Creation The competition was the brainchild of Brazilian sports journalist
Mário Filho, from
Jornal dos Sports newspaper, who envisaged it as a Club World Cup (based on the
FIFA World Cup for nations, held in Brazil in 1950) to be permanently held in Brazil, turning (according to him) Rio de Janeiro as "world's club football capital city".
Mário Filho put the idea forward in 1950, during the
1950 FIFA World Cup, framing the idea as a possibly promising "club version" of the
FIFA World Cup, having the idea been praised by
Jules Rimet,
Ottorino Barassi and
Stanley Rous, who were in Brazil for the
1950 FIFA World Cup. The Brazilian FA endorsed
Mário Filho's idea, and organised the competition with a view to creating a Club World Cup. Two top-ranking FIFA officials helped organise the competition, framing the tournament model and helping convince European clubs to participate:
Ottorino Barassi and
Stanley Rous (the latter having participated only for the 1951 tournament, while the former participated for both 1951-1952 tournaments and also for the 1953 successor tournament, having Barassi come personally to Rio de Janeiro often in 1951 for that reason).
FIFA president
Jules Rimet made statements praising and bidding good luck to the initiative of the Brazilian FA. The Brazilian FA and press, at the time of the 1951 tournament, dubbed it a "Club World Cup" or "World Champions Cup", a label that would later be applied to the
Intercontinental Cup (1960–2004) and the
FIFA Club World Cup.
Organization The idea was to gather together the reigning champions of the world's top football national leagues, in order to determine the world club champion, following the "champions cup" model of competitions such as the
Latin Cup and the
South American Championship of Champions, the same model that would be used in 1955 for the creation of the
UEFA Champions League. At first, a 16-club cup was envisaged, following the
FIFA World Cup intended number of participants; however, this proposal was soon shortened to an 8-club cup. In 1951, there did not exist the
FIFA Ranking, nor any "qualification tournament" for clubs to qualify to intercontinental club competitions (
from 1960 on, the UEFA Champions and Libertadores cups would serve as "qualification tournaments" for the Intercontinental Cup), so in 1951 the organisers of Copa Rio (the Brazilian FA, Ottorino Barassi, Stanley Rous, Mário Filho) had to rely on their view of football history (mainly the
FIFA World Cup history) in order to elect which were the strongest national football leagues of the world, whose champion clubs would be invited to Copa Rio. According to Brazilian newspapers
O Estado de São Paulo and
Jornal do Brasil, and
Spanish newspaper
El Mundo Deportivo, the original 8-club plan of the Brazilian FA (organiser of Copa Rio) was to organise the competition with the reigning champion clubs of the
Rio de Janeiro and
São Paulo state Leagues (
the first Brazilian national cup, named Taça Brasil, was not established until 1959, and the Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo state leagues were – and still are – the strongest state leagues in Brazil), as well as the reigning club champions from
Uruguay,
Italy,
Spain,
England (
participants at the 1950 FIFA World Cup, held in Brazil, not to mention the status of Uruguay and Italy as former FIFA World Cup Champions and England as the founders of the sport),
Portugal (
the Portuguese champions were invited in order to please the huge Portuguese community living in Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo) and
Scotland (
based on Scotland being as successful as England in the British Home Championship). It must be borne in mind that, in 1951, some countries (
such as Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark, Colombia, Chile, Mexico, etc) were not yet considered as strong-football countries (given their 1930-1950
FIFA World Cup history), and that
Germany and the
Iron Curtain countries (
Soviet Union,
Hungary,
Poland,
Czechoslovakia,
Bulgaria and
Romania) were then excluded from international football due to the post-War, early
Cold War tensions. During the first talks about the organization of Copa Rio, some other countries were considered, such as
Argentina (''Argentina was already a very relevant country in football, but the Argentines chose not to participate in the
1950 FIFA World Cup held in Brazil, as Brazil's and Argentina's Football Associations had severed relations after a brawl in a 1946 match between the two national teams
) and Sweden (the 3rd placed-team in the
1950 FIFA World Cup, whose champion
Malmö FF was not invited as the club had not pleased the Brazilian football audience in a former visit to the country''), but the final plan of the Brazilian FA for the organisation of Copa Rio (published by
Jornal dos Sports on March 16th 1951) ended up consisting of an 8-team cup with the reigning champions (1950 South American season and 1950/1951 European season) of
Rio de Janeiro,
