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Vitoria
Clubs Home

Serie A:
Atlético-PR
Botafogo
Corinthians
Cruzeiro
Grêmio
Figueirense
Flamengo
Fluminense
Fortaleza
Goiás
Internacional
Juventude
Palmeiras
Paraná
Ponte Preta
Santa Cruz
Santos
São Caetano
São Paulo
Vasco da Gama

Serie B:
Atlético-MG
Bahia
Brasiliense
Coritiba
Criciúma
Guarani
Paysandu
Vitória

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Minas Gerais
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Vitoria shirt
State
Bahia

Address
Av. Octávio Mangabeira 3,900, Salvador

Telephone
(71) 373-5200

Stadium
Manoel Barradas, the Barradão
Capacity 50,000

Founded
13 May 1899

Colours
Shirt with vertical red-and-black stripes and black shorts

Titles
Dida, Vampeta

Famous Players
Dida, Vampeta

Web Site
www.ecvitoria.com.br

Fan's Sites
Esporte Clube Vitória

A Fan's View
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My Team
Vitória by Gavin McOwan

When I moved to Brazil in 1992 my beloved West Bromwich Albion had just been relegated to the old Third Division for the first time in their long history. (In Fever Pitchspeak Nick Hornby would say their woeful predicament was the reason for my emigrating, and subconsciously it may have been one of the many reasons I decided to leave the UK.)

I was in need of a new footballing love, and what better place to find one than Brazil. I moved to the historic city of Salvador, Brazil's first capital, which has two first division sides, big brash Bahia and smaller perennially underachieving Vitória. Choosing between them wasn't difficult: as an Albion fan it was easy to relate to Vitória. And as an Englishman I had a natural affinity to a club that was christened the Victoria Cricket Club back in 1899. I also thought the red and black strip (or rubro-negro as the team is called) was cool, and a bit menacing.

My first year following Vitória they won promotion back to the first division. My second year was easily the most enjoyable time I've ever had as a football fan. Apart from a fleeting period in the late 1970s watching the Albion had never been pleasurable. It was mostly painful and depressing.

In 1993 Vitória reached the last eight of the Brazilian championship and were put into a semi-final 'group of death' with Flamengo and Corinthians, the Man United and Liverpool of Brazilian football, as well as Santos, Pelé's team. With only one team going through to the final, nobody gave us a hope, especially for our match against Flamengo, the current league champions and the biggest club in South America.

The game was pure joy, the Brazil of your footballing fantasies. Beer flowing on the sweltering terraces, deafening samba bands, a wild crowd with fire crackers and red flares filling the air. The team weren't bad either and after 70 minutes they won a penalty to go one-nil up.

That's when it happened. We took the lead and by the time the delirious crowd had calmed down I was a Vitória fan. For the last twenty minutes I prayed and screamed for us to hang on (They had become We') to the final whistle as desperately as if I'd been watching Albion playing local rivals Aston Villa in the FA Cup. We did hang on, not only until the end of the 90 minutes but, miraculously, for the next five games to reach the final of the Brazilian championship for the first time in the club's history.

The team's tactics was based on all out-attack and putting an implausible amount of faith in their brilliant 19-year-old goalkeeper, Dida (who went on to play for Brazil and recently received a prison sentence in Italy for forging a Portuguese passport).

When we (inevitably) lost the final to Palmeiras, I remember looking around the stadium, breathing in the atmosphere and thinking, "Don't forget this, glory like this doesn't to teams like yours very often." Ten years on, I'm still waiting for either of my teams to emulate that wonderful ride.

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Futebol: The Brazilian Way of Life
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Copyright © 2005 by Alex Bellos. Published by Bloomsbury, New York and London. Distributed to the trade by Holtzbrinck Publishers.