Copa Argentina

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 186.133.189.119 (talk) at 03:10, 2 December 2016 (→‎Champions). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Copa Argentina
File:Copa Argentina logo.png
Founded1969
2011 (re-established)
RegionArgentina
Number of teams261 (2013-14 Edition)
Current championsBoca Juniors
Most successful club(s)Boca Juniors (3 titles)
Television broadcastersMetro
TyC Sports
DIRECTV Sports
SporTV (some matches)
2015–16

The Copa Argentina (English: Argentine Cup), officially known as the "Copa Argentina Sancor Seguros" due to sponsorship reasons, is an official tournament organized by Argentine Football Association (AFA), with the aim of qualifying one club to the Copa Libertadores. The first editions of the championship were contested by teams in Primera División that did not earn eligibility to participate in the Copa Libertadores of the following year, and by the best clubs in the regional leagues.

The tournament was re-launched in 2011, with teams of all divisions that form the Argentine football league system taking part of the championship.[1][2]

Boca Juniors is the most successful team with three titles, (1969, 2012 and 2015).

History

A new international competition, Copa Ganadores de Copa, would be held by CONMEBOL in 1970 as the South American equivalence of UEFA Cup Winners' Cup. AFA thus started a cup competition, the Copa Argentina, in 1969 and the winner would qualify for the Copa Ganadores de Copa 1970.

The competition was contested by 32 teams using a two-legged elimination format. Two points were awarded for winning a leg, one for a draw and null for a loss. The teams having more points would qualify to the next round. If both teams had same numbers of point, it would be determined by the total number of goals, total number of goals conceded, and penalty shootout accordingly.

First edition: 1969

All teams in the Primera División Argentina participated the competition with some top teams from the regional leagues, except teams that had already qualified to the Copa Libertadores, namely, Vélez Sársfield and River Plate, the winners and runners-up of 1968 Nacional respectively, and Estudiantes de La Plata, the champions of 1968 Copa Libertadores.[3]

Boca Juniors and Atlanta entered the final. Boca won the tournament by defeating Atlanta 3-2 on aggregate after two matches were played.

However, as Boca later won the 1969 Nacional and qualified to the 1970 Copa Libertadores, Atlanta qualified to the 1970 "Copa Ganadores de Copa" as the runner-up.[3]

Second edition: 1970

Apart from teams that had got the Copa Libertadores eligibility, namely Boca Juniors and River Plate, the champions and runners-up of Nacional 1969, and Estudiantes de La Plata, who won the Copa Libertadores 1969, all clubs in the Primera División Argentina participated this competition. The champions of Primera B, Ferro, also took part in the tournament, along with 13 top clubs from regional leagues.[4]

Copa Argentina 1970 never finished. 32 teams played the competition and San Lorenzo and Vélez Sársfield entered the final. The tournament had been lasting for a long period in that year. Starting in March 1970, the first leg of the final was played in March 1971. At that time, the Copa Ganadores de Copa, which the winner of Copa Argentina would be qualifying for, had already started. Moreover, as Huracán Buceo and Deportes Concepción, the two other team in the same group with the Argentine representative in the Copa Ganadores de Copa, had not confirmed their participation, so the organizer announced the Copa Ganadores de Copa would become a friendly tournament.[5] Therefore, after the first leg of the Copa Argentina final was held, which the teams drew 2-2, the second leg was never played. No Argentine teams participated in the Copa Ganadores de Copa 1971.

Relaunch

The reschedule of the Copa Argentina -officialized in 2011-[6] includes 186 teams of 7 divisions of the Argentine football league system in a knock-out system competition. All the matches are disputed in neutral locations. The teams of the first division are included in rounds of 32. The champion of the tournament will qualify for the next edition of Copa Sudamericana.

For the relaunching of the tournament, a new trophy was designed. The cup, made of aluminium, was manufactured at the Norberto Ambrosetti factory of Lobos, Buenos Aires.[7]

The 2012 final between Boca and Racing was scheduled many times due to fixture congestion. The match was finally played on August 8, 2012, at the Estadio del Bicentenario in San Juan.[8] Boca Juniors won its second trophy after defeating Racing Club by 2-1.[9]

The 2012–13 Copa Argentina was scheduled to begin October 23, 2012 in a new two-phase knock-out competition.[10] Arsenal defeated San Lorenzo and won its first trophy of this competition.

The 2013–14 Copa Argentina began in October 30, 2013

Champions

The following is the list with the finals played:

Year Champion Scores Runner-up
1969 Boca Juniors 3–1, 0–1 Atlanta
1970
(Not finished, no champion crowned) 1
2011–12 Boca Juniors 2–1 Racing
2012–13 Arsenal 3–0 San Lorenzo
2013–14 Huracán 0–0 (5–4 p) Rosario Central
2014–15 Boca Juniors 2–0 Rosario Central
2015–16 River Plate/Rosario Central TBA River Plate/Rosario Central

Notes:

  • 1 San Lorenzo and Vélez Sarsfield qualified to play the finals. The first match ended 2–2, and the second leg was never played so there was not a champion.

Titles by club

Club Titles Years won
Boca Juniors 3 1969, 2011–12, 2014–15
Arsenal 1 2012–13
Huracán 1 2013–14

Broadcasters Rights

All matches are broadcast on TyC Alternative Signal (before TyC Max) vía Channels 3 (Basic and Digital SD) and 600 (Digital HD)

References

External links