Copa Iberoamericana
Appearance
Organising body | CONMEBOL RFEF |
---|---|
Founded | 1994 |
Abolished | 1994 |
Region | South America Spain |
Number of teams | 2 |
Related competitions | Copa Oro N. Leoz Copa del Rey |
Most successful club(s) | Real Madrid (1 title) |
The Copa Iberoamericana (English: Ibero-American Cup) or Copa Iberia was a one-off international football competition. It was created to face the champions of the Copa de Oro Nicolás Leoz and the Copa del Rey, as a result of an agreement signed between CONMEBOL and the Royal Spanish Football Federation.[1][2]
It was disputed only once between Boca Juniors and Real Madrid in 1994, with the Spanish club prevailing 4–3 on aggregate.[3] In 2015, CONMEBOL included Copa Iberoamericana in the list of its official competitions.[4]
Qualified teams
[edit]Team | Qualification |
---|---|
Boca Juniors | 1993 Copa de Oro winners |
Real Madrid | 1992–93 Copa del Rey winners |
Venues
[edit]Match details
[edit]First leg
[edit]1994 Copa Iberoamericana
First leg
Real Madrid | 3–1 | Boca Juniors |
---|---|---|
Hierro 34' Morales 70', 79' |
Report | MacAllister 85' |
Real Madrid
|
Boca Juniors
|
|
|
Second leg
[edit]Second leg
Boca Juniors | 2–1 | Real Madrid |
---|---|---|
da Silva 40' Naveda 73' |
Report | Milla 74' |
Boca Juniors
|
Real Madrid
|
|
|
Real Madrid won 4–3 on aggregate
References
[edit]- ^ El título que le 'robaron' al Real Madrid ante el Boca de Menotti Archived 2020-05-17 at the Wayback Machine by Tomás Roncero on AS.com, 16 April 2020
- ^ Copa Iberoamericana 1994 Archived 2021-09-12 at the Wayback Machine on Historia de Boca website
- ^ RSSSF – Copa Iberoamericana Archived 2023-02-02 at the Wayback Machine on the RSSSF
- ^ "Las competiciones oficiales de la CONMEBOL". Archived from the original on 2015-08-22. Retrieved 2016-02-12.