2013 Copa Libertadores













































2013 Copa Libertadores de América

2013 Copa Bridgestone Libertadores de América
2013 Copa Bridgestone Libertadores da América
Tournament details
Dates January 22 – July 24, 2013
Teams 38 (from 11 associations)
Final positions
Champions
Brazil Atlético Mineiro (1st title)
Runners-up
Paraguay Olimpia
Tournament statistics
Matches played 138
Goals scored 345 (2.5 per match)
Attendance 3,425,911 (24,825 per match)
Top scorer(s)
Brazil Jô (7 goals)

← 2012


2014 →


The 2013 Copa Libertadores de América (officially the 2013 Copa Bridgestone Libertadores for sponsorship reasons)[1] was the 54th edition of the Copa Libertadores de América, South America's premier international club football tournament organized by CONMEBOL. Corinthians were the defending champions but were knocked out of the tournament by Boca Juniors in the round of 16.


For the fourth year in a row, the title was won by a Brazilian club, with Atlético Mineiro beating Paraguayan club Olimpia on penalties in the finals to win their first title.[2] By winning the competition, Atlético Mineiro won the right to play in the 2013 FIFA Club World Cup and the 2014 Recopa Sudamericana.[3]




Contents






  • 1 Qualified teams


  • 2 Draw


  • 3 Schedule


  • 4 First stage


  • 5 Second stage


    • 5.1 Group 1


    • 5.2 Group 2


    • 5.3 Group 3


    • 5.4 Group 4


    • 5.5 Group 5


    • 5.6 Group 6


    • 5.7 Group 7


    • 5.8 Group 8




  • 6 Knockout stages


    • 6.1 Seeding


    • 6.2 Bracket


    • 6.3 Round of 16


    • 6.4 Quarterfinals


    • 6.5 Semifinals


    • 6.6 Finals




  • 7 Top goalscorers


  • 8 See also


  • 9 References


  • 10 External links





Qualified teams


The following teams qualified for the tournament.


































































































































































































Association
Team (Berth)
Entry stage
Qualification method

Argentina Argentina
5 berths

Arsenal (Argentina 1)

Second stage

2012 Clausura champion[4]

Vélez Sarsfield (Argentina 2)

2012 Torneo Inicial champion[4]

Newell's Old Boys (Argentina 3)

2012 tournaments aggregate table best team not yet qualified[4]

Boca Juniors (Argentina 4)

2012 tournaments aggregate table 2nd best team not yet qualified[4]

Tigre (Argentina 5)

First stage

2012 Copa Sudamericana best Argentine team not yet qualified[4]

Bolivia Bolivia
3 berths

The Strongest (Bolivia 1)

Second stage

2012 Clausura champion and 2012 Apertura champion[5][6][7]

San José (Bolivia 2)

2012 Clausura runner-up and 2012 Apertura runner-up[5][6][7]

Bolívar (Bolivia 3)

First stage

Playoff winner between 2012 Clausura 3rd place and 2012 Apertura 3rd place[5][6][7]

Brazil Brazil
5 + 1 berths

Corinthians (Brazil 1; Title holders)

Second stage

2012 Copa Libertadores champion

Fluminense (Brazil 2)

2012 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A champion[8]

Palmeiras (Brazil 3)

2012 Copa do Brasil champion[8]

Atlético Mineiro (Brazil 4)

2012 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A runner-up[8]

Grêmio (Brazil 5)

First stage

2012 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A 3rd place[8]

São Paulo (Brazil 6)

2012 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A 4th place[8] and 2012 Copa Sudamericana champion

Chile Chile
3 berths

Universidad de Chile (Chile 1)

Second stage

2012 Apertura champion[9]

Huachipato (Chile 2)

2012 Clausura champion[9]

Iquique (Chile 3)

First stage

2012 Primera División aggregate table best team not yet qualified[9]

Colombia Colombia
3 berths

Santa Fe (Colombia 1)

Second stage

2012 Apertura champion[10]

Millonarios (Colombia 2)

2012 Finalización champion[10]

Deportes Tolima (Colombia 3)

First stage

2012 Primera A aggregate table best team not yet qualified[10]

Ecuador Ecuador
3 berths

Barcelona (Ecuador 1)

