A mass brawl broke out in the Campeonato Mineiro final between Cruzeiro and Atletico Mineiro on Sunday, leading to a record 23 red cards.
Cruzeiro faced their fierce rivals in Belo Horizonte looking to become Campeonato Mineiro champions for the first time in seven years. They managed to do just that as they won 1-0, with Kaio Jorge’s goal 14 minutes after half-time proving to be the difference between the two sides.
There were unsavoury scenes in the final moments of the clash, though, as players from both sides came to blows in wild and chaotic scenes.
Mass Brawl Breaks Out in Campeonato Mineiro Final
It all kicked off between the two sides in the final moments when Christian collided with Everson. Everson saved a shot from Matheus Pereira and Christian made contact with the Atletico goalkeeper as they battled for the loose ball.
Everson reacted very badly as he kneed his opponent while he was on the ground and shouted at him. His actions sparked a mass brawl with players from both teams involved in shoving, punches, and kicks.
Arguably the most high profile player on the pitch was Hulk. The Brazilian, who accrued 49 caps for his country, was at the centre of the conflict as he punched opponent Lucas Romero, sending him to the ground. The 39-year-old, considered one of the strongest players in football history, was also kicked by Lucas Villalba during the melee.
After a lengthy stoppage, the referee finally blew the whistle as Cruzeiro were crowned state champions for the 39th time. No player was shown a red card on the pitch, but a match report from the referee has now confirmed 23 red cards, with 12 players from Cruzeiro sent off and 11 from Atletico Mineiro.
The tally is the most in Brazilian football history, eclipsing the record of 22 red cards in Portuguesa and Botafogo’s clash back in 1954.
Hulk Speaks Out After Mass Brawl
Hulk
Hulk apologised for the mass brawl following the match. He said, per Itatiaia Esporte:
“I don’t recall ever participating in violence like that at a football match I attended. I don’t. It’s regrettable, and I will never tire of apologising. Of course, we are defending our colors, we will defend them to the death. We try to calm things down, but our blood runs hot, we see a teammate being attacked, and we automatically react. We have to defend our teammate and the colours of our team.”
Hulk also blamed the referee, Matheus Delgado Candançan, saying he was responsible for the unsavoury scenes.
“It could have been avoided, it could have been avoided. I never tire of saying that the main culprit in everything that happened is Matheus, the referee. I had spoken to him at the beginning of the second half, ‘if you don’t have control of the game, forget it.’ There started being slaps in the face, pushing, and he did nothing.
“It was a very poorly played game, very disjointed. It looked like the friendly in Orlando, all fighting and the referee doing nothing. It’s ugly, it’s ugly for more than 50,000 fans watching, ugly for those watching at home, ugly for those who like to play football. If there’s a fight, and the referee lets it go, it’s ugly. There was no game.”
Cruzeiro manager Tite added: “I regret it. I didn’t want it to happen this way. It was very late in the game. It could have been avoided.
“Can I express my feelings? If the referee is a little more experienced, he ends the game at a specific moment when there’s no contact or conflict. Perhaps he lacked a little experience. That’s why he ended the game soon after.
“He’s young, he refereed well, but he lacked a little more experience to make the spectacle better and end it at an opportune moment. Regardless of the conflict, there were mistakes on both sides.”
On July 8 2014, in front of 58,141 fans at the Estadio Mineirao in Belo Horizonte, Brazilian footballdied in a very public humiliation.
Germany tore apart the tournament hosts in a World Cup semi-final that defied all logic, racing into a 5-0 lead after just 29 minutes before eventually running out 7–1 winners.
It wasn’t a football match; it was a demolition. A nation that had spent four years building towards this tournament, the first on Brazilian soil since 1950, was reduced to rubble.
Thomas Müller opened the scoring after just 11 minutes, and the Germans didn’t stop. Miroslav Klose, Toni Kroos (twice) and Sami Khedira added four more in an eight-minute spell before the game had even hit the half-hour mark. André Schürrle added two further goals in the second half before Oscar gave the shell-shocked crowd a last-minute consolation. By then, Brazil had long since ceased to exist as a competitive football team.
A Perfect Storm: Why Brazil Fell Apart
Andrew Couldridge via Action Images
The seeds of disaster had been planted long before kick-off. Brazil arrived at the semi-final without Neymar, their talisman and the tournament’s standout player, who had fractured a vertebrae in the quarter-final after a reckless knee from Colombia’s Juan Zuniga. His absence removed not just Brazil’s best player, but their entire creative identity. Neymar had scored four goals and provided two assists in the group stages alone; there was no plan B without him.
Captain Thiago Silva was also suspended, leaving Brazil without both their defensive leader and their most composed presence under pressure. Manager Luiz Felipe Scolari had run out of ideas, handing the armband to David Luiz and trusting a makeshift defensive unit to hold one of Europe’s most technical sides. The decision proved catastrophic. Brazil was carved open again and again.
Scolari’s approach had been to build everything around Neymar rather than produce a collective quality side. So when Neymar gets taken out, the plan goes to waste.
