2003 in Brazilian football

The following article presents a summary of the 2003 football (soccer) season in Brazil, which was the 102nd season of competitive football in the country.

Football in Brazil
Season2003
← 2002Brazil2004 →

Campeonato Brasileiro Série A

edit
PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification or relegation
1Cruzeiro46317810247+55100Qualified for 2004 Copa Libertadores
2Santos46251299360+3387
3São Paulo462212128167+1478
4São Caetano461914135337+1674
5Coritiba462110156758+973
6Internacional462010165957+272Qualified for 2004 Copa Sudamericana
7Atlético Mineiro461915127662+1472
8Flamengo461812166673−766
9Goiás461811177863+1565
10Paraná461811178575+1065
11Figueirense461714156254+865
12Atlético-PR461710196772−561
13Guarani461710196472−861
14Criciúma46179205769−1260
15Corinthians461512196163−259
16Vitória461511205064−1456
17Vasco461315185769−1254
18Juventude461214205570−1553
19Fluminense461311225277−2552
20Grêmio[a]461311225468−1450Qualified for 2004 Copa Sudamericana
21Ponte Preta[b]461118176373−1050
22Paysandu[c]461512197477−349
23Fortaleza (R)461213215874−1649Relegation to Série B
24Bahia (R)461210245992−3346
Source: [1]
(R) Relegated
Notes:
  1. ^ Grêmio qualified to 2004 Copa Sudamericana due to a ranking made by CBF with the all-time teams' overall campaign in Campeonato Brasileiro.
  2. ^ Ponte Preta docked the points conquisted in the matches against Internacional and Juventude for the irregulate fielding of the player Roberto. Otherwise, Internacional won 2 points and Juventude won 3 points.
  3. ^ Paysandu docked 8 points due to irregularities fielding of the players Júnior Amorim and Aldrovani. In other way, three points won to Ponte Preta, three for São Caetano, two for Corinthians and two for Fluminense.

Cruzeiro declared as the Campeonato Brasileiro champions.

Relegation

edit

The two worst placed teams, which are Fortaleza and Bahia, were relegated to the following year's second level.

Campeonato Brasileiro Série B

edit

Final stage
PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsPromotion
1Palmeiras6510123+916Promoted to Série A 2004
2Botafogo6222910−18
3Sport612368−25
4Marília603328−63
Source: rsssf.com

Palmeiras declared as the Campeonato Brasileiro Série B champions.

Promotion

edit

The two best placed teams in the final stage of the competition, which are Palmeiras and Botafogo, were promoted to the following year's first level.

Relegation

edit

The two worst placed teams, which are Gama and União São João, were relegated to the following year's third level.

Campeonato Brasileiro Série C

edit
PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsITUSADBPBCPN
1Ituano (P)632197+2112–12–11–0
2Santo André (P)631275+2100–00–11–0
3Botafogo-PB6213812−474–41–31–0
4Campinense620455061–01–23–0
Source: rsssf.com
(P) Promoted to Série B 2004

Ituano declared as the Campeonato Brasileiro Série C champions.

Promotion

edit

The two best placed teams in the final stage of the competition, which are Ituano and Santo André, were promoted to the following year's second level.

Copa do Brasil

edit

The Copa do Brasil final was played between Cruzeiro and Flamengo.


Flamengo1–1Cruzeiro

Cruzeiro3–1Flamengo

Cruzeiro declared as the cup champions by aggregate score of 4–2.

State championship champions

edit
StateChampionStateChampion
AcreRio BrancoParaíbaBotafogo-PB
AlagoasASAParanáCoritiba
AmapáYpirangaPernambucoSport Recife
AmazonasNacionalPiauíFlamengo-PI
BahiaVitóriaRio de JaneiroVasco
CearáFortalezaRio Grande do NorteAmérica-RN
Distrito FederalGamaRio Grande do SulInternacional
Espírito SantoSerraRondôniaUnião Cacoalense
GoiásGoiásRoraimaAtlético Roraima
MaranhãoSampaio CorrêaSanta CatarinaFigueirense
Mato GrossoCuiabáSão PauloCorinthians
Mato Grosso do SulSERCSergipeSergipe
Minas GeraisCruzeiroTocantinsPalmas
ParáRemo

Youth competition champions

edit
CompetitionChampion
Copa Macaé de JuvenisFluminense
Copa Santiago de Futebol JuvenilInternacional
Copa São Paulo de JunioresSanto André
Copa Sub-17 de PromissãoCorinthians
Taça Belo Horizonte de JunioresFlamengo

