Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Brazilians honor soccer team killed in Colombia plane crash

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CHAPECO, Brazil — On a rainy Saturday that only accentuate­d the grief, 20,000 people filled a tiny stadium under umbrellas and plastic ponchos to say goodbye to members of the Chapecoens­e soccer club who died in a plane crash.

The accident Monday night in the Colombian Andes claimed most of the team’s players and staff as it headed to the finals of one of Latin America’s most important club tournament­s. Seventy-one of the 77 people on board died, including 19 players on the team.

Rain-soaked mourners jammed the modest stadium with four or five times that many outside — about half the population of the southern Brazilian city of 210,000 — to pay homage to a modest club that nearly reached the pinnacle of Latin American soccer.

Thousands also lined the roads as the coffins were driven in a procession from the airport to the stadium memorial.

“I’ve been here since early morning,” said Chaiane Lorenzetti, 19, who said she worked at a local supermarke­t frequented by club players and officials. “I’ll never see some of my clients again. It’s a devastatin­g day that will last forever.”

Soldiers carried the coffins into the stadium on their shoulders, sloshing through standing water and mud on a field filled with funeral wreaths, club and national flags, and other tributes.

Most of those who died, including the 19 players, were not from Chapeco and were to be buried elsewhere. A tent, with the coffins placed underneath, stretched across the width of the field. On top of the white tent, a sentence from the club’s anthem was written for all to read.

“In happiness and in the most difficult hours,” it said. “You are always a winner.”

 ?? DOUGLAS MAGNO/ DOUGLAS MAGNO/GETTY-AFP ?? Brazilians mourn members of the Chapecoens­e soccer club Saturday.
DOUGLAS MAGNO/ DOUGLAS MAGNO/GETTY-AFP Brazilians mourn members of the Chapecoens­e soccer club Saturday.

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