  BRA Bruno Leite (at Botafogo until 31 December 2022)
MF  BRA Denner (at Sport Recife until 30 November 2022)
MF  BRA João Pedro (at Pafos until 30 June 2023)
MF  BRA Léo Gomes (at Vitória until 30 November 2022)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF  URU Pablo Siles (at Cruzeiro until 30 November 2022)
FW  BRA Daniel Cruz (at Botafogo until 31 December 2022)
FW  BRA Guilherme Bissoli (at Avaí until 31 December 2022)
FW  BRA Fabinho (at CRB until 30 November 2022)
FW  BRA Jáderson (at Sport Recife until 30 November 2022)
FW  BRA Jajá (at Cruzeiro until 30 November 2022)
FW  ECU John Mercado (at CSA until 30 November 2022)
FW  BRA Jonathan (at Chapecoense until 30 November 2022)
FW  BRA Matheus Babi (at Santa Clara until 30 June 2023)
FW  BRA Paulo Victor (at Brasil de Pelotas until 30 November 2022)
FW  BRA Yago (at Guarani until 30 November 2022)
FW  BRA Vinicius Mingotti (at Tombense until 30 November 2022)

Personnel



Current technical staff


Role Name
Manager Luiz Felipe Scolari
Assistant manager Carlos Pracidelli
Assistant manager Paulo Turra
Fitness coach Túlio Flôres
Goalkeeping coach Felipe Faria
Goalkeeping coach Marcelo Grimaldi
Under-23 manager Wesley Carvalho
Under-23 fitness coach Fabio Eiras
Under-23 goalkeeping coach Douglas Neso

Management


Position Staff
PresidentMario Celso Petraglia
1st Vice-presidentFernando Cesar Corrales
2nd Vice-presidentLauri Antônio Pick

Honours



International


Runner-up (1): 2022;2005
Winner (2): 2018, 2021
Winner (1): 2019

National


Winners: 2001
Winners: 2019
Runners-up: 2013, 2021
Winners: 1999

Note: Seletiva para a Libertadores is not considered an official title, as the criterion for participation in it was the elimination of clubs in the Brazilian Championship, that is, it "rewarded failure" of participants in another competition.

Winners: 1995

Regional


Winners (26): 1925, 1929, 1930, 1934, 1936, 1940, 1943, 1945, 1949, 1958, 1970, 1982, 1983, 1985, 1988, 1990, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2005, 2009, 2016, 2018, 2019, 2020

Other


Winners (2): 1998, 2003

History in competitions


[citation needed]

Winner Runners-up Third place Relegation
Brazilian League
Year 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979
Pos. * * 28th 9th 28th 29th 44th 62nd 11th
Year 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989
Pos. * * 32nd 4th 11th * 18th 20th 19th 18th
Year 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999
Pos. * 17th 15th 24th * * 8th 12th 16th 9th
Year 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
Pos. 13th 1st 14th 12th 2nd 6th 13th 12th 13th 14th
Year 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Pos. 5th 17th * 3rd 8th 10th 6th 11th 7th 5th
Year 2020 2021
Pos. 9th 14th
Brazilian Cup
Year 1989
Pos. *
Year 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999
Pos. * 1R QF * * * * QF * QF
Year 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
Pos. R16 QF * 2R * * 2R QF 1R R16
Year 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Pos. R16 QF QF RU R16 2R R16 QF R16 W
Year 2020 2021 2022
Pos. R16 RU QF
Copa Libertadores
Year 2000 2002 2005 2014 2017 2019 2020 2022
Pos. R16 GS RU GS R16 R16 R16 RU
Copa Sudamericana
Year 2006 2007 2008 2009 2011 2015 2018 2021
Pos. SF 2R R16 1R 2R QF W W

