2007 Copa América

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2007 Copa América

The 2007 Campeonato Sudamericano Copa América, known simply as the 2007 Copa América or 2007 Copa América Venezuela, was the 42nd edition of the Copa América, the South-American championship for international association football teams. The competition was organized by CONMEBOL, South America's football governing body, and was held between 26 June and 15 July in Venezuela, which hosted the tournament for the first time.

Quick Facts Copa América Venezuela 2007, Tournament details ...
2007 Copa América
Copa América Venezuela 2007
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Copa América 2007 official logo
Tournament details
Host countryVenezuela
Dates26 June – 15 July
Teams12 (from 2 confederations)
Venue(s)9 (in 9 host cities)
Final positions
Champions Brazil (8th title)
Runners-up Argentina
Third place Mexico
Fourth place Uruguay
Tournament statistics
Matches played26
Goals scored86 (3.31 per match)
Attendance1,050,230 (40,393 per match)
Top scorer(s) Robinho (6 goals)
Best player(s) Robinho[1]
Best young player Lionel Messi
2004
2011
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The competition was won by Brazil (they were also the defending champions), who beat Argentina 3–0 in the final.[2] Mexico took third place by beating Uruguay 3–1 in the third-place match. Brazil thus won the right to represent CONMEBOL[3] at the 2009 FIFA Confederations Cup.[4]

Competing nations

As with previous tournaments, all ten members of CONMEBOL participated in the competition. In order to bring the number of competing teams to twelve, CONMEBOL invited Mexico and the United States, the two highest ranking CONCACAF teams in the FIFA World Rankings. Just as in every tournament since 1993, Mexico accepted the invitation. The United States rejected the invitation due to scheduling conflicts with the 2007 Major League Soccer season. CONMEBOL then proceeded to invite Costa Rica, the third highest CONCACAF team in FIFA's ranking.[5] In the end, the United States accepted the invitation.[6]

Venues

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For this Copa América, the organizing committee decided to choose eight cities to hold the tournament. A total of 14 cities presented proposal before the committee, of which they rejected proposals from Barquisimeto, Maracay, Valencia, Valera, Portuguesa and Miranda for not meeting established requirements. The cities of Barinas, Caracas, Ciudad Guayana, Maracaibo, Maturín, Mérida, Puerto la Cruz and San Cristóbal were selected to host the tournament. Later on, the organizing committee reconsidered the candidacy of Barquisimeto, based on the proposal of a new stadium to be built for the city. With a final nine host cities, the 2007 edition broke the previous records for host cities set by the 2004 Copa América in Peru, which used seven.

More information Maturín, Barquisimeto ...
MaturínBarquisimetoMéridaCiudad Guayana
Estadio Monumental de MaturínEstadio Metropolitano de LaraEstadio Metropolitano de MéridaEstadio Polideportivo Cachamay
Capacity: 52,000Capacity: 42,000Capacity: 42,000Capacity: 41,600
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Maracaibo
Estadio José Pachencho Romero
Capacity: 40,000
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San Cristóbal Puerto la Cruz Barinas Caracas
Estadio Polideportivo de Pueblo Nuevo Estadio Olímpico Luis Ramos Estadio Agustín Tovar Estadio Olímpico de la UCV
Capacity: 40,000 Capacity: 38,000 Capacity: 27,500 Capacity: 24,900
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Officials

On 30 May 2007, CONMEBOL announced the list of match officials for the competition. The list included one match official from every country (except Paraguay, which had two). From these thirteen, six officiated in the 2006 FIFA World Cup: Carlos Simon, Óscar Ruiz, Carlos Amarilla, Jorge Larrionda, and Armando Archundia.

Draw

The draw for the competition took place on 14 February 2007 in the Teresa Carreño Theater in Caracas.[7][8]

More information Pot 1, Pot 2 ...
Pot 1Pot 2Pot 3Pot 4
 Venezuela (hosts)
 Argentina
 Brazil
 Ecuador
 Paraguay
 Uruguay
 Chile
 Colombia
 Peru
 Bolivia
 Mexico (invitee)
 United States (invitee)
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Squads

Each association had to present a list of twenty-three players to compete in the competition.

Group stage

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The first round, or group stage, saw the twelve teams divided into three groups of four teams. Each group was a round-robin of six games, where each team played one match against each of the other teams in the same group. Teams were awarded three points for a win, one point for a draw and none for a defeat. The teams finishing first, second and two best-placed third teams in each group qualified for the Quarter-finals.

