1951 São Paulo FC season
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Manager
Vicente Feola
Leônidas da Silva
Ariston de Oliveira
| 1951 season | |
|---|---|
| Chairman | |
| Manager | |
| Torneio Rio-São Paulo | 8th |
| Campeonato Paulista | 4th |
The 1951 football season was São Paulo's 22nd season since the club's founding in 1930.
| Games played | 47 (7 Torneio Rio-São Paulo, 28 Campeonato Paulista, 12 Friendly match) |
| Games won | 22 (0 Torneio Rio-São Paulo, 17 Campeonato Paulista, 5 Friendly match) |
| Games drawn | 8 (2 Torneio Rio-São Paulo, 3 Campeonato Paulista, 3 Friendly match) |
| Games lost | 17 (5 Torneio Rio-São Paulo, 8 Campeonato Paulista, 4 Friendly match) |
| Goals scored | 90 |
| Goals conceded | 64 |
| Goal difference | +34 |
| Best result | 6–1 (A) v Comercial - Campeonato Paulista - 1951.12.09 |
| Worst result | 0–4 (A) v Corinthians - Campeonato Paulista - 1951.08.26 |
| Most appearances | |
| Top scorer |
Source: São Paulo FC
Friendlies
| May 6 International | Belenenses | 2–4 | | Lisbon |
| Narciso Pinto de Almeida |
Dido Durval Bibe |
Stadium: Estádio Nacional |
| May 24 Taça Cidade de São Paulo | Santos | 1–2 | São Paulo | São Paulo |
| Stadium: Estádio Paulo Machado de Carvalho (Pacaembu) |
| May 27 Taça Cidade de São Paulo | Palmeiras | 3–2 | São Paulo | São Paulo |
| Stadium: Estádio Paulo Machado de Carvalho (Pacaembu) |
| May 30 International | São Paulo | 0–1 | | São Paulo |
| Stadium: Estádio Paulo Machado de Carvalho (Pacaembu) |
| June 13 International | São Paulo | 1–1 | | São Paulo |
| Stadium: Estádio Paulo Machado de Carvalho (Pacaembu) |
| June 29 National | São Paulo | 1–0 | Ponte Preta | São Paulo |
| Stadium: Estádio Paulo Machado de Carvalho (Pacaembu) |
| July 7 National | Ponte Preta | 2–2 | São Paulo | Campinas |
| Stadium: Estádio Moisés Lucarelli |
| July 22 National | Caldense | 1–3 | São Paulo | Poços de Caldas |
| December 19 International | São Paulo | 0–1 | | São Paulo |
| Stadium: Estádio Paulo Machado de Carvalho (Pacaembu) |
São Paulo / Bangu tour to Europe
A combined São Paulo-Bangu also traveled across Europe. Games were played with nine wins, two draws and two defeats. And it all started in the Italian city of Genoa on the 29 March and ended in Lisbon, Portugal on the 29 April. Cariocas and São Paulo visited eight countries. The coach was Leônidas da Silva, manager of São Paulo.[1][2]
| April 4 International | RSC Anderlecht | 2–1 | | Brussels |
| Voussure |
Moacir |
| April 7 International | 1. FC Saarbrücken | 0–3 | | Saarbrücken |
| Durval Nívio |
| April 10 International | Netherlands | 1–3 | | Amsterdam |
| Snoek |
Report | Nívio Bibe Durval |
Stadium: Olympic Stadium Referee: Klaas Schipper |
| April 11 International | Rot-Weiss Essen | 5–1 | | Essen |
| Ponce de León |
| April 14 International | 1. FC Nürnberg | 0–1 | | Nuremberg |
| Durval |
| April 15 International | TSV 1860 Munich | 3–4 | | Munich |
| Nívio Durval Zizinho |
| April 27 International | KB | 1–3 | | Copenhagen |
| Nívio Zizinho |