Writing for Reuters, journalist Andrew Downie has uncovered a Celtic connection at the Palmeiras v Santos Copa Libertadores final at the Maracana Stadium on Saturday and as a result we should all be hoping for a Palmeiras victory.
The story centres around the 21 year old Palmeiras midfield star Patrick de Paula and his close affection for Celtic. Downie does a great job in illustrating this small example of how the ethos of our club reaches all corners of the world.
De Paula, known simply as Patrick in Brazil, learned his football wearing our green-and-white hooped jersey. These were donated by Celtic to a community project in the Mario Lombardi neighbourhood of Rio de Janeiro.
Today that project is known as Mario Lombardi Celtic, thanks to a long-standing partnership that began in 2006 when members of the Celtic supporters club in Rio made a charitable donation, Downie explains.
One of the members of the Rio Celtic supporters club organised a visit to the community soccer school and soon after Celtic agreed to send kits.
“What we would get was discontinued stock from the Celtic shop,” said then supporters club president Jimmy Dunnet. “There might have been an order of a full set of strips for a wee team and then cancelled, we would get that. Or stock that hadn’t sold when they moved on from brand A to brand B.”
Bags of kit are usually brought over by Celtic fans who live in Rio. In addition to the hoops, the club gets second and third strips. One year a printing error meant the whole team played with number six with Balde on the back.
Patrick grew up nearby and was a regular on the community’s astroturf pitch by the age of seven. His talent, said coach and organiser Gerson Oliveira, was obvious. “We had to polish him of course but he knew how to shield the ball, he had a great left foot, he was a class above. It was like he was born with a ball at his feet.”
Patrick, who earned the nickname Pelezinho, or little Pele, moved through the ranks, usually playing in the age category above his own, and caught the eye of Rio club Botafogo. He later ended up at Palmeiras, where he made his debut in January 2020.
He is now part of a potent young guard at the Sao Paulo club. Danilo, 19, and Gabriel Menino, 20, play alongside him in midfield, while Gabriel Veron, 18, is a pacy winger. All four are expected to feature in Saturday’s all-Brazilian Libertadores final against Santos at Rio’s famous Maracana.
“This is a unique moment, the moment I’ve always waited for,” Patrick told Reuters. “This is a dream for me and for the school where I trained and a dream for all the community. I hope all the community are all tuned in on Saturday at 5pm for the final of the Libertadores.”
Community soccer school coach Gerson however has turned down an invitation to watch the match at Patrick’s family home, apparently believing the player turned his back on his roots and mentors. But the youngsters at Mario Lombardi are aware of their predecessor’s rise and will be cheering for Palmeiras, as will Gerson, although his real love is now in Glasgow.