Tie-breaking criteria

Teams were ranked on the following criteria:

1. Greater number of points in all group matches
2. Goal difference in all group matches
3. Greater number of goals scored in all group matches
4. Head-to-head results
5. Drawing of lots by the CONMEBOL Organising Committee
More information Key to colors in group tables ...
Key to colors in group tables
Group winners, runners-up, and best two third-placed teams advance to the quarterfinals
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All times are in Venezuela Standard Time (UTC–4).

Group A

More information Team, Pld ...
Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Venezuela 3 1 2 0 4 2 +2 5
 Peru 3 1 1 1 5 4 +1 4
 Uruguay 3 1 1 1 1 3 2 4
 Bolivia 3 0 2 1 4 5 1 2
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Source: [citation needed]
More information Uruguay, 0–3 ...
Uruguay 0–3 Peru
Report Villalta 27'
Mariño 70'
Guerrero 88'
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More information Venezuela, 2–2 ...
Venezuela 2–2 Bolivia
Maldonado 20'
Páez 55'
Report Moreno 38'
Arce 84'
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Attendance: 40,000
Referee: Mauricio Reinoso (Ecuador)

More information Bolivia, 0–1 ...
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More information Venezuela, 2–0 ...
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More information Peru, 2–2 ...
Peru 2–2 Bolivia
Pizarro 34', 85' Report Moreno 24'
Campos 45'
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Attendance: 42,000
Referee: Carlos Chandía (Chile)
More information Venezuela, 0–0 ...
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Group B

More information Team, Pld ...
Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Mexico 3 2 1 0 4 1 +3 7
 Brazil 3 2 0 1 4 2 +2 6
 Chile 3 1 1 1 3 5 2 4
 Ecuador 3 0 0 3 3 6 3 0
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Source: [citation needed]
More information Ecuador, 2–3 ...
Ecuador 2–3 Chile
Valencia 16'
Benítez 23'
Report Suazo 20', 80'
Villanueva 86'
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More information Brazil, 0–2 ...
Brazil 0–2 Mexico
Report Castillo 23'
Morales 28'
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More information Brazil, 3–0 ...
Brazil 3–0 Chile
Robinho 36' (pen.), 84', 87' Report
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More information Mexico, 2–1 ...
Mexico 2–1 Ecuador
Castillo 21'
Bravo 79'
Report Méndez 84'
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More information Mexico, 0–0 ...
Mexico 0–0 Chile
Report
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More information Brazil, 1–0 ...
Brazil 1–0 Ecuador
Robinho 56' (pen.) Report
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Group C

More information Team, Pld ...
Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Argentina 3 3 0 0 9 3 +6 9
 Paraguay 3 2 0 1 8 2 +6 6
 Colombia 3 1 0 2 3 9 6 3
 United States 3 0 0 3 2 8 6 0
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Source: [citation needed]
More information Paraguay, 5–0 ...
Paraguay 5–0 Colombia
Santa Cruz 30', 46', 80'
Cabañas 84', 88'
Report
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More information Argentina, 4–1 ...
Argentina 4–1 United States
Crespo 11', 60'
Aimar 76'
Tevez 84'
Report Johnson 9' (pen.)
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Attendance: 34,500
Referee: Carlos Chandía (Chile)

More information United States, 1–3 ...
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Attendance: 28,200
Referee: Victor Rivera (Peru)
More information Argentina, 4–2 ...
Argentina 4–2 Colombia
Crespo 20' (pen.)
Riquelme 34', 45'
D. Milito 90+1'
Report E. Perea 10'
Castrillón 76'
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More information Colombia, 1–0 ...
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Attendance: 37,500
Referee: Manuel Andarcia (Venezuela)
More information Argentina, 1–0 ...
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Ranking of third-placed teams

At the end of the first stage, a comparison was made between the third-placed teams of each group. The two best third-placed teams advanced to the quarter-finals.

