Copa de Oro

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Copa de Oro

The Copa de Oro (English: Gold Cup, Portuguese: Copa Ouro), or Copa de Oro Nicolás Leoz, was a football cup winners' cup competition contested on 3 occasions by the most recent winners of all CONMEBOL continental competitions. These included champions of the Copa Libertadores, Supercopa Sudamericana, Copa CONMEBOL, Supercopa Masters and Copa Masters CONMEBOL. The Recopa Sudamericana champions did not participate. The cup is one of the many continental club competitions that have been organized by CONMEBOL. The first competition was held in 1993 featuring the 4 major continental champions of the previous season whilst the second competition in 1995 two continental champions declined to play leaving only two participants to play. In the final edition in 1996, all the continental champions accepted the invitation to play. Boca Juniors, Cruzeiro and Flamengo were the only winners of the tournament with one title each.[1][2] Brazil became the most successful nation of the competition with two victories.

Quick Facts Organizing body, Founded ...
Copa de Oro
Thumb
Trophy Nicolás Leoz, awarded to champions
Organizing bodyCONMEBOL
Founded1993
Abolished1996; 29 years ago (1996)
RegionSouth America
Number of teams4
Related competitions
Most successful club(s) Boca Juniors
Cruzeiro
Flamengo
(1 title each)
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History

Summarize
Perspective

The 1993 edition was contested by Atlético Mineiro (winners of the 1992 Copa CONMEBOL), Boca Juniors (winners of the 1992 Supercopa Masters), Cruzeiro (winners of the 1992 Supercopa Sudamericana) and São Paulo (winners of the 1992 Copa Libertadores). In the semifinals, Boca Juniors defeated Telê Santana's São Paulo in the mythical La Bombonera 1-0; the Paulistas' golden generation would return the dosage on the return leg and the series went into extra time. Tied 1-1 on aggregate, Sergio Daniel Martínez made history as he scored the first ever golden goal in a South American competition. In the final, Boca Juniors held Atlético Mineiro to a 0-0 tie in the Mineirão and win 1-0 in Buenos Aires, with the goal coming from Carlos MacAllister, to become the first ever winners of the competition. In 1994, the tournament was not played because of the scandal last year.

In 1995, 1994 Copa Libertadores champion Vélez Sársfield and 1994 Supercopa Sudamericana champion Independiente declined to play. This only left the 1994 Copa CONMEBOL and 1995 Supercopa Masters champions in the tournament. Cruzeiro faced São Paulo; in the first leg in Belo Horizonte, São Paulo won 0-1 before the game was suspended at the 47th minute due to Cruzeiro having four players sent off in the first half (they had used all the substitutions) and having one injured player leaving just six in the field for the Reposa; in accordance with the regulations, the minimum number of players per team is seven. However, Cruzeiro came back from and win 0-1 in the Morumbi to eventually win the trophy on penalties. Due to scheduling conflicts, this season was played as part of the Supercopa Sudamericana, specifically the quarterfinal stage.[1]

The 1996 Copa de Oro was played entirely in the city of Manaus and the final edition. The four teams were the champions of the 1995 Copa Libertadores, 1995 Copa CONMEBOL and 1996 Copa Masters CONMEBOL in addition to the runner-up of the 1995 Supercopa Sudamericana as the 1995 champion Independiente declined to play. In the semifinals, Flamengo defeated Rosario Central 2-1 and São Paulo 3-1 and become champions of the competition.[2]

Records and statistics

List of finals

Keys
  • aet: after extra time
  • p: defined on penalty shoot-out
  •   Match decided by a penalty shootout after extra time
  •   Match playoff after the series ended tied on aggregate
  •   Defined on penalty shoot-out in the second leg
More information Year, Winners ...
Year Winners 1st.
leg
2nd.
leg
Playoff/
Agg.
Runner-up Venue
(1st leg)
City
(1st leg)
Venue
(2nd leg)
City
(2nd leg)
Ref.
1993Argentina Boca Juniors
0–0
1–0
Brazil Atlético MineiroMineirãoBelo HorizonteLa BomboneraBuenos Aires[3]
1994
No competition held
1995Brazil Cruzeiro
0–1
1–0
(4–1 p)
Brazil São PauloMineirãoBelo HorizontePacaembuSão Paulo[1][4][5]
1996Brazil Flamengo
3–1
Brazil São PauloVivaldãoManaus
[2]
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Performances by club

More information Club, Titles ...
Club Titles Runners-up Seasons won Seasons runner-up
Argentina Boca Juniors 101993
Brazil Cruzeiro 101995
Brazil Flamengo 101996
Brazil São Paulo 02
1995, 1996
Brazil Atlético Mineiro 01
1993
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Performances by nation

More information Nation, Won ...
Nation Won Runners-Up Winning Clubs Runners-Up
 Brazil 2 3 Cruzeiro (1), Flamengo (1) São Paulo (2), Atlético Mineiro (1)
 Argentina 1 0 Boca Juniors (1)
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References

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