Date | R | 主隊 v 客隊 | - |
---|---|---|---|
03/14 00:00 | 4 | [2] 美利加 MG v 卡迪斯 MG [4] | 0-1 |
03/13 19:30 | 4 | [7] 帕特羅西尼烏競技 v 米內羅競技 [1] | 1-3 |
03/13 19:00 | 4 | [9] 托姆本斯MG v URT MG [8] | 1-0 |
03/12 22:00 | 4 | [11] 博阿 v 科英布拉EC [10] | 2-1 |
03/07 23:30 | 3 | [2] 米內羅競技 v 烏貝蘭迪亞 [11] | 4-0 |
03/07 18:00 | 3 | [6] 運動俱樂部 MG v 博阿 [12] | 1-0 |
03/07 13:00 | 3 | [11] 科英布拉EC v 托姆本斯MG [9] | 0-0 |
03/07 00:00 | 3 | [6] URT MG v 高士路 [9] | 0-2 |
03/06 22:00 | 3 | [7] 波蘇阿萊格里 v 美利加 MG [2] | 1-2 |
03/06 22:00 | 3 | [3] 卡迪斯 MG v 帕特羅西尼烏競技 [5] | 0-0 |
03/05 00:00 | 2 | [8] 托姆本斯MG v 米內羅競技 [3] | 1-2 |
03/04 00:30 | 2 | [6] 高士路 v 卡迪斯 MG [6] | 0-1 |
03/03 23:00 | 2 | [12] URT MG v 烏貝蘭迪亞 [4] | 1-0 |
03/03 22:15 | 2 | [2] 運動俱樂部 MG v 美利加 MG [3] | 0-1 |
03/03 22:00 | 2 | [8] 科英布拉EC v 帕特羅西尼烏競技 [11] | 0-1 |
03/03 22:00 | 2 | [10] 博阿 v 波蘇阿萊格里 [8] | 0-0 |
02/28 21:15 | 1 | 米內羅競技 v URT MG | 3-0 |
02/28 19:00 | 1 | [6] 帕特羅西尼烏競技 v 運動俱樂部 MG [6] | 0-2 |
02/28 18:30 | 1 | [6] 波蘇阿萊格里 v 科英布拉EC [6] | 0-0 |
02/27 22:00 | 1 | [7] 美利加 MG v 博阿 [5] | 1-0 |
02/27 22:00 | 1 | [1] 卡迪斯 MG v 托姆本斯MG [10] | 1-1 |
02/27 19:30 | 1 | [11] 烏貝蘭迪亞 v 高士路 [8] | 1-1 |
08/30 19:00 | 1 | [1] 托姆本斯MG v 米內羅競技 [3] | 0-1 |
08/27 00:30 | 1 | [3] 米內羅競技 v 托姆本斯MG [1] | 2-1 |
08/06 00:30 | 2 | [2] 美利加 MG v 米內羅競技 [3] | 0-3 |
08/05 22:00 | 1 | 高士路 v 烏貝蘭迪亞 | Postponed |
08/05 19:00 | 2 | [1] 托姆本斯MG v 卡迪斯 MG [4] | 2-0 |
08/02 22:00 | 2 | [6] 烏貝蘭迪亞 v 博阿 [7] | 7-6 |
08/02 19:00 | 2 | [3] 米內羅競技 v 美利加 MG [2] | 2-1 |
08/02 14:00 | 2 | [4] 卡迪斯 MG v 托姆本斯MG [1] | 0-1 |
Campeonato Mineiro is the Brazilian state football league of the state of Minas Gerais and is controlled by the Federação Mineira de Futebol (FMF).
The history of Campeonato Mineiro can be divided into two parts: before and after the construction of the Mineirão, in September 1966. The Mineirão is the biggest football stadium of Minas Gerais and it is located in Minas Gerais' state capital, Belo Horizonte. Before the stadium's inauguration América and Atlético were the most successful teams in the state, but after the construction of the Mineirão, known as the "Era Mineirão" ("Mineirão Era"), another team from the capital, Cruzeiro, also gained prominence. Atlético is the most successful team in the competition, having won 49 championships as of 2024, trailed by Cruzeiro with 39 championships.
As with many other Brazilian football state leagues, the Campeonato Mineiro is much older than the Brazilian League itself. This is partly because in the early 20th century Brazil did not have a well established transportation and communication infrastructure, that could help it organize a national league in the country, which was made worse by the nation's enormous size.
Many of the best players in Brazilian football were first seen in the Campeonato Mineiro. Reinaldo, Cerezo, Éder, Ronaldo, Dario and Tostão had their professional football debut in the competition.