The 1996 Copa de Oro was the third and last Copa de Oro, a football competition for the reigning champions of CONMEBOL's Copa Libertadores, the Supercopa Libertadores, the Copa CONMEBOL, and the Copa Master de CONMEBOL; the latter competition replaced the berth taken by the winners of the Copa Master de Supercopa. It took place in Manaus, Brazil from August 13 to August 16.[1]

1996 Copa de Oro
1996 Copa de Oro Nicolás Leoz
1996 Copa de Ouro Nicolás Leoz
Tournament details
Host countryBrazil
CityManaus
DatesAugust 13 - August 16
Teams4 (from 1 confederation)
Venue(s)1 (in 1 host city)
Final positions
ChampionsBrazil Flamengo (1st title)
Runners-upBrazil São Paulo
Tournament statistics
Matches played3
Goals scored10 (3.33 per match)
Top scorer(s)Brazil Sávio (3 goals)
1995

It was the first and only time the competition was hosted by a single nation and all the matches were played at the Vivaldão. The competition was contested by Grêmio, winners of the 1995 Copa Libertadores, Flamengo, runners-up of the 1995 Supercopa Libertadores, Rosario Central, winners of the 1995 Copa CONMEBOL, and São Paulo, winners of the 1996 Copa Master de Conmebol. Independiente, winners of the previous Supercopa Libertadores, declined to participate as they had in 1995.

In the semifinals, Flamengo defeated Rosario Central 2-1, while São Paulo dispatched Grêmio by the same score. In the final, Flamengo beat São Paulo by 3-1 and won the last Copa de Oro title.

Participating teams edit

Team Honor
  Grêmio Winners of the 1995 Copa Libertadores
  Flamengo Runners-up of the 1995 Supercopa Libertadores
  Rosario Central Winners of the 1995 Copa CONMEBOL
  São Paulo Winners of the 1996 Copa Master de CONMEBOL

Knockout bracket edit

Semifinals Final
      
1   Flamengo 2
4   Rosario Central 1
  Flamengo 3
  São Paulo 1
3   São Paulo 2
2   Grêmio 1

Semifinals edit

Flamengo  2 – 1  Rosario Central
Baiano   7', 63' Montoya   10'

São Paulo  2 – 1  Grêmio
Adriano   52'
Müller   59'
Emerson   63'

Final edit

Flamengo  3 – 1  São Paulo
Sávio   16' (pen.), 57', 82' Aristizábal   33'
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Flamengo
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
São Paulo
GK 1   Roger
RB 2   Paulo César
CB 3   Fabiano
CB 4   Ronaldão (c)
LB 6   Gilberto
DM 7   Márcio Costa
DM 5   Alejandro Mancuso
AM 11   Fábio Baiano   68'   70'
AM 9   Nélio   87'
FW 8   Marques
FW 10   Sávio
Substitutes:
MF 15   Iranildo   70'
DF 14   Athirson   87'
Manager:
  Joel Santana
GK 1   Rogério Ceni
RB 2   Luisinho Netto
CB 3   Pedro Luís (c)   64'
CB 4   Bordon
LB 6   Guilherme   60'
DM 8   Edmílson   13'
DM 5   Belletti   72'
AM 10   Sandoval   64'
AM 11   André Luiz
FW 7   Víctor Aristizábal
FW 9   Valdir   64'
Substitutes:
MF 16   Fábio Mello   72'
MF 15   Adriano   64'
FW 17   França   64'
Manager:
  Carlos Alberto Parreira

Top goalscorers edit

3 goals
2 goals
1 goal

References edit

  1. ^ "TÍTULOS INTERNACIONAIS". Fla Estatistica. Archived from the original on 2011-07-26. Retrieved June 1, 2010.

External links edit