List of Supercopa Sudamericana winners

The Supercopa Sudamericana was a seasonal association football competition that was established in 1988. It was usually contested between August and December. The Supercopa Sudamericana was opened to the past winners of Copa Libertadores; Vasco da Gama, winners of the Copa de Campeones tournament held in 1948, was later allowed to participate. Nearly every phase of the competition was contested over two legs, one at each participating club's stadium. Racing Club won the inaugural competition in 1988, defeating Cruzeiro 4-1 on points.

Cruzeiro, alongside Independiente, hold the record for the most victories, with two wins each since the competition's inception. They are also the only teams to have won the competition consecutively. Overall, eight different clubs have won the competition since its inception in 1988 until it folded in 1997 to give room for other competitions. Clubs from Argentina have won the most Supercopa Sudamerica titles, with six wins among them. Brazilian teams are second with three victories, and Paraguay are third with a lone triumph.

Contents

Key

# Finals decided on goal aggregate
* Finals decided by a penalty shootout
Bold Indicates the winner in two-legged finals
Year Each link is the relevant Supercopa Sudamericana article for that year

Finals

Year Country Home team Score Away team Country Venue Location Refs
1988  ARG Racing 2–1 Cruzeiro  BRA Estadio Juan D. Perón Avellaneda, Argentina [1]
 BRA Cruzeiro 1–1 Racing  ARG Mineirão Belo Horizonte, Brazil
Racing won 4–1 on points
1989  ARG Boca Juniors 0–0 Independiente  ARG Estadio Camilo Cichero Buenos Aires, Argentina [2]
 ARG Independiente 0–0 Boca Juniors  ARG La Doble Visera Avellaneda, Argentina
2–2 on points and 0–0 on goal difference; Boca Juniors won 3–5 in a penalty shootout *
1990  URU Nacional 0–3 Olimpia  PAR Estadio Centenario Montevideo, Uruguay [3]
 PAR Olimpia 3–3 Nacional  URU Estadio Defensores del Chaco Asunción, Paraguay
Olimpia won 4–1 on points
1991  ARG River Plate 2–0 Cruzeiro  BRA Estadio Antonio V. Liberti Buenos Aires, Argentina [4]
 BRA Cruzeiro 3–0 River Plate  ARG Mineirão Belo Horizonte, Brazil
3–3 on points; Cruzeiro won 3–2 on aggregate
1992  BRA Cruzeiro 4–0 Racing  ARG Mineirão Belo Horizonte, Brazil [4]
 ARG Racing 1–0 Cruzeiro  BRA Estadio Juan D. Perón Avellaneda, Argentina
3–3 on points; Cruzeiro won 4–1 on aggregate
1993  BRA Flamengo 2–2 São Paulo  BRA Estádio do Maracanã Rio de Janeiro, Brazil [5]
 BRA São Paulo 2–2 Flamengo  BRA Estádio do Morumbi São Paulo, Brazil
2–2 on points and 4–4 on aggregate; São Paulo won 5–4 in a penalty shootout *
1994  ARG Boca Juniors 1–1 Independiente  ARG Estadio Camilo Cichero Buenos Aires, Argentina [6]
 ARG Independiente 2–1 Boca Juniors  ARG La Doble Visera Avellaneda, Argentina
Independiente won 4–1 on points
1995  ARG Independiente 2–0 Flamengo  BRA La Doble Visera Avellaneda, Argentina [6]
 BRA Flamengo 1–0 Independiente  ARG Estádio do Maracanã Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
3–3 on points; Independiente won 2–1 on aggregate
1996  BRA Cruzeiro 0–1 Vélez Sarsfield  ARG Mineirão Belo Horizonte, Brazil [7]
 ARG Vélez Sarsfield 2–0 Cruzeiro  BRA Estádio do Morumbi São Paulo, Brazil
Vélez Sarsfield won 6–0 on points
1997  BRA São Paulo 0–0 River Plate  ARG Estadio Morumbi São Paulo, Brazil [8]
 ARG River Plate 2–1 São Paulo  BRA Estadio Antonio V. Liberti Buenos Aires, Argentina
River Plate won 4–1 on points

Performances

By club

Team Winner Runner-up Years won Years runner-up
Cruzeiro 2 2 1991, 1992 1988, 1996
Independiente 2 1 1994, 1995 1989
Racing 1 1 1988 1992
Boca Juniors 1 1 1989 1994
São Paulo 1 1 1993 1997
River Plate 1 1 1997 1991
Olimpia 1 0 1990
Vélez Sársfield 1 0 1996
Flamengo 0 2
1993, 1995
Nacional 0 1
1990

Performance by country

Country Winners Runners-Up Winning Clubs Runners-Up
 Argentina 6 4 Independiente (2), Racing (1), Boca Juniors (1), River Plate (1), Vélez Sársfield (1) Independiente (1), River Plate (1), Racing Club (1), Boca Juniors (1)
 Brazil 3 5 Cruzeiro (2), São Paulo (1) Cruzeiro (2), Flamengo (2), São Paulo (1)
 Paraguay 1 0 Olimpia (1)
 Uruguay 0 1
Nacional (1)

See also

References

External links