1997 Copa América

1997 Copa América
Tournament details
Host country Bolivia
Dates June 11 – 29
Teams 12 (from 2 confederations)
Venue(s) 5 (in 5 host cities)
Final positions
Champions  Brazil (5th title)
Runners-up  Bolivia
Third place  Mexico
Fourth place  Peru
Tournament statistics
Matches played 26
Goals scored 67 (2.58 per match)
Top scorer(s) Mexico Luis Hernández
(6 goals)
Best player Brazil Ronaldo[1]

Bolivia hosted the Copa América for the second time in its 38th edition. It was held from June 11 to 29. It was organised by CONMEBOL, South America's football governing body.

There is no qualifying for the final tournament. All South American countries (10 countries) participate, along with two more invited countries, making a total of 12 teams competing in the tournament.

In the 1997 edition, Costa Rica and Mexico were the invitees.

The tournament was won by Brazil, who became the first team to hold the Copa América and the World Cup at the same time, a feat they would repeat in 2004.

Venues

Sucre Cochabamba
Estadio Olímpico PatriaEstadio Félix Capriles
Capacity: 29,000Capacity: 36,000
La PazSanta Cruz
Estadio Hernando SilesEstadio Ramón Aguilera
Capacity: 51,000Capacity: 42,000
Oruro
Estadio Jesús Bermúdez
Capacity: 28,000

Squads

For a complete list of participating squads: 1997 Copa América squads

Match officials

Argentina Argentina

Bolivia Bolivia

Brazil Brazil

Chile Chile

Colombia Colombia

  • Rafael Sanabria

Costa Rica Costa Rica

Ecuador Ecuador

Mexico Mexico

  • Antonio Marrufo

Paraguay Paraguay

Peru Peru

  • José Arana

Uruguay Uruguay

United States United States

Venezuela Venezuela

  • Paolo Borgosano

First round

The teams were divided into three groups of four teams each. The formation of the groups was made by CONMEBOL, in a public drawing of lots that took place on December 17, 1996.

Each team plays one match against each of the other teams within the same group. Three (3) points are awarded for a win, one (1) point for a draw and zero (0) points for a defeat.

First and second placed teams, in each group, advance to the quarter-finals. The best third placed team and the second best third placed team, also advance to the quarter-finals.

Key to colours in group tables
Group winners, runners-up, and best two third-placed teams advance to the quarter-finals

Group A

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Ecuador 321041+37
 Argentina 312031+25
 Paraguay 311123−14
 Chile 300315−40

June 11, 1997
Paraguay  1–0  Chile
Acuña  28'

June 14, 1997
Argentina  2–0  Chile
Berti  83'
Gallardo  87'

June 14, 1997
Paraguay  0–2  Ecuador
Sánchez  71'
Graziani  86'
Estadio Félix Capriles, Cochabamba
Referee: Paolo Borgosano (Venezuela)

June 17, 1997
Ecuador  2–1  Chile
Graziani  32'
Gavica  55'
Vergara  52'
Estadio Félix Capriles, Cochabamba
Referee: Rafael Sanabria (Colombia)

Group B

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Bolivia 330040+49
 Peru 320132+16
 Uruguay 31022203
 Venezuela 300305−50

June 12, 1997
Peru  1–0  Uruguay
Hidalgo  75'
Estadio Olímpico Patria, Sucre
Referee: Antonio Marrufo (Mexico)

June 15, 1997
Uruguay  2–0  Venezuela
Recoba  19'
Saralegui  47'

June 15, 1997
Bolivia  2–0  Peru
Etcheverry  45'
Baldivieso  50'

June 18, 1997
Peru  2–0  Venezuela
Cominges  13', 59'

June 18, 1997
Bolivia  1–0  Uruguay
Baldivieso  29'
Estadio Hernando Siles, La Paz
Referee: Antonio Marrufo (Mexico)

Group C

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Brazil 3300102+89
 Mexico 31115504
 Colombia 31025503
 Costa Rica 3012210−81

June 13, 1997
Brazil  5–0  Costa Rica
Djalminha  20'
González  34' (o.g.)
Ronaldo  47', 54'
Romário  60'

June 13, 1997
Colombia  1–2  Mexico
Ricard  58' Hernández  7', 11'

June 16, 1997
Brazil  3–2  Mexico
Aldair  47'
Romero  59' (o.g.)
Leonardo  77'
Hernández  13', 31'
Estadio Ramón Aguilera, Santa Cruz
Referee: José Arana (Peru)


June 19, 1997
Brazil  2–0  Colombia
Dunga  11'
Edmundo  67'
Estadio Ramón Aguilera, Santa Cruz
Referee: Juan Carlos Paniagua (Bolivia)

Ranking of third-placed teams

At the end of the first stage, a comparison was made between the third-placed teams of each group. The two best third-placed teams advanced to the quarter-finals.

Group Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
A  Paraguay 311123−14
C  Colombia 31025503
B  Uruguay 31022203

Quarter-finals

June 21, 1997
Peru  2–1  Argentina
Carazas  30'
Hidalgo  61'
Gallardo  66' (pen.)



June 22, 1997
17:30
Brazil  2–0  Paraguay
Ronaldo  9', 34'
Estadio Ramón Aguilera, Santa Cruz
Referee: Rafael Sanabria (Colombia)

Semi-finals


June 26, 1997
Peru  0–7  Brazil
Denílson  1'
Conceição  28'
Romário  36', 49'
Leonardo  45', 55'
Djalminha  77'

Third-place match

June 28, 1997
19:00
Mexico  1–0  Peru
Hernández  82'
Estadio Jesus Bermudez, Oruro
Referee: Paolo Borgosano (Venezuela)

Final

June 29, 1997
23:30
Bolivia  1–3  Brazil
E. Sánchez  45' Edmundo  40'
Ronaldo  79'
Zé Roberto  90'

Result

 1997 Copa América Champions 

Brazil
Fifth title

Goalscorers

With six goals, Luis Hernández is the top scorer in the tournament. In total, 67 goals were scored by 42 different players, with two of them credited as own goals.

6 goals

5 goals

3 Goals

2 goals

1 goal

Own goals

Final positions

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Eff
1 Brazil 6600223+1818100%
2  Bolivia 6501105+51583.5%
3  Mexico 622289−1844.4%
4  Peru 6303511−5950%
Eliminated in the Quarterfinals
5  Ecuador 422052+3866.7%
6  Argentina 412143+1541.7%
7  Paraguay 411225−3433.3%
8  Colombia 410367−1325%
Eliminated in the First Stage
9  Uruguay 3102220333.3%
10  Costa Rica 3012210−8111.1%
11  Chile 300315−400%
12  Venezuela 300305−500%

References

  1. "Copa América Best Players". RSSSF. Retrieved 30 October 2015.

External links

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