Brazilian association football club based in Belém, Pará, BrazilSoccer club
Clube do Remo, commonly referred to as Remo, is a Brazilian 💪 professional club based in Belém, Pará founded on 5 February 1905.
It competes in the Campeonato Brasileiro Série C, the third 💪 tier of Brazilian football, as well as in the Campeonato Paraense, the top flight of the Pará state football league.
History 💪 [ edit ]
Clube do Remo was founded on 5 February 1905, as Grupo do Remo.
The founders, before founding Remo, had 💪 abandoned Sport Club do Pará.
On 14 February 1908, Remo was closed, after the club's general assembly.
On 29 March 1908, Remo's 💪 partners and Sport Club do Pará made a deal, and Remo was officially extinct in 1908.
On 15 August 1911, Remo 💪 was reorganized following the initiative of Antonico Silva, Cândido Jucá, Carl Schumann, Elzaman Magalhães, Geraldo Motta, Jayme Lima, Norton Corllet, 💪 Oscar Saltão, Otto Bartels and Palmério Pinto.[1]
In 1950, Remo held a tour to Venezuela at the invitation of the football 💪 federation of the country to compete in the Caracas International Tournament, which, according to some publications, may have been the 💪 precursor of the Little World Cup, played between the 1950s and 1960s.
The team held five matches, getting four wins (La 💪 Salle, Unión, Military School and Deportivo Italia) and only one loss to Loyola, considering the higher strength of the Venezuelan 💪 football at the time.
Remo is still seeking official recognition of the title by the CONMEBOL.
If accepted, will be the first 💪 international title in club history.
Remo also has great campaigns on the national scene.
His most outstanding campaigns were the 7th place 💪 in the Campeonato Brasileiro Série A in 1993 and the semifinals in the Copa do Brasil in 1991 – these 💪 results represent the best performance of a northern team in the history of both competitions.
In 2005, the club won the 💪 Campeonato Brasileiro Série C.
This was the club's first national title.
The club also has one title of the Copa Verde, three 💪 of the Torneio do Norte and one Torneio Norte-Nordeste, as well as being one of the largest state winners.
Symbols [ 💪 edit ]Crest [ edit ]
The first Remo's emblem consisted of a navy blue rectangle, with the center a white anchor, 💪 in obliquely, circulated by thirteen stars of the same color.
After the reorganization of 1911, the anchor gave way to a 💪 format shield similar to a buoy lifeguard, crossed by a pair of oars.
At the top was the description "Grupo do 💪 Remo" and the environment, the initials "GR" intertwined.
In 1914, the college is renamed Clube do Remo.
With this change, the shield 💪 also is renewed.
The circular uniformity of the previous badge is maintained by adding the typical symmetrical side cut-outs of British 💪 heraldry - heritage of some founders of the club with academic training in Europe, especially in England.
The acronym GR gives 💪 way to the CR.
Over the years, the shield has undergone some changes, without change your style.
The last change occurred in 💪 2013, seeking to rescue the origins of the club and to combine the concept of modernity.
According to the Brand Manual, 💪 the Bluean shield now has a finish on the sidelines and superior to characterize volume and three-dimensionality, in addition to 💪 the reversal of the stars color according to the degree of importance of each title - five white representing the 💪 five state titles consecutive and golden, representing the national title of Campeonato Brasileiro Série C in 2005.
Anthem [ edit ]
The 💪 hymn of Clube do Remo came to an adjustment made by the poet Antônio Tavernard the carnival march created by 💪 Emílio Albim for block Cadetes Azulinos, created in 1933 and was formed by athletes, members, leaders and supporters who roamed 💪 the streets of Belém bound Republic Square.
Tavernard exchanged 30 march of words to create the anthem of Azulinos Athletes, first 💪 published in the newspaper O Estado do Pará on 4 November 1941.
Colours [ edit ]
Raul Engelhard, one of the founders 💪 of the Grupo do Remo, on 5 February 1905, had been a student in England.
Rowing Club supporter, also party race, 💪 has proposed that the official color of Remo was the same of Rowing: the United Kingdom's imperial blue.
In 1911, the 💪 Grupo do Remo (regattas) turned Clube do Remo and, two years later, already disputed the first Campeonato Paraense, with horizontal 💪 stripes shirts in Navy Blue and white.
Traditional home kit [ edit ]
Since it emerged, the club features navy blue and 💪 white as its official colors.