Brazil’s midfield was overrun from the first whistle, and there was a wider sense of complacency, a belief born from home-crowd pressure that tournament destiny would carry them through. Germany didn’t cater to that opinion; they pressed high, moved the ball quickly, and exploited every single yard of space.
The Mineiraco: The wound that would not close
Brazil had a history of heartbreak on the world stage, but nothing had prepared the country for this. The defeat was immediately compared to the Maracanzo — the 1950 World Cup final loss to Uruguay on home soil, widely regarded as the greatest trauma in Brazilian sports history. Where the Maracanazo had been a narrow defeat, this was something a lot more damming.
Journalists and pundits scrambled for new vocabulary, and they found it in Mineiraco, using the suffix often used in journalism to describe a devastating, catastrophic defeat, the same one used for the 1950 defeat. Within hours, it had entered the Brazilian vocabulary permanently.
⚽
World Cup History Quiz
You scored
out of 20
The images from inside the Mineirao told the full story. Grown men wept openly in the stands. Children buried their teary faces in their hands. The Brazil players stood motionless, some in tears, as the scoreboard ticked all the way up to seven. The emotional weight of hosting a World Cup, a tournament Brazil had won five times, collapsed under the scale of the defeat. The sense of shame was immediate.
The internet had its own response. Such was the volume of video highlights uploaded to Pornhub in the hours after the final whistle that the platform was forced to issue a public statement asking users to stop — its sports category had been flooded.
The episode, as darkly comic as it was, underscored the extent to which Brazil’s humiliation had transcended football and become a cultural event. Even the world’s largest adult content site was not immune to fallout.
Some of these will stay in the minds of fans forever.
Scolari resigned within days, and a 3-0 third-place playoff defeat to the Netherlands compounded the misery. The Mineiraco didn’t just end a tournament; it ended an era, exposed structural rot within Brazilian football, and forced a long-overdue reckoning with a culture that had coasted too long on individual quality.
12 years on, it remains the benchmark for sporting catastrophe. Some wounds never fully heal. Brazil haven’t won the World Cup since 2002, with the Mineiraco being the closest they have got to lifting the trophy. The humiliating defeat set them back years, and it still lingers on the country, who are desperate to return to glory.
Tottenham have been handed a major blow in their efforts to sign Marcus Rashford this summer, according to the i Paper, as the Manchester United ace is not currently open to join the club.
It comes as Spurs have been linked with the winger as a potential option to improve the forward ranks, as talks continue over the signing of some key players up front.
There is also interest in Cody Gakpo, who offers slightly more experience. Then there’s Rashford, who is available on the market, but he has seemingly made his mind up over a deal in North London.
It’s stated that the 28-year-old doesn’t want to join another Premier League club, despite his previous success in the division, as he looks for an exit outside of England.
It follows on from Rashford’s successful loan spell at Barcelona, which saw him become a useful squad option for the club, where he could enjoy his football once again.
However, the Blaugrana opted against a permanent deal to sign the Man United star, who had a permanent clause in his loan move, with a move for Anthony Gordon going through instead.
Barcelona are claimed to be open to another loan move for Rashford, though the Red Devils prefer an exit in the region of £40 million, which could drop to £25 million in the coming weeks.
It means Tottenham will miss out on a move, unless the player’s stance changes in the near future. That said, it will save the club on wages.
You scored
out of 20
Rashford Wage Boost
Nathan Ray Seebeck via Reuters
Tottenham’s move for Rashford would’ve been expensive in the long-term, not due to the transfer fee, but due to the likely wages the club would have to take on.
It’s a monumental amount that would smash through the current wage structure for the Lilywhites, as they look to invest even more in the market.
However, with Rashford seemingly turning down the possibility of moving to Tottenham and other Premier League clubs, that may save the club a huge amount that can be invested elsewhere in the squad.
Cody Gakpo’s girlfriend, Noa van der Bij, has posted an emotional statement to confirm that their son has passed away during pregnancy.
The Liverpool star and his partner announced in May that they were expecting another boy. They already have one son, Samuel, who was born in 2024.
Gakpo is currently representing the Netherlands at the 2026 World Cup, while Van der Bij is in the United States of America to support him from the stands. The latter took to Instagram to share the news that their baby, who they named Elijah Raphael Gakpo, had passed.
Cody Gakpo and Noa van der Bij Lose Son
Jay Biggerstaff (IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters)
Van der Bij posted to her Instagram story on Saturday afternoon, saying: “With broken hearts, we share the devastating news that our baby boy passed away during pregnancy. Thank you for your love and support. Elijah Raphael Gakpo Forever loved. Forever our son.”
She then shared a heartbreaking story of how the couple and their son, Samuel, went to light a candle at church and came across another little boy called Elijah. Her next post stated:
“We went to church to light a candle. Afterwards, we walked to the church playground with our son Samuel. There was only one other child there. His name was Elijah.
“There could not have been a more beautiful sign from God He reminded us that our little boy is never far away.”