Copa San Isidro de Curuguaty

The Copa San Isidro de Curuguaty (English: San Isidro de Curuguaty Cup) is a football (soccer) tournament of regional character played between the champions of the Campeonato Nacional de Interligas organized by the Unión del Fútbol del Interior (Paraguay) and the Copa Nacional de Selecciones del Interior organized by the Organización del Fútbol del Interior (Uruguay).

History

The tournament was created by Eusebio Baeza, former executive of Pluna and the Asociación Uruguaya de Fútbol, and Arturo Filartiga Candia, member of the Asociación Paraguaya de Fútbol. The tournament is played every two years since 1978 with home and away games. If teams tie in points and goals the game is decided by penalty kicks.

Winners

Year Winner Country Runners-up Country Aggregate 1st leg 2nd leg
1956TrinidadLiga Central4-22-12-1
1959Fray BentosVilleta7-13-04-1
1963ColoniaYpacaraí3-3[1]0-13-2
1966TacuarembóCoronel Oviedo4-12-02-1
1978Federación MisioneraMelo4-01-03-0
1980Federación MisioneraTacuarembó5-5, 3-2p2-13-4
1982MaldonadoVillarrica1-1, 4-3p1-00-1
1984San PedroRocha4-31-33-0
1988PaysandúParanaense4-31-23-1
1990YpacaraíFlorida2-11-01-1
1992Liga del SudMinas6-12-04-1
1994MaldonadoCaaguazú9-24-05-2
1996ParanaenseMaldonado Interior3-3[2]2-21-1
1998ItauguáMelo4-31-13-2
2000San José Liga MayorCarapeguá2-2, 4-2p1-11-1
2002LimpioDurazno5-45-40-0
2004San José de los ArroyosDurazno4-3[3]0-24-1
2006PirayúMaldonado Liga Mayor3-3, 4-2p1-22-1
2008Colonia DepartamentalCaaguazú4-23-11-1
2008Liga CaacupeñaArtigas3-11-12-0

Notas:
[1] Colonia participated instead of Melo. Colonia declared champion after mutual agreement with Ypacarai.
[2] Paranaense winners after Maldonado Interior had five red cards in the game.
[3] Durazno participated instead of Mercedes.

Titles per country and team


Paraguay
10
Federación Misionera 2
Itauguá 1
Liga del Sud 1
Limpio 1
Paranaense 1
Pirayú 1
San José de los Arroyos 1
San Pedro 1
Ypacaraí 1

Uruguay
9
Colonia Departamental 2
Maldonado 2
Fray Bentos 1
Paysandú 1
San José Liga Mayor 1
Tacuarembó 1
Trinidad 1

See also

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/23/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.