Second stage

2012 Serie A champion[11]

Emelec (Ecuador 2)

2012 Serie A second-place playoffs winner[11]

LDU Quito (Ecuador 3)

First stage

2012 Serie A second-place playoffs loser[11]

Mexico Mexico
(CONCACAF)
3 invitees


Toluca (Mexico 1)

Second stage

2012 Apertura classification phase best team not qualified for 2012–13 CONCACAF Champions League

Tijuana (Mexico 2)

2012 Apertura classification phase 2nd best team not qualified for 2012–13 CONCACAF Champions League

León (Mexico 3)

First stage

2012 Apertura classification phase 3rd best team not qualified for 2012–13 CONCACAF Champions League

Paraguay Paraguay
3 berths

Libertad (Paraguay 1)

Second stage

2012 Primera División tournament champion with better record in aggregate table[12]

Cerro Porteño (Paraguay 2)

2012 Primera División tournament champion with worse record in aggregate table[12]

Olimpia (Paraguay 3)

First stage

2012 Primera División aggregate table best team not yet qualified[12]

Peru Peru
3 berths

Sporting Cristal (Peru 1)

Second stage

2012 Descentralizado champion[13]

Real Garcilaso (Peru 2)

2012 Descentralizado runner-up[13]

Universidad César Vallejo (Peru 3)

First stage

2012 Descentralizado aggregate table best team not yet qualified[13]

Uruguay Uruguay
3 berths

Nacional (Uruguay 1)

Second stage

2011–12 Primera División champion[14]

Peñarol (Uruguay 2)

2011–12 Primera División runner-up[14]

Defensor Sporting (Uruguay 3)

First stage

2011–12 Primera División aggregate table best team not yet qualified[14]

Venezuela Venezuela
3 berths

Deportivo Lara (Venezuela 1)

Second stage

2011–12 Primera División champion[15]

Caracas (Venezuela 2)

2011–12 Primera División runner-up[15]

Deportivo Anzoátegui (Venezuela 3)

First stage

2011–12 Primera División aggregate table best team not yet qualified[15]


Draw




2013 Copa Libertadores is located in South America

Arsenal Boca Juniors Tigre Vélez Sarsfield


Arsenal
Boca Juniors
Tigre
Vélez Sarsfield



Newell's Old Boys

Newell's Old Boys



Bolívar The Strongest


Bolívar
The Strongest



San José

San José



Corinthians Palmeiras São Paulo


Corinthians
Palmeiras
São Paulo



Fluminense

Fluminense



Atl. Mineiro

Atl. Mineiro



Grêmio

Grêmio



U. de Chile

U. de Chile



Huachipato

Huachipato



Iquique

Iquique



Millonarios Santa Fe


Millonarios
Santa Fe



Dep. Tolima

Dep. Tolima



Barcelona Emelec


Barcelona
Emelec



LDU Quito

LDU Quito



Cerro Porteño Libertad Olimpia


Cerro Porteño
Libertad
Olimpia



Sp. Cristal

Sp. Cristal



Real Garcilaso

Real Garcilaso



U. César Vallejo

U. César Vallejo



Defensor Sporting Nacional Peñarol


Defensor Sporting
Nacional
Peñarol



Dep. Lara

Dep. Lara



Caracas

Caracas



Dep. Anzoátegui

Dep. Anzoátegui




Location of teams of the 2013 Copa Libertadores from South America.




2013 Copa Libertadores is located in Mexico

Toluca

Toluca



Tijuana

Tijuana



León

León




Location of teams of the 2013 Copa Libertadores from Mexico.


The draw of the tournament was held on 21 December 2012 in Luque, Paraguay.[16][17]


For the first stage, the 12 teams were drawn into six ties containing a team from Pot 1 and a team from Pot 2, with the former hosting the second leg in three ties, and the latter hosting the second leg in the other three ties. The seeding of each team was determined by which associations reached the furthest stage in the previous Copa Libertadores.[3]











Pot 1
Pot 2

Argentina Tigre
Brazil Grêmio
Brazil São Paulo
Chile Iquique
Colombia Deportes Tolima
Paraguay Olimpia



