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Brazil at the Copa América

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The teams walking out of the tunnel for the2007 semi-final between Brazil and Uruguay inMaracaibo.
The squad that won Brazil's first international title: the 1919 South American Championship. The final play-off against Uruguay finished 0–0 after regulation, before star playerArthur Friedenreich (kneeling, middle), scored the decisive winning goal in extra time.
Ronaldo was named player of the tournament in 1997 and its top scorer in 1999. He scored in the finals of both editions.

TheCopa América is South America's major tournament in senior men's football and determines the continental champion. Until 1967, the tournament was known asSouth American Championship. It is the oldest continental championship in the world with its first edition held in 1916.

Brazil have won the tournament nine times, which makes them the third-most successful team in tournament history behindArgentina (16) andUruguay (15). Brazil withdrew from the tournament for almost ten years between1926 and1935.

Brazil were particularly successful from 1997 to 2007, winning four out of five Copas during that time.Zizinho, who competed in the 1940s and 1950s, is the player with the joint-most goals (17) in tournament history.

Pelé, the "Player of the Century", never won the continental title and only competed in one South American Championship in 1959. However, he did present his impressive scoring abilities with eight goals in six matches, becoming that edition's top scorer and most valuable player.

Overall record

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South American Championship / Copa América record
YearRoundPositionPldWD*LGFGASquad
Argentina1916Third place3rd302134Squad
Uruguay1917Third place3rd310278Squad
Brazil1919Champions1st4310123Squad
Chile1920Third place3rd310218Squad
Argentina1921Runners-up2nd310243Squad
Brazil1922Champions1st523072Squad
Uruguay1923Fourth place4th300325Squad
Uruguay1924Withdrew
Argentina1925Runners-up2nd4211119Squad
Chile1926Withdrew
Peru1927
Argentina1929
Peru1935
Argentina1937Runners-up2nd64021711Squad
Peru1939Withdrew
Chile1941
Uruguay1942Third place3rd6312157Squad
Chile1945Runners-up2nd6501195Squad
Argentina1946Runners-up2nd5311137Squad
Ecuador1947Withdrew
Brazil1949Champions1st8701467Squad
Peru1953Runners-up2nd7403179Squad
Chile1955Withdrew
Uruguay1956Fourth place4th522145Squad
Peru1957Runners-up2nd6402239Squad
Argentina1959Runners-up2nd6420177Squad
Ecuador1959Third place3rd4202710Squad
Bolivia1963Fourth place4th62131213Squad
Uruguay1967Withdrew
1975Third place3rd6501164Squad
1979Third place3rd6222109Squad
1983Runners-up2nd824285Squad
Argentina1987Group stage5th210154Squad
Brazil1989Champions1st7520111Squad
Chile1991Runners-up2nd7 412128Squad
Ecuador1993Quarter-finals5th412164Squad
Uruguay1995Runners-up2nd6420103Squad
Bolivia1997Champions1st6600223Squad
Paraguay1999Champions1st6600172Squad
Colombia2001Quarter-finals6th420254Squad
Peru2004Champions1st6321136Squad
Venezuela2007Champions1st6411155Squad
Argentina2011Quarter-finals8th413064Squad
Chile2015Quarter-finals5th421154Squad
United States2016Group stage9th311172Squad
Brazil2019Champions1st6420131Squad
Brazil2021Runners-up2nd7511123Squad
United States2024Quarter-finals6th413052Squad
Total9 Titles38/481951094145435206

Decisive matches and finals

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In the era of the South American Championship, Round Robins were more commonly played than knock-out tournaments. Listed are the decisive matches which secured Brazil the respective titles.

YearMatch typeOpponentResultManagerBrazil scorer(s)Final location
Brazil1919Final (Play-off) Uruguay1–0 (a.e.t.)BrazilHaroldo DominguesA. FriedenreichRio de Janeiro
Brazil1922Final (Play-off) Paraguay3–0BrazilLaísNeco,Formiga (2)Rio de Janeiro
Brazil1949Final (Play-off)ParaguayParaguay7–0BrazilFlávio CostaAdemir (3),Tesourinha (2),Jair (2)Rio de Janeiro
Brazil1989Final Round Robin Uruguay1–0BrazilSebastião LazaroniRomárioRio de Janeiro
Bolivia1997Final Bolivia3–1BrazilMário ZagalloEdmundo,Ronaldo,Zé RobertoLa Paz
Paraguay1999Final Uruguay3–0BrazilVanderlei LuxemburgoRivaldo (2),RonaldoAsunción
Peru2004Final Argentina2–2(4–2p)BrazilCarlos Alberto ParreiraLuisão,Adriano (decisive penalty:Juan)Lima
Venezuela2007Final Argentina3–0BrazilDungaJúlio Baptista,R. Ayala (o.g.),Dani AlvesMaracaibo
Brazil2019Final Peru3–1BrazilTiteEverton,Gabriel Jesus,Richarlison (p)Rio de Janeiro