(*): Not participated


South American Record


As of match played 20 November 2021
CompetitionPlayedWonDrewLostGFGAGDWin%
Copa Libertadores 77 35 14 28 106 99 +7 045.45
Copa Sudamericana 49 28 8 13 71 42 +29 057.14
Recopa Sudamericana 4 1 1 2 3 7 −4 025.00
Total 130 64 23 43 180 148 +32 049.23
Season Competition Round Opponents Home Away Aggregate
2000 Copa Libertadores
Group 1 Alianza Lima 2–1 3-0 1st
Emelec 1-0 0-0
Nacional 2-0 3-1
R16 Atlético Mineiro 2–1 0-1 2–2 (3-5p)
2002 Copa Libertadores
Group 4 América de Cali 0-0 0-5 4th
Olmedo 2-1 0-2
Bolivar 1-2 5-5
2005 Copa Libertadores
Group 1 Independiente Medellín 0-4 2-2 2nd
América de Cali 2-1 1-3
Libertad 1-0 2-1
R16 Cerro Porteño 2-1 1-2 2–2 (5-4p)
QF Santos 3-2 2-0 5-2
SF Chivas Guadalajara 3-0 2-2 5-2
F São Paulo 1-1 0-4 1-5
2006 Copa Sudamericana
2R Paraná 1-0 3-1 4-1
R16 River Plate 2-2 1-0 3-2
QF Nacional 2-1 4-1 6-2
SF Pachuca 0-1 1-4 1-5
2007 Copa Sudamericana 2R Vasco da Gama 2-4 0-2 2-6
2008 Copa Sudamericana
1R São Paulo 0-0 0-0 0-0 (4-3p)
R16 Chivas Guadalajara 3-4 2-2 5-6
2009 Copa Sudamericana 1R Botafogo 0-0 2-3 2-3
2011 Copa Sudamericana 2R Flamengo 0-1 0-1 0-2
2014 Copa Libertadores
1R Sporting Cristal 2-1 1-2 3-3 (5-4p)
Group 1 Vélez Sarsfield 1-3 0-2 3rd
The Strongest 1-0 1-2
Universitario 3-0 1-0
2015 Copa Sudamericana
2R Joinville 2-0 1-0 3-0
R16 Brasília 1-0 0-0 1-0
QF Sportivo Luqueño 1-0 0-2 1-2
2017 Copa Libertadores
2R Millonarios 1-0 0-1 1-1 (4-2p)
3R Deportivo Capiatá 3-3 1-0 4-3
Group 4 San Lorenzo 0-3 1-0 2nd
Flamengo 2-1 1-2
Universidad Católica 2-2 3-2
R16 Santos 2-3 0-1 2-4
2018 Copa Sudamericana
1R Newell's Old Boys 3-0 1-2 4-2
2R Peñarol 2-0 4-1 6-1
R16 Caracas 2-1 2-0 4-2
QF Bahia 0-1 1-0 1-1 (4-1p)
SF Fluminense 2-0 2-0 4-0
F Junior Barranquilla 1-1 1-1 2-2 (4-3p)
2019 Recopa Sudamericana F River Plate 1-0 0-3 1-3
2019 Copa Libertadores Group G Boca Juniors 3-0 1-2 2nd
Tolima 1-0 0-1
Jorge Wilstermann 4-0 2-3
R16 Boca Juniors 0-1 0-2 0-3
2020 Copa Libertadores
Group C Jorge Wilstermann 0-0 3-2 2nd
Colo-Colo 2-0 0-1
Peñarol 1-0 2-3
R16 River Plate 1-1 0-1 1-2
2021 Copa Sudamericana
Group D Melgar 1-0 0-1 1st
Aucas 4-0 1-0
Metropolitanos 1-0 1-0
R16 América de Cali 4-1 1-0 5-1
QF L.D.U. Quito 4-2 0-1 4-3
SF Peñarol 2-0 2-1 4-1
F Red Bull Bragantino 1-0
2022 Recopa Sudamericana F Palmeiras 2-2 0-2 2-4
2022 Copa Libertadores Group B Libertad 2-0 0-1 2nd
Caracas 5-1 0-0
The Strongest 1-0 0-5
R16 Libertad 2-1 1-1 3-2
QF Estudiantes de La Plata 0-0 1-0 1-0
SF Palmeiras 1-0 2-2 3-2
F Flamengo 0-1

