Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/copa-paulista

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Copa Paulista


FieldValue
nameCopa Paulista
founded1962 (officially 1999)
regionSão Paulo São Paulo
number of teams24 (2020)
current championsXV de Piracicaba (3rd title)
most successful clubPaulista and XV de Piracicaba (3 titles)
broadcastersSky Uno

The Copa Paulista de Futebol, formerly known as Copa FPF, also sometimes called Copa Federação Paulista de Futebol or, in English, São Paulo State Cup, is a tournament organized by Federação Paulista de Futebol Company every second half of the season. It is played by São Paulo state teams not playing in the Campeonato Brasileiro Serie A and by reserve teams of Paulista teams playing in the Brazilian League.

The competition has already had several different names. In 2001, it was named Copa Coca-Cola (Coca-Cola Cup), due to the company's sponsorship. In 2002, it was named Copa Futebol Interior (São Paulo Countryside Football Cup). In 2003 it was named Copa Estado de São Paulo (São Paulo State Cup). From 2004 to 2007 it was named Copa FPF. Since 2008 it is named Copa Paulista de Futebol.

Since 2005, the competition winner gained the right to compete in the following year's Copa do Brasil. From 2007 to 2010, the Copa Paulista winner also competed in Recopa Sul-Brasileira.

List of champions

There are all the championship editions, officially recognized by Federação Paulista de Futebol.

YearEditionNameChampionCityRunners-upCity
19621I Taça São PauloCorinthiansSão PauloSantosSantos
19792Copa São Paulo de Futebol ProfissionalInternacionalBebedouroRio BrancoIbitinga
19803II Copa São Paulo de Futebol ProfissionalParque da MoocaSão PauloSertãozinhoSertãozinho
19814III Copa São Paulo de Futebol ProfissionalOesteItápolisBatataisBatatais
19855Copa 50 anos da FPF / 20 Anos da TV GloboSão BentoSorocabaSertãozinhoSertãozinho
19996Copa Estado de São PauloEtti JundiaíJundiaíItuanoItu
20017Copa Coca-ColaBandeiranteBiriguiUnião BarbarenseSanta Bárbara d'Oeste
20028Copa Estado de São Paulo / Futebol InteriorSão BentoSorocabaJaboticabalJaboticabal
Copa Mauro RamosItuanoItuSanto AndréSanto André
20039Copa Estado de São PauloSanto AndréSanto AndréItuanoItu
200410Copa FPFSantosSantosGuaraniCampinas
200511NoroesteBauruRio ClaroRio Claro
200612FerroviáriaAraraquaraBragantinoBragança Paulista
200713Copa FPF - Heróis de 32JuventusSão PauloLinenseLins
200814Copa PaulistaAtlético SorocabaSorocabaXV de PiracicabaPiracicaba
200915VotoratyVotorantimPaulistaJundiaí
201016PaulistaJundiaíRed Bull BrasilCampinas
201117PaulistaJundiaíComercialRibeirão Preto
201218Copa Paulista - Heróis de 32NoroesteBauruAudaxSão Paulo
201319Copa PaulistaSão Bernardo FCSão Bernardo do CampoAudaxSão Paulo
201420Santo AndréSanto AndréBotafogoRibeirão Preto
201521LinenseLinsItuanoItu
201622XV de PiracicabaPiracicabaFerroviáriaAraraquara
201723FerroviáriaAraraquaraInternacionalLimeira
201824VotuporanguenseVotuporangaFerroviáriaAraraquara
201925São CaetanoSão Caetano do SulXV de PiracicabaPiracicaba
202026PortuguesaSão PauloMaríliaMarília
202127São Bernardo FCSão Bernardo do CampoBotafogoRibeirão Preto
202228XV de PiracicabaPiracicabaMaríliaMarília
202329Portuguesa SantistaSantosSão JoséSão José dos Campos
202430Monte AzulMonte Azul PaulistaVotuporanguenseVotuporanga
202531XV de PiracicabaPiracicabaPrimaveraIndaiatuba

Titles by club

TitlesClubCity
3PaulistaJundiaí
XV de PiracicabaPiracicaba
2FerroviáriaAraraquara
NoroesteBauru
Santo AndréSanto André
São BentoSorocaba
São Bernardo FCSão Bernardo do Campo
1Atlético SorocabaSorocaba
BandeiranteBirigui
CorinthiansSão Paulo
InternacionalBebedouro
ItuanoItu
JuventusSão Paulo
LinenseLins
Monte AzulMonte Azul Paulista
OesteItápolis
Parque da MoocaSão Paulo
PortuguesaSão Paulo
Portuguesa SantistaSantos
SantosSantos
São CaetanoSão Caetano do Sul
VotoratyVotorantim
CA VotuporanguenseVotuporanga

;Names change

  • During a partnership with the food brand Etti, Paulista FC played in some championships under the name "Etti Jundiaí".

;Cities change

  • Oeste FC has moved from Itápolis to Barueri.

References

References

  1. "Campeões". [[Federação Paulista de Futebol]].
  2. (2002-02-09). "São Paulo Countryside Cup 2002 (Copa Futebol Interior)". [[Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation.
  3. (2008-07-28). "Copa FPF é, agora, Copa Paulista de Futebol". [[Federação Paulista de Futebol]] official website.
  4. (October 2010). "Recopa Sul-brasileira começa com Juventus em campo". Gazeta Esportiva }} {{Dead link.
  5. Rodolfo Kussarev, Bernardo Itri. (2021). "125 Anos de História - A Enciclopédia do Futebol Paulista". [[Federação Paulista de Futebol.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Copa Paulista — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report