Local: Estádio do Mineirão, em Belo Horizonte (MG) Data: 23 de novembro de 2014, domingo Horário: 17 horas (de Brasília) Árbitro: Paulo Henrique Godoy Bezerra (SC) Assistentes: Carlos Berkenbrock (SC) e Nadine Schramm Camara Bastos (SC) Cartões amarelos: Henrique (Cruzeiro); Tiago Real (Goiás) GOLS: CRUZEIRO: Ricardo Goulart (aos 12 minutos do primeiro tempo) e Everton Ribeiro (aos 17 minutos do segundo tempo) GOIÁS: Samuel (aos 22 minutos do primeiro tempo) CRUZEIRO: Fábio; Mayke (Eurico), Léo, Bruno Rodrigo e Egídio; Henrique, Lucas Silva (Nilton), Everton Ribeiro e Ricardo Goulart; Willian e Marcelo Moreno (Júlio Baptista) Técnico: Marcelo Oliveira GOIÁS: Renan; Tiago Real, Jackson, Pedro Henrique e Felipe Saturnino (Lima); Amaral, David (Wellington Júnior), Thiago Mendes e Ramon (Esquerdinha); Érik e Samuel Técnico: Ricardo Drubscky CRUZEIRO TETRACAMPEÃO BRASILEIRO 1966 | 2003 | 2013 | 2014
CAMPEONATO CARIOCA 1995 FINAL FLUMINENSE 3x2 FLAMENGO Local: Maracanã, Rio de Janeiro (RJ) Data: 25/6/1995 ...
BOSTON CELTICS THE CELTIC DYNASTY The Boston Celtics are an American professional basketball team based in Boston. The Celtics compete in the National Basketball Association (NBA) as a member of the league's Eastern Conference Atlantic Division. Founded in 1946 as one of the league's original eight teams, the Celtics play their home games at TD Garden, which they share with the National Hockey League's Boston Bruins. The Celtics are one of the most successful basketball teams in NBA history. The franchise is one of two teams with 17 NBA Championships, the other franchise being the Los Angeles Lakers. The Celtics currently hold the record for the most recorded wins of any NBA team. The Celtics have a notable rivalry with the Los Angeles Lakers, which was heavily highlighted throughout the 1960s and 1980s. During the two teams' many match-ups in the 1980s, the Celtics' star, Larry Bird, and the Lakers' star, Magic Johnson, had an ongoing feud. The franchise has played the Lakers a record 12 times in the NBA Finals (including recent appearances in 2008 and 2010), of which the Celtics have won nine. Four Celtics players (Bob Cousy, Bill Russell, Dave Cowens and Larry Bird) have won the NBA Most Valuable Player Award for an NBA record total of 10 MVP awards. Both the nickname "Celtics" and their mascot "Lucky the Leprechaun" are a nod to Boston's historically large Irish population, and also to the Original Celtics, a marquee team prior to the NBA. The Celtics' rise to dominance began in the late 1950s, after the team, led by coach Red Auerbach, acquired center Bill Russell, who would become the cornerstone of the Celtics dynasty, in a draft-day trade in 1956. Led by Russell and point guard Bob Cousy, the Celtics won their first NBA championship in 1957. Russell, along with a talented supporting cast of future Hall of Famers including John Havlicek, Tom Heinsohn, K. C. Jones, Sam Jones, Satch Sanders, and Bill Sharman, would usher the Celtics into the greatest period in franchise history, winning eight consecutive NBA championships from 1959 to 1966. After Russell retired in 1969, the team entered a period of rebuilding. In the mid-1970s, the Celtics became contenders once again, winning two championships in 1974 and 1976 under the leadership of center Dave Cowens and point guard JoJo White. In the 1980s, the Celtics returned to dominance, as well as renewed competition with the "Showtime" Lakers, who were led by Magic Johnson and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Anchored by the "Big Three" of Larry Bird, Kevin McHale, and Robert Parish, the Celtics won championships in 1981, 1984, and 1986. The team defeated the Lakers in the 1984 Finals, but lost to Los Angeles in 1985 and 1987. After the departure of Parish as a free agent and the retirement of both Bird and McHale, the team struggled through the 1990s and much of the early 2000s. It was not until the Celtics assembled a new "Big Three" of Kevin Garnett, Paul Pierce, and Ray Allen that they found success once again. Under the leadership of head coach Doc Rivers, the team beat the Lakers to win a championship in 2008, but lost to Los Angeles in a seven-game series in 2010, the latest Finals matchup between the two ancient rivals. By the start of the 2013–14 season, none of the new "Big Three" were still with the team. Garnett and Pierce were traded away to the Brooklyn Nets, while Allen left as a free agent. After a period of rebuilding, the Celtics became a force again under head coach Brad Stevens. During the 2016–17 season, the Celtics clinched the top seed in the Eastern Conference, but were eliminated in the Conference Finals. Led by Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum, the team returned to the Conference Finals in 2018 and 2020, and broke through to the NBA Finals in 2022 in head coach Ime Udoka's first season at the helm.
