Corinthians
Est. 1910 · Brazil
About Corinthians
Corinthians are Brazilian football's people's club, a black and white institution from Sao Paulo founded in 1910 by working-class railway employees who named their team after the English touring side whose spirit they admired. Sport Club Corinthians Paulista became the most supported club in Brazil and one of the most followed on earth, with an estimated 30 million supporters. Their 2012 Copa Libertadores triumph, followed by the FIFA Club World Cup title the same year, placed Corinthians on the global stage and confirmed that the Timao's ambition matched the scale of their following.
Founded on 1 September 1910, Corinthians compete in the Campeonato Brasileiro Serie A, Brazil's top division. Their home is the Neo Quimica Arena in Sao Paulo, which holds 46,931 supporters. Key honours include 7 Campeonato Brasileiro titles, 3 Copa do Brasil wins, 1 Copa Libertadores (2012), and 2 FIFA Club World Cup titles (2000, 2012).
Corinthians' black and white colours have been their identity since the very beginning, a clean and powerful combination that has been worn across more than a century of Brazilian football. The home kit traditionally features a white shirt with black shorts, while the black away provides a bold inversion of that classic. The 2012 FIFA Club World Cup winning shirt, worn when Corinthians beat Chelsea 1-0 in the final in Yokohama, is the most celebrated in the club's modern history. Reaching that final as a Brazilian club and defeating one of Europe's elite in those black and white colours was a statement heard around the world.









