CONMEBOL Pre-Olympic Tournament

The CONMEBOL Pre-Olympic Tournament is an international association football event in the South America region, and is the qualification tournament for the football at the Olympic Games.

In 1960, the teams from North and Central America also entered the tournament.[1] Before 1984, only junior or non-professional players were allowed to participate. In 1987 the competition was open to any player who has not played in World Cup (whether a qualifying match or at the final tournament).[1] Since 1992 the competition is open to players under the age of 23 without any other restriction.[1] The competition was last held in 2004 and between 2007 and 2015, the South American Youth Championship were chosen as the qualifying tournament for the Olympic Games.[2]

The tournament was re-introduced for the 2020 games.[3]

Results

Summaries

Teams in bold qualify for the Olympic Games.
Year Host Final Standings
Gold Medal Silver Medal Bronze Medal Fourth Place
1960[4]
Details
 Peru
Argentina

Peru

Brazil

Mexico
1964[5]
Details
 Peru
Argentina

Brazil

Peru

Colombia
1968[6]
Details
 Colombia
Brazil

Colombia

Uruguay

Paraguay
1971[7]
Details
 Colombia
Brazil

Colombia

Argentina

Peru
1976[8]
Details
 Brazil
Brazil

Uruguay

Argentina

Colombia
1980[9]
Details
 Colombia
Argentina

Colombia

Peru

Venezuela
1984[10]
Details
 Ecuador
Brazil

Chile

Paraguay

Ecuador
1987[11]
Details
 Bolivia
Brazil

Argentina

Bolivia

Colombia
1992[12]
Details
 Paraguay
Paraguay

Colombia

Uruguay

Ecuador
1996[13]
Details
 Argentina
Brazil

Argentina

Uruguay

Venezuela
2000[14]
Details
 Brazil
Brazil

Chile

Argentina

Uruguay
2004[15]
Details
 Chile
Argentina

Paraguay

Brazil

Chile
2020[3]
Details
 Colombia
Argentina

Brazil

Uruguay

Colombia

Performances by countries

Team Titles Runners-up
 Brazil 7 (1968, 1971, 19761, 1984, 1987, 1996, 20001) 2 (1964, 2020)
 Argentina 5 (1960, 1964, 1980, 2004, 2020) 2 (1987, 19961)
 Paraguay 1 (19921) 1 (2004)
 Colombia 4 (19681, 19711, 19801, 1992)
 Chile 2 (1984, 2000)
 Uruguay 1 (1976)
 Peru 1 (19601)
1 = host

See also

References

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