Bolivia Bolívar
Ecuador LDU Quito
Mexico León
Peru Universidad César Vallejo
Uruguay Defensor Sporting
Venezuela Deportivo Anzoátegui



For the second stage, the 32 teams were drawn into eight groups of four containing one team from each of the four seeding pots. The seeding of each team was determined by their association and qualifying berth (as per the rotational agreement established by CONMEBOL, the teams which qualified through berths 1 from Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Venezuela were seeded into Pot 1 for odd-numbered years, while the teams which qualified through berths 1 from Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay were seeded into Pot 1 for even-numbered years).[3] Teams from the same association in Pots 1 and 3 could not be drawn into the same group. However, a first stage winner, whose identity was not known at the time of the draw, could be drawn into the same group with another team from the same association.















Pot 1
Pot 2
Pot 3
Pot 4

Argentina Arsenal
Argentina Vélez Sarsfield
Brazil Corinthians
Brazil Fluminense
Colombia Santa Fe
Ecuador Barcelona
Peru Sporting Cristal
Venezuela Deportivo Lara



Bolivia The Strongest
Bolivia San José
Chile Universidad de Chile
Chile Huachipato
Paraguay Libertad
Paraguay Cerro Porteño
Uruguay Nacional
Uruguay Peñarol



Argentina Newell's Old Boys
Argentina Boca Juniors
Brazil Palmeiras
Brazil Atlético Mineiro
Colombia Millonarios
Ecuador Emelec
Peru Real Garcilaso
Venezuela Caracas



Mexico Toluca
Mexico Tijuana

First stage winner G1

First stage winner G2

First stage winner G3

First stage winner G4

First stage winner G5

First stage winner G6




Schedule


The schedule of the competition was as follows (all dates listed were Wednesdays, but matches may be played on Tuesdays and Thursdays as well).[17]





































Stage
First leg
Second leg
First stage
23 January
January 30
Second stage
13 February, 20, 27
6, 13 March
3, 10, 17 April
Round of 16
24 April
1 May
8, 15 May
Quarterfinals
22 May
May 29
Semifinals
3 July
July 10
Finals
17 July
July 24


First stage



In the first stage, each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If tied on aggregate, the away goals rule was used. If still tied, the penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner (no extra time was played). The winners of each tie advanced to the second stage to join the 26 automatic qualifiers.[3]




















































Team 1

Agg.
Team 2
1st leg
2nd leg

Tigre Argentina
5–1

Venezuela Deportivo Anzoátegui

2–1

3–0

LDU Quito Ecuador
1–1 (4–5 p)

Brazil Grêmio

1–0

0–1

Deportes Tolima Colombia
2–1

Peru Universidad César Vallejo

1–0

1–1

Defensor Sporting Uruguay
0–2

Paraguay Olimpia

0–0

0–2

São Paulo Brazil
8–4

Bolivia Bolívar

5–0

3–4

León Mexico
2–2 (2–4 p)

Chile Iquique

1–1

1–1


Second stage



In the second stage, each group was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis. Each team earned 3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, and 0 points for a loss. If tied on points, the following criteria were used to determine the ranking: 1. Goal difference; 2. Goals scored; 3. Away goals scored; 4. Drawing of lots. The winners and runners-up of each group advanced to the round of 16.[3]



Group 1




































































Team

Pld


W


D


L


GF


GA


GD


Pts


Uruguay Nacional
6
3
1
2
10
6
+4

10

Argentina Boca Juniors
6
3
0
3
7
7
0

9

Mexico Toluca
6
2
2
2
8
11
−3

8

Ecuador Barcelona
6
1
3
2
5
6
−1

6






































 

BAR

BOC

NAC

TOL

Barcelona


1–2

1–0

0–0

Boca Juniors

1–0


0–1

1–2

Nacional

2–2

0–1


4–0

Toluca

1–1

3–2

2–3




Group 2




































































Team

Pld


W


D


L


GF


GA


GD


Pts


Brazil Palmeiras
6
3
0
3
5
5
0

9

Argentina Tigre
6
3
0
3
9
10
−1

9

Paraguay Libertad
6
2
2
2
10
9
+1

8

Peru Sporting Cristal
6
2
2
2
8
8
0

8






































 

