Supporters of Bahia are seen outside the Arena Fonte Nova stadium before the Brazil's Second Division Football Championship match between Bahia and Operario in Salvador, Bahia state, Brazil, on September 24, 2022. - EC Bahia football team, in northeastern Salvador, is a rare safe space for gay fans who often steer clear of football stadiums for fear of coming under attack. The Torcida LGBTricolor fan collective, founded in September 2019 with the support of EC Bahia (currently in the second division), has become known for its progressive attitude in recent years. The supporters count only 15 members, a far cry from other massive Brazilian fan groups. However, the fact that they can go to the stadium waving rainbow flags and wearing rainbow T-shirts is no small matter. In other Brazilian football stadiums, homosexual fans are forced to fly under the radar to avoid homophobic chants, insults, hostile looks, and even assaults.

City Football Group adds Brazil's Bahia to growing portfolio of clubs

Agence France-Presse
RAFAELA ARAUJO / AFP / Getty

City Football Group, the United Arab Emirates-controlled company that owns Manchester City, finalized a deal Thursday to buy a majority stake in Brazilian club Bahia, the two sides said.

The Abu Dhabi company acquired 90 percent of shares in Bahia, said a statement from the club, the most popular in Brazil's populous northeast.

The price of the deal was not disclosed. Brazilian media reports said City Football Group (CFG) had agreed to pay one billion reais ($199 million), including money for debt payments, player acquisitions and infrastructure investments.

"Bahia is exceptional for its size and fan base. It will be the group's second-biggest club" after Manchester City, said Ferran Soriano, chief executive of CFG.

"The group sees Bahia and Brazilian football as the biggest growth opportunity in the world. It will be up to us and other clubs to make the league grow as it deserves," he told a press conference in Salvador, the capital of Bahia state.

The purchase is CFG's first in Brazil, the world's leading exporter of footballers. The group now has stakes in 13 clubs on four continents.

The deal, which had been in the works since September, was approved in December by 99 percent of Bahia's members.

Founded in 1931, Bahia have won the Brazilian league twice, in 1959 and 1988.

The team, who have struggled in recent years, returned to the first division this season after being relegated in 2021.

They are currently struggling at 15th place in the league, with three points from three matches.

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