in the final of 1905
Campeonato Paulista. for the club in 1905. Under the leadership of the Englishman
Charles William Miller representing the
São Paulo Athletic Club (SPAC), Paulistano, together with
SC Internacional,
AA Mackenzie College and
SC Germânia founded in 1901 the
Liga Paulista de Foot-Ball (LPF), the first football league in Brazil. In 1902 the first
championship of São Paulo was held and the São Paulo Athletic club secured the first three titles, with Paulistano being runner up on each occasion. 1905 was the year when Paulistano won its first championship after all. 1907 Paulistano made the Briton
John Hamilton coach of the team, which is believed to be the first appointment of a professional trainer by a Brazilian team. Further championships followed in 1908 and 1913. In 1914 there was a schism in the football of São Paulo as the LPF was averse to accepting new members and thus the broadening of the base of the game. Paulistano joined the competing, generally accessible league under the auspices of the
Associação Paulista de Esportes Atléticos (APEA). In 1917 the LPF should dissolve and integrate into the APEA, which proved far more attractive. From 1916 to 1919 Paulistano won four consecutive championships, a feat hitherto unrivalled. A major contributor to this success was
Arthur Friedenreich, these days counted among the all-time greats of football, who became six times top-scorer of the São Paulo championship during his time with the club. In this era Paulistano also won the
Taça Ioduran of 1918, a cup for the winner of a match between the champions of São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, and in 1920 the
Copa dos Campeões Estaduais, the Cup of State Champions, which also included the champion of
Rio Grande do Sul. In both cases Paulistano defeated
Fluminense FC from Rio in the decisive match. in 1925. In March and April 1925 Paulistano as first Brazilian side toured continental Europe, a trip that to date forms a major part of the club's folklore. Paulistano, re-inforced with
Araken Patusca from
Santos FC and three far less prominent players from Rio's
CR Flamengo, won nine out of ten matches in France, Switzerland and Portugal, encountering and defeating also the national selections of their first two countries. On the occasion of the match against France in Paris, defeating the hosts 7–1, Brazilian football was seen as revelation, and Arthur Friedenreich was pronounced by the local press
le roi du football, the "king of football". Arakén was described as "Le Danger". Another one of Paulistano's stars on this tour was
Anfilogino "Filó" Guarisi, who later should play in Italy and win the
World Cup of 1934. On their return to São Paulo there was another break up in the state football. Most clubs opted for official professionalisation. Few clubs resisted, among them Paulistano. Under the leadership of Paulistano, the amateur league
Liga dos Amadores de Futebol was founded. The fellow footballing pioneers of SC Gêrmania and
AA das Palmeiras joined the club from the APEA and played with five other clubs from 1926 in this break-away league. Paulistano won three of the tournaments until 1929, and the
SC Internacional, which joined in 1927, won in 1928 its second state title after 1907. However, amateur football proved not viable and with the formal dissolution of the league in early January 1930 Paulistano shut down its football operations, too. By the end of the month some members, sympathisers and players like Friedenreich from Paulistano and AA das Palmeiras joined to form the
São Paulo FC, then known as
São Paulo da Floresta, a club which in later years became one of the most prominent clubs in Brazilian and South American football. ==Stadium==