LIB

PAL

CRI

TIG

Libertad


2–0

2–2

3–5

Palmeiras

1–0


2–1

2–0

Sporting Cristal

1–1

1–0


2–0

Tigre

0–2

1–0

3–1




Group 3




































































Team

Pld


W


D


L


GF


GA


GD


Pts


Brazil Atlético Mineiro
6
5
0
1
16
9
+7

15

Brazil São Paulo
6
2
1
3
8
8
0

7

Argentina Arsenal
6
2
1
3
10
15
−5

7

Bolivia The Strongest
6
2
0
4
8
10
−2

6






































 

ARS

CAM

SPL

STR

Arsenal


2–5

2–1

2–1

Atlético Mineiro

5–2


2–1

2–1

São Paulo

1–1

2–0


2–1

The Strongest

2–1

1–2

2–1




Group 4




































































Team

Pld


W


D


L


GF


GA


GD


Pts


Argentina Vélez Sarsfield
6
4
1
1
10
3
+7

13

Ecuador Emelec
6
3
1
2
5
4
+1

10

Uruguay Peñarol
6
3
0
3
7
7
0

9

Chile Iquique
6
1
0
5
5
13
−8

3






































 

EME

IQU

PEN

VEL

Emelec


2–1

2–0

1–0

Iquique

2–0


1–2

1–3

Peñarol

1–0

3–0


0–1

Vélez Sarsfield

0–0

3–0

3–1




Group 5




































































Team

Pld


W


D


L


GF


GA


GD


Pts


Brazil Corinthians
6
4
1
1
10
2
+8

13

Mexico Tijuana
6
4
1
1
8
4
+4

13

Bolivia San José
6
1
2
3
5
11
−6

5

Colombia Millonarios
6
1
0
5
2
8
−6

3






































 

COR

MIL

SJO

TIJ

Corinthians


2–0

3–0

3–0

Millonarios

0–1


2–1

0–1

San José

1–1

2–0


1–1

Tijuana

1–0

1–0

4–0




Group 6




































































Team

Pld


W


D


L


GF


GA


GD


Pts


Colombia Santa Fe
6
4
2
0
9
4
+5

14

Peru Real Garcilaso
6
3
1
2
8
7
+1

10

Colombia Deportes Tolima
6
2
2
2
7
5
+2

8

Paraguay Cerro Porteño
6
0
1
5
3
11
−8

1






































 

CEP

TOL

RGA

SFE

Cerro Porteño


0–0

0–1

1–2

Deportes Tolima

2–1


0–1

1–2

Real Garcilaso

5–1

0–3


1–1

Santa Fe

1–0

1–1

2–0




Group 7




































































Team

Pld


W


D


L


GF


GA


GD


Pts


Paraguay Olimpia
6
4
1
1
16
7
+9

13

Argentina Newell's Old Boys
6
3
0
3
11
10
+1

9

Chile Universidad de Chile
6
3
0
3
7
9
−2

9

Venezuela Deportivo Lara
6
1
1
4
8
16
−8

4






































 

LAR

NEW

OLI

UCH

Deportivo Lara


2–1

1–5

2–3

Newell's Old Boys

3–1


3–1

1–2

Olimpia

2–2

4–1


3–0

Universidad de Chile

2–0

0–2

0–1




Group 8




































































Team

Pld


W


D


L


GF


GA


GD


Pts


Brazil Fluminense
6
3
2
1
5
5
0

11

Brazil Grêmio
6
2
2
2
10
6
+4

8

Chile Huachipato
6
2
2
2
10
8
+2

8

Venezuela Caracas
6
2
0
4
6
12
−6

6






































 

CAR

FLU

GRE

HUA

Caracas


0–1

2–1

0–4

Fluminense

1–0


0–3

1–1

Grêmio

4–1

0–0


1–2

Huachipato

1–3

1–2

1–1




Knockout stages



In the knockout stages, the 16 teams played a single-elimination tournament, with the following rules:[3]



  • Each tie was played on a home-and-away two-legged basis, with the higher-seeded team hosting the second leg. However, CONMEBOL required that the second leg of the finals must be played in South America, i.e., a finalist from Mexico must host the first leg regardless of seeding.

  • In the round of 16, quarterfinals, and semifinals, if tied on aggregate, the away goals rule was used. If still tied, the penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner (no extra time was played).

