Copa CONMEBOL explained

Copa CONMEBOL
Founded:1992
Region:South America
Number Of Teams:16
Related Comps:Copa Mercosur
Copa Merconorte
Most Successful Club: Atlético Mineiro
(2 titles)
American:yes

The Copa CONMEBOL (English: CONMEBOL Cup) was an annual football cup competition organized by CONMEBOL between 1992 and 1999 for South American football clubs.[1] During its time of existence, it was a very prestigious South American club football contest, similar to the UEFA Cup. Clubs qualified for the competition based on their performance in their national leagues and cup competitions. Teams that were not able to qualify for the Copa Libertadores would play in this tournament. The tournament was played as a knockout cup. The tournament ended in 1999, following the expansion of the Copa Libertadores to 32 teams.

The Copa Mercosur and Copa Merconorte -which both started in 1998- replaced the Copa CONMEBOL, and the merger of those 3 cups would later transformed in the current Copa Sudamericana.[2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]

The last champion of the competition was Talleres, while Atlético Mineiro is the most successful club in the cup history, having won the tournament two times. The cup was won by seven different clubs but it was never won consecutively.[9] [10]

Format

Qualification

Each national association was assigned a number of entries determined by CONMEBOL which changed slightly from one edition to another. The best teams from the previous season that did not qualify for the Copa Libertadores through their league qualified for the Copa CONMEBOL. The tournament itself was played in two-legged knockout stages. The champion of the Copa CONMEBOL disputed the Recopa Sudamericana, the Copa de Oro and the Copa Master de CONMEBOL, albeit irregularly.

Tournament

The tournament started in the first stage in which 16 clubs were paired in a series of two-legged knockout ties in the round of 16, the first of four stages that worked on a single elimination phase knockout system that culminated in the finals. During each stage of the tournament, ties were decided on points, followed by goal difference, away goals, then a penalty shootout after full-time of the second leg, if necessary.

List of champions

Finals

Ed.Yearwidth=Coun.width=120pxWinnerwidth=120pxRunner-upwidth=Coun.Scoreswidth= Venuewidth= Citywidth= Ref.
1992Atlético Mineiro
Botafogo Montevideo
Rio de Janeiro
São Paulo
Rosario Central Belo Horizonte
1996Lanús ColombiaLanús
BrazilAtlético Mineiro Lanús
Santos Vila Belmiro
Talleres (C)

Performances by club

Performance in the Copa CONMEBOL by club
scope=colClubscope=colTitlesscope=colRunners-upscope=colSeasons wonscope=colSeasons runner-up
Atlético Mineiro211992, 19971995
Rosario Central1119951998
Lanús1119961997
Botafogo101993
São Paulo101994
Santos101998
Talleres101999
Peñarol0 21993, 1994
Olimpia0 11992
Santa Fe0 11996
CSA0 11999

Top scorers

YearPlayer (team)Goals
19926
19938
19945
19954
19965
19977
19984
19994

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.rsssf.org/miscellaneous/torre-sac-best.html RSSSF SOUTH AMERICAN COMPETITIONS
  2. http://conmebol.com/virtual/conmebol.html Copa Conmebol at the official page of Conmebol.com
  3. https://www.rsssf.org/sacups/conmebol.html CONMEBOL Cup / UEFA Cup
  4. http://www.infofutbolonline.com/torneos/copa_conmebol.htm Información sobre la Copa Conmebol
  5. https://www.rsssf.org/miscellaneous/torre-sac-best.html THE BEST CLUB OF SOUTH AMERICA RSSSF
  6. http://globoesporte.globo.com/ESP/Noticia/Futebol/Santos/0,,MUL210981-4404,00.html Globo Esporte
  7. http://esportes.terra.com.br/sao-paulo/em-94-expressinho-salvou-temporada-com-precursora-da-sul-americana,bd60c563e456b310VgnCLD2000000ec6eb0aRCRD.html Terra Brazil
  8. http://www.futbolsantander.com/es/actualidad/noticias/?noticia=625 Santander Fútbol
  9. http://www.bolanaarea.com/gal_copa_conmebol.htm Bola na Área Copa Conmebol
  10. https://www.rsssf.org/miscellaneous/torre-sac-best.html RSSSF SOUTH AMERICAN COMPETITIONS