More information Grp, Team ...
Grp Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
B  Chile 3 1 1 1 3 5 2 4
A  Uruguay 3 1 1 1 1 3 2 4
C  Colombia 3 1 0 2 3 9 6 3
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Source: [citation needed]

Knockout stage

Bracket

 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
          
 
7 July San Cristóbal
 
 
 Venezuela 1
 
10 July Maracaibo
 
 Uruguay 4
 
 Uruguay 2 (4)
 
7 July Puerto la Cruz
 
 Brazil (p) 2 (5)
 
 Chile 1
 
15 July Maracaibo
 
 Brazil 6
 
 Brazil 3
 
8 July Maturín
 
 Argentina 0
 
 Mexico 6
 
11 July Ciudad Guayana
 
 Paraguay 0
 
 Mexico 0
 
8 July Barquisimeto
 
 Argentina 3 Third place
 
 Argentina 4
 
14 July Caracas
 
 Peru 0
 
 Uruguay 1
 
 
 Mexico 3
 

Quarter-finals

More information Venezuela, 1–4 ...
Venezuela 1–4 Uruguay
Arango 41' Report Forlán 38', 90+1'
García 64'
Rodríguez 86'
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Attendance: 41,200
Referee: Carlos Chandía (Chile)

More information Chile, 1–6 ...
Chile 1–6 Brazil
Suazo 76' Report Juan 16'
Baptista 23'
Robinho 27', 50'
Josué 68'
Vágner Love 85'
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More information Mexico, 6–0 ...
Mexico 6–0 Paraguay
Castillo 5' (pen.), 38'
Torrado 27'
Arce 79'
Blanco 87' (pen.)
Bravo 90+1'
Report
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More information Argentina, 4–0 ...
Argentina 4–0 Peru
Riquelme 47', 85'
Messi 61'
Mascherano 75'
Report
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Semi-finals


More information Mexico, 0–3 ...
Mexico 0–3 Argentina
Report Heinze 45'
Messi 61'
Riquelme 65' (pen.)
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Attendance: 41,600
Referee: Carlos Chandía (Chile)

Third-place match

More information Uruguay, 1–3 ...
Uruguay 1–3 Mexico
Abreu 22' Report Blanco 36' (pen.)
Bravo 68'
Guardado 76'
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Attendance: 25,000
Referee: Mauricio Reinoso (Ecuador)

Final

More information Brazil, 3–0 ...
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Result

 2007 Copa América champions 

Brazil

8th title

Awards

Goalscorers

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Robinho, top scorer

With six goals, Robinho was the top scorer in the tournament. There were 86 goals scored in 26 matches, for an average of 3.31 goals per match.

6 goals

5 goals

4 goals

3 goals

2 goals

1 goal

1 own goal

Team of the Tournament

[9]

More information Goalkeeper, Defenders ...
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Final positions

More information Pos, Team ...
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Eff
1 Brazil 6411155+101372.2%
2 Argentina 6501166+101583.3%
3 Mexico 6411135+81372.2%
4 Uruguay 622289−1844.4%
Eliminated in the quarterfinals
5 Paraguay 4202880650.0%
6 Venezuela 412156−1541.6%
7 Peru 411258−3433.3%
8 Chile 4112411−7433.3%
Eliminated in the first round
9 Colombia 310239−6333.3%
10 Bolivia 302145−1222.2%
11 Ecuador 300336−300.0%
12 United States 300328−600.0%
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Marketing

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Sponsorship

Global Platinum Sponsor

Global Gold Sponsor

Global Silver Sponsor

Charitable Partner

Local Supplier

Match ball

The official match ball for the tournament was the Nike Mercurial Veloci. The ball was presented on 14 February 2007, prior to a friendly match played between Venezuela and New Zealand, by the president of the Venezuelan Football Federation, Rafael Esquivel, to the mayor of Maracaibo, Giancarlo Di Martino – head of the local organising committee.

Mascot

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Guaky suit manufactured by Fractal Studio, through the main cities of Venezuela

Guaky is a scarlet macaw, a bird representative of Venezuela. He wore the traditional jersey Venezuela national football team burgundy and football shoes. Under their wings the characteristic tricolor national flag, with its eight stars on their wings.

To choose the official mascot held a contest in which proposals received 4,500,000 of Venezuelan children and adolescents at a school. The winning draw corresponded to the 15-year-old Jhoyling Zabaleta.[10] The final design was commissioned to Fractal Studio, bring life and a "strong personality, cheerful and sport" that accompanied the event during its realization. The name of the pet, Guaky was subsequently elected by an online survey, where that option was a 54.17% of preferences.[11]

Theme songs

  • "Gol" by Venezuelan singer Juan Carlos Luces, was the main theme song of the tournament, which was performed during the draw and the opening ceremonies.[12]
  • "Baila la Copa" by Venezuelan singer Ose was an official anthem for the tournament.

References

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