In a first half with many
fouls and few chances, Cruzeiro tried long-range shots from
Kaiki and Lucas Silva, while Atlético Mineiro's
Renan Lodi also made an attempt. The second half was short on chances for its first 15 minutes, until Cruzeiro's
Matheus Pereira passed to
Gerson on the left side of the attack. He crossed the ball to Kaio Jorge, who headed it past Atlético Mineiro goalkeeper
Everson for the only goal of the game, given after
video assistant referee review. Atlético Mineiro sought an equaliser, but were unable to create goalscoring opportunities.
Referee Matheus Delgado Candançan recorded two
sendings-off during the game: in the sixth minute of added time, he sent off Everson for the knee on Christian, and he sent off Christian for kicking the goalkeeper in the head with his shin while the goalkeeper had the ball under control. The referee noted that he did not show a
red card during the game, because of the brawl that immediately followed. Though he was again unable to show red cards due to the brawl, Delgado Candançan recorded another 21 sendings-off due to the fight, recording them all under the same explanation. The 11 Cruzeiro players sent off were
Cássio,
Fagner,
Fabrício Bruno,
João Marcelo,
Lucas Villalba,
Kauã Prates,
Lucas Romero,
Matheus Henrique,
Walace, Gerson and Kaio Jorge. The 10 Atlético Mineiro players sent off were
Gabriel Delfim,
Ángelo Preciado,
Lyanco,
Ruan Tressoldi,
Júnior Alonso, Renan Lodi,
Alan Franco,
Alan Minda,
Mateo Cassierra and Hulk. The 23 sendings-off set a new record in a Brazilian football match. The previous record was 22 for a game between
Portuguesa and
Botafogo in the 1954
Torneio Rio–São Paulo, and a 1971
friendly between
Santa Catarina rivals
Avaí and
Figueirense in 1971. The world record is held by a game between
Claypole and
Victoriano Arenas in the Argentinian fifth division on 27 February 2011, in which a brawl led to the sending-off of the eleven players and seven substitutes of both teams.
Details ==Post-match==