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Copa América

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Association football tournament

For other uses, seeCopa America (disambiguation).
Football tournament
CONMEBOL Copa América
Organizer(s)CONMEBOL
Founded1916; 109 years ago (1916)
RegionSouth America
Teams16 (2024)
Qualifier forFinalissima
Related competitionsCopa América Femenina
Current champion Argentina (16th title)
Most championshipsArgentina Argentina (16 titles)
Websitecopaamerica.com
Tournaments

TheCONMEBOL Copa América (English:America's Cup; known until 1975 as theSouth American Football Championship),[1] often simply called theCopa America, is the top men's quadrennialfootball tournament contested amongnational teams fromSouth America. It is the oldest still-running continental football competition.[2] The competition determines thechampions of South America, minusSuriname,Guyana andFrench Guiana.[2][3][4] Since the 1990s, teams fromNorth America andAsia have also been invited to compete.

Eight of the tenCONMEBOL national teams have won the tournament at least once in its 48 stagings since the event's inauguration in 1916, withEcuador andVenezuela the only teams yet to win.Argentina have the most championships in the tournament's history, with 16 cups. The country that hosted the tournament the most times (nine editions) is Argentina, including the inaugural edition in 1916. TheUnited States is the only non-CONMEBOL country that hosted the event, having done so in both2016 and2024. On three occasions (in1975,1979, and1983), the tournament was held in multiple South American countries.

Since 1993, the tournament has generally featured 12 teams — all 10 CONMEBOL teams and two additional teams from other confederations.Mexico participated in every tournament between 1993 and 2016, with one additional team drawn fromCONCACAF, except for1999, whenAFC teamJapan filled out the 12-team roster, and2019, which featured Japan andQatar. The2016 and2024 tournaments both featured 16 teams, with six teams from CONCACAF in addition to the 10 from CONMEBOL.[5][6]

History

[edit]

South American Football Championship era (1916–1967)

[edit]

Beginnings (1916–1929)

[edit]
The first edition was held in 1916 and won by Uruguay (pictured)

The first football team in South America,Lima Cricket and Football Club, was established inPeru in 1859,[7] and theArgentine Football Association was founded in 1893. By the early 20th century, football was growing in popularity, and the first international competition held among national teams of the continent occurred in1910[8] whenArgentina organized an event to commemorate the centenary of theMay Revolution.Chile andUruguay participated, but this event is not considered official byCONMEBOL. Similarly, for the centennial celebration of its independence, Argentina helda tournament between 2 and 17 July 1916 with Argentina, Chile, Uruguay andBrazil being the first participants of the tournament. This so-calledCampeonato Sudamericano de Football would be the first edition of what is currently known as Copa América; Uruguay would triumph in this first edition after tying 0–0 with hosts Argentina in the deciding, last match held inEstadio Racing Club inAvellaneda.

Seeing the success of the tournament, a boardmember of theUruguayan Football Association,Héctor Rivadavia, proposed the establishment of a confederation of the associations of Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Uruguay.[9] On 9 July,independence day in Argentina, CONMEBOL was founded.The following year, the competition was played again, this time in Uruguay. Uruguay would win the title again to win theirbicampeonato after defeating Argentina 1–0 in the last match of the tournament. The success of the tournament onCharrúan soil would help consolidate the tournament.

Brazil achieved its first championship in 1919

After aflu outbreak inRio de Janeiro canceled the tournament in 1918,[10] Brazil hosted the tournament in1919 and was crowned champion for the first time after defeating the defending champions 1–0 in a playoff match to decide the title, while theChilean city ofViña del Mar would host the1920 event which was won by Uruguay.

For the1921 event,Paraguay participated for the first time after itsfootball association affiliated to CONMEBOL earlier that same year. Argentina won the competition for the first time thanks to the goals ofJulio Libonatti. In subsequent years, Uruguay would dominate the tournament, which at that time was the largest football tournament in the world. Argentina, however, would not be far behind and disputed the supremacy with theCharruas. After losing the1928 final at the1928 Summer Olympics held inAmsterdam, Argentina would gain revenge in the1929 South American Championship by defeating the Uruguayans in the last, decisive match. During this period, bothBolivia andPeru debuted in the tournament in1926 and1927, respectively.

Disorganization and intermittency (1930–1967)

[edit]

After the firstWorld Cup held in Uruguay in 1930, the enmity between the football federations of Uruguay and Argentina prevented the competition from being played for a number of years. Only in 1935 was it possible to dispute aspecial edition of the event to be officially reinstated in1939.Peru became the host nation of the 1939 edition and won the competition for the first time.Ecuador made their debut at that tournament.