MICHAEL JORDAN ROAD TO SUCCESS Michael Jeffrey Jordan (Nova Iorque, 17 de fevereiro de 1963) é considerado por muitos como o melhor jogador de basquete de todos os tempos. Jordan estudou na Universidade da Carolina do Norte, onde foi campeão da NCAA em 1982. Entrou na NBA em 1984 ao ser escolhido pelo Chicago Bulls, e logo se tornou uma das estrelas da liga por sua incrível capacidade de pontuar e habilidade nos saltos. Seus pulos, com enterradas pulando da linha do lance-livre, renderam participações marcantes nos concursos de enterradas e os apelidos de Air Jordan e His Airness. Além de tudo, Jordan foi um dos melhores marcadores que o basquete já viu. Venceu seu primeiro título da NBA em 1991, seguidos por mais dois troféus. Antes da temporada 1993–94 iniciar-se, Jordan se aposentou do basquete para jogar beisebol, mas rapidamente voltou às quadras em 1995 e liderou o Chicago Bulls a mais três títulos consecutivos entre 1996 e 1998. Em 1999 anunciou outra aposentadoria, assumindo um posto entre os dirigentes do Washington Wizards. Eventualmente Jordan decidiu voltar a jogar pelo Wizards em 2001, ficando nas quadras até 2003. Foi eleito o melhor jogador da temporada regular por cinco vezes, melhor jogador das finais em todos os seis títulos do Bulls, 10 vezes incluído entre All-NBA Team e nove vezes para o NBA All-Defensive Team. Participou de 13 NBA All-Star Game e foi melhor jogador do All-Star Game em três oportunidades. Foi cestinha da liga em 10 temporadas, maior ladrão de bolas por três vezes e eleito Defensor do Ano em 1988. A sua pontuação máxima num único jogo foi de 69 pontos, contra os Cleveland Cavaliers, no dia 28 de março de 1990. Um dos seus recordes mais marcantes e uma das provas da sua superioridade no basquete é a sua média de pontos durante toda a carreira: 30,1 pontos em quinze temporadas. Pela Seleção Estadunidense, Jordan foi bicampeão dos Jogos Olímpicos. Foi introduzido no Basketball Hall of Fame em 2009.
CAMPEONATO CARIOCA 2022 FINAL JOGO 2 FLUMINENSE 1X1 FLAMENGO Data/Hora: 02/04/2022, às 18h Local: Maracanã, Rio de Janeiro (RJ) Renda/Público: R$ 2.938.488,00 64.709 pagantes / 67.754 presentes Árbitro: Bruno Arleu de Araújo Assistentes: Daniel do Espírito Santo Parro e Carlos Henrique Alves de Lima Filho VAR: Carlos Eduardo Nunes Braga Cartão amarelo: David Braz, Cris Silva, André e Luiz Henrique (FLU); Gabigol, David Luiz, João Gomes (FLA) Cartão vermelho: Fred (FLU); Bruno Henrique (FLA) Gols: Gabigol (0-1, 28'/1ºT) e Cano (1-1, 43'/1ºT) FLUMINENSE Fábio; Nino, Manoel e David Braz; Calegari (David Duarte, 23'/2ºT), André, Yago Felipe (Nonato, 34'/2ºT) e Cris Silva; Ganso (Martinelli, 23'/2ºT); Jhon Arias (Luiz Henrique, 27'/2ºT) e Germán Cano (Fred, 34'/2ºT). Técnico: Abel Braga FLAMENGO Hugo Souza; Gustavo Henrique (Willian Arão, 29'/2ºT), David Luiz e Filipe Luís; Rodinei (Matheuzinho, 18'/2ºT), João Gomes, Andreas Pereira (Everton Ribeiro, 7'/2ºT) e Lázaro (Pedro, 18'/2ºT)); Arrascaeta, Bruno Henrique e Gabigol. Técnico: Paulo Sousa FLUMINENSE CAMPEÃO CARIOCA 2022