Head coaches



References


  1. "Athletico-PR já é mais relevante que quais clubes do grupo dos '12 grandes'? Veja opinião dos comentaristas dos canais Disney". ESPN (in Brazilian Portuguese). February 23, 2022. Retrieved October 15, 2022.
  2. Rodrigues, Rodolfo (September 7, 2022). "Athletico-PR comprova cada vez mais que é um dos grandes do Brasil". UOL (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved October 15, 2022.
  3. "CA Paranaense". Soccerway. Perform. Retrieved April 22, 2016.
  4. "Atletico Paranaense Champion of Marbella Cup 2013". Football Impact.com. February 11, 2013. Retrieved May 31, 2019.
  5. Sao Paulo 4(5)-0(1) Paranaense... Tercer título continental del Sao Paulo on Medio Tiempo, 14 Jul 2005
  6. on Medio Tiempo, 29 Oct 2022
  7. "Maioria rubro-negra" (in Portuguese). Gazeta do Povo. October 16, 2005. Archived from the original on June 2, 2008. Retrieved August 8, 2008.
  8. Netto, Brendon (May 3, 2015). "Romeo Fernandes becomes first Indian to play in Brazil". Goal.com. Retrieved May 3, 2015.
  9. Banerjee, Ritabrata (May 3, 2015). "Romeo Fernandes Creates History As he Becomes First Indian Player To Play For Brazilian Top Tier Club". The Hard Tackle. Retrieved May 3, 2015.
  10. Tenorman, Scott (May 3, 2015). "Atletico Paranaense's Romeo Fernandes becomes the first Indian to play in Brazil". Sportskeeda. Retrieved May 3, 2015.
  11. "Athletico Paranaense 2019 Home & Away Kits Released by Umbro". Footy Headlines. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
  12. "Orlando City SC Announces Partnership with Clube Atlético Paranaense". Orlando City SC. Retrieved January 18, 2017.
  13. "Colectiva em Nova Delhi anuncia official mente o accordo com a AIFF nesta ouinta". Atletico Paranaense. Archived from the original on November 13, 2014. Retrieved November 13, 2014.
  14. "Brazil's Atletico Paranaense inks deal with AIFF". Chris Daniel. November 13, 2014. Retrieved November 13, 2014.
  15. "Equipe - Conheça os jogadores do CAP - Clube Atlético Paranaense". www.athletico.com.br.
  16. "Universo Online - Esporte - Últimas Notícias do Esporte". Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved December 13, 2018.



На других языках


[de] Athletico Paranaense

Der Club Athletico Paranaense – im deutschen meist kurz Athletico Paranaense genannt, in Listen oft auch als Athletico-PR aufgeführt – ist ein brasilianischer Fußballverein aus Curitiba, der Hauptstadt des Bundesstaates Paraná.
- [en] Club Athletico Paranaense

[es] Club Athletico Paranaense

El Club Athletico Paranaense es un club de fútbol brasileño, de la ciudad de Curitiba en el estado de Paraná. Fue fundado el 26 de marzo de 1924 de la fusión del Internacional Futebol Clube y el América Paraná. Disputa sus partidos de local en el Arena da Baixada. Es popularmente conocido como Furacão (Huracán), apodo que se ganó en la década del 1950.

[ru] Атлетико Паранаэнсе

«Атле́тико Паранаэнсе» (порт. Club Athletico Paranaense) — бразильский футбольный клуб из города Куритиба, штат Парана. Клуб является одним из двух грандов своего штата (наряду с «Коритибой»), присоединившимся членом Клуба Тринадцати, организации самых популярных и титулованных клубов Бразилии.



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