1966 Copa Libertadores

1966 Copa Libertadores
1966 Copa Libertadores de América
1966 Copa Libertadores da América
Tournament details
Dates February 5 - April 15
Teams 17 (from 8 confederations)
Final positions
Champions Peñarol (3rd title)
Runners-up River Plate
Tournament statistics
Matches played 95
Goals scored 283 (2.98 per match)
Top scorer(s) Daniel Onega (17 goals)
1965
1967

The 1966 Copa Libertadores de América was the seventh edition of the Copa Libertadores, the premier South American club football tournament, organized by CONMEBOL. Colombia and Brazil did not send the representatives. This became the first edition to carry, officially, the name "Copa Libertadores". Also, this edition became the first club competition of the world to include the runners-up of each of its participating associattion. Despite the fact that Colombian and Brazilian clubs did not participate, this tournament saw a record 95 matches being played out to determine this year's champion.

Colombia did not send a representative due to the disaggreements between CONMEBOL and the Colombian football federations, ADEFútbol and FEDEBOL. The Brazilians protested the inclusion of the runners-up of each nation and argued that the tournament should be reserved for national champions. that led them to become denatured and the powers reserved only for the champions, in addition to the priority order they gave their inter state tournaments and the many unattractive ecounters-to-come against teams from the "Pacific", the Brazilian clubs opted for tours around the world instead as they were seen more economically rewarding. Not having any economic incentives, CONMEBOL was forced to allow clubs the freedom of whether they participated or not. This trend will continue for the next 5 editions.

After winning each of their home legs, Peñarol and River Plate required a playoff to break the deadlock. The match was played in the Estadio Nacional of Santiago, Chile. River Plate will finish the first half 2-0 and was in cruise control towards its first title. Incredibly, the manyas managed to revert the disadvantage to push this match into extra time. With two more goals, the final score of 2-4 meant that Peñarol became the first three-time winners of the competition. The spectacular collapse of River Plate in the second half led the club to being known, even now, as the "gallinas".

Contents

Qualified teams

Country Team Qualification method
CONMEBOL
1 berth
Independiente 1965 Copa de Campeones winners
 Argentina
1 berth
Boca Juniors 1965 Primera División champion
River Plate 1965 Primera División runner-up
 Bolivia
1 berth
Deportivo Municipal 1965 Copa Simón Bolívar champion
Jorge Wilstermann 1965 Copa Simón Bolívar runner-up
 Chile
1 berth
Universidad de Chile 1965 Primera División champion
Universidad Católica 1965 Primera División runner-up
 Ecuador
1 berth
Emelec 1965 Campeonato Ecuatoriano de Fútbol champion
9 de Octubre 1965 Campeonato Ecuatoriano de Fútbol runner-up
Paraguay
1 berth
Olimpia 1965 Primera División champion
Guaraní 1965 Primera División runner-up
 Peru
1 berth
Alianza Lima 1964 Primera División champion
Universitario 1964 Primera División runner-up
 Uruguay
1 berth
Peñarol 1964 Primera División champion
Nacional 1964 Primera División runner-up
 Venezuela
1 berth
Deportivo Lara 1965 Venezuelan Primera División champion
Deportivo Italia 1965 Venezuelan Primera División runner-up

Tie-breaking criteria

At each stage of the tournament teams receive 2 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, and no points for a loss. If two or more teams are equal on points, the following criteria will be applied to determine the ranking in the group stage:

  1. a one-game playoff;
  2. superior goal difference;
  3. draw of lots.

First round

Sixteen teams were drawn into two groups of six and one group of four. In each group, teams played against each other home-and-away. The top two teams in each group advanced to the Semifinals. Independiente, the title holders, had a bye to the next round.

Group 1

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
River Plate 10 8 1 1 23 8 +15 17
Boca Juniors 10 7 0 3 19 9 +10 14
Universitario 10 4 3 3 10 13 -3 11
Deportivo Italia 10 4 2 4 15 18 -3 10
Alianza Lima 10 2 0 8 9 16 -7 4
Deportivo Lara 10 1 2 7 5 17 -12 4

Group 2

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
Universidad Católica 6 2 3 1 9 5 +4 7
Guaraní 6 2 2 2 9 9 0 6
Olimpia 6 2 2 2 7 10 -3 6
Universidad de Chile 6 1 3 2 6 7 -1 5

Group 3

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
Peñarol 10 8 0 2 20 10 +10 16
Nacional 10 7 1 2 22 10 +12 15
Jorge Wilstermann 10 4 2 4 14 14 0 10
Deportivo Municipal 10 4 1 5 21 22 -1 9
Emelec 10 4 0 6 15 18 -3 8
9 de Octubre 10 1 0 9 13 31 -18 2

Semifinals

Seven teams were drawn into two groups, one of our and the other of three. In each group, teams played against each other home-and-away. The top team in each group advanced to the Finals.

Group A

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
River Plate 6 3 2 1 13 8 +5 8
Independiente 6 3 2 1 9 6 +3 8
Boca Juniors 6 2 3 1 7 6 +1 7
Guaraní 6 0 1 5 5 14 -9 1

Group B

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
Peñarol 4 3 0 1 6 1 +5 6
Universidad Católica 4 2 0 2 4 5 -1 4
Nacional 4 1 0 3 3 7 -4 2

Finals

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
Peñarol 2 1 0 1 4 3 +1 2
River Plate 2 1 0 1 3 4 -1 2
May 12, 1966
Peñarol 2–0 River Plate Estadio Centenario, Montevideo
Attendance: 46,041
Referee: Roberto Goicoechea (Argentina)
Abbadie  74'
Joya  84'

May 18, 1966
River Plate 3–2 Peñarol Estadio Antonio V. Liberti, Buenos Aires
Attendance: 100,000
Referee: José María Codesal (Uruguay)
D. Onega  37'
Sarnari  56'
E. Onega  69'
Rocha  35'
Spencer  53'

May 20, 1966
Playoff
River Plate 2–4 (a.e.t.) Peñarol Estadio Nacional, Santiago
Attendance: 40,240
Referee: Claudio Vicuña (Chile)
D. Onega  27'
E. Onega  42'
Spencer  65'102'
Matosas  71' (o.g.)
Rocha  109'

Champion

Copa Libertadores
1966 Champion

Peñarol
Third Title

Top goalscorers

Pos Player Team Goals
1 Daniel Onega River Plate 17
2 Pedro Rocha Peñarol 10
3 Alfredo Hugo Rojas Boca Juniors 7
Julio César Morales Nacional 7
Orlando Virgili Nacional 7
Agostino Nitti Deportivo Italia 7
Salomón Moyano Deportivo Municipal 7
Gerardo González Olimpia 7
Hugo Lencina Emelec 7
Cirilo Fernández 9 de Octubre 7
Ausberto García Jorge Wilstermann 7

Footnotes

A. ^ The match finished 1-1, but Universitario were declared 0-1 winners as Alianza fielded two ineligible players: Catalá and Cruz.

External links