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Copa Interamericana

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Not to be confused withFIFA Derby of the Americas orInteramerican Series.
Football tournament
Copa Interamericana
Interamerican Cup
The trophy awarded to champions
Organizer(s)CONCACAF
CONMEBOL
Founded1968
Abolished1998; 27 years ago (1998)
RegionAmericas
Teams2
Last championUnited StatesD.C. United (1st title)
Most championshipsArgentinaIndependiente (3 titles)

TheCopa Interamericana (English:Interamerican Cup) was an internationalfootball competition endorsed byCONCACAF (North, Central America and Caribbean) andCONMEBOL (South America). Established in 1969, it was discontinued in 1998 after CONCACAF clubs, particularly those from Mexico, began participating in CONMEBOL competitions.

The competition was intended to be contested between the winners of the North AmericanCONCACAF Champions Cup and the South AmericanCopa Libertadores tournaments, although the participants varied at times. The competition was usually contested over a two legged tie, with a playoff orpenalty kicks if necessary, but it was common for several consecutive editions to go unheld. Of the 18 competitions played out, four of them were contested over several matches in just one venue. Two others were held in a single match. Another two editions had participants that didn't outright qualify to dispute the competition. Most of the editions were held one, and sometimes two, years after the participants had qualified. This was the result of the lack of financial incentives and the low relevance of the competition.[citation needed]

The 18 Copa Interamericana tournaments were won by 13 different club teams. Argentine sideIndependiente won a record three titles. The last winner of the cup was American sideD.C. United, defeating Brazilian sideVasco da Gama 2–1 on aggregate in1998. Argentina was the most successful national league with seven titles, while Uruguayan outfitNacional and Independiente share the record for the most appearances with three each.

History

[edit]

In 1969, an agreement came between the confederations of South America (CONMEBOL) and Central and North America (CONCACAF) to play an annual competition, theInteramerican Cup, which pits the champions of those two confederations in a format similar to the Intercontinental Cup. The first edition was contested between Estudiantes andMexican clubToluca in which each team won 2–1 in their away legs. The playoff in Montevideo proved to be the tie-breaker as Estudiantes won a violent match 2–0. This promising start did little to help the competition; due to the difference in interests between the clubs involved, the Interamerican Cup had an even more sporadic lifeline than the Intercontinental Cup; sometimes, years would go without it being played. The second edition was played four years later, in 1971, which saw Nacional edged Mexican sideCruz Azul 3–2 on aggregate. Independiente would become the only club to win the competition three times in a row, from 1972 to 1974, after seeing offHonduran clubOlimpia,Guatemalan clubMunicipal and Mexican sideAtlético Español, the last two after apenalty shoot-out. Mexico'sAmérica broke the South American hegemony after beating Boca Juniors in a play-off match in 1977. As a result of this victory, the Mexican squad argued that it had the right to participate in the Intercontinental Cup of that year; however, they were denied the opportunity. Paraguay's Olimpia returned the trophy back south in 1980 with a victory overEl Salvador'sFAS butClub Universidad Nacional ofMexico City defeating Uruguay's Nacional to win CONCACAF's second title.

The competition entered a state of hiatus again, this time for five years. In 1986,Argentinos Juniors would defeatDefence Force ofTrinidad and Tobago in a single-match final.River Plate would keep the trophy in Argentina, for the second year running, defeatingCosta Rican sideAlajuelense. Uruguay's Nacional would trounce Honduras' Olimpia 5-1 on aggregate the following year. Colombia'sAtlético Nacional made short work of Club Universidad Nacional; however, South America hegemony would once again be broken by América after defeating Paraguay's Olimpia. CompatriotsPuebla failed to retain the trophy in Mexico after being routed byChile'sColo-Colo. The importance of the competition decreased significantly after two Brazilian clubs, Copa Libertadores winners São Paulo (1993) andGrêmio (1995) declined to participate out of disinterest; both times, the Copa Libertadores runners-up, Chilean sideUniversidad Católica and Atlético Nacional took their place; each of them were pushed to the limit by Costa Rica'sSaprissa.Vélez Sársfield beat Costa Rican clubCartaginés in 1994 while the last Interamerican Cup, held in 1998, sawAmerican clubD.C. United beat Vasco da Gama.

