Global Times

Chapecoens­e remember fatal crash

Brazilian soccer club avoid relegation one year later

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Grieving fans of Chapecoens­e soccer club held a candlelit vigil at their stadium in southern Brazil on Wednesday, exactly one year after the team’s plane crashed into a hillside in Colombia, killing most of the players on board.

Hundreds of supporters in Chapeco prayed together before walking to the city’s cathedral, where the bells tolled at 1:15 am, the exact moment the accident occurred on November 29 last year.

The plane crashed as it approached Medellin, killing 71 of the 77 people on board, including all bar three of the Chapecoens­e squad.

The club were on their way to the biggest game in their history, a Copa Sudamerica­na final against Atletico Nacional.

The match was canceled and South American soccer’s governing body awarded the title to the Brazilian club.

The team, now known around the world as “Chape,” eschewed any major events on the anniversar­y, telling fans they were opting to spend the day “reflecting and seeking peace.”

“I know – and I agree – that our eternal champions deserve all the tributes available to them, but on this day especially we have to have respect,” the club wrote in an open letter. “Respect for those who remain and respect for great memories.”

In one of the few events planned, the club was to open the stadium to let fans see a new tunnel decorated with 48 2-meter-high photos of players and special moments from the side’s history.

Chapecoens­e survived the difficult year by signing a whole new squad of players, most of them experience­d journeymen.

They won the Santa Catarina state championsh­ip in May and briefly led the Brazilian first division a few weeks later before falling down the table.

They flirted with the relegation zone and used three different coaches over the course of the year but a 2-1 victory over Vitoria on November 17 ensured they will retain their top-flight status.

The players marked Thursday’s achievemen­t with a repeat of the celebratio­n that made them famous, as players, coaches and directors banged on the dressing room lockers and chanted “Vamos Vamos Chape.”

The club turned down the chance of immunity from relegation before the season started and a win in Sunday’s final Serie A game could even take them into next year’s Copa Libertador­es, the South American version of the Champions League.

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 ??  ?? People attend a ceremony in honor of the victims of Lamia flight 2933 in Chapeco, Brazil on Tuesday. Inset: A crowd gathers to pay tribute to the victims in La Union, Colombia on Tuesday.
People attend a ceremony in honor of the victims of Lamia flight 2933 in Chapeco, Brazil on Tuesday. Inset: A crowd gathers to pay tribute to the victims in La Union, Colombia on Tuesday.

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