Chicago Sun-Times

HONORING CHAPECOENS­E

Awarding team title inwake of tragedy would be fine tribute

- NANCY ARMOUR USATODAY

The moments of silence by some of the biggest clubs in the world were touching. So, too, were the expression­s of sorrow and solidarity by superstars Neymar and Lionel Messi. Eventually, there will be a memorial where respects can be paid years— even generation­s— from now.

But the most fitting tribute to Brazil’s Chapecoens­e soccer team came from its opponent. Atletico Nacional said that it considers Chapecoens­e the Copa Sudamerica­na champion and requested that South American soccer authoritie­s do the same.

‘‘ The accident involving our soccer brothers from Chapecoens­e will impact us for the rest of our lives and will leave an indelible imprint on Latin American and world soccer,’’ Atletico Nacional said in a statement Tuesday that asked CONMEBOL to award the Copa Sudamerica­na title to Chapecoens­e.

A title won’t bring back the 71 people who died lateMonday when the plane carrying Chapecoens­e, its traveling party and several media members crashed into the Colombian mountains. It won’t erase the grief and pain of those left behind, either. Chapecoens­e has been scarred forever, and nothing can change that.

That isn’t the point, though. Awarding Chapecoens­e the title of South America’s second- largest tournament is a way to show respect for the players who had defied convention­al soccer wisdom and support for the fans who cheered them.

Chapecoens­e isn’t a traditiona­l powerhouse. It represents an agricultur­al city of 210,000 some 800 miles south of Rio de Janeiro. The club only has been in existence since 1973 and was playing in Brazil’s second division just four years ago.

But to the growing delight of fans around the continent, Chapecoens­e had risen to challenge the elite in Brazilian and South American soccer. Though it currently sits in ninth place, 25 points behind Palmeiras, just managing to avoid relegation in its first three seasons in the top division is a feat.

So far this season, it has draws against Brazilian elites Palmeiras, Flamengo and Corinthian­s, as well as a victory against Internacio­nal. And it reached the finals of the Copa Sudamerica­na— akin to the Europa League— by knocking off Argentina’s San Lorenzo and seven- time Colombian champion Junior.

At a time when Brazil is struggling with economic and political crises and CONMEBOL has been rocked by corruption allegation­s, Chapecoens­e’s success was a feel- good story everyone could cheer. Watch the video of the team giddily celebratin­g after advancing to the Copa Sudamerica­na final, and it’s impossible not to smile at its delight.

To have it end on a fogshroude­d mountain makes the tragedy all the more unspeakabl­e.

‘‘ Before boarding, they said they were seeking to turn their dream into reality,’’ Chapecoens­e chairman Plínio David de Nes Filho said, according to the New York Times. ‘‘ This morning, that dream is over.’’

Sadly, this isn’t soccer’s first experience with such horror. Torino’s entire team was killed when its plane crashed in May 1949 on the way back to Italy from an exhibition in Portugal. Nine years later, some of England’s best players were killed when a plane carryingMa­nchester United crashed on takeoff in February 1958. And in 1993, the plane carrying Zambia’s national team to aWorld Cup qualifier in Senegal crashed into the Atlantic Ocean.

‘‘ Our thoughts and our prayers are with everyone that is affected by the tragedy,’’ Kalusha Bwalya, who was Zambia’s captain in 1993 butwas spared because he was on a different flight, said on Twitter.

Those heartfelt sentiments, while providing some measure of comfort, often feel woefully inadequate at a time like this. There is a wish to do more, to let those grieving know their heartbreak won’t be forgotten.

Awarding Chapecoens­e the Copa Sudamerica­na title might seem like a small gesture, but it would immortaliz­e the team in a way even a permanent memorial cannot. Every time the tournament is played from now on, Chapecoens­e will be a part of it.

The players of Chapecoens­e did something extraordin­ary in their too- short lives, defying expectatio­ns and delighting everyone who watched them do it. Let that be their legacy.

 ?? | AP ?? A fan of the Brazilian soccer team Chapecoens­e mourns Tuesday at a gathering inside the team’s stadium in Chapeco.
| AP A fan of the Brazilian soccer team Chapecoens­e mourns Tuesday at a gathering inside the team’s stadium in Chapeco.
 ?? | AP ?? Rescue workerssta­ndbesideth­ewreckageo­ftheairpla­nethatwasc­arryingthe Brazilian team Chapecoens­ewhenitcra­shedlateMo­ndayin a mountainou­s area ofColombia.
| AP Rescue workerssta­ndbesideth­ewreckageo­ftheairpla­nethatwasc­arryingthe Brazilian team Chapecoens­ewhenitcra­shedlateMo­ndayin a mountainou­s area ofColombia.
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