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Reigning Brazilian champions Flamengo (red and black) in action against Atletico Mineiro

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Pandemic batters market for Brazilian football transfers

SAO PAULO, Brazil, Sep 15Brazil exports more footballers than any other country, but the coronavirus pandemic has caused a plunge in international transfers, hitting the finances of clubs that depend on lucrative deals for their young talent.

The number of Brazilian footballers transferred to foreign clubs fell 62 percent during the European summer transfer window this year, according to an AFP count based on data from the website Transfermarkt.

From June 1 to September 8 last year, 194 players at Brazilian clubs left to play abroad, either on loan or transferred, according to the site.

This year, the number was just 74.

“The transfer market has slowed. Clubs are trying not to spend as much because everyone’s financial situation is complicated,” said ESPN commentator Gustavo Hofman.

Brazil leads the world with 2,742 footballers playing abroad, ahead of Argentina (2,330) and France (1,740), according to a May report by the International Centre for Sports Studies, in Switzerland.

In the country of Pele and Neymar, transfers typically generate around one-fourth of clubs’ income, second only to TV rights as a revenue source.

But the number of transfers is not the only thing that has fallen. Amid the financial uncertainty unleashed by Covid-19, the amount of money involved in the deals has also dropped.

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Last year, the three top international transfers brought 77 million euros ($91.4 million) to Brazilian clubs. That included a 45-million-euro deal between Real Madrid and Brazilian club Santos for teenage winger Rodrygo.

This year, the three top transfers have brought less than 62 million euros to Brazilian clubs. In the biggest, Portuguese club Benfica paid 28 million euros to Gremio for forward and national team standout Everton.

The Lisbon club also paid 18 million euros to bring attacking midfielder Pedrinho from Corinthians.

“In any other year, (Everton) might have brought a higher price from Benfica,” said Hofman.

– Fragile finances –

Rodrygo (L) scored seven times in 26 games for Real Madrid in his first season at the club © AFP/File / GABRIEL BOUYS

The slump comes at the worst possible time for Brazilian clubs, which were already struggling with heavy debt. Now, they are also reeling from the economic fallout of Covid-19 in the country that has the second-highest death toll worldwide, after the United States.

“Clubs’ financial fragility has increased because of the pandemic,” said Rodrigo Capelo, a sports business journalist at Brazilian media house Globo.

The pandemic led authorities in Brazil to cancel all football matches for nearly four months, shattering clubs’ sponsorship, TV and ticket revenues.

The economic crisis has made international transfers all the more attractive, since it has caused the Brazilian real to plunge against the dollar and euro.

That means the take-home value has increased for Brazilian clubs, at a time when they are struggling to make ends meet with other revenue streams.

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But “European clubs are tightening their belts,” as they, too, struggle with the economic uncertainties of the pandemic, said agent Edgardo Aguilar.

The value of transfers handled by his company, Soccer Stars Group, has plummeted by 70 percent this year.

– Cascade effect –

The situation is having a cascade effect around South America.

Games in Brazil have been played behind closed doors due to the coronavirus pandemic © AFP/File / Mauro PIMENTEL

In normal times, Brazil is also a major importer of football talent. But this year, clubs have dramatically scaled back transfer deals for players from countries such as Uruguay, Peru and Colombia.

“They’ve basically made do with players who were already on the market in Brazil,” said Colombian agent Carlos Calero, of World Sports Management.

He usually brokers three deals per season to send players from elsewhere in South America to Brazilian clubs.

This year, he hasn’t done any.

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