In 1941, Chile hosted that year'sedition in celebration of the 400th anniversary of the founding ofSantiago for which the capacity of the newly builtEstadio Nacional was expanded from 30,000 to 70,000 spectators. Despite the large investment and initial success of the team, the Chileans would be defeated in the last match by eventual champions Argentina. Uruguay hosted and won the1942 edition. Chile would host again in1945, and came close to playing for the title against Argentina. However, Brazil spoiled that possibility, and Argentina would win the tournament once again on Chilean soil.

TheCarasucias ("dirty faces"), a name that was known for the Argentina squad that won the 1957 championship held in Peru

The event then entered a period of great disruption. The championship was not played on a regular basis and many editions would be deemed unofficial, only to be considered valid later on by CONMEBOL. For example, Argentina would be the first (and so far only) team to win three consecutive titles by winning the championships of 1945,1946 and1947. After those three annual tournaments, the competition returned to being held every two years, then three and later four. There were even two tournaments held in 1959, one inArgentina and a second inEcuador. During this period, some of the national teams were indifferent to the tournament. Some did not participate every year, others sent lesser teams; in the 1959 edition held in Ecuador, Brazil entered a team from the state ofPernambuco. Bolivia won for the first time when it hosted in1963, but was defeated in the first game of the1967 tournament by debutantVenezuela. The founding of theCopa Libertadores in1959 also affected the way the tournament was viewed by its participants.

Copa América era (1975–present)

[edit]

Renewal, name and format change (1975–1987)

[edit]

After eight years of absence, the event resumed in1975 and officially acquired the nameCopa América. The tournament had no fixed venue, and all matches were played throughout the year in each country. Nine teams participated in the group stages with the defending champions receiving a bye into the semifinals. The tournament was contested every four years using this system until 1987. It also no longer held theround-robin tournament format and instead incorporated a group stage, knockout round and a final.

Host rotation (1987–2015)

[edit]
Carlos Valderrama andDiego Maradona greeting before the Argentina v Colombia match in 1987

In 1986, CONMEBOL decided to return to having one country host the tournament and to contest it every other year. From1987 until2001, the event was hosted every two years in rotation by the ten members of the confederation. The format would remain constant with a first round of groups, but the final round stage ranged from being a new, finalround-robin group or asingle-elimination system to decide the winner. This renewal helped the tournament, which began to receive television coverage in Europe and North America. The1987 Copa América was held in Argentina; this was the first time the nation had hosted an edition in 28 years. Despite entering as heavy favorites for being the reigningworld champions (having won the1986 FIFA World Cup), playing at home and having a team largely composed of its World Cup winners led by the legendaryDiego Maradona, Argentina would finish in a disappointing fourth place after being beaten bydefending champions Uruguay 0–1 in the semifinals. Uruguay would defeat a surprisingly strong Chilean squad who made it to the final, disposing of the powerful Brazil 4–0 on the group stage.

Brazil lifted its first official international title since the1970 FIFA World Cup upon winning the1989 Copa América held on home soil. Argentina, in turn, won the Copa América after 32 long years in1991 in Chile, thanks to a refreshed squad led by the prolific goalscorerGabriel Batistuta. The1993 Copa América tournament in Ecuador would take its current form. Along with the usual ten teams, CONMEBOL invited two countries fromCONCACAF to participate, Mexico and the United States.

Uruguay managed to win the competition in1995 as host, ending a period of decline for Uruguayan football. With the implementation of rotating hosts,Colombia, Paraguay andVenezuela hosted the tournament for the first time. Brazil entered a series of victories, winning four of the five continental titles between 1997 and 2007. The first, in1997, was won after defeating host nation Bolivia 1–3 with goals fromLeonardo,Denílson andRonaldo becoming crucial in theVerde-Amarela's consecration onBolivia's altitude. Brazil would successfully defend the title in1999 after thumping Uruguay 3–0 inAsunción, Paraguay. However, the2001 Copa América saw one of the biggest surprises of the history of the sport asHonduras eliminated Brazil in the quarterfinals. Colombia, the host nation, would go on to win the competition for the first time ever.

Aftermath of a match in the2007 Copa América, held for the first time inVenezuela.

From 2001 to 2007, the tournament was contested every three years, and from 2007 forward every four years, with the exception of the tournament's centennial in 2016.

Running from an embarrassing performance in 2001, Brazil reestablished itself in the South American pantheon after defeating Argentina, on penalties, in order to win the2004 competition held in Peru.Three years later, the two teams met again in the final, this time in Venezuela. Once again, Brazil came out victorious after crushing Argentina 3–0.