The Interamerican Cup was abolished in 1998 when Mexican clubs began to participate in the Copa Libertadores and other CONCACAF teams participated in theCopa Sudamericana. From 2005 to 2023, when FIFA adopted the Club World Championship format clash between the champions of all continental confederations, the champions of CONCACAF and CONMEBOL again had the opportunity to meet, which happened on multiple occasions throughout the history of the tournament with this format.

In January 2023, CONCACAF and CONMEBOL had signed a new strategic partnership, which would include a "final four" style club tournament containing two teams from both confederations that would start in 2024.[1] This event was not held however beginning in 2024, the annualFIFA Intercontinental Cup has included a match between the champions of each confederation dubbedDerby of the Americas.

Records and statistics

[edit]

List of finals

[edit]
Key to the list
a.e.t.Match was won duringextra time
p.Match was won on apenalty shoot-out
Ed.YearWinnersSco./Agg.Runners-up1st leg2nd legPlay-off
1
1969ArgentinaEstudiantes (LP)6–3MexicoToluca2–11–23–0
2
1971UruguayNacional
3–2
MexicoCruz Azul1–12–1
3
1973ArgentinaIndependiente4–1HondurasOlimpia2–12–0
4
1974ArgentinaIndependiente1–1(4–2p)GuatemalaMunicipal1–00–1
5
1976ArgentinaIndependiente2–2(4–2p)MexicoEspañol2–20–0
6
1978MexicoAmérica1–3[n 1]ArgentinaBoca Juniors0–31–02–1 (a.e.t.)
7
1979ParaguayOlimpia8–3El SalvadorFAS3–35–0
8
1981MexicoUNAM6–5UruguayNacional3–11–32–1
9
1985ArgentinaArgentinos Juniors1–0[n 2]Trinidad and TobagoDefence Force
10
1986ArgentinaRiver Plate3–0Costa RicaAlajuelense0–03–0
11
1988UruguayNacional5–1HondurasOlimpia1–14–0
12
1989ColombiaAtlético Nacional6–1MexicoUNAM2–04–1
13
1990MexicoAmérica3–2ParaguayOlimpia1–12–1
14
1991ChileColo-Colo7–2MexicoPuebla4–13–1
15
1993ChileUniversidad Católica6–4Costa RicaSaprissa1–35–1
16
1996ArgentinaVélez Sársfield2–0Costa RicaCartaginés0–02–0
17
1997ColombiaAtlético Nacional3–2[n 2]Costa RicaSaprissa
18
1998United StatesD.C. United2–1BrazilVasco da Gama0–12–0
Notes
  1. ^Aggregate score not taken into account.[2][3]
  2. ^abFinal was played under a single match format.

Performances by club

[edit]
TeamWinnersRunners-upYears wonYears runners-up
ArgentinaIndependiente301972, 1974, 1975
UruguayNacional211971, 19881980
MexicoAmérica201977, 1990
ColombiaAtlético Nacional201989, 1995
ParaguayOlimpia1119791990
MexicoUNAM1119811989
ArgentinaEstudiantes101968
ArgentinaArgentinos Juniors101985
ArgentinaRiver Plate101986
ChileColo-Colo101991
ChileUniversidad Católica101993
ArgentinaVélez Sársfield101994
United StatesD.C. United101998
HondurasOlimpia021972, 1988
Costa RicaSaprissa021993, 1995
MexicoToluca011968
MexicoCruz Azul011971
GuatemalaMunicipal011974
MexicoAtlético Español011975
ArgentinaBoca Juniors011977
El SalvadorFAS011979
Trinidad and TobagoDefence Force011985
Costa RicaAlajuelense011986
MexicoPuebla011991
Costa RicaCartaginés011994
BrazilVasco da Gama011998

By nation

[edit]
NationWinnersRunners-upTotal
 Argentina718
 Mexico358
 Chile202
 Colombia202
 Uruguay213
 Paraguay112
 United States101
 Costa Rica044
 Honduras022
 Brazil011
 El Salvador011
 Guatemala011
 Trinidad and Tobago011

By confederation

[edit]
Results by confederation
ConfederationWinnersRunners-up
CONMEBOL144
CONCACAF414

See also

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Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"CONMEBOL and Concacaf sign strategic collaboration agreement".Concacaf.com. January 27, 2023. RetrievedJanuary 27, 2023.
  2. ^Copa Interamericana onHistoria de Boca
  3. ^El primer triunfo de un equipo mexicano en la Copa Interamericana, 1978 by Gerardo Díaz onRelatos e Historias

External links

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