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Corinthians Beat São Paulo 31 And Show A Better Plan For The Future
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) For people outside Brazil, it can be easy to miss how much a single league match can say about a country's football - and its mood. Corinthians' 3–1 win over São Paulo in Itaquera was one of those nights.
On the surface, it was a classic derby script. Corinthians dominated early, driven by a hard-working midfield and full-backs who constantly cut inside.
A clumsy foul on the gifted youngster Breno Bidon gave Yuri Alberto the chance to open the scoring from the penalty spot. São Paulo, missing stars like Lucas and Oscar, looked flat, slow to react and strangely resigned for a club of its size.
After the break, the pattern flipped. São Paulo finally pushed up, pressed with more courage and equalised through a Tapia header from a corner.
For a while, Corinthians looked fragile, losing second balls and struggling to build from the back. In a league as unforgiving as Brazil's Série A, it felt like another example of a big club unable to hold its nerve.
Corinthians rebuild with structure and star efficiency
The story changed with a pragmatic decision on the touchline. Coach Dorival Júnior turned to Vitinho and Memphis Depay, who had just come back from securing World Cup qualification with the Netherlands.
Depay played barely twenty minutes, but they were ruthless: smart movement, one-on-ones taken without drama, and the moment that will live in highlight reels - a nutmeg on defender Sabino in the box, followed by a composed finish for 2–1.
Minutes later, Yuri Alberto followed up a shot off the post to make it 3–1. Behind the scoreline lies something bigger. Corinthians and São Paulo are now tied on points, with almost identical records, separated only by disciplinary criteria.
Yet they feel very different. Corinthians' win hints at a team trying to rebuild on structure, work rate and clear roles, using a big-name foreign signing to add efficiency rather than noise.
São Paulo, stretched by injuries and inconsistency, looked more like a side paying the price for short-term fixes. For expats and foreign readers, this derby was not just about a Dutch star scoring in Brazil.
It was a reminder that in this country, success still tends to reward discipline, planning and cold-blooded execution over improvisation and permanent crisis.
On the surface, it was a classic derby script. Corinthians dominated early, driven by a hard-working midfield and full-backs who constantly cut inside.
A clumsy foul on the gifted youngster Breno Bidon gave Yuri Alberto the chance to open the scoring from the penalty spot. São Paulo, missing stars like Lucas and Oscar, looked flat, slow to react and strangely resigned for a club of its size.
After the break, the pattern flipped. São Paulo finally pushed up, pressed with more courage and equalised through a Tapia header from a corner.
For a while, Corinthians looked fragile, losing second balls and struggling to build from the back. In a league as unforgiving as Brazil's Série A, it felt like another example of a big club unable to hold its nerve.
Corinthians rebuild with structure and star efficiency
The story changed with a pragmatic decision on the touchline. Coach Dorival Júnior turned to Vitinho and Memphis Depay, who had just come back from securing World Cup qualification with the Netherlands.
Depay played barely twenty minutes, but they were ruthless: smart movement, one-on-ones taken without drama, and the moment that will live in highlight reels - a nutmeg on defender Sabino in the box, followed by a composed finish for 2–1.
Minutes later, Yuri Alberto followed up a shot off the post to make it 3–1. Behind the scoreline lies something bigger. Corinthians and São Paulo are now tied on points, with almost identical records, separated only by disciplinary criteria.
Yet they feel very different. Corinthians' win hints at a team trying to rebuild on structure, work rate and clear roles, using a big-name foreign signing to add efficiency rather than noise.
São Paulo, stretched by injuries and inconsistency, looked more like a side paying the price for short-term fixes. For expats and foreign readers, this derby was not just about a Dutch star scoring in Brazil.
It was a reminder that in this country, success still tends to reward discipline, planning and cold-blooded execution over improvisation and permanent crisis.
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