Argentina hosted the2011 competition and was ousted by Uruguay in the quarterfinals by penalty shootout. Uruguay would go on defeating Peru 2–0 in the semis to reach the finals and overpower Paraguay 3–0, thus winning the trophy on Argentinean soil for the third time and second in a row. This, the 43rd edition, was the first time that neither Argentina nor Brazil reached the semifinals of a tournament they both had entered.

The2015 competition was hosted in Chile, who swapped hosting positions with Brazil in light of the latter's hosting of the2014 FIFA World Cup and2016 Summer Olympics.[11] Chile went on to win the tournament, their first title, on home soil.

Centenary and beyond (2016–present)

[edit]

In 2016, the centenary of the tournament was celebrated with theCopa América Centenario tournament hosted in the United States; the tournament was the first to be hosted outside ofSouth America and had an expanded field of 16 teams from CONMEBOL and CONCACAF. During the tournament, media outlets reported that CONMEBOL and CONCACAF were negotiating a merger of the Copa América with theCONCACAF Gold Cup, the latter's continental tournament held every two years, with the United States hosting regular tournaments;United States Soccer Federation presidentSunil Gulati called the report inaccurate, saying that no such discussion had taken place and that a new tournament would have to be established.[12] For the second time, Chile won the trophy in a penalty shoot-out.[13] The 2016 edition broke tournament records for attendance, with 1.5 million total spectators and an average of 46,000 per match through the semi-finals.[14]

Brazil hosted the 2019 edition, which was played in the normal four-year cycle, and won their ninth title by defeating Peru in the final at the renovatedMaracanã Stadium.[15] CONMEBOL approved a permanent switch from odd to even years beginning with the2020 Copa América to move in line with theUEFA European Championship, which would be jointly hosted by Argentina and Colombia and split into two groups.[16] The tournament was postponed by a year due to theCOVID-19 pandemic and lost two invited teams from Asia—Australia andQatar—due to fixture congestion.[17] Colombia requested that the tournament be moved to November 2021 due towidespread protests and increased COVID-19 cases, but withdrew after CONMEBOL rejected a second postponement.[18] 13 days prior to the opening match, the entire tournament was moved to Brazil due to a rise in COVID-19 cases in Argentina.[19] The 2021 Copa América was played by 10 teams withno spectators at most matches due to the pandemic; thefinal at the Maracanã was limited to 10 percent of capacity. Argentina won their first title in 28 years by defeating Brazil in the final.[20]

CONMEBOL and CONCACAF signed a collaborative partnership agreement in January 2023 that included the United States being selected as host for the2024 Copa América, which would feature six CONCACAF teams. The tournament would share some venues with the2026 FIFA World Cup, which is planned to be co-hosted by the United States.[21][22]

Hosts

[edit]
Map of CONMEBOL members, by their times hosted as of 2024

In 1984, CONMEBOL adopted the policy of rotating the right to host the Copa América amongst the ten member confederations. The first rotation was completed following the2007 Copa América which took place in Venezuela. A second rotation commenced in 2011, with host countries rotating in alphabetical order, starting with Argentina.[23] Chile, Mexico and the United States expressed interest in hosting the next tournament, but the CONMEBOL Executive Committee decided to continue the execution of the rotation, giving priority of the organization to each of its member associations; each association confirms whether they will host an edition or not, having no obligation to do so. Argentina confirmed on 24 November 2008, via representatives of the Argentine Football Association, that it would host the2011 Copa América.

The 2015 Copa América was due to be held in Brazil following the order of rotation. However, as Brazil was hosting both the2014 FIFA World Cup and the2016 Summer Olympics, the decision was reconsidered. Although CONMEBOL President Nicolas Leoz proposed hosting the continental tournament in Mexico (a member of the CONCACAF federation) and board members Brazil and Chile discussed the possibility of exchanging the 2015 and 2019 tournaments, it was decided and confirmed by the CBF in February 2011 that the 2015 Copa América would remain in Brazil. However, in March 2012, CBF presidentRicardo Teixeira resigned from his position and the CBF agreed to swap the tournament's hosting with Chile. The swap was made official in May 2012. The centennial edition of the tournament,Copa América Centenario, took place in June 2016, and was held in the United States.[24] The Copa América Centenario marked the first time the tournament was hosted by a non-CONMEBOL nation.

Each Copa América since 2005 has had its ownmascot.Gardelito, the mascot for the 1987 competition, was the firstCopa América mascot.

