Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Flamengo's Five-Goal Rout And The Quiet Power Map Of Brazil


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) On its 130th birthday, Flamengo did more than crush Sport 5–1. It tightened its grip on the Brazilian league race and reminded the country who sits at the centre of its football map.

On the pitch, the story was simple and brutal. Sport, a traditional club from the poorer Northeast, scored first and briefly threatened an upset. Then two red cards in quick succession left the home side with nine men.

Flamengo equalised before half-time and, with two extra players and far more talent, turned the second half into a parade.

Goals from Juninho, Bruno Henrique, Ayrton Lucas and teenage debutant Douglas Telles completed the comeback and pushed Flamengo to 71 points at the top of the table, ahead of Palmeiras.

The deeper story lives off the pitch. A nationwide survey found that among Brazilians who support a club, roughly a quarter back Flamengo and just under a fifth back Corinthians.

Together, the two giants account for almost half of the country's declared fans, far ahead of São Paulo, Palmeiras, Vasco and the rest.

Most of these supporters are men, young adults and people earning two to five minimum wages – the everyday Brazil that fills buses and queues, not seminar rooms.


Flamengo's Five-Goal Rout And The Quiet Power Map Of Brazil
Football, in other words, is where the real mass audience still lives. Around three in four Brazilians say they watch matches, and almost half do so at least once a week, mostly on free-to-air TV.

Online, the fan map circulates on X, Instagram and Facebook, where supporters argue about methodology but rarely about who the true giants are. This concentration of passion did not appear overnight.

For decades, nationwide radio and television beamed Rio and São Paulo clubs into living rooms across the map, creating a country where fans in the North and Northeast often pair a local team with a big“national” club.

Flamengo benefited most, combining history, media exposure and now financial muscle. For outsiders, the lesson is simple: watch who fills stadiums, not who dominates talk shows.

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The Rio Times

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