A Quote by Emerson Fittipaldi

I based in Brazil, Sao Paulo, but I come very often to the states, and I travel all over the world. — © Emerson Fittipaldi
I based in Brazil, Sao Paulo, but I come very often to the states, and I travel all over the world.
I was born in Sao Paulo, Brazil, and from an early age was interested in technology and engineering.
Brazil has its own fashion identity. Many very talented Brazilian designers show every season at Sao Paulo and Rio fashion weeks.
My father played for Sao Paulo for several years. I played in Brazil, too, and made a lot of friends there.
From the moment I left Sao Paulo and Brazil, I was fixed on staying here, playing for the first team and succeeding at Real Madrid. That was always my dream. But it was an advantage to be able to join Castilla first.
As tough as it was for us with my father gone, my mother and sister were always pushing me. They even let me go to Brazil by myself when I was 13 to train with Sao Paulo for four months.
We saw groups of people gathering in front of Lula's house in Sao Paulo this morning. You had people shouting at one another, and some fistfights even broke out. Some of his supporters are claiming that this is equivalent of a coup attempt, an attempt to remove Rousseff from power and prevent Lula from running again. And other people are saying that this is simply a display of rule of law in Brazil, that no one in Brazil can be above the law at this time.
I'd be happy to play in Sao Paulo. It would be a dream; that would be very exciting.
Sao Paulo is a dump. That's a known fact.
Ceni was very skilful - and he made history. He played for 25 years at Sao Paulo, more than 1,200 games, and that's an inspiration. Hopefully, I can build a history like that.
We've got clouds and rain, just like in Seattle .. but Sao Paulo is better.
All the way through the youth ranks at Sao Paulo, I've always been the captain.
As far as Sao Paulo are concerned, I've never played for a club as well-structured as this.
In Brazil, even inside the same city, people from different parts dress differently. Sao Paulo, for example, is more connected to global trends and urban movements. Rio de Janeiro is more influenced by the beach, and has a sort of Cali vibe with the way people dress. Porto Alegre down in the south has a hard winter, so people have to dress to face the cold days.
If I'd grown up in Sao Paulo, I'm sure I would've been a great soccer fan.
It's something I've been working on since I started out at Sao Paulo, and over time I've tried to improve my skills. But even when I played in the local academy, I was trying to show off some ability with my feet. I actually scored several free-kicks.
I just opened a free, public MMA gym in Paraiba, so why can't Curitiba or Sao Paulo have one? No money? Someone needs to do this.
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