HostsEditions hosted
Argentina9 (1916,1921,1925,1929,1937,1946,1959,1987,2011)
Uruguay7 (1917,1923,1924,1942,1956,1967,1995)
Chile7 (1920,1926,1941,1945,1955,1991,2015)
Brazil6 (1919,1922,1949,1989,2019,2021)
Peru6 (1927,1935,1939,1953,1957,2004)
Ecuador3 (1947,1959,1993)
Bolivia2 (1963,1997)
United StatesC2 (2016,2024)
Paraguay1 (1999)
Colombia1 (2001)
Venezuela1 (2007)
home-and-away basis3 (1975,1979,1983)
C = non-CONMEBOL host.

Format and rules

[edit]

In early tournaments all teams competed in around-robin stage, while later ones saw the teams were split into different groups followed by asingle-elimination knockout stage.

YearTeamsMatchesFormat
Min.Act.
191646round-robin group of 4
191746
1919467
192046
192146
192251011round-robin group of 5
192346round-robin group of 4
192446
192536double round-robin group of 3
1926510round-robin group of 5
192746round-robin group of 4
192946
193546
193761516round-robin group of 6
1939510round-robin group of 5
1941510
1942721round-robin group of 7
1945721
1946615round-robin group of 6
1947828round-robin group of 8
194982829
195372122round-robin group of 7
1955615round-robin group of 6
1956615
1957721round-robin group of 7
1959 (A)721
1959 (E)510round-robin group of 5
1963721round-robin group of 7
1967615round-robin group of 6
19751024253 groups of 3, semi-finals,[a] final
(two-legged matches throughout the tournament)
1979102425
19831024
198710133 groups of 3, semi-finals,[a] 3rd-place match, final
198910262 groups of 5, final round-robin group of 4
19911026
199312263 groups of 4, quarter-finals, semi-finals, 3rd-place match, final
19951226
19971226
19991226
20011226
20041226
20071226
20111226
20151226
201616324 groups of 4, quarter-finals, semi-finals, 3rd-place match, final
201912263 groups of 4, quarter-finals, semi-finals, 3rd-place match, final
202110282 groups of 5, quarter-finals, semi-finals, 3rd-place match, final
202416324 groups of 4, quarter-finals, semi-finals, 3rd-place match, final
Notes
  1. ^abTitle holders joined from the semi-finals.

The tournament was previously known asCampeonato Sudamericano de Futbol (South American Championship of Football).South American Championship of Nations was the official English language name. The current name has been used since 1975. Up to 1967 if there was a tie of points at the top of the standings, a playoff match (or matches) would be held to determine the champion. Between 1975 and 1983 it had no fixed host nation, and was held in a home and away fashion. The current final tournament features 12 national teams competing over a month in the host nation. There are two phases: the group stage followed by the knockout stage. In the group stage, teams compete within three groups of four teams each. Three teams are seeded, including the hosts, with the other seeded teams selected using a formula based on theFIFA World Rankings. The other teams are assigned to different "pots", usually based also on the FIFA Rankings, and teams in each pot are drawn at random to the three groups.

Each group plays around-robin tournament, in which each team is scheduled for three matches against other teams in the same group. In earlier tournaments, the last round of matches of each group were not scheduled at the same time unlike many tournaments around the world for unknown reasons, although more recent tournaments have adopted this rule. The top two teams from each group advance to the knockout stage. Points are used to rank the teams within a group. Beginning in1995,three points have been awarded for a win, one for a draw and none for a loss (before, winners received two points).

The ranking of each team in each group is determined as follows:

a) greatest number of points obtained in all group matches;
b)goal difference in all group matches;
c) greatest number of goals scored in all group matches.

If two or more teams are equal on the basis of the above three criteria,their rankings are determined as follows:

d) greatest number of points obtained in the group matches between the teams concerned;
e) goal difference resulting from the group matches between the teams concerned;
f) greater number of goals scored in all group matches between the teams concerned;
g) drawing of lots by the CONMEBOL Organizing Committee (i.e. at random).

The knockout stage is asingle-elimination tournament in which teams play each other in one-off matches, withpenalty shootouts used to decide the winner if a match is still tied after 90 minutes in the quarter-finals and semi-finals, and afterextra time in the final. It begins with the quarter-finals, then semi-finals, thethird-place match (contested by the losing semi-finalists), and the final.

Participating teams

[edit]

All registered national federations of CONMEBOL, of which there currently are ten, are eligible for automatic berths in the tournament. Since the competition's rebranding in 1975, there has been only one occasion when one of those teams missed out on a tournament: Argentina withdrew from the2001 edition due to scheduling and security disagreements.

