2013 Copa EuroAmericana

2013 Copa EuroAmericana
Tournament details
Dates 20 July – 4 August 2013
Teams 11 (from 2 confederations)
Venue(s) 8 (in 8 host cities)
Final positions
Champions Europe (1st title)
Runners-up South America
Tournament statistics
Matches played 8
Goals scored 22 (2.75 per match)
Top scorer(s) Brazil Danilo (3 goals)

The 2013 Copa EuroAmericana was the first edition of Copa EuroAmericana, a exhibition men's football friendly tournament created by DirecTV. This edition took place in South America on 20 July – 4 August 2013. Eleven teams from CONMEBOL and UEFA participated in it.[1][2] Europe, represented by Atlético Madrid, Porto and Sevilla, won the cup by a 6–2 score, beating South America, represented by Atlético Nacional, Barcelona, Deportivo Anzoátegui, Estudiantes, Millonarios, Nacional, Sporting Cristal, Universidad Católica.

Format

Each match is played all 90 minutes. In case of a tie after the 90 minutes, will proceed to play two 15-minute overtime periods, and if they continue in a draw the champion will be defined through penalty kicks. The confederation of the winner team of each match is awarded with a point, and the confederation with most points will champion.

Participant teams

Confederation Team Recent domestic honours Last continental performance
CONMEBOL Argentina Estudiantes 2010–11 Torneo Apertura 2011 Copa LibertadoresRound of 16
CONMEBOL Chile Universidad Católica 2011 Copa Chile 2012 Copa LibertadoresSecond stage
CONMEBOL Colombia Atlético Nacional 2013 Torneo Apertura 2012 Copa LibertadoresRound of 16
CONMEBOL Colombia Millonarios 2012 Torneo Finalización 2013 Copa LibertadoresSecond stage
CONMEBOL Ecuador Barcelona 2012 Serie A 2013 Copa LibertadoresSecond stage
CONMEBOL Peru Sporting Cristal 2012 Torneo Descentralizado 2013 Copa LibertadoresSecond stage
CONMEBOL Uruguay Nacional 2011–12 Primera División Uruguaya 2013 Copa LibertadoresRound of 16
CONMEBOL Venezuela Deportivo Anzoátegui 2012 Copa Venezuela 2013 Copa LibertadoresFirst stage
UEFA Spain Atlético Madrid 2012–13 Copa del Rey 2012 UEFA Super CupChampion
UEFA Spain Sevilla 2009–10 Copa del Rey 2011–12 UEFA Europa LeaguePlay-off round
UEFA Portugal Porto 2012–13 Primeira Liga 2012–13 UEFA Champions League - Round of 16

Venues

Bogotá Lima La Plata Guayaquil
Estadio El Campín Estadio Nacional Estadio Ciudad de La Plata Estadio Monumental
 Colombia  Peru  Argentina  Ecuador
Capacity: 36,343 Capacity: 50,000 Capacity: 53,000 Capacity: 59,283
Montevideo Santiago Puerto la Cruz Medellín
Estadio Centenario Estadio San Carlos de Apoquindo Estadio José Antonio Anzoátegui Atanasio Girardot Sports Complex
 Uruguay  Chile  Venezuela  Colombia
Capacity: 65,235 Capacity: 16,000 Capacity: 37,485 Capacity: 45,739

Standings

South America
2
     Europe     
6

Matches

20 July 2013
17:30 UTC–04:00
Universidad Católica Chile 0 – 2 Spain Sevilla
Report Marin  60'
Jairo  83'
Estadio San Carlos de Apoquindo, Santiago, Chile
Attendance: 15,000
Referee: Eduardo Gamboa (Chile)

21 July 2013
19:00 UTC–04:30
Deportivo Anzoátegui Venezuela 2 – 4 Portugal Porto
Aguilar  39'
Fuenmayor  62'
Report Jackson  53'
Mangala  64'
Varela  65', 90+3'
Estadio José Antonio Anzoátegui, Puerto la Cruz, Venezuela
Attendance: 10,000
Referee: Maiker Moreno (Venezuela)


24 July 2013
21:30 UTC–05:00
Millonarios Colombia 0 – 4 Portugal Porto
Report Danilo  29',  52',  72'
Jackson  85'

26 July 2013
19:30 UTC–05:00
Barcelona Ecuador 1 – 3 Spain Sevilla
Caicedo  4' (pen.) Report Pareja  72'
Jairo  79'
Bacca  86'

27 July 2013
15:00 UTC–03:00
Estudiantes Argentina 1 – 0 Spain Atlético Madrid
Zapata  23' Report

31 July 2013
20:00 UTC–05:00
Sporting Cristal Peru 0 – 1 Spain Atlético Madrid
Report Suárez  78'
Estadio Nacional, Lima, Peru
Attendance: 19,500[4]
Referee: Omar Ponce (Ecuador)

4 August 2013
15:00 UTC–03:00
Nacional Uruguay 0 – 2 Spain Atlético Madrid
Report Baptistão  46',  80'
Estadio Centenario, Montevideo, Uruguay
Attendance: 48,000[5]
Referee: Saúl Laverni (Argentina)

Top goalscorers

Rank Name Team Goals
1 Brazil Danilo Portugal Porto 3
2 Brazil Léo Baptistão Spain Atlético Madrid 2
Colombia Jackson Martínez Portugal Porto
Portugal Silvestre Varela Portugal Porto
Spain Jairo Samperio Spain Sevilla

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/3/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.