Playoffs
Amazonense · 2026Quarter-finals
Semi-finals
Final
Standings
Amazonense · 2026Current Amazonense 2026 standings with 8 teams. Amazonas leads the table with 8 points after 4 matches, followed by JC on 6 points. The table shows wins, draws, losses, goals scored and conceded, goal difference, and recent form — essential for pre-match betting analysis.
| Team | Played | Won | Drawn | Lost | Goals For:Goals Against | Goal Diff | Points | Form | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Amazonense: First stage | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team1Amazonas | Played4 | Won2 | Drawn2 | Lost0 | Goals For:Goals Against7:3 | Goal Diff+4 | Points8 | Form DWDW | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team2JC | Played4 | Won2 | Drawn0 | Lost2 | Goals For:Goals Against4:6 | Goal Diff-2 | Points6 | Form WLWL | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team3Manauara | Played4 | Won1 | Drawn2 | Lost1 | Goals For:Goals Against4:5 | Goal Diff-1 | Points5 | Form DDLW | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team4Parintins | Played4 | Won1 | Drawn0 | Lost3 | Goals For:Goals Against3:4 | Goal Diff-1 | Points3 | Form LWLL | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team1Nacional AM | Played4 | Won2 | Drawn2 | Lost0 | Goals For:Goals Against6:2 | Goal Diff+4 | Points8 | Form WDDW | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team2Princesa Solimões | Played4 | Won2 | Drawn1 | Lost1 | Goals For:Goals Against6:3 | Goal Diff+3 | Points7 | Form DWWL | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team3Manaus FC | Played4 | Won2 | Drawn0 | Lost2 | Goals For:Goals Against4:3 | Goal Diff+1 | Points6 | Form LLWW | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team4São Raimundo AM | Played4 | Won0 | Drawn1 | Lost3 | Goals For:Goals Against2:10 | Goal Diff-8 | Points1 | Form DLLL | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Amazonense: Second stage | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team1Manauara | Played3 | Won2 | Drawn1 | Lost0 | Goals For:Goals Against5:3 | Goal Diff+2 | Points7 | Form WDW | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team2Parintins | Played3 | Won1 | Drawn1 | Lost1 | Goals For:Goals Against2:2 | Goal Diff0 | Points4 | Form DWL | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team3Amazonas | Played3 | Won0 | Drawn3 | Lost0 | Goals For:Goals Against0:0 | Goal Diff0 | Points3 | Form DDD | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team4JC | Played3 | Won0 | Drawn1 | Lost2 | Goals For:Goals Against2:4 | Goal Diff-2 | Points1 | Form LLD | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team1Manaus FC | Played3 | Won3 | Drawn0 | Lost0 | Goals For:Goals Against6:1 | Goal Diff+5 | Points9 | Form WWW | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team2Nacional AM | Played3 | Won1 | Drawn1 | Lost1 | Goals For:Goals Against5:3 | Goal Diff+2 | Points4 | Form DLW | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team3Princesa Solimões | Played3 | Won1 | Drawn1 | Lost1 | Goals For:Goals Against5:5 | Goal Diff0 | Points4 | Form DWL | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Team4São Raimundo AM | Played3 | Won0 | Drawn0 | Lost3 | Goals For:Goals Against1:8 | Goal Diff-7 | Points0 | Form LLL | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Team Stats
Side-by-side performance comparison of all 8 teams in the Amazonense. Manaus FC leads with 3 wins this season. The colour-coded heatmap highlights wins, losses, draws, goals scored and conceded, goal difference, and win percentage — making it easy to spot the strongest and weakest teams at a glance for betting analysis.
Teams
AmazonenseAll 8 teams competing in the Amazonense 2026 season. Click any club to view their full squad, match history, and detailed statistics.
Past Seasons
AmazonenseBrowse 11 archived seasons of the Amazonense, from 2016 to 2026. Each season page includes full standings, top scorers, and match results — useful for comparing historical performance and identifying long-term betting patterns.
