2012 Copa Sudamericana final stages

The final stages of the 2012 Copa Bridgestone Sudamericana de Clubes consisted of four stages:

  • Round of 16 (first legs: September 25–27, October 2–3; second legs: October 23–25)[1]
  • Quarterfinals (first legs: October 30–November 1; second legs: November 7–8, 15)[2]
  • Semifinals (first legs: November 22; second legs: November 28–29)
  • Finals (first leg: December 5; second leg: December 12)

Format edit

The defending champion, Universidad de Chile, and the fifteen winners of the second stage (three from Argentina, four from Brazil, eight from rest of South America) qualified for the final stages. The sixteen teams played a single-elimination tournament, and were seeded depending on which second stage tie they won (i.e., the winner of Match O1 would be assigned the 1 seed, etc.; Universidad de Chile were assigned the 10 seed). In each stage, teams played in two-legged ties on a home-away basis, with the higher-seeded team playing the second leg at home. Each team earned 3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, and 0 points for a loss. The following criteria were used for breaking ties on points, except for the final:[3]

  1. Goal difference
  2. Away goals
  3. Penalty shootout (no extra time is played)

For the final, the first tiebreaker was goal difference. If the teams are tied on goal difference, the away goals rule would not be applied, and 30 minutes of extra time would be played. If still had tied after extra time, the title would be decided by penalty shootout.

If two teams from the same association reach the semifinals, they would be forced to play each other.

Bracket edit

In each tie, the higher-seeded team played the second leg at home.

Round of 16 Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
                
1   Millonarios 1 3
16   Palmeiras 3 0
1   Millonarios 0 3
8   Grêmio 1 1
8   Grêmio 1 2
9   Barcelona 0 1
1   Millonarios 0 1
4   Tigre (a) 0 1
4   Tigre 0 4
13   Deportivo Quito 2 0
4   Tigre 0 4
5   Cerro Porteño 1 2
5   Cerro Porteño 2 2
12   Colón 1 1
4   Tigre 0 0
2   São Paulo 0 2
2   São Paulo (a) 1 0
15   LDU Loja 1 0
2   São Paulo 2 5
10   U. de Chile 0 0
7   Emelec 2 0
10   U. de Chile 2 1
2   São Paulo (a) 1 0
11   U. Católica 1 0
3   Liverpool 1 1
14   Independiente 2 2
14   Independiente 2 1
11   U. Católica 2 2
6   Atlético Goianiense 0 3
11   U. Católica (a) 2 1

Round of 16 edit

Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Millonarios   4–3   Palmeiras 1–3 3–0
São Paulo   1–1 (a)   LDU Loja 1–1 0–0
Liverpool   2–4   Independiente 1–2 1–2
Tigre   4–2   Deportivo Quito 0–2 4–0
Cerro Porteño   4–2   Colón 2–1 2–1
Atlético Goianiense   3–3 (a)   Universidad Católica 0–2 3–1
Emelec   2–3   Universidad de Chile 2–2 0–1
Grêmio   3–1   Barcelona 1–0 2–1

Match A edit

Palmeiras  3–1  Millonarios
Obina   12'
Tiago Real   53'
Luan   87'
Report Artur   84' (o.g.)

Tied on points 3–3, Millonarios won on goal difference.

Match B edit


Tied on points 2–2, São Paulo won on away goals.

Match C edit


Independiente won on points 6–0.

Match D edit


Tied on points 3–3, Tigre won on goal difference.

Match E edit


Cerro Porteño won on points 6–0.

Match F edit


Tied on points 3–3, Universidad Católica won on away goals.

Match G edit


Universidad de Chile won on points 4–1.

Match H edit


Grêmio won on points 6–0.

Quarterfinals edit

Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Millonarios   3–2   Grêmio 0–1 3–1
São Paulo   7–0   Universidad de Chile 2–0 5–0
Universidad Católica   4–3   Independiente 2–2 2–1
Tigre   4–3   Cerro Porteño 0–1 4–2

Match S1 edit


Tied on points 3–3, Millonarios won on goal difference.

Match S2 edit


São Paulo won on points 6–0.

Match S3 edit

Independiente  2–2  Universidad Católica
Tula   44'
Martínez   55' (o.g.)
Report Andía   2'
Castillo   70'

Universidad Católica won on points 4–1.

Match S4 edit


Tied on points 3–3, Tigre won on goal difference.

Semifinals edit

Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Millonarios   1–1 (a)   Tigre 0–0 1–1
São Paulo   1–1 (a)   Universidad Católica 1–1 0–0

Match F1 edit


Tied on points 2–2, Tigre won on away goals.

Match F2 edit


Tied on points 2–2, São Paulo won on away goals.

Finals edit

The Finals were played over two legs, with the higher-seeded team playing the second leg at home. If the teams were tied on points and goal difference at the end of regulation in the second leg, the away goals rule would not be applied and 30 minutes of extra time would be played. If still tied after extra time, the title would be decided by penalty shootout.[3]


The second leg was abandoned after 45 minutes by the referee, as the Tigre players refused to come back to play the rest of the match after incidents at halftime. Therefore, São Paulo were declared as the champion.[4]

São Paulo won on points 4–1.

References edit

  1. ^ "Sudamericana: el programa de octavos". CONMEBOL.com. September 21, 2012. Archived from the original on September 23, 2012.
  2. ^ "Sudamericana: definidos los cuartos". CONMEBOL.com. October 26, 2012. Archived from the original on October 29, 2012.
  3. ^ a b "Copa Bridgestone Sudamericana 2012: reglamento del torneo" (PDF) (in Spanish). CONMEBOL. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-08-13. Retrieved 2012-09-21.
  4. ^ "¡Sao Paulo es el nuevo campeón!". CONMEBOL. December 12, 2012.

External links edit