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2001 Copa Mercosur Finals

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2001 Copa Mercosur Finals
Event2001 Copa Mercosur
2-2 on points
San Lorenzo won 4–3 on penalties
First leg
Date12 December 2001 (2001-12-12)
VenueMaracanã Stadium, Rio de Janeiro
RefereeEpifanio González (Paraguay)
Attendance???
Second leg
Date24 January 2002 (2002-01-24)
VenueEstadio Pedro Bidegain, Buenos Aires
RefereeOscar Ruiz (Colombia)
Attendance40,000
← 2000

The 2001 Copa Mercosur Finals were the two-legged final that decided the winner of the 2001 Copa Mercosur, the fourth (and last) edition of the Copa Mercosur, South America's international club football tournament organized by CONMEBOL.[1]

The finals were contested in two-legged home-and-away format between Argentinian team San Lorenzo de Almagro and Brazilian team Flamengo. The first leg was hosted by Flamengo at Maracanã Stadium in Rio de Janeiro on 22 November 2017, while the second leg was hosted by San Lorenzo at its own venue, Estadio Pedro Bidegain in Buenos Aires on 24 January 2002.[2]

The second leg had originally been scheduled for December 19, but it had to be postponed to January 24, 2002 due to social unrest in Argentina.[3]

After both matches ended tied on 90 minutes (0–0 the fist game and 1–1 the second one), the winner was decided by penalty shoot-out, with San Lorenzo winning the series 4–3 and also winning its first international title organised by CONMEBOL (the first international had been in 1927 when San Lorenzo won Copa Aldao, organised by Argentine and Uruguayan Associations together).[4] Goalkeeper Sebastián Saja was one of the keyplayers of the final, after stopping two penalties and converting one himself in the shoot-out,[3] while Diego Capria kicked (and scored) the last penalty to make San Lorenzo win the series.[5]

Teams

Team Previous finals appearances (bold indicates winners)
Argentina San Lorenzo None
Brazil Flamengo 1 (1999)

Venues

Format

The finals were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis, with the higher-seeded team hosting the second leg. If tied on aggregate, neither the away goals rule nor 30 minutes of extra time would be used. Instead, the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner.

Matches

First leg

Flamengo Brazil0–0Argentina San Lorenzo
Referee: Paraguay Epifanio González
Flamengo
San Lorenzo
GK 1 Brazil Júlio César
DF 2 Brazil Alessandro downward-facing red arrow 85'
DF 3 Brazil Juan
DF 13 Brazil Fernanddo
DF 6 Brazil Cassio
MF 5 Brazil Leandro Ávila
MF 15 Brazil Jorginho
MF 9 Brazil Rocha
MF 7 Brazil Beto
MF 10 Serbia Dejan Petković downward-facing red arrow 33'
FW 11 Brazil Edílson
FW 8 Brazil Reinaldo
Substitutes:
MF 19 Brazil Roma upward-facing green arrow 33'
DF 14 Brazil Bruno Carvalho upward-facing green arrow 85'
Manager:
Brazil Carlos Alberto Torres
GK 1 Argentina Sebastián Saja
DF 17 Argentina Juan José Serrizuela
DF 2 Argentina Horacio Ameli
DF 6 Argentina Diego Capria
DF 4 Argentina Aldo Paredes
MF 22 Argentina Cristian Zurita downward-facing red arrow 61'
MF 5 Argentina Pablo Michelini
MF 11 Argentina Walter Erviti
MF 10 Argentina Leandro Romagnoli downward-facing red arrow 87'
MF 8 Argentina Guillermo Franco downward-facing red arrow 78'
FW 9 Argentina Bernardo Romeo
Substitutes:
MF 21 Argentina Lucas Pusineri upward-facing green arrow 61'
MF 19 Argentina Mario Santana upward-facing green arrow 78'
FW 19 Argentina Lucio Filomeno upward-facing green arrow 87'
Manager:
Chile Manuel Pellegrini

Second leg

San Lorenzo Argentina1–1Brazil Flamengo
Estévez 67' Report Leandro Machado 10'
Penalties
Acosta soccer ball with red X
Serrizuela soccer ball with red X
Romagnoli soccer ball with check mark
Pusineri soccer ball with check mark
Saja soccer ball with check mark
Capria soccer ball with check mark
4–3 soccer ball with red X Juan
soccer ball with check mark Petkovic
soccer ball with check mark Andrezinho
soccer ball with red X Cássio
soccer ball with check mark Edson
soccer ball with red X Roma
Attendance: 40,000
Referee: Colombia Oscar Ruíz
San Lorenzo
Flamengo
GK 1 Argentina Sebastián Saja
DF 17 Argentina Juan José Serrizuela
DF 2 Argentina Horacio Ameli
DF 6 Argentina Diego Capria
DF 4 Argentina Aldo Paredes
MF 8 Argentina Guillermo Franco
MF 5 Argentina Pablo Michelini
MF 11 Argentina Walter Erviti
MF 10 Argentina Leandro Romagnoli
FW 7 Argentina Raúl Estévez
FW 20 Argentina Alberto Acosta
Manager:
Chile Manuel Pellegrini
GK 1 Brazil Júlio César
DF 30 Brazil Edson
DF 3 Brazil Juan
DF 13 Brazil Fernanddo
DF 6 Brazil Cassio
MF 5 Brazil Leandro Ávila
MF 15 Brazil Jorginho
MF 9 Brazil Rocha
MF 10 Serbia Dejan Petković
FW 18 Brazil Roma
FW 17 Brazil Leandro Machado
Manager:
Brazil Carlos Alberto Torres
Copa Mercosur
2001 Winner
Argentina
San Lorenzo
First title

References

  1. ^ "Copa Mercosur 2001" by José Carluccio on Historia y Fútbol
  2. ^ Copa Mercosur 2001 by Miguel Alvim Gonzalez and Juan Pablo Andrés on the RSSSF
  3. ^ a b A 18 años del primer festejo internacional by Bautista Ordóñez on Olé, 24 Jan 2020
  4. ^ Títulos: Copa Mercosur 2001 on San Lorenzo website
  5. ^ San Lorenzo campeón Copa Mercosur 2001 on El Gráfico, 24 Jan 2012