History 2 Apr 2025
The Campeonato Amazonense traces its origins to January 7, 1914, when the Liga Amazonense de Football (LAF) was established by local enthusiasts in Manaus during the city's rubber trade boom. Initially an amateur competition featuring teams like Manáos Athletic, Nacional, and Rio Negro, the tournament remained confined to Manaus until the 1980s due to logistical challenges across the Amazon region. The league transitioned to a professional format in 1964, with the Federação Amazonense de Futebol (FAF) formally established in 1966 to oversee governance and align with Confederação Brasileira de Futebol (CBF) standards. A watershed moment came in 2005 when Grêmio Coariense became the first interior-based team to win the title, breaking Manaus's historical dominance and symbolizing the competition's geographic expansion. The adoption of the popular name "Barezão"—referencing the indigenous Baré ethnic group—during the professional era strengthened the league's cultural identity, while format evolutions including group stages and playoff structures have enhanced competitive balance and spectator engagement.
- —1914 — Liga Amazonense de Football founded on January 7, establishing the region's first organized football competition
- —1964 — Championship transitions to professional format, introducing paid players and structured organization
- —1966 — Federação Amazonense de Futebol (FAF) established on September 26 to oversee governance and CBF alignment
- —1980 — League expands beyond Manaus for the first time, with interior clubs from Humaitá and Itacoatiara participating
- —2005 — Grêmio Coariense wins title as first interior-based champion, ending Manaus's monopoly on titles
- —2023 — Amazonas FC claims inaugural championship, later earning promotion to Série B in 2024
- —2024 — Manaus FC wins title, defeating Amazonas FC on penalties in the final
Competition Format 2 Apr 2025
The Campeonato Amazonense employs a two-phase group stage format followed by knockout playoffs. In the initial phase, 10 participating teams are divided into two groups of five, with each team playing a single round-robin of five matches. The top four teams from each group advance to the quarterfinals, progressing through semifinals and culminating in a two-legged final, where the higher-seeded team hosts the decisive match. The overall standings from the group stage determine qualification for national tournaments (Copa do Brasil and Copa Verde) and identify the bottom three teams for automatic relegation to the Second Division. This structure balances regular-season competitive balance with knockout excitement, emphasizing both consistency and match-day drama.
Records 2 Apr 2025
Manauara recorded a dominant 6–0 victory over Princesa Solimões on March 23, 2025, demonstrating the league's capacity for emphatic scorelines in recent seasons.
Analysis 2 Apr 2025
Current Season Analysis
The 2025 Campeonato Amazonense is in its early stages with Nacional AM establishing themselves as the dominant force through the opening rounds. With three matches played, Nacional AM sits atop the standings with a perfect record of three wins and nine points, showcasing an impressive goal differential of +5 after scoring seven goals while conceding only two. Their clinical performances have included victories over Manaus FC (2–0) and São Raimundo AM (4–1), coupled with a goalless draw against Parintins that was decided on penalties, underlining their resilience under pressure.
The title race remains wide open, with Manauara occupying second place on four points following one win, one draw, and one loss. The club demonstrated their attacking prowess with a commanding 6–0 demolition of Princesa Solimões on March 23, one of the most emphatic performances of the young season. Amazonas, the defending champions from 2025, hold third place with three points from one win and two defeats, indicating they face a challenging campaign to repeat their recent success. São Raimundo AM languishes in fourth with just one point from a single draw, having suffered a demoralizing 4–1 defeat to Nacional AM and a 3–0 loss to Amazonas.
The relegation picture is already taking shape, with São Raimundo AM's struggles suggesting potential danger if their form doesn't improve significantly. The competition's playoff format ensures that the group stage leaders maintain psychological advantage heading into the knockout rounds, where Nacional AM's current form could prove decisive. The league continues to demonstrate the volatility characteristic of Brazilian state championships, where early-season dominance can quickly evaporate under playoff pressure.
League Structure and Format Evolution
The Campeonato Amazonense employs one of Brazil's most distinctive competitive formats, combining group-stage consistency with high-stakes playoff drama. The two-group system, with each team playing five matches in the initial phase, ensures every club faces meaningful competition while maintaining geographic balance—a crucial consideration given Amazonas state's vast territory and logistical challenges. The advancement of the top four teams from each group to quarterfinals creates a natural inflection point where the league's narrative shifts from grinding accumulation to sudden-death competition.
The playoff structure, culminating in a two-legged final, has produced some of the league's most memorable moments. The 2024 final between Manaus FC and Amazonas FC exemplified this drama, with Amazonas forcing a penalty shootout after a 1–1 aggregate draw before ultimately falling short. This format contrasts sharply with single-match deciders, generating extended storylines and allowing teams to recover from first-leg setbacks—a feature that has repeatedly prevented the league from becoming predictable despite Nacional-AM's historical dominance.
