2020 Copa Libertadores
Copa CONMEBOL Libertadores 2020 | |
---|---|
Tournament details | |
Dates | January – November 2020 |
Teams | 47 (minimum) (from 10 (minimum) associations) |
The 2020 Copa CONMEBOL Libertadores will be the 61st edition of the CONMEBOL Libertadores (also referred to as the Copa Libertadores), South America's premier club football tournament organized by CONMEBOL.
The winners of the 2020 Copa Libertadores will earn the right to play against the winners of the 2020 Copa Sudamericana in the 2021 Recopa Sudamericana. They will also automatically qualify for the 2021 Copa Libertadores group stage.
Teams
The following 47 teams from the 10 CONMEBOL member associations will qualify for the tournament:[1]
- Copa Libertadores champions
- Copa Sudamericana champions
- Brazil: 7 berths
- Argentina: 6 berths
- All other associations: 4 berths each
The entry stage is determined as follows:[1]
- Group stage: 28 teams
- Copa Libertadores champions
- Copa Sudamericana champions
- Teams which qualified for berths 1–5 from Argentina and Brazil
- Teams which qualified for berths 1–2 from all other associations
- Second stage: 13 teams
- Teams which qualified for berths 6–7 from Brazil
- Team which qualified for berth 6 from Argentina
- Teams which qualified for berths 3–4 from Chile and Colombia
- Teams which qualified for berths 3 from all other associations
- First stage: 6 teams
- Teams which qualified for berths 4 from Bolivia, Ecuador, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela
Association | Team (Berth) | Entry stage | Qualification method |
---|---|---|---|
TBD | (Title holders) | Group stage | 2019 Copa Libertadores champions |
(Copa Sudamericana) | 2019 Copa Sudamericana champions | ||
(6 berths) |
(Argentina 1) | Group stage | 2018–19 Superliga Argentina champions[2] |
(Argentina 2) | 2018–19 Superliga Argentina runners-up[2] | ||
(Argentina 3) | 2018–19 Copa Argentina champions (or best team not yet qualified)[2] | ||
(Argentina 4) | 2019 Copa de la Superliga champions (or best team not yet qualified)[2] | ||
(Argentina 5) | 2018–19 Superliga Argentina 3rd place[2] | ||
(Argentina 6) | Second stage | 2018–19 Superliga Argentina 4th place[2] | |
(4 berths) |
(Bolivia 1) | Group stage | |
(Bolivia 2) | |||
(Bolivia 3) | Second stage | ||
(Bolivia 4) | First stage | ||
(7 berths) |
(Brazil 1) | Group stage | |
(Brazil 2) | |||
(Brazil 3) | |||
(Brazil 4) | |||
(Brazil 5) | |||
(Brazil 6) | Second stage | ||
(Brazil 7) | |||
(4 berths) |
(Chile 1) | Group stage | |
(Chile 2) | |||
(Chile 3) | Second stage | ||
(Chile 4) | |||
(4 berths) |
(Colombia 1) | Group stage | |
(Colombia 2) | |||
(Colombia 3) | Second stage | ||
(Colombia 4) | |||
(4 berths) |
(Ecuador 1) | Group stage | |
(Ecuador 2) | |||
(Ecuador 3) | Second stage | ||
(Ecuador 4) | First stage | ||
(4 berths) |
(Paraguay 1) | Group stage | |
(Paraguay 2) | |||
(Paraguay 3) | Second stage | ||
(Paraguay 4) | First stage | ||
(4 berths) |
(Peru 1) | Group stage | |
(Peru 2) | |||
(Peru 3) | Second stage | ||
(Peru 4) | First stage | ||
(4 berths) |
(Uruguay 1) | Group stage | |
(Uruguay 2) | |||
(Uruguay 3) | Second stage | ||
(Uruguay 4) | First stage | ||
(4 berths) |
(Venezuela 1) | Group stage | |
(Venezuela 2) | |||
(Venezuela 3) | Second stage | ||
(Venezuela 4) | First stage |
See also
- 2020 Copa Sudamericana
- 2021 Recopa Sudamericana
References
External links
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