1982 Copa Libertadores Finals

The 1982 Copa Libertadores de América Finals was the final two-legged tie to determine the champion of the 1982 edition. It was contested by Uruguayan club Peñarol and Chilean club Cobreloa. The first leg of the tie was played on 26 November at Estadio Centenario (used by Peñarol as its home venue by then) with the second leg played on 30 November at Estadio Nacional in Santiago.

1982 Copa Libertadores de América Finals
Event1982 Copa Libertadores
First leg
DateNovember 26, 1982
VenueEstadio Centenario, Montevideo
RefereeAssis de Aragão (Brazil)
Second leg
DateNovember 30, 1982
VenueEstadio Nacional, Santiago
RefereeJorge Romero (Argentina)

Peñarol won the series by 1-0 on aggregate.

Qualified teams

Team Previous finals appearances (bold indicates winners)
Peñarol 1970
Cobreloa 1981

Venues

Estadio Centenario (Montevideo) and Estadio Nacional (Santiago), venues for the finals

Format

The finals were played over two legs; home and away. The team that accumulates the most points —two for a win, one for a draw, zero for a loss— after the two legs would be crowned the champion. If the two teams were tied on points after the second leg, a playoff in a neutral venue would become the next tie-breaker. Goal difference was going to be used as a last resort.

Match details

First leg

Peñarol 0–0 Cobreloa
Report
Attendance: 55,248
Referee: Carlos Espósito (Argentina)

Second leg

Cobreloa 0–1 Peñarol
Morena  89'
Attendance: 70,400
Referee: Romero (Argentina)
Cobreloa
Peñarol
GK1 Oscar Wirth
RB2 Hugo Tabilo
CB3 Juan Páez
CB4 Mario Soto (c)
LB20 Enzo Escobar
DM6 Eduardo Jiménez
CM14 Armando Alarcón
CM8 Víctor Merello
RW11 Hector Puebla
CF9 Jorge Luis Siviero
LW15 Washington Olivera
Substitutes:
Martínez
FW Juan Carlos Letelier
Manager:
Vicente Cantatore
GK1 Gustavo Fernández
DF4 Carlos Diogo
DF2 Walter Olivera
DF3 Nelson Gutiérrez
DF6 Juan V. Morales
MF8 Mario Saralegui
MF5 Miguel Bossio
MF10 Jair
FW7 Ernesto Vargas
FW9 Fernando Morena
FW11 Venancio Ramos
Substitutes:
FW D. Rodríguez
Manager:
Hugo Bagnulo[1]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.