Record by opponent

[edit]

Brazil's biggest victories at continental championships were a 10–1 win against Bolivia in 1949 and a 9–0 win against Colombia in 1957, withEvaristo scoring five goals. Their largest defeat was a 0–6 loss against Uruguay in 1920.

Copa América matches (by team)
OpponentWDLPldGFGA
 Argentina10816344053
 Bolivia902114213
 Chile1723226125
 Colombia82212326
 Costa Rica210391
 Ecuador1230155312
 Haiti100171
 Honduras001102
 Mexico4026116
 Paraguay13117316231
 Peru1533214714
 United States100110
 Uruguay999273740
 Venezuela7209302
Total1084145194432206

Record players

[edit]
With 17 goals in 33 matches,Zizinho is both Brazil's all-time record player and most successful scorer at the tournament. He won the title once, in 1949.
RankPlayerMatchesTournaments
1Zizinho331942, 1945, 1946, 1949, 1953 and 1957
2Claudio Taffarel251989, 1991, 1993, 1995 and 1997
3Djalma Santos221953, 1956, 1957 and 1959 (Argentina)
4Roberto Carlos211993, 1995, 1997 and 1999
5Dani Alves192007, 2011, 2015, 2016 and 2019
Marquinhos192015, 2016, 2019, 2021 and 2024
7Jair181945, 1946, 1949 and 1953
Aldair181989, 1995 and 1997
Dunga181989, 1995 and 1997
Thiago Silva182011, 2015, 2019 and 2021

Top goalscorers

[edit]
RankPlayerGoalsTournaments (goals)
1Zizinho171942 (2), 1945 (2), 1946 (5), 1949 (5), 1953 (1) and 1957 (1)
2Jair131945 (2), 1946 (2) and 1949 (9)
Ademir131945 (5), 1949 (7) and 1953 (1)
4Didi111957 (8) and 1959 (3)
5Ronaldo101997 (5) and 1999 (5)
6Heleno91945 (6) and 1946 (3)
7Neco81917 (2), 1919 (4) and 1922 (2)
Tesourinha81945 (1) and 1949 (7)
Evaristo81957
Pelé81959 (Argentina)

Players with multiple titles

[edit]
Former defensive midfielderDunga is the only Brazilian who has won the Copa América three times: Twice as a player (1989 and 1997) and once as head coach (2007).

In spite of Brazil winning four Copa Américas within ten years from 1997 to 2007, no single player has been part of more than two victorious squads. Twenty-three players, however, have won two tournaments each:

PlayerChampionships
Amílcar1919 and 1922
Agostinho Fortes
Arthur Friedenreich
Heitor
Marcos
Neco
Palamone
Aldair1989 and 1997
Dunga*
Romário
Cláudio Taffarel
Cafú1997 and 1999
Flávio Conceição
Roberto Carlos
Ronaldo
Zé Roberto
Alex1999 and 2004
Diego2004 and 2007
Juan
Júlio Baptista
Maicon
Vágner Love
Dani Alves2007 and 2019

* Additionally, Dunga won the title as head coach in 2007. Another Brazilian with two titles isDanilo Alvim, who won the South American Championship as player (1949) and as head coach of Bolivia (1963).

Awards and records

[edit]

Team awards

Individual awards[1]

Team records

  • Most goals in one tournament (46, in 1949)
  • Victory with highest number of goals conceded (6–4 v Chile in 1937, tied with Chile 5–4 Peru in 1955 and Bolivia 5–4 Brazil in 1963)
  • Only team to simultaneously hold the Copa América and theFIFA World Cup title (1997-1998 and 2004–2006. During both spells they additionally won theFIFA Confederations Cup.)

Individual records

See also

[edit]

References

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  1. ^"The Copa América Archive".RSSSF. July 19, 2007. RetrievedApril 4, 2019.

External links

[edit]
General topics
Statistics / Results
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Panamerican Championship
CONCACAF Gold Cup
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Related teams
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Brazil South American Championship squads
Brazil Copa América squads
Countries at theCopa América
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