Estádio Cícero Pompeu de Toledo, widely known as Morumbi or MorumBIS is a football stadium located in the eponymous district in São Paulo, Brazil.
It is the home of São Paulo Futebol Clube and its formal name honors Cícero Pompeu de Toledo, who was São Paulo Futebol Clube's chairman during most of the stadium construction and died before its inauguration.
Morumbi is the largest privately owned stadium in Brazil.
The São Paulo Futebol Clube, commonly referred to as São Paulo and sometimes anglicised as Saint Paul, is a professional football club in the Morumbi district of São Paulo, Brazil, founded in 1930.
They are one of two clubs to have never been relegated from the top division, the other being Flamengo.
São Paulo is one of the most successful teams in Brazil with 22 state titles, 6 Campeonato Brasileiro titles, 1 Copa do Brasil title, 1 Supercopa do Brasil title, 3 Copa Libertadores titles, 1 Copa Sudamericana, 1 Supercopa Libertadores, 1 Copa CONMEBOL, 1 Copa Masters CONMEBOL, 2 Recopa Sudamericanas, 2 Intercontinental Cup and 1 FIFA Club World Cup.
São Paulo was an inaugural member of the Clube dos 13, group of Brazil's leading football clubs.
The club's most consistent spell of success came in the 1990s under coach Telê Santana when it won 2 state titles, one national championship, 2 Copa Libertadores, 2 Recopa Sudamericanas, 2 Intercontinental Cups, 1 Supercopa Sudamericana, 1 Copa CONMEBOL and 1 Copa Masters CONMEBOL.
Its youth system revealed many players known worldwide, including Kaká.
São Paulo is the third best-supported club in Brazil, with over 22 million supporters.
The team's traditional home kit is a white shirt with two horizontal stripes, white shorts, and white socks.
The squads for all five FIFA World Cups won by Brazil have had at least one São Paulo player in them, an honour shared with cross-city rivals Palmeiras.
The badge, representing a heart with five points, consists of a shield with a black rectangle in the upper section bearing the initials SPFC in white below the rectangle there's a red, white and black triangle.
It was designed by the german graphic designer Walter Ostrich and one of the founders, Firmiano de Morais Pinto Filho.
The badge also has five stars, two gold and three red ones: the gold ones denote Adhemar Ferreira da Silva's World and Olympic records at the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki and at the 1955 Pan American Games in Mexico City the red ones represent each of the two Intercontinental Cups and the FIFA Club World Cup won by the club.
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