Promotion and relegation mechanisms maintain the league's competitive integrity within Brazil's broader football hierarchy. The bottom three teams' automatic descent to the Segunda Divisão ensures stakes for struggling clubs, while the champion's qualification for Copa do Brasil and Copa Verde provides pathways to national prominence. The integration with Série D access has proven transformative, particularly for emerging clubs like Amazonas FC, whose 2023 championship earned them promotion to Série B—a trajectory unimaginable in the league's early decades when Manaus remained geographically isolated from Brazil's football mainstream.
Historical Dominance and Record Holders
Nacional Futebol Clube (Nacional-AM) stands as the undisputed heavyweight of Amazonense football, with an astonishing 43 championship titles accumulated across both amateur and professional eras. Their supremacy began in the 1910s when they secured five consecutive championships from 1916 to 1920, establishing a dynasty that would define the league for over a century. The club's sustained excellence reflects both institutional stability and deep roots within Manaus society, having competed continuously since the league's 1914 inception. Their most recent title came in 2015, demonstrating that despite younger competitors' recent ascendancy, Nacional-AM retains the capability to compete at the highest level.
Manaus FC represents the second tier of Amazonense success with six championship titles, including their 2024 victory that came via penalty shootout in a dramatic final. The club's multiple triumphs across different eras—particularly their back-to-back titles in 2017 and 2018—establish them as a consistent top-tier force capable of challenging Nacional-AM's historical supremacy. Their recent 2024 championship demonstrates that the traditional powerhouses remain competitive despite the emergence of younger clubs.
The rise of Amazonas FC marks a significant shift in the league's competitive landscape. Founded in 2019 by former administrators of other Manaus clubs, Amazonas FC achieved their first championship in 2023 and claimed a second title in 2025, creating an unprecedented trajectory for a recently established club. Their 2023 victory earned them promotion to Série B, making them the first club from the Amazonense to achieve such advancement in recent memory. This rapid ascendancy suggests that the league's traditional hierarchy, long dominated by Nacional-AM and other established clubs, is undergoing fundamental reorganization.
Other notable title winners include Fast Clube (seven championships), Operário-AM, and Rio Negro Clube, reflecting the league's diverse competitive heritage. The distribution of titles across multiple clubs, while heavily skewed toward Nacional-AM, demonstrates that the Campeonato Amazonense has historically maintained sufficient competitive balance to prevent absolute monopolization despite one club's overwhelming superiority.
Geographic Expansion and Regional Development
The Campeonato Amazonense's evolution from a Manaus-centric competition to a state-wide league represents one of Brazilian football's most significant geographic transformations. Throughout the amateur era (1914–1963) and the early professional period, all participating clubs remained based in Manaus, reflecting the state capital's dominance and the logistical impossibility of regular travel across the Amazon region. The expansion in 1980, when clubs from Humaitá and Itacoatiara first participated, marked a watershed moment that fundamentally altered the league's character and reach.
This geographic broadening accelerated through the 1990s and 2000s, culminating in Grêmio Coariense's historic 2005 championship—the first title won by an interior-based club. Coariense's victory over Nacional-AM in the final shattered the myth of Manaus's inevitable superiority and demonstrated that talent and organization could overcome geographic disadvantage. The subsequent participation of clubs from across Amazonas state, including Itacoatiara, Humaitá, and smaller municipalities, has enriched the league's competitive depth while distributing football investment across the region.
The infrastructure investments accompanying this expansion have been modest but meaningful. The development of regional stadiums and training facilities in interior cities has enabled local talent to remain in-state for professional development rather than immediately migrating to southern Brazilian leagues. This retention of talent has paradoxically strengthened the Amazonense by deepening its talent pool, even as the brightest prospects eventually move to Serie A or international clubs. The league's role as a talent incubator for Brazil's national football system has grown correspondingly, with players developed in the Amazonense increasingly visible in higher divisions.
International Context and National Significance
Within Brazil's complex football hierarchy, the Campeonato Amazonense occupies a distinctive position as one of 27 state championships that feed into the national league system. Unlike the economically dominant southern states (São Paulo, Minas Gerais, Rio de Janeiro), which produce multiple clubs capable of competing in Série A, Amazonas has historically generated limited national-level representation. However, the recent promotion of Amazonas FC to Série B represents a significant breakthrough, suggesting that the league's competitive standards are rising and its clubs are becoming increasingly capable of national competition.