  • In the finals, if tied on aggregate, the away goals rule was not used, and 30 minutes of extra time was played. If still tied after extra time, the penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner.

  • If there were two semifinalists from the same association, they must play each other.



Seeding


The qualified teams were seeded in the knockout stages according to their results in the second stage, with the group winners seeded 1–8, and the group runners-up seeded 9–16.























































































































































































































Seed

Team

Pld


W


D


L


GF


GA


GD


Pts

Group winners (Seeds 1–8)
1

Brazil Atlético Mineiro
6
5
0
1
16
9
+7

15
2

Colombia Santa Fe
6
4
2
0
9
4
+5

14
3

Paraguay Olimpia
6
4
1
1
16
7
+9

13
4

Brazil Corinthians
6
4
1
1
10
2
+8

13
5

Argentina Vélez Sarsfield
6
4
1
1
10
3
+7

13
6

Brazil Fluminense
6
3
2
1
5
5
0

11
7

Uruguay Nacional
6
3
1
2
10
6
+4

10
8

Brazil Palmeiras
6
3
0
3
5
5
0

9
Group runners-up (Seeds 9–16)
9

Mexico Tijuana
6
4
1
1
8
4
+4

13
10

Peru Real Garcilaso
6
3
1
2
8
7
+1

10
11

Ecuador Emelec
6
3
1
2
5
4
+1

10
12

Argentina Newell's Old Boys
6
3
0
3
11
10
+1

9
13

Argentina Boca Juniors
6
3
0
3
7
7
0

9
14

Argentina Tigre
6
3
0
3
9
10
−1

9
15

Brazil Grêmio
6
2
2
2
10
6
+4

8
16

Brazil São Paulo
6
2
1
3
8
8
0

7

Ranking rules: 1. Points; 2. Goal difference; 3. Goals scored; 4. Away goals scored; 5. Drawing of lots.[3]



Bracket



































































































































































































































































































































































 

Round of 16


Quarterfinals


Semifinals


Finals
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

11

Ecuador Emelec
2
0
2
 

6

Brazil Fluminense
1
2
3
 

 
6

Brazil Fluminense
0
1
1
 



 
3

Paraguay Olimpia
0
2
2
 

14

Argentina Tigre
2
0
2


3

Paraguay Olimpia
1
2
3
 


 
3

Paraguay Olimpia
2
0
2
 



 
2

Colombia Santa Fe
0
1
1
 

10

Peru Real Garcilaso (p)
1
0
1 (4)
 


7

Uruguay Nacional
0
1
1 (1)
 

 
10

Peru Real Garcilaso
1
0
1



 
2

Colombia Santa Fe
3
2
5
 

15

Brazil Grêmio
2
0
2


2

Colombia Santa Fe (a)
1
1
2
 


 
3

Paraguay Olimpia
2
0
2 (3)




 
1

Brazil Atlético Mineiro (p)
0
2
2 (4)

13

Argentina Boca Juniors
1
1
2
 


4

Brazil Corinthians
0
1
1
 

 
13

Argentina Boca Juniors
0
0
0 (9)0



 
12

Argentina Newell's Old Boys (p)
0
0
0 (10)
 

12

Argentina Newell's Old Boys (a)
0
2
2


5

Argentina Vélez Sarsfield
1
1
2
 


 
12

Argentina Newell's Old Boys
2
0
2 (2)



 
1

Brazil Atlético Mineiro (p)
0
2
2 (3)
 

9

Mexico Tijuana
0
2
2
 


8

Brazil Palmeiras
0
1
1
 

 
9

Mexico Tijuana
2
1
3



 
1

Brazil Atlético Mineiro (a)
2
1
3
 

16

Brazil São Paulo
1
1
2


1

Brazil Atlético Mineiro
2
4
6
 


Round of 16


































































Team 1

Agg.
Team 2
1st leg
2nd leg

São Paulo Brazil
2–6

Brazil Atlético Mineiro

1–2

1–4

Grêmio Brazil
2–2 (a)

Colombia Santa Fe

2–1

0–1

Tigre Argentina
2–3

Paraguay Olimpia

2–1

0–2

Boca Juniors Argentina
2–1

Brazil Corinthians

1–0

1–1

Newell's Old Boys Argentina
2–2 (a)

