GLADIADORES PATCH NARRAÇÕE CLÉBER MACHADO PS3

He began his career in the late 1970s, working at Rádio Bandeirantes and Rádio Tupi with the encouragement of his father, Clodoaldo José Machado, who was artistic director. The following year, he moved to Sistema Globo de Rádio, where he began his work in sports on Osmar Santos' team. On television, he began at TV Gazeta and later at TV Globo Vale do Paraíba, in São José dos Campos. In 1988, he moved to TV Globo São Paulo.[3] Since then, he has participated in network coverage of some of the world's most important sporting events, such as Formula 1, the Olympics, the World Cup, international boxing, and the São Silvestre Race, among others. Until mid-1989, Cléber Machado worked as a reporter, also providing commentary on boxing highlights and other sporting events that aired on the program Esporte Espetacular, then broadcast on Sunday nights. His transition to commentator occurred during the Copa do Brasil that same year. In the 1990s, he hosted the São Paulo edition of Globo Esporte. Formula 1 featured some of the most memorable commentary of his career: Nelson Piquet's victory in the Australian Grand Prix, the 1990 season finale, Ayrton Senna's victory in the 1992 Monaco Grand Prix, and especially the 2002 Austrian Formula 1 Grand Prix: after leading the race from the start, Rubens Barrichello was forced by the Ferrari team to concede victory to Michael Schumacher, the team's first driver. Excited about the Brazilian driver's imminent victory, Cléber recalled previous episodes when Barrichello was told to give up position to his teammate. The frustrated expression "Not today, not today... today!" remains one of his most memorable phrases to this day, even though it's not a recurring catchphrase. Cléber narrated some important achievements in Brazilian sport: judoka Rogério Sampaio's gold medal at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, Brazil's first title at the 1997 Under-17 World Championship, Brazil's 2004 Volleyball World League title, the Brazilian national team's second title at the 2006 Volleyball World Championship, Brazil's seventh Futsal World Cup title in 2012, Rafaela Silva's gold medal at the 2016 Rio Olympics, and Isaquias Queiroz's gold medal at the 2021 Tokyo Olympics. In December 1997, he narrated for the first time an international friendly match for the Brazilian national team in their 2-1 victory over South Africa.