The Manila Times

Fans cram into Brazil football stadium to mourn

- AFP

CHAPECÓ, Brazil: Fans of Brazil’s Chapecoens­e football club whose team was wiped out in a Colombian air crash crammed into the home stadium late Wednesday (Thursday in Manila) for tearful prayers around the empty pitch.

The stadium in Chapeco, southern Brazil, was a solid wall of green as fans and mourners dressed in the team shirt stood shoulder to shoulder.

They gathered at exactly the hour their team, which just a few years ago was in Brazil’s gritty lower leagues, should have been kicking off in Medellin, Colombia against Atletico

Instead of participat­ing in what would have been the biggest match in the club’s history, the team, many of the chief staff, and 20 Brazilian journalist­s were killed when their charter plane slammed into a mountainsi­de short of the airport late Monday.

And instead of sitting excitedly in front of television­s to watch the action in Colombia, the people of Chapeco, a provincial city of about 200,000, trooped into their stadium to mourn and join in ecumenical prayer.

Players who had not been on members, relatives of those killed and throngs upon throngs of ordinary fans joined together, all in the team colors.

was projected to pay homage to the dead teammates.

The team had an outsized presence here and its inspiring story of unknowns who rose to Brazil’s Chapecoens­e football club fans participat­e in a tribute to the players killed in a plane crash Monday night in Colombia, at the club’s stadium in Chapeco, Santa Catarina, Brazil, on Thursday. take on champions had spread across Brazil.

“I think this transcends football. It has become something human. This is why I decided to come and pay my respects for the players who left Chapeco with a dream and who will never be forgotten,” said student Daniel Augusto Barrera, 21.

Teacher Aline Fonseca, 21, said the sudden deaths of the team members had torn a hole in the community.

“Chapeco is not a big city. We would meet (the players) in the street, anywhere. It’s hard to keep going,” she said.

“This gathering -- they deserved twice as a big a gathering,” said pensioner Nelio Dalbosco, 73.

- build a team that will be as good and to keep going. Life doesn’t stop,” he said.

Hard to take in

be flown back from Colombia, later this week.

Club leaders said they hope to organize a mass wake at the stadium to give the players a true Chapecoens­e sendoff.

“Our desire is for a group wake Gelson Della Costa at a press conference, adding that the families’ permission was being sought.

Though the plans have not been finalized and there isn’t even a emergency services did a dry run Wednesday of the route that the to the stadium.

“It’s still hard to believe. I think we’ll only really take it in when the dead arrive. We are in deep sorrow,” said Valemar Jardine, 50, who runs a newsstand.

For the vice president of the football club, though, reality has already set in -- brutally.

the meeting room in the morning and seeing all the empty seats of our companions, and knowing that I was also on the list to travel but didn’t go in the end,” said Ivan Tozzo, his voice trembling.

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AFP PHOTO

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