Owing to this somewhat limited number of available participants, countries from other continents have usually been invited to make up the 12 teams necessary for the current tournament format since 1993. Most often those have been fromCONCACAF, whose members are geographically and culturally close. For the centennial edition in2016 and for the one in2024, reflecting the number of teams being increased to 16, qualification stages were held for the CONCACAF teams.

In all, ten non-South American nations have participated in Copa América at least once: CONCACAF membersCanada,Costa Rica,Haiti,Honduras,Jamaica,Mexico,Panama, and theUnited States, as well asAFC membersJapan andQatar. Two other teams,China andAustralia, had accepted invitations respectively for 2015 and 2021, but both did not end up appearing because of clashes with other commitments.[25][26][27] Moreover,Spain was invited to the 2011 edition but declined to participate.[28]

Team records

[edit]
Regular participants
TeamAppearances
as of 2024
First
 Argentina441916
 Bolivia291926
 Brazil381916
 Chile411916
 Colombia241945
 Ecuador301939
 Paraguay391921
 Peru341927
 Uruguay461916
 Venezuela201967
Invitees
TeamAppearancesFirstLatest
CONCACAF
 Canada12024
 Costa Rica619972024
 Haiti12016
 Honduras12001
 Jamaica320152024
 Mexico1119932024
 Panama220162024
 United States519932024
AFC
 Japan219992019
 Qatar12019

Trophies

[edit]
Main article:Copa América trophy
Current Copa América trophy (left) at the Conmebol Museum and the special edition awarded exclusively forCopa América Centenario in 2016

The Copa América trophy, which is awarded to the winners of the tournament, was donated to the Association by theMinistry of Foreign Affairs of Argentina, Ernesto Bosch, in1910, when Argentina organized an event to commemorate the centenary of theMay Revolution. That competition (also attended byUruguay andChile) was named "Copa del Centenario" (Centennial Cup).[29]

The current Copa América trophy was purchased in 1916 from "Casa Escasany", a jewelry shop inBuenos Aires, at the cost of 3,000Swiss francs.[30]

The Copa América trophy is a 9 kg (20 lb) weight and 77 cm (30 in) tall silver ornament, with a 3-level wooden base which contains several plaques. The plaques are engraved with every winner of the competition, as well as the edition won.[31] The trophy previously had a one- and two-level base[citation needed], and prior to 1979 there was no base at all,[32] like the one used in1975.

In April 2016, a commemorative trophy – specifically designed for theCopa América Centenario – was introduced at theColombian Football Federation headquarters ofBogotá to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the competition.[33] The trophy was based on the original Copa América trophy's shape, added with the 2016 edition logo. The trophy was not to have a base. The CAC was 61 cm (24 in) tall with a weight of 7.1 kg (16 lb), covered by 24-carat gold. The emblems of CONMEBOL and CONCACAF were also engraved on its body.[34]

The commemorative Copa América Centenario trophy was designed by Epico Studios in the United States and manufactured by London Workshops of Thomas Lyte in England.[35][36] The winning team will keep the trophy in perpetuity.

Apart from the main trophy, the "Copa Bolivia" (a small trophy made in silver) has been awarded to the runner-up of the competition since the1997 edition.[37] The trophy is named after the country that hosted the 1997 Copa América, with a smallBolivian flag attached on one of its sides.[38]

Results

[edit]
See also:List of Copa América finals
Tournament name
  • 1916–1967: "South American Championship"
  • 1975–present: "Copa América"
Key
Ed.YearHostFirst place gameThird place gameTeams
ChampionScoreRunner-upThirdScoreFourth
11916Argentina
Uruguay
round-robin
Argentina

Brazil
round-robin
Chile
4
21917Uruguay
Uruguay
round-robin
Argentina

Brazil
round-robin
Chile
4
31919Brazil
Brazil
round-robin
Play-off:1–0 (a.e.t.)

Uruguay

Argentina
round-robin
Chile
4
41920Chile
Uruguay
round-robin
Argentina

Brazil
round-robin
Chile
4
51921Argentina
Argentina
round-robin
Brazil

Uruguay
round-robin
Paraguay
4
61922Brazil
Brazil
round-robin
Play-off:3–0

Paraguay

Uruguay
round-robin
Argentina
5
71923Uruguay
Uruguay
round-robin
Argentina

Paraguay
round-robin
Brazil
4
81924Uruguay
Uruguay
round-robin
Argentina

Paraguay
round-robin
Chile
4
91925Argentina
Argentina
round-robin
Brazil

Paraguay
round-robin3
101926Chile
Uruguay
round-robin
Argentina

Chile
round-robin
Paraguay
5
111927Peru
Argentina
round-robin
Uruguay

Peru
round-robin
Bolivia
4
121929Argentina
Argentina
round-robin
Paraguay

Uruguay
round-robin
Peru
4
131935Peru
Uruguay
round-robin
Argentina

Peru
round-robin
Chile
4
141937Argentina
Argentina
round-robin
Play-off:2–0 (a.e.t.)

