Tag Archives: Brazilians

‘Casemiro is INSTRUMENTAL to Man United’ – How crucial will the Brazilian’s absence be? | ESPN FC – ESPN UK

  1. ‘Casemiro is INSTRUMENTAL to Man United’ – How crucial will the Brazilian’s absence be? | ESPN FC ESPN UK
  2. Ten Hag urges Man Utd players ‘not to get distracted’ by Mason Greenwood situation after striker’s charges dropped Goal.com
  3. Manchester United staff split over whether Mason Greenwood should stay The Guardian
  4. Manchester United’s Mason Greenwood, Who Was Arrested for Allegedly Assaulting Girlfriend, Considers Playing in China to Revive Career EssentiallySports
  5. Why dropping of charges against Mason Greenwood does not make the case for anonymity for the accused The Scotsman
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Pelé: Brazilians to bid final farewell with wake and coffin procession



CNN
 — 

Brazilians will pay their final respects to football great Pelé with a 24-hour public wake, which begins on Monday at the Urbano Caldeira Stadium, the home of his former football club, Santos.

On Tuesday, a funeral procession will then carry Pelé’s coffin through the streets of the city of Santos, including passing down the street where Pelé’s 100-year-old mother, Celeste Arantes, lives.

The procession will continue to Pelé’s final resting place, the Memorial Necrópole Ecumênica cemetery, where a private funeral will be held for family members.

Fireworks greeted the hearse carrying Pelé’s coffin as it left the Albert Einstein Hospital in São Paulo, where the three-time World Cup winner died on Thursday from multiple organ failure due to the progression of colon cancer.

The hearse was under a heavy police escort as it headed the stadium, where his coffin will be placed in the middle of the pitch.

Fans had already started lining the streets in the early hours of Monday morning, many holding flags or banners with messages for ‘O Rei’ (“The King”). “Pelé, you are eternal,” read one by the side of the highway.

Inside Santos’ 16,000-seater stadium, a number of large banners had been placed throughout the stands, with one reading “long live The King.”

For more than 60 years, the name Pelé has been synonymous with football. He played in four World Cups and is the only player in history to win three, but his legacy stretched far beyond his trophy haul and remarkable goal-scoring record.

“I was born to play football, just like Beethoven was born to write music and Michelangelo was born to paint,” Pelé famously said.

Pelé, born Edson Arantes do Nascimento, is widely regarded as one of the greatest players in history and Brazil held three days of national mourning following his death.

Tributes have poured in from sports stars, politicians and musicians from all around the world for a man that transcended his sport and became a global icon.

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Seeing snow for the first time at 62: Brazilians revel in icy snap

July 30 (Reuters) – Temperatures dropped across Brazil on Thursday – with rare snowfall overnight in some places – as a polar air mass advanced toward the center-south of the global agricultural powerhouse, threatening coffee, sugarcane and orange crops with frost.

Cars, streets and highways were blanketed in ice while people took the opportunity to take pictures and play in the snow, building snowmen.

“I am 62 years old and had never seen the snow, you know? To see nature’s beauty is something indescribable,” said truck driver Iodor Goncalves Marques in Cambara do Sul, a municipality of Rio Grande do Sul state, speaking to TV Globo network.

More than 40 cities in the state of Rio Grande do Sul had icy conditions and at least 33 municipalities had snow, reported the meteorology company Somar Meteorologia.

General view of a street covered in snow in Vacaria, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil July 28, 2021, in this picture obtained from social media. Picture taken July 28, 2021. TWITTER @Lho_nardo via REUTERS

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Unusually cold weather in Brazil has already sent international prices for coffee and sugar higher and Friday was forecast to be the coldest day of the year, according to Marco Antonio dos Santos, a partner at weather consultancy firm Rural Clima.

In a report on Thursday, dos Santos said the south of Goiás and Mato Grosso do Sul, states where farmers grow crops like corn, would face low temperatures on Friday as the wave of cold air marched northward.

The polar air mass should move over Sao Paulo and Minas Gerais, major producers of sugar, citrus and coffee, on Friday, bringing freezing temperatures.

According to meteorology company MetSul, winds in the city of Sao Francisco de Paula reached a maximum of 80 kilometres per hour (49 mph), a rare occurrence in Brazil.

“It was worth it. Actually, you almost do not feel the cold because of how exciting the snow is. It is marvellous, it is marvellous!” Brazilian Joselaine da Silva Marques told TV Globo while enjoying the snow in Cambara do Sul.

Reporting by Reuters Television; Editing by Karishma Singh and Sonali Paul

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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