2015 Copa Sudamericana finals

The 2015 Copa Sudamericana finals were the two-legged final that decided the winner of the 2015 Copa Sudamericana, the 14th edition of the Copa Sudamericana, South America's secondary international club football tournament organized by CONMEBOL.

2015 Copa Sudamericana finals
Event2015 Copa Sudamericana
on aggregate
Santa Fe won 3–1 on penalties
First leg
Date2 December 2015
VenueEstadio Tomás Adolfo Ducó, Buenos Aires
RefereeAntonio Arias (Paraguay)
Second leg
After extra time
Date9 December 2015
VenueEstadio El Campín, Bogotá
RefereeHéber Lopes (Brazil)
2014
2016

The finals were contested in two-legged home-and-away format between Argentine team Huracán and Colombian team Santa Fe. The first leg was hosted by Huracán at Estadio Tomás Adolfo Ducó in Buenos Aires on 2 December 2015, while the second leg was hosted by Santa Fe at Estadio El Campín in Bogotá on 9 December.[1] The winner qualified for the 2016 Copa Libertadores, and earned the right to play against the 2015 Copa Libertadores winners in the 2016 Recopa Sudamericana, and against the 2015 J. League Cup winners in the 2016 Suruga Bank Championship.[2]

As both the first leg[3] and the second leg[4] were tied 0–0, the champion was decided by penalty shoot-out in which Santa Fe won 3–1, winning the tournament for the first time in their history.

Teams edit

Team Previous finals appearances (bold indicates winners)
  Huracán None
  Santa Fe None

Venues edit

Estadio Tomás Ducó in Buenos Aires, Argentina, hosted the first leg
Estadio El Campín in Bogotá, Colombia, hosted the second leg

Road to the finals edit

Note: In all scores below, the score of the home team is given first.

  Huracán Round   Santa Fe
Opponent Venue Score Elimination stages Opponent Venue Score
Bye First stage   LDU Loja
(won 3–0 on aggregate)
Away 0–0
Home 3–0
  Tigre
(won 6–2 on aggregate)
Away 2–5 Second stage   Nacional
(won 2–1 on aggregate)
Away 0–2
Home 1–0 Home 0–1
Seed 7 final stages Seed 3
  Sport Recife
(won 4–1 on aggregate)
Away 1–1 Round of 16   Emelec
(tied 2–2 on aggregate, won on away goals)
Away 2–1
Home 3–0 Home 1–0
  Defensor Sporting
(won 1–0 on aggregate)
Home 1–0 Quarter-finals   Independiente
(won 2–1 on aggregate)
Away 0–1
Away 0–0 Home 1–1
  River Plate
(won 3–2 on aggregate)
Away 0–1 Semi-finals   Sportivo Luqueño
(tied 1–1 on aggregate, won on away goals)
Away 1–1
Home 2–2 Home 0–0

Format edit

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 would not be used, and 30 minutes of extra time would be played. If still tied after extra time, the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner.[2]

Matches edit

First leg edit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Huracán
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Santa Fe
GK 1   Marcos Díaz
RB 13   José San Román
CB 21   Hugo Nervo (c)
CB 2   Federico Mancinelli   28'
LB 15   Luciano Balbi
RM 26   Mauro Bogado
CM 5   Federico Vismara   30'
LM 18   Patricio Toranzo
AM 30   Daniel Montenegro   81'
CF 7   Cristian Espinoza   61'
CF 9   Ramón Ábila
Substitutes:
GK 22   Matías Giordano
DF 3   Carlos Arano
DF 19   Santiago Echeverría
MF 8   Lucas Villarruel
MF 16   Iván Moreno y Fabianesi
MF 20   David Distéfano   81'
FW 24   Ezequiel Miralles   82'   61'
Manager:
  Eduardo Domínguez
GK 1   Róbinson Zapata
RB 18   Almir Soto
CB 21   Francisco Meza
CB 26   Yerry Mina
LB 11   Leyvin Balanta   67'
RM 5   Yulián Anchico (c   89'
CM 30   Yeison Gordillo
CM 14   Baldomero Perlaza
LM 20   Luis Manuel Seijas   38'
CF 19   Wilson Morelo   73'
CF 28   Daniel Angulo   84'
Substitutes:
GK 22   Leandro Castellanos
DF 3   Harold Cummings
DF 4   Sergio Otálvaro   90'    89'
MF 8   Dario Rodríguez Parra
MF 10   Omar Pérez   84'
MF 13   Sebastián Salazar
FW 9   Miguel Borja   73'
Manager:
  Gerardo Pelusso

Assistant referees:[5]
Eduardo Cardozo (Paraguay)
Milcíades Saldívar (Paraguay)
Fourth official:
Ulises Mereles (Paraguay)

Second leg edit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Santa Fe
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Huracán
GK 1   Róbinson Zapata
RB 5   Yulián Anchico (c)   107'
CB 21   Francisco Meza
CB 26   Yerry Mina
LB 11   Leyvin Balanta
RM 17   Juan Daniel Roa
CM 30   Yeison Gordillo   71'
CM 14   Baldomero Perlaza
LM 20   Luis Manuel Seijas   90+4'
CF 19   Wilson Morelo
CF 28   Daniel Angulo   46'
Substitutes:
GK 22   Leandro Castellanos
DF 3   Harold Cummings
DF 4   Sergio Otálvaro   107'
MF 8   Dario Rodríguez Parra
MF 10   Omar Pérez   71'
MF 18   Almir Soto
FW 9   Miguel Borja   118'   46'
Manager:
  Gerardo Pelusso
GK 1   Marcos Díaz
RB 13   José San Román
CB 2   Federico Mancinelli
CB 21   Hugo Nervo (c)
LB 15   Luciano Balbi
CM 5   Federico Vismara
CM 26   Mauro Bogado
RM 7   Cristian Espinoza   88'   96'
AM 30   Daniel Montenegro   76'
LM 18   Patricio Toranzo
CF 9   Ramón Ábila   116'
Substitutes:
GK 22   Matías Giordano
DF 3   Carlos Arano   119'
DF 19   Santiago Echeverría
MF 8   Lucas Villarruel
MF 16   Iván Moreno y Fabianesi
MF 20   David Distéfano   76'
FW 11   Agustín Torassa   96'   119'
Manager:
  Eduardo Domínguez

Assistant referees:[5]
Kleber Gil (Brazil)
Bruno Boschilia (Brazil)
Fourth official:
Péricles Bassols (Brazil)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Horarios definidos para los partidos de la gran final de la Copa Sudamericana" (in Spanish). CONMEBOL.com. 27 November 2015.
  2. ^ a b "Copa Sudamericana 2015 – Reglamento" (PDF) (in Spanish). CONMEBOL.com.
  3. ^ "Copa Sudamericana: Huracán y Santa Fe empataron 0 a 0 en la primera final" (in Spanish). CONMEBOL.com. 2 December 2015.
  4. ^ "Copa Sudamericana: Independiente Santa Fe es campeón tras vencer en penales a Huracán" (in Spanish). CONMEBOL.com. 9 December 2015.
  5. ^ a b "Antonio Arias and Héber Lopes will be the referees for the final of the Copa Sudamericana". CONMEBOL. 29 November 2015.

External links edit