Football
Associated Press 7y

Chapecoense chief: We will rebuild this club so it is even stronger

CHAPECO, Brazil -- Six players, a handful of support staff, and deep sorrow are all that remain of Brazil's Chapecoense football club.

They will still try to play again. Because they know that's what their 19 teammates who died when a charter plane ripped into an Andean mountainside would want them to do.

"In the memory of those who died and to honour their families, we will rebuild this club from scratch so it is even stronger," club director and local businessman Cecilio Hans said. "We had material assets and human assets. Now we've lost nearly all of our human assets."

Other clubs in Brazil's top league are offering to loan players to Chapecoense, with a proposal that the modest club in deep southern Brazil is guaranteed to stay in the top division for the next three years.

"The club will rebuild, I am sure," said Walter Feldman, secretary general of the Brazilian Football Confederation. "Eight clubs have already called me to offer concrete, material solidarity. We are studying ways to best help."

Monday's crash occurred as the team was on their way to the first of a two-match final of the Copa Sudamericana -- the No. 2 tournament on the continent. Only three players survived, and all are recovering at a hospital in Colombia: defender Helio Zampier, commonly known as Neto, defender-midfielder Alan Ruschel and goalkeeper Jakson Follmann, whose right leg had to be amputated on Tuesday.

Chape, as the team are called locally, reached the top of South American football without any superstars -- no high-profile players from Brazil's celebrated national team. They were in Brazil's fourth division just seven years ago, climbing into the first division by 2014. Now they start the climb again, and this one is even steeper.

Goalkeeper Marcelo Boeck said he and several players had deals to leave the club next year. He said they're reconsidering.

"We know this is a different moment, and we are part of it," Boeck said. "We hope we can help rebuild in the memory of our team."

The rebuilding could start Dec. 11, the date scheduled for the final round of league matches in the top Brazilian league. Games have been called off this weekend for a period of mourning.

Chapecoense's acting President Ivan Tozzo told reporters on Wednesday the club hopes to play that match against Atletico Mineiro using a primarily junior team.

After that match, there is uncertainty over Chapecoense's future. If the team are awarded the Copa Sudamericana title -- as their final opponent Atletico Nacional have proposed -- they would qualify for next year's Copa Libertadores, the Champions League of South America, which begins in February.

Chapecoense guaranteed their place in the Brazilian first division for next season, and they are also scheduled to defend their Santa Catarina state title in the regional championship starting in January.

Data analyst Victor Hugo, one of the key assistants to coach Caio Junior, who died in the crash, said very little remains.

"We have a couple of doctors, two physiotherapists, two locker room staffers, one nurse, one masseur, one goalie coach and me," he said, speaking at Chapecoense's Arena Conda.

Hugo said the staff members and six players not selected for the big match in Colombia -- some because of injury, others because of the coach's decision -- are trying to cope with the tragedy.

"That disappointment over not being chosen to be there was quickly replaced by that horrible mixture of grief, and with some relief just to be alive," he said. "That will stick with us forever."

Argentine midfielder Alejandro Martinuccio was injured and didn't travel. He spent Tuesday answering concerned calls and comforting friends and family of the Chapecoense players.

"I am not religious, so this is even more difficult," Martinuccio said. "I am so sorry that this beautiful story is going to end like this."

Veteran goalkeeper Nivaldo was not selected so he could prepare for his 300th game with the club in Sunday's finale against Atletico Mineiro.

After the accident, the 42-year old goalkeeper said he would retire immediately. But now he wants to play in the last game to honour his fallen teammates.

"My teammates would want us to play that match," a teary and emotional Nivaldo said. "I just don't know how I could stand a full stadium with people calling the name of the players that died. We will have to try, I think. But that is going to be hard."

One of the three surviving players was Follmann, the second-string goalkeeper behind starter Danilo, who died in the crash. Authorities in Colombia said they had to amputate Follmann's right leg, and he remains in the hospital.

"I told Follmann I was going to stay here one more year to see him thrive," Nivaldo said. "He said he was going to carry me on his shoulders after my 300th game. That is not going to happen."

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