Brazil

Uruguay
round-robin
Paraguay
6
151939Peru
Peru
round-robin
Uruguay

Paraguay
round-robin
Chile
5
161941Chile
Argentina
round-robin
Uruguay

Chile
round-robin
Peru
5
171942Uruguay
Uruguay
round-robin
Argentina

Brazil
round-robin
Paraguay
7
181945Chile
Argentina
round-robin
Brazil

Chile
round-robin
Uruguay
7
191946Argentina
Argentina
round-robin
Brazil

Paraguay
round-robin
Uruguay
6
201947Ecuador
Argentina
round-robin
Paraguay

Uruguay
round-robin
Chile
8
211949Brazil
Brazil
round-robin
Play-off:7–0

Paraguay

Peru
round-robin
Bolivia
8
221953Peru
Paraguay
round-robin
Play-off:3–2

Brazil

Uruguay
round-robin
Chile
7
231955Chile
Argentina
round-robin
Chile

Peru
round-robin
Uruguay
6
241956Uruguay
Uruguay
round-robin
Chile

Argentina
round-robin
Brazil
6
251957Peru
Argentina
round-robin
Brazil

Uruguay
round-robin
Peru
7
261959Argentina
Argentina
round-robin
Brazil

Paraguay
round-robin
Peru
7
271959Ecuador
Uruguay
round-robin
Argentina

Brazil
round-robin
Ecuador
5
281963Bolivia
Bolivia
round-robin
Paraguay

Argentina
round-robin
Brazil
7
291967Uruguay
Uruguay
round-robin
Argentina

Chile
round-robin
Paraguay
6
301975Home-and-away basis
Peru
0–1 /2–0
Play-off:1–0

Colombia

Brazil

Uruguay
10
311979Home-and-away basis
Paraguay
3–0 /0–1
Play-off:0–0 (a.e.t.)

Chile

Brazil

Peru
10
321983Home-and-away basis
Uruguay
2–0 /1–1
Brazil

Paraguay

Peru
10
331987Argentina
Uruguay
1–0
Chile

Colombia
2–1
Argentina
10
341989Brazil
Brazil
round-robin
Uruguay

Argentina
round-robin
Paraguay
10
351991Chile
Argentina
round-robin
Brazil

Chile
round-robin
Colombia
10
361993Ecuador
Argentina
2–1
Mexico

Colombia
1–0
Ecuador
12
371995Uruguay
Uruguay
1–1
(5–3p)

Brazil

Colombia
4–1
United States
12
381997Bolivia
Brazil
3–1
Bolivia

Mexico
1–0
Peru
12
391999Paraguay
Brazil
3–0
Uruguay

Mexico
2–1
Chile
12
402001Colombia
Colombia
1–0
Mexico

Honduras
2–2
(5–4p)

Uruguay
12
412004Peru
Brazil
2–2
(4–2p)

Argentina

Uruguay
2–1
Colombia
12
422007Venezuela
Brazil
3–0
Argentina

Mexico
3–1
Uruguay
12
432011Argentina
Uruguay
3–0
Paraguay

Peru
4–1
Venezuela
12
442015Chile
Chile
0–0 (a.e.t.)
(4–1p)

Argentina

Peru
2–0
Paraguay
12
452016United States
Chile
0–0 (a.e.t.)
(4–2p)

Argentina

Colombia
1–0
United States
16
462019Brazil
Brazil
3–1
Peru

Argentina
2–1
Chile
12
472021Brazil
Argentina
1–0
Brazil

Colombia
3–2
Peru
10
482024United States
Argentina
1–0 (a.e.t.)
Colombia

Uruguay
2–2
(4–3p)

Canada
16
492028
Notes
  1. ^abcNo third place match was played; teams are listed in alphabetical order.

