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2009 Copa Sudamericana

The 2009 Copa Sudamericana de Clubes (officially the 2009 Copa Nissan Sudamericana de Clubes for sponsorship reasons) is the 8th edition of the CONMEBOL's secondary international club tournament. Internacional were the defending champions, having won the trophy the previous season. Ecuadorian side LDU Quito won the 2009 tournament, becoming the first Ecuadorian winners of the trophy.

2009 Copa Sudamericana
2009 Copa Nissan Sudamericana de Clubes
2009 Copa Nissan Sul-americana do Clubes
Tournament details
DatesAugust 4 - December 2
Teams31 (from 10 associations)
Final positions
ChampionsEcuador LDU Quito (1st title)
Runners-upBrazil Fluminense
Tournament statistics
Matches played60
Goals scored148 (2.47 per match)
Attendance639,150 (10,653 per match)
Top scorer(s)Argentina Claudio Bieler (8 goals)
2008
2010

From this edition onward, CONCACAF teams, which have participated in the tournament since 2005, will no longer be participating because of the format change in the CONCACAF Champions League, which conflicted with scheduling.[1] This will also mark the last tournament in which Argentine clubs River Plate and Boca Juniors will be invited to participate without qualification. Further changes include the additional allocation of berths (1) to all the countries except Brazil and Argentina.[2]

Qualified teams

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Association Team Qualify method
Argentina  Argentina
6 berths
Lanús 2008–09 Primera División 1st place overall
Vélez Sársfield 2008–09 Primera División 2nd place overall
San Lorenzo 2008–09 Primera División 3rd place overall
Tigre 2008–09 Primera División 4th place overall
Boca Juniors Invited
River Plate Invited
Bolivia  Bolivia
2 berths
La Paz 2008 Apertura 2nd place
Blooming 2008 Clausura 2nd place
Brazil  Brazil
8 + 1 berths
Internacional 2008 Copa Sudamericana champion
Flamengo 2008 Série A 5th place
Botafogo 2008 Série A 7th place
Goiás 2008 Série A 8th place
Coritiba 2008 Série A 9th place
Vitória 2008 Série A 10th place
Atlético Mineiro 2008 Série A 12th place
Atlético Paranaense 2008 Série A 13th place
Fluminense 2008 Série A 14th place
Chile  Chile
2 berths
Unión Española 1st in 2009 Apertura general table
Universidad de Chile 2009 Copa Sudamericana playoff winner
Colombia  Colombia
2 berths
Deportivo Cali 2008 Primera A 2nd best-placed non-champion
La Equidad 2008 Copa Colombia champion
Ecuador  Ecuador
2 berths
Emelec 2009 Serie A First Stage winner
LDU Quito 2009 Serie A First Stage runner-up
Paraguay  Paraguay
2 berths
Libertad Apertura or Clausura champion with most points in 2008 Primera División
Cerro Porteño 2008 Primera División 3rd best-placed non-champion
Peru  Peru
2 berths
Cienciano 2008 Descentralizado 2nd best-placed non-champion
Alianza Atlético 2008 Descentralizado 3rd best-placed non-champion
Uruguay  Uruguay
2 berths
River Plate 2009 Liguilla Pre-Libertadores 3rd place
Liverpool 2009 Liguilla Pre-Libertadores 4th place
Venezuela  Venezuela
2 berths
Deportivo Anzoátegui 2008 Copa Venezuela champion
Zamora 2008–09 Primera División 2nd best-placed non-finalist

First stage

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The first stage began on August 4, and ended on September 17. Team #1 played the first leg at home.[3] All teams, except for defending champion Internacional, entered the tournament in the First Stage.[4]

Team #1   Points earned   Team #2   1st leg     2nd leg  
Atlético Mineiro Brazil  2–2 (5–6 p) Brazil  Goiás 1–1 1–1
La Equidad Colombia  1–4 Chile  Unión Española 2–2 0–1
Vitória Brazil  3–3 (5–3 p) Brazil  Coritiba 2–0 0–2
Universidad de Chile Chile  6–0 Colombia  Deportivo Cali 2–1 1–0
Fluminense Brazil  (a) 2–2 Brazil  Flamengo 0–0 1–1
Liverpool Uruguay  1–4 Peru  Cienciano 0–0 0–2
River Plate Argentina  0–6 Argentina  Lanús 1–2 0–1
Zamora Venezuela  0–6 Ecuador  Emelec 0–1 1–2
Atlético Paranaense Brazil  1–4 Brazil  Botafogo 0–0 2–3
LDU Quito Ecuador  2–1 Paraguay  Libertad 1–0 1–1
Tigre Argentina  3–3 (a) Argentina  San Lorenzo 2–1 0–1
Alianza Atlético Peru  4–1 Venezuela  Deportivo Anzoátegui 0–0 2–1
Blooming Bolivia  0–6 Uruguay  River Plate 0–3 1–2
Boca Juniors Argentina  1–4 Argentina  Vélez Sársfield 1–1 0–1
Cerro Porteño Paraguay  6–0 Bolivia  La Paz 2–0 2–1

Final stages

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Round of 16 Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
                    
