| Date | R | Home v Away | - |
|---|---|---|---|
| 08/21 22:30 | 7 |
Trujillanos v Independiente del Valle
|
0-1 |
| 08/21 20:15 | 7 |
Deportivo Capiata v Danubio
|
3-1 |
| 08/21 18:00 | 7 |
Ayacucho FC v Caracas
|
0-1 |
| 08/21 01:30 | 7 |
Deportivo La Guaira v Atletico Nacional Medellin
|
1-1 |
| 08/20 23:15 | 7 |
Penarol v Jorge Wilstermann
|
2-0 |
| 08/20 23:15 | 7 |
Club General Diaz v Cobresal
|
2-1 |
| 08/20 21:00 | 7 |
UTC Cajamarca v Deportivo Cali
|
0-0 |
| 08/20 21:00 | 7 |
Nacional Potosi v Libertad Asuncion
|
1-0 |
| 08/20 01:30 | 7 |
Huachipato v San Jose
|
3-1 |
| 08/19 23:15 | 7 |
Universidad Catolica del Ecuador v Anzoategui
|
1-1 |
| 08/19 23:15 | 7 |
Aguilas Doradas v Emelec
|
1-1 |
| 08/19 21:00 | 7 |
Rentistas v Cerro Porteno
|
0-2 |
| 08/19 21:00 | 7 |
Universitario de Sucre v Deportes Iquique
|
2-0 |
CA Independiente
Fluminense
Libertad Asuncion
Sao Paulo
Deportes Tolima
Atletico Mineiro
Atletico Nacional Medellin
Estudiantes LP
Union Santa Fe
Cruzeiro
Internacional
Chapecoense
Santos
Colon
Newell's
Sport Recife
River Plate
Racing Club de Montevideo
Ceara
Gremio
Cuiaba
Estudiantes Merida
Flamengo
Argentinos Jrs
Belgrano
Banfield
Vitoria
America MG
CD Antofagasta
Cienciano
Zamora
Olimpia Asuncion
CA Tigre
Anzoategui
Mineros
Magallanes
Coritiba
Plaza Colonia
Nublense
Macara
CD Lara
Rampla Juniors
Juventud De Las Piedras
Central Cordoba
Carlos Manucci
Sport Boys
Liga De Loja
Figueirense
Santiago Wanderers
Tecnico Universitario
The CONMEBOL Sudamericana (Portuguese: CONMEBOL Sul-Americana), also known as Copa Sudamericana (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈkopa suðameɾiˈkana]; Portuguese: Copa Sul-Americana [ˈkɔpɐ ˈsulɐmeɾiˈkɐnɐ]), is an annual international club football competition organized by CONMEBOL, the governing body of football in South America, since 2002. It is the second-most prestigious club competition in South American football. CONCACAF clubs were invited between 2004 and 2008. The CONMEBOL Sudamericana began in 2002, replacing the separate competitions Copa Merconorte and Copa Mercosur (that had replaced Copa CONMEBOL) by a single competition. Since its introduction, the competition has been a pure elimination tournament with the number of rounds and teams varying from year to year.
The CONMEBOL Sudamericana is considered a merger of defunct tournaments such as the Copa CONMEBOL, Copa Mercosur and Copa Merconorte. The winner of the Copa Sudamericana becomes eligible to play in the Recopa Sudamericana, the South American supercup. They gain entry to the next edition of the Copa Libertadores, South America's premier club competition, and also contest the UEFA–CONMEBOL Club Challenge, a friendly cup against the winners of the UEFA Europa League. Previously they also competed in the J.League Cup / Copa Sudamericana Championship against the winner of the Japanese League Cup.
The reigning champion of the competition is Argentine club Racing, who defeated Brazilian club Cruzeiro in the most recent final.
Argentine clubs have accumulated the most victories with ten while containing the largest number of winning teams, with eight clubs. The cup has been won by 18 clubs. Argentine clubs Boca Juniors and Independiente as well as Brazilian club Athletico Paranaense and Ecuadorian clubs Independiente del Valle and LDU Quito are the most successful clubs in the competition's history, having won the tournament twice, with Boca Juniors being the only one to achieve victories back-to-back, in 2004 and 2005.
In 1992, the Copa CONMEBOL was an international football tournament created for South American clubs that did not qualify for the Copa Libertadores and Supercopa Sudamericana. This tournament was discontinued in 1999 and replaced by the Copa Merconorte and Copa Mercosur. These tournaments started in 1998 but were discontinued in 2001. A Pan-American club cup competition was intended, under the name of Copa Pan-Americana, but instead, the Copa Sudamericana was introduced in 2002 as a single-elimination tournament with the reigning Copa Mercosur champion, San Lorenzo.