Teams reaching the top four

[edit]
TeamTitle(s)Runners-upThird placeFourth place
 Argentina16 (1921*,1925*,1927,1929*,1937*,1941,1945,1946*,1947,1955,1957,1959*,1991,1993,2021,2024)14 (1916*,1917,1920,1923,1924,1926,1935,1942,1959,1967,2004,2007,2015,2016)5 (1919,1956,1963,1989,2019)2 (1922,1987*)
 Uruguay15 (1916,1917*,1920,1923*,1924*,1926,1935,1942*,1956*,1959,1967*,1983,1987,1995*,2011)6 (1919,1927,1939,1941,1989,1999)10 (1921,1922,1929,1937,1947,1953,1957,1975,2004,2024)5 (1945,1946,1955,2001,2007)
 Brazil9 (1919*,1922*,1949*,1989*,1997,1999,2004,2007,2019*)12 (1921,1925,1937,1945,1946,1953,1957,1959,1983,1991,1995,2021*)7 (1916,1917,1920,1942,1959,1975,1979)3 (1923,1956,1963)
 Paraguay2 (1953,1979)6 (1922,1929,1947,1949,1963,2011)7 (1923,1924,1925,1939,1946,1959,1983)7 (1921,1926,1937,1942,1967,1989,2015)
 Chile2 (2015*,2016)4 (1955*,1956,1979,1987)5 (1926*,1941*,1945*,1967*,1991*)11 (1916,1917,1919,1920,1924,1935,1939,1947,1953,1999,2019)
 Peru2 (1939*,1975)1 (2019)8 (1927*,1935*,1949,1955,1979,1983,2011,2015)6 (1929,1941,1957*,1959,1997,2021)
 Colombia1 (2001*)2 (1975,2024)5 (1987,1993,1995,2016,2021)2 (1991,2004)
 Bolivia1 (1963*)1 (1997*)02 (1927,1949)
 Mexico02 (1993,2001)3 (1997,1999,2007)0
 Honduras001 (2001)0
 Ecuador0002 (1959*,1993)
 United States0002 (1995,2016*)
 Venezuela0001 (2011)
 Canada0001 (2024)
* Host nation

Records and statistics

[edit]
Main article:Copa América records and statistics

Copa América champions' results in the Confederations Cup

[edit]
Further information:FIFA Confederations Cup
Qualified viaTeamEditionResult
1991 Copa América Argentina1992Champions
1993 Copa América Argentina1995Runners up
1995 Copa América Uruguay1997(4th)
1997 Copa América Brazil1999Runners up
1999 Copa América Brazil2001(4th)
2001 Copa América Colombia2003(4th)
2004 Copa América Brazil2005Champions
2007 Copa América Brazil2009Champions
2011 Copa América Uruguay2013(4th)
2015 Copa América Chile2017Runners up

Copa América champions' results in the CONMEBOL-UEFA Cup of Champions

[edit]
Further information:CONMEBOL-UEFA Cup of Champions
Qualified viaTeamEditionResult
1983 Copa América Uruguay1985Runners up
1993 Copa América Argentina1993Champions
2021 Copa América Argentina2022Champions
2024 Copa América Argentina2026Qualified