The Campeonato Amazonense's qualification pathways—particularly Copa do Brasil and Copa Verde access—have created memorable David-versus-Goliath moments in Brazilian football. Smaller Amazonense clubs occasionally draw major Série A teams in Copa do Brasil, generating national media attention and providing financial windfalls through prize distributions. These occasional high-profile matchups have elevated the league's profile beyond the Amazon region and demonstrated that Amazonense football, while economically modest, can produce competitive intensity comparable to wealthier states.
The league's cultural significance extends beyond statistics and standings. Football in Amazonas represents one of the few truly unifying forces across a geographically vast and economically disparate region. The passionate support for clubs like Nacional-AM, Manaus FC, and the emerging Amazonas FC reflects deep community identities and provides social cohesion in a region often marginalized within Brazil's national consciousness. The Barezão's annual championship cycle generates local media coverage, commercial activity, and social engagement that extends throughout the state, making it an essential component of Amazonian cultural life.
Recent Competitive Trends and Future Outlook
The 2023–2025 seasons have witnessed an unprecedented competitive realignment in the Campeonato Amazonense. Amazonas FC's emergence as a two-time champion in three years, combined with their Serie B promotion, signals that the league's traditional hierarchy—dominated by Nacional-AM and Manaus FC—is becoming more fluid. The club's rapid rise from founding in 2019 to national prominence within six years suggests that financial investment, competent administration, and strategic recruitment can overcome historical disadvantage in Brazilian football even at the state level.
Manaus FC's 2024 championship, secured via the dramatic penalty shootout against Amazonas FC, demonstrates that established clubs retain the capability to compete despite younger rivals' momentum. The intensity of recent finals—consistently decided through extra time or penalties rather than regulation victories—indicates that the league has achieved a competitive equilibrium where multiple clubs possess championship-caliber capabilities. This parity, while reducing predictability, has enhanced the league's entertainment value and commercial appeal.
The 2025 season's early dominance by Nacional AM suggests that the historic powerhouse is reasserting itself after several seasons of relative underperformance. Whether Nacional-AM can sustain their current form through the knockout stages remains uncertain, but their early performances indicate they have not conceded their traditional supremacy to younger rivals. The convergence of Nacional-AM's resurgence, Manaus FC's continued strength, and Amazonas FC's ambitious trajectory suggests that future Amazonense seasons will feature intensely competitive title races involving multiple genuine contenders.
Looking forward, the league's trajectory depends significantly on whether Amazonas FC can consolidate their national advancement and whether other Amazonense clubs might follow suit. Promotion pathways to Série B and beyond create powerful incentives for investment and talent development throughout the state championship system. As Brazil's football structure increasingly emphasizes meritocratic advancement rather than historical privilege, the Campeonato Amazonense—once a peripheral competition—may become a genuine pathway for ambitious clubs seeking national prominence.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many teams compete in the Campeonato Amazonense?
Ten teams participate in a standard Campeonato Amazonense season, divided into two groups of five during the initial phase before advancing to knockout playoffs.
What is the Barezão and how does it relate to the Amazonense?
The Barezão is the popular name for the Campeonato Amazonense, adopted during the professional era to reference the indigenous Baré ethnic group and reflect Amazonas state's cultural heritage.
Who has won the most Campeonato Amazonense titles?
Nacional Futebol Clube (Nacional-AM) holds the all-time record with 43 championship titles, including victories in the amateur era and as recently as 2015, making them the league's most successful club.
How does relegation work in the Campeonato Amazonense?
The bottom three teams in the overall league standings are automatically relegated to the Campeonato Amazonense Segunda Divisão (Second Division) at the end of each season.
When was the Campeonato Amazonense founded?
The Campeonato Amazonense was established on January 7, 1914, by the Liga Amazonense de Football, making it the second-oldest state championship in Brazil's Northern Region.
What national competitions do Amazonense champions qualify for?
The Campeonato Amazonense champion qualifies for the Copa do Brasil and Copa Verde, while top finishers also gain entry to the Brasileirão Série D, integrating the league into Brazil's national football structure.
API data: 25 May 2026 · Content updated: 2 Apr 2025