Thus, the main uniforms of all types adopt navy blue as the predominant color, reversing the 💪 order in secondary uniforms.
The shirt used by the team in his first football match had horizontal stripes.
Kit suppliers [ edit 💪 ]
Period Kit supplier 1913–1976 None 1977–1989 Adidas 1990–1993 Campeã 1994–1995 Amddma 1996 Rhumell 1997–2000 Penalty 2001–2004 Topper 2005–2007 Finta 2007–2008 💪 Kanxa 2008–2009 Champs 2010–2011 Penalty 2012–2016 Umbro 2016–2019 Topper 2020–2021 Kappa 2021–present Volt SportSupporters [ edit ]
In the 1970s, the 💪 prestigious magazine Revista Placar, elected the best supported clubs in each Brazilian state and the Leão Azul again confirmed its 💪 supremacy in Pará.
In the 90s contributed further to the increase in Clube do Remo fans, due to the large made 💪 the club in this period: eight state titles, large national campaigns and supremacy in the Classic King of the Amazon 💪 (the taboo history of 33 games without losing for the biggest rival).
However, from the 2000s, the Clube do Remo began 💪 to get into a turbulent period in its history with successive failures in national competitions like the relegation for the 💪 Série C in 2005 and getting even without play a national championship three times.
Despite the difficulties, the fans, contrary to 💪 expectations, only increased.
Proof of this was the IBOPE which ranked the Clube do Remo as the largest North of Brazil 💪 and the 16th in the ranking of the largest supporters of the country, besides being the northern fastest growing among 💪 fans in the range of 10 to 15 years, surpassing clubs like Botafogo, Fluminense and Coritiba.
In Belém, Remo focuses its 💪 biggest fans.
Currently, bluish appearance ranging from 1 million to 2 million.
Rivalries [ edit ]
Remo's biggest rival is Paysandu, with whom 💪 he plays the Clássico Rei da Amazônia (Amazon King derby) or Re-Pa, the largest in the northern region of Brazil.
The 💪 first game took place on 14 June 1914, with Remo winning 2–1.
The Periçá's Club has the most wins in the 💪 derby.
Between 1993 and 1997, Remo applied a historical taboo on the rival.
There were 33 matches (21 wins and 12 draws) 💪 in 4 years, 5 months and 24 days.
In 2016, the derby was declared intangible cultural heritage of the Pará state, 💪 being qualified as a cultural expression of the people of Pará.
[2] To this day, more than 760 matches were played 💪 between both clubs; which makes this rivalry the football derby with most games played in history, beating even the oldest 💪 derbies from Europe.
Also, a further minor rivalry exists between Remo and Tuna Luso.
The first match happened on 15 November 1931.
It 💪 was a friendly that ended tied at 0–0.
Stadiums [ edit ]
Remo's stadium is Evandro Almeida (Baenão), which has a maximum 💪 capacity of 17,250 people.
The stadium is named after Evandro Almeida, who was a Remo's football player and employee.
The nickname Baenão 💪 is a reference to the place where the stadium is located, called Travessa Antônio Baena.
Mangueirão is used for the derbies 💪 against Paysandu and also for Remo big matches, where the record attendance for Remo occurred on 5 November 2000, in 💪 a Copa João Havelange Group Yellow semifinal match attended by 55,000 fans against Paraná.
Players [ edit ]
Current squad [ edit 💪 ]As of 2 August 2023
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules.
Players may hold more than one 💪 non-FIFA nationality.
Youth players with first team numbers [ edit ]
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules.
Players 💪 may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Out on loan [ edit ]
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA 💪 eligibility rules.
Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Retired numbers [ edit ]
33 – Number dedicated to the Remo's supporters.
Honours 💪 [ edit ]
Remo is one of the most successful clubs in Brazil's North, having won a total of 53 titles.
[3]National 💪 [ edit ]Winners (1): 2005Regional [ edit ]Winners (1): 2021Winners (1): 1971
Winners (3): 1968, 1969, 1971State [ edit ]
Winners (47): 💪 1913, 1914, 1915, 1916, 1917, 1918, 1919, 1924, 1925, 1926, 1930, 1933, 1936, 1940, 1949, 1950, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1960, 💪 1964, 1968, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1986, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2003, 2004, 💪 2007, 2008, 2014, 2015, 2018, 2019, 2022