Copa Argentina | |
Year: | 2022 |
Country: | Argentina |
Num Teams: | 64 |
Runner-Up: | Talleres (C) |
Continentalcup1: | 2023 Copa Libertadores |
Continentalcup1 Qualifiers: | Patronato |
Matches: | 62 |
Goals: | 154 |
Top Goal Scorer: | Jesús Dátolo Marcelo Estigarribia (4 goals each) |
Player: | Facundo Altamirano[1] |
Prevseason: | 2019–20 |
Nextseason: | 2023 |
The 2022 Copa Argentina (officially the Copa Argentina AXION energy 2022 for sponsorship reasons)[2] was the twelfth edition of the Copa Argentina, and the tenth since the relaunch of the tournament in 2011. The competition began on 23 February and ended on 30 October 2022. Boca Juniors, the defending champions, were eliminated in the semi-finals.
Patronato defeated Talleres (C) 1–0 in the final to win their first title in the tournament.[3] As winners, they qualified for the 2023 Copa Libertadores group stage and earned the right to play against the winners of the 2022 Argentine Primera División in the 2022 Supercopa Argentina.
Sixty-four teams took part in this competition: All twenty-six teams from the Primera División; fifteen teams of the Primera Nacional; six from the Primera B, four from the Primera C; three from the Primera D and ten teams from Federal A.[4] [5]
All twenty-six teams of the 2021 tournament qualified.
The top seven teams of each zone and the best eighth-placed team of the 2021 tournament qualified.
The top six teams of the 2021 Primera B tournament qualified.
The top five teams of each zone of the 2021 tournament qualified.
The top four teams of the 2021 Primera C tournament qualified.
The top-three teams of 2021 Primera D tournament qualified.
Phase | Round | Draw date | Dates |
---|---|---|---|
Final Stage | Round of 64 | 22 December 2021 | 23 February – 1 June 2022 |
Round of 32 | 8 June – 4 August 2022 | ||
Round of 16 | 9 August – 15 September 2022 | ||
Quarter-finals | 27 – 28 September 2022 | ||
Semi-finals | 26 October 2022 | ||
Final | 30 October 2022 |
The draw for the Final Rounds was held on 22 December 2021, 15:00 at AFA Futsal Stadium in Ezeiza. The 64 qualified teams were divided in four groups. Teams were seeded by their historical performance and Division. Champions of AFA tournaments playing in Argentine Primera División were allocated to Group A. The matches were drawn from the respective confronts: A vs. C; B vs. D. Some combinations were avoided for security reasons.[6]
width=25% | Group A | width=25% | Group B | width=25% | Group C | width=25% | Group D |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Round of 64 had 10 qualified teams from the Torneo Federal A, 13 qualified teams from the Metropolitan Zone (6 teams from Primera B Metropolitana; 4 teams from Primera C Metropolitana and 3 teams from Primera D Metropolitana), 15 teams from Primera Nacional and 26 teams from Primera División. The round was played between 23 February and 1 June 2022, in a single knock-out match format. The 32 winning teams advanced to the Round of 32.
This round had 32 qualified teams from the Round of 64. The round was played between 8 June and 4 August 2022, in a single knock-out match format. The 16 winning teams advanced to the Round of 16.
This round had the 16 qualified teams from the Round of 32. The round was played between August 9 and September 15, in a single knock-out match format. The 8 winning teams advanced to the Quarterfinals.
This round had the 8 qualified teams from the Round of 16. The round was played between 27 and 28 September 2022, in a single knock-out match format. The 4 winning teams advanced to the semi-finals.
This round had the 4 qualified teams from the Quarter-finals. The round was played on 26 October 2022, in a single knock-out match format. The 2 winning teams advanced to the Final.
See main article: 2022 Copa Argentina Final.
Rank | Player | Club | Goals | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center rowspan=2 | 1 | Jesús Dátolo | Banfield | align=center rowspan=2 | 4 |
Marcelo Estigarribia | Patronato | ||||
align=center rowspan=4 | 3 | Juan Garro | Newell's Old Boys | align=center rowspan=4 | 3 |
José Manuel López | Lanús | ||||
Pablo Solari | River Plate | ||||
Franco Soldano | Gimnasia y Esgrima (LP) | ||||
align=center rowspan=16 | 7 | Ramón Ábila | Colón | align=center rowspan=16 | 2 |
Tadeo Allende | Godoy Cruz | ||||
Gabriel Ávalos | Argentinos Juniors | ||||
Brian Blando | Agropecuario Argentino | ||||
Enzo Díaz | Ferro Carril Oeste | ||||
Federico Girotti | Talleres (C) | ||||
Lucas González | Deportivo Madryn | ||||
Franco Orozco | Lanús | ||||
Nicolás Orsini | Boca Juniors | ||||
Agustín Palavecino | River Plate | ||||
Juan Fernando Quintero | River Plate | ||||
Salomón Rodríguez | Godoy Cruz | ||||
Joaquín Susvielles | Belgrano | ||||
Fernando Valenzuela | Barracas Central | ||||
Sebastián Villa | Boca Juniors | ||||
Bruno Zuculini | River Plate |
Team | |||
Goalkeeper | Defenders | Midfielders | Forwards |
---|---|---|---|
Facundo Altamirano (Patronato) | Enzo Díaz (Talleres (C)) Carlos Quintana (Patronato) Rafa Pérez (Talleres (C)) | Jesús Dátolo (Banfield) Nicolás Castro (Patronato) Guillermo Fernández (Boca Juniors) Julián Bonetto (Quilmes) | Tadeo Allende (Godoy Cruz) Marcelo Estigarribia (Patronato) Juan Garro (Newell's Old Boys) |
Substitutes | |||
Alan Aguerre (Talleres (C)) Facundo Cambeses (Banfield) | Emanuel Coronel (Banfield) Sergio Barreto (Independiente) | Bruno Zuculini (River Plate) Juan Fernando Quintero (River Plate) | Lucas González (Deportivo Madryn) Franco Soldano (Gimnasia y Esgrima (LP)) Leonardo Marinucci (Deportivo Madryn) Sebastián Villa (Boca Juniors) Joaquín Susvielles (Belgrano) Brian Blando (Agropecuario Argentino) |
Coach | |||
Facundo Sava (Patronato) |