2019 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A
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CSA
Chapecoense
Avaí
| Season | 2019 |
|---|---|
| Dates | 27 April – 8 December 2019 |
| Champions | Flamengo (6th title) |
| Relegated | Cruzeiro CSA Chapecoense Avaí |
| Copa Libertadores | Flamengo (via Copa Libertadores) Athletico Paranaense (via Copa do Brasil) Santos Palmeiras Grêmio São Paulo Internacional Corinthians |
| Copa Sudamericana | Fortaleza Goiás Bahia Vasco da Gama Atlético Mineiro Fluminense |
| Matches | 380 |
| Goals | 876 (2.31 per match) |
| Top goalscorer | Gabriel Barbosa (25 goals) |
| Biggest home win | Flamengo 6–1 Goiás (14 July 2019) Santos 6–1 Goiás (4 August 2019) Grêmio 6–1 Avaí (26 September 2019) Flamengo 6–1 Avaí (5 December 2019) |
| Biggest away win | CSA 0–4 Athletico-PR (20 July 2019) |
| Highest scoring | Grêmio 4–5 Fluminense (5 May 2019) |
| Longest winning run | 8 games Flamengo |
| Longest unbeaten run | 24 games Flamengo |
| Longest winless run | 18 games Avaí |
| Longest losing run | 8 games Avaí |
← 2018 2020 → | |
The 2019 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A (officially the Brasileirão Assaí 2019 for sponsorship reasons) was the 63rd season of the Campeonato Brasileiro Série A, the top level of professional football in Brazil, and the 17th edition in a double round-robin since its establishment in 2003. The competition started on 27 April and ended on 8 December 2019.[1]
The top six teams as well as the 2019 Copa do Brasil champions qualified for the Copa Libertadores. The next six best-placed teams not qualified for Copa Libertadores qualified for the Copa Sudamericana and the last four were relegated to Série B for 2020. Palmeiras were the defending champions. During the 2019 season, the official match ball was the Nike Merlin CBF.[2]

Flamengo secured their sixth league title with four matches to spare on 24 November and just one day after winning the 2019 Copa Libertadores, following Palmeiras' 2–1 loss to Grêmio at home.[3]
Number of teams by state
Botafogo
Flamengo
Fluminense
Vasco da Gama
São Paulo teams:
Corinthians
Palmeiras
São Paulo
Twenty teams competed in the league – the top sixteen teams from the previous season, as well as four teams promoted from the Série B.
Fortaleza became the first club to be promoted after a 1–2 win against Atlético Goianiense on 3 November 2018.[4] Goiás was promoted on 17 November,[5] and Avaí and CSA on 24 November.[6]
|
|
| Number of teams | State | Team(s) |
|---|---|---|
| 4 | Botafogo, Flamengo, Fluminense and Vasco da Gama | |
| Corinthians, Palmeiras, Santos and São Paulo | ||
| 2 | Ceará and Fortaleza | |
| Atlético Mineiro and Cruzeiro | ||
| Grêmio and Internacional | ||
| Avaí and Chapecoense | ||
| 1 | CSA | |
| Bahia | ||
| Goiás | ||
| Athletico Paranaense |
Stadiums and locations
Personnel and kits
(c) = caretaker
Foreign players
The clubs can have a maximum of five foreign players in their Campeonato Brasileiro squads per match, but there is no limit of foreigners in the clubs' squads.
(dn) = Player holding Brazilian dual nationality.
Managerial changes
| Team | Outgoing manager | Manner of departure | Date of vacancy | Position in table | Incoming manager | Date of appointment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vasco da Gama | End of caretaker tenure | 12 May | 20th | 13 May | ||
| Flamengo | Resigned | 29 May | 6th | 29 May | ||
| End of caretaker tenure | 1 June | 4th | 1 June | |||
| Avaí | Sacked | 17 June | 20th | 18 June | ||
| CSA | 30 June | 19th | 2 July | |||
| Chapecoense | 24 July | 19th | 24 July | |||
| End of caretaker tenure | 16 September | 19th | 16 September | |||
| Goiás | Resigned | 4 August | 12th | 4 August | ||
| End of caretaker tenure | 7 August | 12th | 7 August | |||
| Cruzeiro | Resigned | 8 August | 18th | 11 August | ||
| Fortaleza | Signed by Cruzeiro | 11 August | 14th | 12 August | ||
| Fluminense | Sacked | 19 August | 18th | 20 August | ||
| Palmeiras | 2 September | 5th | 3 September | |||
| São Paulo | Resigned | 26 September | 6th | 26 September | ||
| Cruzeiro | Sacked | 16th | 27 September | |||
| Fortaleza | 27 September | 15th | 29 September | |||
| Fluminense | 16th | 27 September | ||||
| Ceará | 1 October | 15th | 2 October | |||
| Botafogo | 6 October | 12th | 11 October | |||
| Internacional | 10 October | 6th | 10 October | |||
| Avaí | Signed by Botafogo | 11 October | 19th | 11 October | ||
| Atlético Mineiro | Sacked | 13 October | 11th | 14 October | ||
| Internacional | End of caretaker tenure | 21 October | 6th | 21 October | ||
| Corinthians | Sacked | 3 November | 8th | 3 November | ||
| Athletico Paranaense | Signed by Corinthians (to 2020) | 5 November | 6th | 5 November | ||
| Ceará | Sacked | 27 November | 16th | 29 November | ||
| CSA | Signed with Ceará | 29 November | 18th | |||
| Cruzeiro | Sacked | 29 November | 17th | 29 November | ||
| Palmeiras | 1 December | 3rd | 2 December |