List of Copa CONMEBOL finals
The Copa CONMEBOL was an annual association football tournament established in 1992.[1] The competition was organized by the South American Football Confederation, or CONMEBOL, and it was usually contested by 16 clubs from its member associations. The tournament ended in 1999, following the expansion of 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 transformed in the current Copa Sudamericana.[2][3][4][5][6]
The finals are contested over two legs, one at each participating club's stadium. Atlético Mineiro won the inaugural competition in 1992, defeating Olimpia. Seven clubs have won the competition since its inception. Atlético Mineiro holds the record for the most victories, winning the competition two times. Teams from Brazil have won the competition the most, with five wins among them.
Key
# |
Finals decided on goal aggregate |
* |
Finals decided by a penalty shootout |
Bold |
Indicates the winner over two legs |
Year |
Each link is the relevant Copa CONMEBOL article for that year |
Finals
Year |
Country |
Home team |
Score |
Away team |
Country |
Venue |
Location |
Refs |
1992 |
BRA |
Atlético Mineiro |
2–0 |
Olimpia |
PAR |
Mineirão |
Belo Horizonte, Brazil |
[7] |
PAR |
Olimpia |
1–0 |
Atlético Mineiro |
BRA |
Estadio Defensores del Chaco |
Asunción, Paraguay |
2–2 on points; Atlético Mineiro won 2–1 on aggregate # |
1993 |
URU |
Peñarol |
1–1 |
Botafogo |
BRA |
Estadio Centenario |
Montevideo, Uruguay |
[8] |
BRA |
Botafogo |
2–2 |
Peñarol |
URU |
Estádio do Maracanã |
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil |
2–2 on points and 3–3 on aggregate; Botafogo won 3–1 in a penalty shootout * |
1994 |
BRA |
São Paulo |
6–1 |
Peñarol |
URU |
Estádio do Morumbi |
São Paulo, Brazil |
[9] |
URU |
Peñarol |
3–0 |
São Paulo |
BRA |
Estadio Centenario |
Montevideo, Uruguay |
3–3 on points; São Paulo won 6–4 on aggregate # |
1995 |
BRA |
Atlético Mineiro |
4–0 |
Rosario Central |
ARG |
Mineirão |
Belo Horizonte, Brazil |
[10] |
ARG |
Rosario Central |
4–0 |
Atlético Mineiro |
BRA |
Estadio Gigante de Arroyito |
Rosario, Argentina |
3–3 on points and 4–4 on aggregate; Rosario Central won 4–3 in a penalty shootout * |
1996 |
ARG |
Lanús |
2–0 |
Santa Fe |
COL |
La Fortaleza |
Lanús, Argentina |
[11] |
COL |
Santa Fe |
1–0 |
Lanús |
ARG |
Estadio El Campín |
Bogotá, Colombia |
3–3 on points; Lanús won 2–1 on aggregate # |
1997 |
ARG |
Lanús |
1–4 |
Atlético Mineiro |
BRA |
La Fortaleza |
Lanús, Argentina |
[7] |
BRA |
Atlético Mineiro |
1–1 |
Lanús |
ARG |
Mineirão |
Belo Horizonte, Brazil |
Atlético Mineiro won 4–1 on points |
1998 |
BRA |
Santos |
1–0 |
Rosario Central |
ARG |
Estádio Vila Belmiro |
Santos, Brazil |
[12] |
ARG |
Rosario Central |
0-0 |
Santos |
BRA |
Estadio Gigante de Arroyito |
Rosario, Argentina |
Santos won 4–1 on points |
1999 |
BRA |
CSA |
4–2 |
Talleres |
ARG |
Estádio Rei Pelé |
Maceió, Brazil |
[13] |
ARG |
Talleres |
3–0 |
CSA |
BRA |
Estadio Olímpico Chateau Carreras |
Córdoba, Argentina |
3–3 on points; Talleres won 5–4 on aggregate # |
Performances
By club
By city
By country
Clubs
Number of participating clubs by nation
Nation |
Number of clubs |
Clubs |
Brazil |
20 |
América (RN), Atlético Mineiro, Botafogo, Bragantino, Corinthians, Ceará, CSA, Fluminense, Grêmio, Guaraní, Palmeiras, Paraná, Portuguesa, Rio Branco, Sampaio Corrêa, São Raimundo, Santos, Vasco da Gama, Vila Nova, Vitória |
Argentina |
9 |
Colón, Deportivo Español, Gimnasia y Esgrima, Huracán, Lanús, Rosario Central, San Lorenzo, Talleres, Vélez Sarsfield |
Colombia |
8 |
América, Atlético Huila, Deportes Quindío, Deportes Tolima, Independiente Medellín, Junior, Once Caldas, Santa Fe |
Peru |
7 |
Alianza Lima, Ciclista Lima, Melgar, Sipesa, Sport Boys, Sporting Cristal, Universitario |
Uruguay |
7 |
Danubio, Defensor Sporting, Huracán Buceo, Peñarol, Porongos, River Plate, Sud América |
Venezuela |
7 |
Caracas, Deportivo Italia, Deportivo Táchira, Estudiantes, Marítimo, Mineros, Minervén |
Chile |
6 |
Audax Italiano, Cobreloa, Colo-Colo, Concepción, O'Higgins, Universidad de Chile |
Ecuador |
6 |
Barcelona, Deportivo Cuenca, El Nacional, Emelec, LDU Quito, Técnico Universitario |
Paraguay |
6 |
Colegiales, Cerro Corá, Guaraní, Olimpia, San Lorenzo, Sportivo Luqueño |
Bolivia |
5 |
Bolívar, Independiente Petrolero, Jorge Wilstermann, Oriente Petrolero, The Strongest |
References
External links