CAMPEONATO CARIOCA 2022 FINAL JOGO 1 FLAMENGO 0 X 2 FLUMINENSE Local: Maracanã, no Rio de Janeiro (RJ) Data: Quarta-feira, 30 de março de 2022 Horário: 21h40 (Brasília) Árbitro: Wagner do Nascimento Magalhães Assistentes: Luiz Cláudio Regazone e Thiago Rosa de Oliveira Esposito VAR: Carlos Eduardo Nunes Braga Cartões amarelos: Marinho, João Gomes, Éverton Ribeiro, David Luiz e Vitinho (Flamengo); Felipe Melo, Ganso, Arias, Martinelli e Cristiano (Fluminense) GOLS FLUMINENSE: Germán Cano, aos 37 e 39min do segundo tempo FLAMENGO Hugo, Fabrício Bruno (Léo Pereira), David Luiz e Filipe Luis; Matheuzinho (Lázaro), Willian Arão, João Gomes e Everton Ribeiro (Arrascaeta), Marinho (Pedro), Vitinho (Bruno Henrique) e Gabigol Técnico: Paulo Sousa FLUMINENSE Fábio, Manoel, Felipe Melo (Luccas Claro) e David Braz; Calegari (Nonato), André, Yago, Ganso (Martinelli) e Cristiano; Germán Cano e Willian (Jhon Arias) Técnico: Abel Braga
April 20, 1986 Chicago Bulls 131, Boston Celtics 135 (2OT) Scoring by quarter: 33–25, 25–26, 33–37, 25–28, Overtime: 9–9, 6–10 Pts: Michael Jordan 63 Rebs: Charles Oakley 14 Asts: Michael Jordan 6 Pts: Larry Bird 36 Rebs: McHale, Walton 15 each Asts: Bird, Johnson 8 each Boston leads series, 2–0 Boston Garden, Boston, Massachusetts Attendance: 14,890 Referees: Jake O'Donnell, Ed Middleton, Jack Nies Michael Jordan hits the game-tying free throws with no time left in regulation to force the first OT; Danny Ainge hits the game-tying lay-up with 12 seconds left in the first OT to force the second OT. Michael Jordan's 63 points scored is an NBA playoff record, this was George Gervin's final NBA game.
1998 NBA Finals Game 6 As they arrived at the Delta Center for Game 6, things didn't look good for the Bulls. Scottie Pippen, whose back was already injured going into the game, aggravated his injury when he dunked the opening basket of the game. He scored only 8 points the whole game. To keep pace with Utah, the Bulls were forced to rely almost entirely on Jordan, who scored 23 points in the first half. Emotions ran high at the Delta Center when the Jazz suffered a critical shot clock violation in the second quarter. Referee Dick Bavetta ruled that Howard Eisley did not get a successful 3-point shot off in time, although TV replays showed that the ball was out of Eisley's hands just before the shot clock hit zero. Later in the fourth quarter, Michael Jordan tied the game with only a minute left. The Jazz received some relief as John Stockton hit a 3 with 41.9 seconds left to give Utah an 86–83 lead and sent the Delta Center into a frenzy. After Jordan made a layup to make it 86–85, the Bulls needed to stop the Jazz from scoring again. When John Stockton passed the ball to Karl Malone, Jordan stole the ball away and dribbled down the court. Guarding him was Bryon Russell, one of the Jazz's best defenders. With 10 seconds remaining, Jordan started to dribble right, then crossed over to his left.[1][2][3] Jordan hit the 20-footer after crossing over Bryon Russell while apparently initiating contact, but replays would show that he did not, to give the Bulls an 87–86 lead with 5.2 seconds left. After a time-out, Stockton missed a potential game-winning 3-pointer, giving the Bulls their sixth NBA title in 8 years. Jordan, who scored 45 points, and whose game-winning shot has been immortalized around the world, was once again named Finals MVP. June 14, 1998 Chicago Bulls 87, Utah Jazz 86 Scoring by quarter: 22–25, 23–24, 16–17, 26–20 Pts: Michael Jordan 45 Rebs: Dennis Rodman 8 Asts: Kukoč, Pippen 4 Pts: Karl Malone 31 Rebs: Karl Malone 11 Asts: Karl Malone 7 Delta Center, Salt Lake City Attendance: 19,911 Referees: Dick Bavetta Danny Crawford Hue Hollins Chicago won NBA Finals, 4–2