Jump to content

Campeonato Internacional de Verano

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Fadesga (talk | contribs) at 00:05, 4 August 2013. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Campeonato Internacional de Verano
Founded2009
RegionSouth America (CONMEBOL)
Number of teams4
Current championsUruguay Peñarol
Most successful team(s)Uruguay Nacional
(2 titles)
WebsiteCopa Bimbo
2012 Copa Bimbo

The Campeonato Internacional de Verano, also known under its sponsored name Copa Bimbo, is an international exhibition football competition hosted in Montevideo, Uruguay since 2009. It features four teams: Uruguay's two major teams Nacional and Peñarol, and guest teams from Argentina (in 2011), Brazil (in 2009) and Paraguay (in 2010 and 2011). All matches are played at the Estadio Centenario in Montevideo, the home stadium of the Uruguayan national team and the host of the 1930 FIFA World Cup Final. The tournament is produced and televised by Uruguayan telecommunications company Tenfield, and is sponsored by the Mexican bakery and food corporation Grupo Bimbo.

The 2009 tournament was won by Brazilian club Cruzeiro, and the 2010 and 2011 edition was won by Uruguayan club Nacional.

Results

Year Final Third Place Venue
Winner Score Runner-up Third place Score Fourth place
2009 Cruzeiro Brazil 4 – 1 Uruguay Nacional Atlético Mineiro Brazil 4 – 1 Uruguay Peñarol Estadio Centenario,
Montevideo
2010 Nacional Uruguay 1 – 1
(3 – 1 pens.)
Uruguay Danubio Nacional Paraguay 2 – 2
(3 – 1 pens.)
Uruguay Peñarol Estadio Centenario,
Montevideo
2011 Nacional Uruguay 2 – 2
(5 – 3 pens.)
Paraguay Libertad Peñarol Uruguay 2 – 2
(4 – 2 pens.)
Argentina Vélez Sársfield Estadio Centenario,
Montevideo
2012 Peñarol Uruguay 4 – 2 Chile Palestino Nacional Uruguay 2 – 1 Peru Universidad San Martín Estadio Centenario,
Montevideo

Honours

Year Top Goalscorer Winning Manager Best Player
2009 Brazil Diego Tardelli (Atlético Mineiro)
(3 goals)
Brazil Adílson Dias Batista (Cruzeiro) Brazil Ramires (Cruzeiro)
2010 Uruguay Diego Ifrán (Danubio)
Uruguay Diego Perrone (Danubio)
Paraguay Ricardo Mazacote (Nacional (PAR))
(2 goals each)
Uruguay Eduardo Mario Acevedo (Nacional) Argentina Ángel Morales (Nacional)
2011 Australia Richard Porta (Nacional)
(2 goals)
Uruguay Juan Ramón Carrasco (Nacional) Uruguay Sebastián Coates (Nacional)
2012 Uruguay Emiliano Albín (Peñarol)
Uruguay Santiago Silva (Peñarol)
Chile David Llanos (Palestino) (2 goals each)
Uruguay Gregorio Pérez (Peñarol) Uruguay Alejandro González (Peñarol)

Performances by team

Team Winners Runners-Up Third Fourth
Uruguay Nacional 2 (2010, 2011) 1 (2009) 1 (2012)
Uruguay Peñarol 1 (2012) 1 (2011) 2 (2009, 2010)
Brazil Cruzeiro 1 (2009)
Chile Palestino 1 (2012)
Paraguay Libertad 1 (2011)
Uruguay Danubio 1 (2010)
Brazil Atlético Mineiro 1 (2009)
Paraguay Nacional 1 (2010)
Peru Universidad San Martín 1 (2012)
Argentina Vélez Sársfield 1 (2011)

Performances by country

Nation Winners Runners-Up Third Fourth
Uruguay Uruguay 3 (2010, 2011, 2012) 2 (2009, 2010) 2 (2011, 2012) 2 (2009, 2010)
Brazil Brazil 1 (2009) 1 (2009)
Paraguay Paraguay 1 (2011) 1 (2010)
Chile Chile 1 (2012)
Peru Peru 1 (2012)
Argentina Argentina 1 (2011)

References