- Source: 1999 Copa Libertadores
The 1999 Copa Libertadores was the 40th edition of the Copa Libertadores, South America's premier club championship. It was held between February 21 and June 16. Palmeiras became the champions after beating Deportivo Cali on penalties for the first time in their history. from Brazil, after the team defeated Deportivo Cali, from Colombia, in the decisive match held at Estádio Palestra Itália, São Paulo, on June 16, 1999. The match ended 2-1 in regular time and 4-3 in a penalty shootout. The first leg of the final, played on June 2 in the Colombian city of Cali at Estadio Olímpico Pascual Guerrero, saw Deportivo win 1-0.
This was the first Libertadores title for the São Paulo team, which had previously reached the runner-up position in 1961 and 1968.
The coach who led Palmeiras to this historic victory was Luiz Felipe Scolari, who, years later, guided the Brazilian national team to its fifth World Cup title. Palmeiras' goalkeeper Marcos was the tournament’s standout revelation and was also named the best player of the 1999 continental competition by Conmebol.
History
The core Palmeiras team, besides goalkeeper Marcos, who replaced injured keeper Velloso (footballer, born 1968) during the group stage, consisted of fullbacks Arce (right) and Júnior (left); center-backs Júnior Baiano and Roque Júnior; defensive midfielders César Sampaio and Rogério; midfielders Alex and Zinho; and forwards Paulo Nunes and Oséas. Other key players included forwards Evair and Euller, as well as center-back Cléber and defensive midfielder Galeano.
Before reaching the final, Palmeiras eliminated River Plate of Argentina in the semi-finals. River had previously ousted fellow Argentine club Vélez Sársfield in the quarterfinals. In the first leg, played in Buenos Aires at the Estadio Monumental de Núñez, River defeated Palmeiras 1-0. In the return leg at Estádio Palestra Itália, Palmeiras won 3-0.
In the quarterfinals, Palmeiras eliminated their arch-rival Corinthians. Both matches were held at Estádio do Morumbi, each ending 2-0: Palmeiras won the first, Corinthians the second. The tie went to penalties, with Palmeiras prevailing 4-2. A similar scenario unfolded in the 2000 edition, this time in the semi-finals, again decided by penalties (5-4) and once more favoring Palmeiras, who advanced to the final.
In the round of 16 in 1999, Palmeiras defeated the defending champions, Vasco da Gama. The first match, held at Estádio Palestra Itália, ended 1-1. The second, played at Estádio São Januário, saw Palmeiras win 4-2.
During the group stage, Palmeiras finished second with 10 points, behind Corinthians with 12 points. Both Brazilian teams, along with Cerro Porteño, advanced from Group 3, leaving Paraguayan club Olimpia in last place with just 5 points.
First round
Teams in green qualified to the Round of 16
Teams in red were eliminated
Twenty teams were distributed among five groups in the First Round; the top three of each group qualified to the playoff bracket. Vasco da Gama (winner of the previous edition of the tournament) received a bye to the playoff bracket.
= Group 1
== Group 2
== Group 3
== Group 4
== Group 5
=Knockout stages
= Bracket
== Round of 16
=First leg matches were played on April 14. Second leg matches were on April 20 and April 21.
= Quarterfinals
=First leg matches were played on May 5. Second leg matches were played on May 12.
= Semi-finals
=First leg matches were played on May 19. Second leg matches were played on May 26.
= Finals
=First leg match were played on June 2. Second leg match were played on June 16.
Champion
Broadcasting rights
= Americas
=Latin America: local channels
References
CONMEBOL: Copa Toyota Libertadores 1999
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
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- Piala Interkontinental 1999
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- 1999 Copa Libertadores
- Copa Libertadores
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- Supercopa Libertadores
- Copa Libertadores records and statistics
- 1999 Copa Libertadores finals
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- List of Copa Libertadores finals