The Jerusalem Post

Tears flow as Chapecoens­e returns to action

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CHAPECO, Brazil (Reuters) – Thousands of fans gathered under a blazing sun in southern Brazil on Saturday as Chapecoens­e played its first match since most of the club’s players were killed in an air crash in Colombia in November.

The friendly against Palmeiras was the first game of the season for both sides, but it was much more about symbolism and emotion than sport for a club looking to bounce back from one of soccer’s great tragedies.

The game was halted in the 71st minute to allow fans to scream their now famous “Vamos Chape!” chant in tribute to the players and staff who perished in the crash.

The Arena Conda stadium was adorned with thousands of hand-made origami in the shape of hearts and tsurus, birds that signify health, good fortune and long life.

One banner behind the goals read, “Eternal Champions, kit man to the president,” a reference to the many players and backroom staff who died.

The survivors and their relatives took center stage before a ball was kicked, with Jackson Follman, the goalkeeper whose leg was amputated as a result of the crash, being presented with the Copa Sudamerica­na trophy in a tearful ceremony.

Follman was one of only six people to survive the crash, which came as the Chapecoens­e squad approached Medellin to play Atletico Nacional in November’s Copa Sudamerica­na final.

The plane ran out of fuel and hit a mountainsi­de, killing 71 people on board, many of them players, officials and reporters on their way to the game.

Chapecoens­e were awarded the Sudamerica­na title by CONMEBOL in December after the fixture was canceled.

In an emotional ceremony, the wives of the dead players were given the medals their husbands would have received.

Follman, who was wheeled into the center circle in his wheelchair, cried as he lifted the trophy, Chapecoens­e’s first-ever continenta­l title.

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