1 Brazil  Goiás 0 3 3
16 Paraguay  Cerro Porteño (a) 2 1 3
16 Paraguay  Cerro Porteño 2 3 5
9 Brazil  Botafogo 1 1 2
8 Ecuador  Emelec 0 2 2
9 Brazil  Botafogo 2 1 3
16 Paraguay  Cerro Porteño 0 1 1
5 Brazil  Fluminense 1 2 3
5 Brazil  Fluminense 2 4 6
12 Peru  Alianza Atlético 2 1 3
5 Brazil  Fluminense 2 1 3
4 Chile  Universidad de Chile 2 0 2
4 Chile  Universidad de Chile 1 1 2
13 Brazil  Internacional 1 0 1
5 Brazil  Fluminense 1 3 4
10 Ecuador  LDU Quito 5 0 5
2 Chile  Unión Española 2 2 4
15 Argentina  Vélez Sársfield 3 2 5
15 Argentina  Vélez Sársfield 1 1 2
10 Ecuador  LDU Quito 1 2 3
7 Argentina  Lanús 0 1 1
10 Ecuador  LDU Quito 4 1 5
10 Ecuador  LDU Quito 1 7 8
14 Uruguay  River Plate 2 0 2
3 Brazil  Vitória 1 1 2
14 Uruguay  River Plate 4 1 5
14 Uruguay  River Plate (p) 0 1 1 (7)
11 Argentina  San Lorenzo 1 0 1 (6)
6 Peru  Cienciano 0 0 0
11 Argentina  San Lorenzo 3 2 5

Round of 16

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The first leg of the round of 16 was played from September 22 to September 24. The second leg was played from September 30 to October 1. Team #1 played the first leg at home.[4]

Team #1   Points earned   Team #2   1st leg     2nd leg  
Cerro Porteño Paraguay  3–3 (a) Brazil  Goiás 2–0 1–3
Vélez Sarsfield Argentina  5–4 Chile  Unión Española 3–2 2–2
River Plate Uruguay  5–2 Brazil  Vitória 4–1 1–1
Internacional Brazil  1–2 Chile  Universidad de Chile 1–1 0–1
Alianza Atlético Peru  3–6 Brazil  Fluminense 2–2 1–4
San Lorenzo Argentina  5–0 Peru  Cienciano 3–0 2–0
LDU Quito Ecuador  5–1 Argentina  Lanús 4–0 1–1
Botafogo Brazil  3–2 Ecuador  Emelec 2–0 1–2

Quarterfinals

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The first leg of the Quarterfinals was played from October 20–22. The second leg was played from November 4–5. Team #1 played the first leg at home.

Team #1   Points earned   Team #2   1st leg     2nd leg  
Cerro Porteño Paraguay  5–2 Brazil  Botafogo 2–1 3–1
Vélez Sarsfield Argentina  2–3 Ecuador  LDU Quito 1–1 1–2
River Plate Uruguay  1–1 (7–6 p) Argentina  San Lorenzo 0–1 1–0
Fluminense Brazil  3–2 Chile  Universidad de Chile 2–2 1–0

Semifinals

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The first leg was played from November 11–12. The second leg was played from November 18–19. Team #1 played the first leg at home.

Team #1   Points earned   Team #2   1st leg     2nd leg  
Cerro Porteño Paraguay  1–3 Brazil  Fluminense 0–1 1–2
River Plate Uruguay  2–8 Ecuador  LDU Quito 2–1 0–7

Finals

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The Finals were played on November 25 and December 2. Just like the 2008 Copa Libertadores Finals, both teams played against each other in a final.

LDU Quito Ecuador 5–1Brazil  Fluminense
Méndez   21', 44', 60'
Salas   78'
de la Cruz   87'
Report Marquinho   1'
Attendance: 55,000

Fluminense Brazil 3–0Ecuador  LDU Quito
Diguinho   14'
Fred   43'
Gum   72'
Report

Top goalscorers

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Pos Name Club Goals
1 Argentina  Claudio Bieler Ecuador  LDU Quito 8
2 Ecuador  Édison Méndez Ecuador  LDU Quito 7
3 Argentina  Jorge Córdoba Uruguay  River Plate 5
Brazil  Fred Brazil  Fluminense 5
5 Brazil  Felipe Brazil  Goiás 4
Uruguay  Juan Manuel Olivera Chile  Universidad de Chile 4
7 Argentina  Gustavo Canales Chile  Unión Española 3
Brazil  André Lima Brazil  Botafogo 3
Uruguay  Hernán López Argentina  Vélez Sársfield 3
Argentina  Roberto Nanni Paraguay  Cerro Porteño 3
Peru  Marcio Valverde Peru  Alianza Atlético 3

References

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  1. ^ "Concacaf". www.concacaf.com. Archived from the original on 4 July 2009. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
  2. ^ "Se mantienen cupos sudamericanos al Mundial de Brasil 2014". Archived from the original on 2011-08-02. Retrieved 2009-06-17.
  3. ^ "Confederación Sudamericana de Fútbol". Archived from the original on 2009-07-25. Retrieved 2009-07-23.
  4. ^ a b (in Spanish) Sorteada la Copa Nissan Sudamericana 2009 Archived 2009-07-06 at the Wayback Machine, CONMEBOL, retrieved 4 July 2009
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