Argentina Vélez Sarsfield

0–1

2–1

Emelec Ecuador
2–3

Brazil Fluminense

2–1

0–2

Real Garcilaso Peru
1–1 (4–1 p)

Uruguay Nacional

1–0

0–1

Tijuana Mexico
2–1

Brazil Palmeiras

0–0

2–1


Quarterfinals






































Team 1

Agg.
Team 2
1st leg
2nd leg

Tijuana Mexico
3–3 (a)

Brazil Atlético Mineiro

2–2

1–1

Real Garcilaso Peru
1–5

Colombia Santa Fe

1–3

0–2

Fluminense Brazil
1–2

Paraguay Olimpia

0–0

1–2

Boca Juniors Argentina
0–0 (9–10 p)

Argentina Newell's Old Boys

0–0

0–0


Semifinals
























Team 1

Agg.
Team 2
1st leg
2nd leg

Newell's Old Boys Argentina
2–2 (2–3 p)

Brazil Atlético Mineiro

2–0

0–2

Olimpia Paraguay
2–1

Colombia Santa Fe

2–0

0–1


Finals



The finals were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis, with the higher-seeded team hosting the second leg. If tied on aggregate, the away goals rule was not used, and 30 minutes of extra time was played. If still tied after extra time, the penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner.[3]


.mw-parser-output .fbbox{clear:both;overflow:auto}.mw-parser-output .fbbox .fbtitle{text-align:center;font-weight:bold}.mw-parser-output .fbbox .fbleft{float:left;width:15%;padding:2px 0;overflow:auto}.mw-parser-output .fbbox time{display:block;overflow:auto}.mw-parser-output .fbbox .fbdate{display:block;float:right}.mw-parser-output .fbbox .fbtime{display:block;clear:right;float:right}.mw-parser-output .fbbox .fbrnd{clear:right;float:right}.mw-parser-output .fbbox .fbevent{float:left;width:61%;table-layout:fixed;text-align:center}.mw-parser-output .fbbox tr{vertical-align:top}.mw-parser-output .fbbox .fbhome{width:39%;text-align:right}.mw-parser-output .fbbox .fbscore{width:22%}.mw-parser-output .fbbox .fbaway{width:39%;text-align:left}.mw-parser-output .fbbox .fbgoals{font-size:85%}.mw-parser-output .fbbox .fbhgoal{text-align:right}.mw-parser-output .fbbox .fbagoal{text-align:left}.mw-parser-output .fbbox .fbright{float:left;font-size:85%;width:24%;padding:2px 0}

17 July 2013

20:50 UTC−4












Olimpia Paraguay 2–0 Brazil Atlético Mineiro

A. Silva Goal 23'
Pittoni Goal 90+4'
Report


Estadio Defensores del Chaco, Asunción

Attendance: 35,000[18]

Referee: Néstor Pitana (Argentina)







24 July 2013

21:50 UTC−3


















Atlético Mineiro Brazil 2–0 (a.e.t.) Paraguay Olimpia

Goal 47'
Leonardo Silva Goal 87'
Report
Penalties

Alecsandro Penalty scored
Guilherme Penalty scored
Penalty scored
Leonardo Silva Penalty scored
4–3
Penalty missedMiranda
Penalty scoredFerreyra
Penalty scoredCandia
Penalty scoredAranda
Penalty missedGiménez


Estádio Governador Magalhães Pinto (Mineirão), Belo Horizonte

Attendance: 56,557[19]

Referee: Wilmar Roldán (Colombia)



Tied 2–2 on aggregate, Atlético Mineiro won on penalties.