Other competition champions

edit
CompetitionChampion
Campeonato do NordesteVitória
Copa Espírito SantoEstrela do Norte
Copa FPFSanto André
Copa ParanáAtlético Paranaense
Copa PernambucoSport
Taça Minas GeraisUberlândia
Torneio de Integração da AmazôniaCFA

Brazilian clubs in international competitions

edit
TeamCopa Libertadores 2003Copa Sudamericana 2003Recopa Sudamericana 2003
Atlético Mineirodid not qualify1st Preliminary roundN/A
CorinthiansRound of 161st Preliminary roundN/A
Cruzeirodid not qualify1st Preliminary roundN/A
Flamengodid not qualify1st Preliminary roundN/A
Fluminensedid not qualify2nd Preliminary roundN/A
GrêmioQuarterfinals1st Preliminary roundN/A
Internacionaldid not qualify1st Preliminary roundN/A
Palmeirasdid not qualifyPreliminary roundN/A
PaysanduRound of 16did not qualifyN/A
SantosRunner-upQuarterfinalsN/A
São Caetanodid not qualify2nd Preliminary roundN/A
São Paulodid not qualifySemifinalsN/A
Vascodid not qualify1st Preliminary roundN/A

Brazil national team

edit

The following table lists all the games played by the Brazil national football team in official competitions and friendly matches during 2003.

DateOppositionResultScoreBrazil scorersCompetition
February 12, 2003  ChinaD0–0-International Friendly
March 29, 2003  PortugalL1–2RonaldinhoInternational Friendly
April 30, 2003  MexicoD0–0-International Friendly
June 11, 2003  NigeriaW3–0Gil, Luís Fabiano, AdrianoInternational Friendly
June 19, 2003  CameroonL0–1-Confederations Cup
June 21, 2003  United StatesW1–0AdrianoConfederations Cup
June 23, 2003  TurkeyD2–2Adriano, AlexConfederations Cup
July 13, 2003  MexicoL0–1-Gold Cup
July 15, 2003  HondurasW2–1Maicon, DiegoGold Cup
July 19, 2003  ColombiaW2–0Kaká (2)Gold Cup
July 23, 2003  United StatesW2–1 (aet)Kaká, DiegoGold Cup
July 27, 2003  MexicoL0–1 (aet)-Gold Cup
September 7, 2003  ColombiaW2–1Ronaldo, KakáWorld Cup Qualifying
September 10, 2003  EcuadorW1–0RonaldinhoWorld Cup Qualifying
October 12, 2003  JamaicaW1–0Roberto CarlosInternational Friendly
November 16, 2003  PeruD1–1RivaldoWorld Cup Qualifying
November 19, 2003  UruguayD3–3Kaká, Ronaldo (2)World Cup Qualifying

Women's football

edit

Brazil women's national football team

edit

The following table lists all the games played by the Brazil women's national football team in official competitions and friendly matches during 2003.

DateOppositionResultScoreBrazil scorersCompetition
April 23, 2003  ArgentinaW3–2Kátia Cilene, Pretinha, RosanaSudamericano Femenino
April 25, 2003  PeruW3–0Formiga, Pretinha, MartaSudamericano Femenino
April 27, 2003  ColombiaW12–0Pretinha (2), Formiga, Marta (3), Kátia Cilene (5), Cristiane SilvaSudamericano Femenino
July 13, 2003  United StatesL0–1-International Friendly
July 17, 2003  CanadaL1–2TatianaInternational Friendly
July 20, 2003  CanadaL1–2Cristiane SilvaInternational Friendly
August 2, 2003  HaitiW5–0Marta, Kelly, Formiga, Renata Costa, MayconPan American Games
August 8, 2003  CanadaW5–0Renata Costa, Formiga, Marta, Maycon, ElainePan American Games
August 11, 2003  ArgentinaW2–1Marta (2)Pan American Games
August 14, 2003  CanadaW1–1 (aet: 1–0)Formiga, Cristiane SilvaPan American Games
September 21, 2003  South KoreaW3–0Marta, Kátia Cilene (2)World Cup
September 24, 2003  NorwayW4–1Daniela Alves, Rosana, Marta, Kátia CileneWorld Cup
September 27, 2003  FranceD1–1Kátia CileneWorld Cup
October 1, 2003  SwedenL1–2MartaWorld Cup

The Brazil women's national football team competed in the following competitions in 2003:

CompetitionPerformance
World CupQuarterfinals
Sudamericano FemeninoChampions
Pan American GamesChampions

Domestic competition champions

edit
CompetitionChampion
Circuito BrasileiroSaad

References

edit