São Paulo,
Portugal,
Spain,
England,
Scotland,
Italy and
Uruguay. However, no British or Spanish clubs accepted to participate in Copa Rio:
Tottenham,
Newcastle United,
Hibernian,
Barcelona and
Atlético Madrid were all invited to the 1951 Copa Rio and declined to participate (as for the Madrid team, they declined participation in Copa Rio supposedly due to its proximity of dates with the
Latin Cup). Thus, the Brazilian FA invited/accepted teams from other countries to participate in Copa Rio:
Nice, from France,
Austria Wien, from
Austria (at the time, the most successful federation at the
Mitropa Cup), and
Red Star, from
Yugoslavia (the next highest-ranked nation at the 1950 World Cup). However, the Austrian representative,
Austria Wien, were previous national champions (1949-1950 season), while another club,
Rapid Wien, were the reigning (1950-1951 season) Austrian champions; Rapid Wien were not invited to Copa Rio by the Brazilian FA as the club had not pleased the Brazilian audience in a previous tour to the country. As for the Italian representative, the Brazilian FA invited the reigning (1950-1951) Italian champions
AC Milan, who declined to participate (supposedly due to the proximity of dates between Copa Rio and the
Latin Cup), whereupon the organisers invited the previous (1949-1950) Italian champions
Juventus, who participated in Copa Rio. Also in 1951, for the first edition of the tournament, Mexican club
Atlas requested participation and were denied, while the
Indian Football Association requested the participation of a representative club and were also denied. Therefore, the final list of participants of the 1951 Copa Rio ended up being:
Vasco da Gama (1950 Rio de Janeiro state champions),
Palmeiras (1950 São Paulo state champions),
Sporting CP (1950/51 Portuguese champions),
Austria Wien (1949/50 Austrian champions),
Nacional (1950 Uruguayan champions),
Red Star (1951 Yugoslav champion),
Juventus (1949/50 Italian champions) and
OGC Nice (1950/51 French champions). The Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Portugal, Uruguay, Yugoslavia and France representatives were the reigning (the then current) champions of their leagues.
Palmeiras won the 1951 Copa Rio. In 1952, the
Brazilian FA entitled
Fluminense to organise the second edition of the tournament, as part of Fluminense's 50th anniversary celebrations (
the second edition of the tournament was originally scheduled to 1953, but was advanced to 1952 for the aforementioned anniversary celebrations). In 1952, no British, Spanish, French or Italian clubs accepted the invitation to participate in Copa Rio:
Juventus,
AC Milan,
Internazionale,
Hibernian,
Newcastle United,
Manchester United,
Barcelona,
Real Madrid and
Nice were all invited to participate in the 1952 Copa Rio, and all of them declined. As for
Juventus,
Barcelona and
Nice, the three participated in the 1952
Latin Cup, which was held in dates close to the dates of Copa Rio, being that the supposed reason of their declination; as for
Real Madrid, they prioritised participation in the 1952
Small Club World Cup, held in
Caracas. Thus, Fluminense and the Brazilian FA invited teams from Argentina, Paraguay, Colombia, Switzerland and West Germany, which were not invited for the 1951 edition of the tournament. As for the Colombian invitee,
Millonarios, they prioritised participation in the 1952
Small Club World Cup. In 1952 the Argentinian FA refused to allow its national champion
Racing Club to participate in Copa Rio, while
FC Nürnberg (West Germany) were prevented from participating in 1952 due to a West Germany 1950-1952 federal law prohibiting national clubs from participating in tournaments abroad (
FC Saarbrücken took its berth, since that law did not apply to clubs from the
Saar Protectorate due to political reasons). In 1952,
Dinamo Zagreb (then Yugoslavia, presently
Croatia) requested participation and were denied. Therefore, the final list of participants of the 1952 Copa Rio ended up being:
Fluminense (1951 Rio de Janeiro state champions),
Corinthians (1951 São Paulo state champions),
Austria Wien (1951/52 Austrian runners-up),
Grasshopper-Club (1951/52 Swiss champions),
Libertad (1952 Paraguayan runners-up),
Peñarol (1951 Uruguayan champions),
Sporting CP (1951/52 Portuguese champions) and
1. FC Saarbrücken (1951/52
Southwest German champions and
West German runners-up). The Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Portugal, Uruguay and Switzerland representatives were the reigning (the then current) champions of their leagues, while FC Saarbrücken were the reigning Southwest-Germany champions but lost the final match of the West German championship.
Fluminense won the 1952 Copa Rio. Both editions of the competition were contested between eight teams from Europe and South America, divided into two four-team groups, one in
São Paulo and the other in
Rio de Janeiro, with matches at
Pacaembu stadium in São Paulo and
Maracanã stadium in Rio de Janeiro.