Top goalscorers

















































































































Rank
Player
Team
Goals
1

Brazil

Brazil Atlético Mineiro
7
2

Brazil Diego Tardelli

Brazil Atlético Mineiro
6

Argentina Ignacio Scocco

Argentina Newell's Old Boys
6
4

Paraguay Fredy Bareiro

Paraguay Olimpia
5

Brazil Luís Fabiano

Brazil São Paulo
5

Uruguay Braian Rodríguez

Chile Huachipato
5

Uruguay Juan Manuel Salgueiro

Paraguay Olimpia
5
8

Peru Irven Ávila

Peru Sporting Cristal
4

Brazil Bernard

Brazil Atlético Mineiro
4

Colombia Cristian Martínez Borja

Colombia Santa Fe
4

Argentina Rubén Botta

Argentina Tigre
4

Argentina Juan Carlos Ferreyra

Paraguay Olimpia
4

Peru Paolo Guerrero

Brazil Corinthians
4

Brazil Jádson

Brazil São Paulo
4

Paraguay Rogerio Leichtweis

Colombia Deportes Tolima
4

Ecuador Fidel Martínez

Mexico Tijuana
4

Colombia Wilder Medina

Colombia Santa Fe
4

Argentina Matías Pérez García

Argentina Tigre
4

Brazil Ronaldinho

Brazil Atlético Mineiro
4

Chile Manuel Villalobos

Chile Iquique
4

Source:[20]



See also



  • 2013 FIFA Club World Cup

  • 2013 Copa Sudamericana

  • 2014 Recopa Sudamericana



References





  1. ^ "Libertadores, con nuevo patrocinador" (in Spanish). CONMEBOL.com. 3 December 2012. Archived from the original on 11 December 2012..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ "Atletico win dramatic final". ESPN. 25 July 2013. Retrieved 25 July 2013.


  3. ^ abcdefgh "Copa Bridgestone Libertadores 2013: reglamento del torneo" (PDF) (in Spanish). CONMEBOL.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 March 2016.


  4. ^ abcde "Reglamento del Campeonato de Primera División 2012/2013" (PDF) (in Spanish). AFA.
    [permanent dead link]



  5. ^ abc "Convocatoria Oficial LFPB, 2011-2012" (PDF) (in Spanish). LFPB. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 August 2011.


  6. ^ abc "Convocatoria a Campeonatos Entel Apertura y Clausura Temporada 2012-2013" (PDF) (in Spanish). LFPB. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 April 2014.


  7. ^ abc "Casos Especiales 2012-2013" (PDF) (in Spanish). LFPB. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 July 2013.


  8. ^ abcde "Campeonato Brasileiro da Série A / 2012 Regulamento" (PDF) (in Portuguese). CBF. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 October 2012.


  9. ^ abc "Bases Campeonato Nacional Primera División 2012" (PDF) (in Spanish). ANFP. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 April 2012.


  10. ^ abc "Reglamento Liga Postobon 2012" (PDF) (in Spanish). dimayor.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 January 2012.


  11. ^ abc "Se premiará a los cinco mejores clubes de la temporada" (in Spanish). lahora.com.ec. 8 January 2012.


  12. ^ abc "Reglamento del Campeonato Oficial" (PDF) (in Spanish). APF. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 February 2012. Retrieved 17 December 2012.


  13. ^ abc "Torneo Descentralizado 2012 Copa Movistar" (PDF) (in Spanish). ADFP. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 September 2012.


  14. ^ abc "Reglamento de Primera División" (PDF) (in Spanish). AUF.


  15. ^ abc "Comisión de Torneos Nacionales Normas Reguladoras de Categoría Nacional Temporada 2011–2012" (PDF) (in Spanish). FVF. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-12-25.


  16. ^ "Comité Ejecutivo el 20 de diciembre; sorteo de la Copa Libertadores el 21" (in Spanish). CONMEBOL.com. 5 October 2012. Archived from the original on 9 November 2012.


  17. ^ ab "Se sorteó la Libertadores 2013" (in Spanish). CONMEBOL.com. 21 December 2012. Archived from the original on 1 February 2013.


  18. ^ "Ficha técnica de Olimpia 2 -Atlético Mineiro 0" (in Spanish). UOL. 18 July 2013.


  19. ^ "Ficha Técnica: Atlético-MG 2 (4) x (3) 0 Olímpia" (in Spanish). Terra. 25 July 2013.


  20. ^ "Copa Bridgestone Libertadores — Goleadores" (in Spanish). CONMEBOL.com.




External links




  • Copa Bridgestone Libertadores (in Spanish)


  • Copa Libertadores, CONMEBOL.com (in Spanish)











Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Monte Carlo

Information security

章鱼与海女图