Awards

[edit]
Main article:Copa América awards

There are currently five post-tournament awards

  • theBest Player formost valuable player, first awarded in1987;
  • theTop Goalscorer for most prolific goal scorer;
  • theBest Goalkeeper for most outstanding goalkeeper, first awarded in2011;
  • theTeam of the Tournament for best combined team of players at the tournament;
  • theFair Play Award for the team with the best record of fair play, first awarded in2011.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"X Campeonato Sud Americano de Football".biblioteca.afa.org.ar (in Spanish). Biblioteca de Fútbol Argentino.Archived from the original on 27 March 2018. Retrieved27 February 2015.
  2. ^ab"The oldest main continental tournament in the world". CONMEBOL. Archived fromthe original on 21 February 2014. Retrieved3 April 2014.
  3. ^"CONCACAF and CONMEBOL Announce Agreement to Bring Copa America 2016 to the United States". CONCACAF. 1 May 2014. Archived fromthe original on 28 June 2019. Retrieved29 June 2014.
  4. ^"Copa América: History". CONMEBOL. 27 January 2015.Archived from the original on 25 June 2018. Retrieved27 February 2015.
  5. ^"Teams | COPA America Centenario | USA 2016".ca2016.com. Archived fromthe original on 22 May 2016. Retrieved22 May 2016.
  6. ^"CONMEBOL and Concacaf sign strategic collaboration agreement". CONCACAF. 27 January 2023.
  7. ^"Cricket Peru".ICC. ICC Cricket. Retrieved18 June 2024.
  8. ^Murray, Scott (17 June 2015)."A brief history of … the Copa América, the tournament with a special kind of beauty".The Guardian. Retrieved18 June 2024.
  9. ^"Se cumplen 100 años de la visionaria idea de Héctor Rivadavia Gómez".CONMEBOL. 9 July 2016. Retrieved18 June 2024.
  10. ^"History provides hope that Copa America can come back stronger after coronavirus-forced postponement".ESPN. 17 March 2020. Retrieved18 June 2024.
  11. ^"Brazil passes hosting of 2015 Copa America to Chile".CNN. 26 March 2012. Retrieved13 September 2023.
  12. ^Butler, Alex (8 June 2016)."Copa America 2016: Contradicting reports surface on U.S. becoming permanent home".United Press International.Archived from the original on 8 June 2016. Retrieved10 June 2016.
  13. ^Timms, Aaron (26 June 2016)."Chile win Copa América once again as Argentina title drought continues".The Guardian. Retrieved13 September 2023.
  14. ^Baxter, Kevin (23 June 2016)."Centenario edition is most successful Copa America in history".Los Angeles Times. Retrieved13 September 2023.
  15. ^Wilson, Jonathan (7 July 2019)."Brazil Shows Character, Quality in Winning Copa America, Restoring Faith".Sports Illustrated. Retrieved13 September 2023.
  16. ^Vickery, Tim (5 December 2019)."Copa America reboot features five group games, lots of travel and move to even years". ESPN. Retrieved13 September 2023.
  17. ^"Football: Australia, Qatar pull out of 2021 Copa America".The Straits Times. Reuters. 24 February 2021. Retrieved13 September 2023.
  18. ^"Copa America: Colombia will no longer co-host tournament after widespread protests".BBC Sport. 21 May 2021. Retrieved13 September 2023.
  19. ^Young, Alex (31 May 2021)."Copa America moves to Brazil after Argentina dropped as hosts just 13 days before tournament start".Evening Standard. Retrieved13 September 2023.
  20. ^Creditor, Avi (10 July 2021)."Messi and Argentina Finally Have Their Peace".Sports Illustrated. Retrieved13 September 2023.
  21. ^Stejskal, Sam; Linehan, Meg (27 January 2023)."The CONCACAF/CONMEBOL partnership: Everything we know so far — Copa America, W Gold Cup and beyond".The Athletic. Retrieved13 September 2023.
  22. ^Vertelney, Seth (27 January 2023)."The 2024 Copa America is coming to the United States". Pro Soccer Wire.USA Today. Retrieved13 September 2023.
  23. ^"Copa América: a new cycle begins and the revolving calendar remains". 21 December 2007. Archived fromthe original on 5 December 2008.
  24. ^"Reunión de Presidentes y el C. Ejecutivo". CONMEBOL.com. 24 October 2012. Archived fromthe original on 2 January 2013. Retrieved24 October 2012.
  25. ^"China accept 2015 Copa America invitation". tribalfootball.com. 3 March 2014.Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved3 June 2016.
  26. ^"足协正式拒绝美洲杯:冲世界杯 紧" (in Chinese). Hupu.com. 19 April 2014. Archived fromthe original on 20 April 2014. Retrieved3 June 2016.
  27. ^"Football Australia confirms Socceroos' withdrawal from Copa America".Football Australia. 23 February 2021.Archived from the original on 12 June 2021. Retrieved23 February 2021.
  28. ^"Japón se Copa en América". 14 April 2011.Archived from the original on 18 March 2012. Retrieved3 April 2012.
  29. ^"Una historia que cumple 100 años" by Oscar Barnade,Clarín, 6 June 2016
  30. ^"El origen catalán de la Copa América"Archived 27 July 2016 at theWayback Machine, Sobre Césped.com
  31. ^"Trofeo de la Copa América"Archived 15 July 2014 at theWayback Machine on DePeru.com
  32. ^"History of Copa America". Archived fromthe original on 16 June 2021. Retrieved15 June 2021.
  33. ^"Fue presentado en Bogotá el trofeo de la Copa América Centenario"Archived 6 May 2016 at theWayback Machine,El Espectador, 28 April 2016
  34. ^"Copa América Centenario: La historia de los dos trofeos"Archived 24 June 2016 at theWayback Machine, Copa América website
  35. ^"Este es el trofeo que se llevará el ganador de la Copa América"Archived 10 June 2016 at theWayback Machine, El Colombiano, 2 June 2016
  36. ^"Así es el trofeo de la Copa América Centenario"Archived 5 May 2016 at theWayback Machine, Infobae, 28 April 2016
  37. ^"'Bolivia' para el segundo"Archived 27 July 2016 at theWayback Machine, Correo del Sur, 4 July 2015
  38. ^"Entérate por qué el trofeo de subcampeón tiene una bandera de Bolivia"Archived 6 June 2016 at theWayback Machine, Ovación Deportes, 5 July 2016

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