Impact in Europe Among the six countries that would later on dominate European club football, as measured by
UEFA Champions League conquests (England, Italy, Spain, Germany, Netherlands and Portugal), two of them were not invited to Copa Rio 1951, as Germany and Netherlands did not participate in the
1950 FIFA World Cup held in Brazil, bearing in mind that back then Netherlands was not yet seen as a relevant football powerhouse, and
Germany was then excluded from international football due to the
post-War, early
Cold War political tension (as were then excluded from international football all the
Iron Curtain Countries:
Soviet Union, Poland, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria and Czechoslovakia). It must be pointed out also that German and Dutch clubs declined participation in the
Intercontinental Cup (IC) in the 1970s, perhaps indicating indifference in these countries for intercontinental club competitions. As for the British clubs, both English and Scottish clubs were invited to Copa Rio, having declined participation, and their indifference to play Copa Rio can be paralleled to their indifference to play the Intercontinental Cup in the 1970s or to play the
FIFA World Cup in the 1930s. As for the Latin European countries (Italy, France, Portugal and Spain), their clubs and national FAs entitled priority to the
Latin Cup, created by
Ottorino Barassi and
Jules Rimet and organised jointly by the national associations of the four participating countries. As there was proximity of dates between Copa Rio and the
Latin Cup (and the European clubs were obliged to grant vacation to their footballers after the end of the European season), 2 clubs in 1951 (AC Milan and Atlético Madrid) and 3 in 1952 (Barcelona, Juventus and Nice) declined participation in Copa Rio supposedly in order to prioritise the
Latin Cup. This can be compared to the fact that, later on, European clubs would entitle to the
UEFA Champions League much more importance than entitled to the Intercontinental Cup and the
FIFA Club World Cup. Differently from the others, in 1951 French champions Nice prioritised Copa Rio and relinquished their berth in the Latin Cup to French runners-up Lille, and
Sporting CP played both the Latin Cup and the Copa Rio every year (1951 and 1952, and also Copa Rio's 1953 successor tournament). It must be pointed out that, as a competition organised by the Brazilian FA, participation in Copa Rio was non-compulsory for non-Brazilian clubs; the case being different from the
IC from the 1980s onwards and the
FCWC, in which participation of the
UEFA Champions League club champion was compulsory under
UEFA and
FIFA rules (as an example, Barcelona considered the possibility of not participating in the 1992
IC, and the contractual obligation with UEFA weighed in for its decision to participate). One Spanish club declined participation in the 1952 Copa Rio in order to play
Pequeña Copa del Mundo in
Caracas:
Real Madrid CF. In Italy, the only European country that had been champion of the
FIFA World Cup by 1951, the 1951 tournament was hailed enthusiastically: the Italian press regarded the competition as an "impressive project" that "was greeted so enthusiastically by FIFA officials
Stanley Rous and
Jules Rimet to the extent of almost giving it an official FIFA stamp;" Describing Juventus's acceptance to participate in the 1951 tournament, the Italian press stated that "an Italian club could not be missing in such an important and worldwide-reaching event".
Giampiero Boniperti,
Juventus's main star at Copa Rio 1951 (thus, the main European star in the competition), declared, in a 2007 interview to
Placar, that he and his teammates played Copa Rio 1951 seeing it as the legitimate Club World Cup. In at least five European countries (Switzerland, Austria, Spain, Portugal, and Italy), the competition was hailed as either "Club World Championship/Cup" or simply as "Champions Cup".
Impact in South America , who played the
1950 FIFA World Cup with
Brazil and the 1951 Copa Rio with Palmeiras, said: "''in 1951 I got to be what I hadn't gotten to be in 1950: Football World Champion''" In 1951, the whole Brazilian press (all of the 15 Brazilian newspapers that have been researched on the issue) hailed the competition as the "World Champions Cup". In 1951
Vasco da Gama cancelled a trip to Europe in order to play in the Copa Rio, and in 1953 Vasco da Gama declined the invitation to play the 1953 "
Pequeña Copa del Mundo" in order to play the 1953 Copa Rio-successor-tournament. The reigning Uruguayan champion participated in both editions of Copa Rio, what can be interpreted as a sign of the competition's prestige in that country, the only South American one that had been champion of the
FIFA World Cup by 1951. Moreover, the Uruguayan League was interrupted in 1951 in order to allow for its reigning champion
Club Nacional de Football to participate in Copa Rio, and in the same year the
Uruguayan FA proposed to the Brazilian FA that Uruguay should host the 2nd edition of the tournament. However, in 1952 Uruguayan club
Peñarol withdrew from the Copa Rio in their semi-final second leg match, resulting in a
walkover forfeiture against
Corinthians, citing "lack of security" after their first semi-final match ended in a brawl. One South American club declined participation in the 1952 Copa Rio in order to play
Pequeña Copa del Mundo in
Caracas:
Millonarios F.C. == Degradation ==