Top Ad unit 728 × 90

Breaking News

recent

FC Barcelona and the history of the Copa America

Claudio Bravo became Barça's newest Copa America champion in 2015 / CA2015
From Hugo Sotil in 1975 to Claudio Bravo in 2015, Barça players have often taken centre stage at the biggest international football tournament in the Americas

Other Barça players at the Copa America before or after playing for the club

Jacinto Villalba (Paraguay, 39)
Dagoberto Moll (Uruguay, 49)
Alcides Silveira (Uruguay, 59)
Cayetano Re (Paraguay, 59)
Juan Seminario (Peru, 56, 57, 59)
Roberto ‘Dinamita’ (Brazil, 75, 79, 83)
Diego Maradona (Argentina, 79, 87, 89)
Julio CĂ©sar Romero (Paraguay, 79*, 83, 87)
Mauricio Pellegrino (Argentina, 97)
Juan RomĂ¡n Riquelme (Argentina, 99, 07)
Juan Pablo SorĂ­n (Argentina, 99, 04)
Giovani dos Santos (Mexico, 11)

The South American Football Championship, or Copa America as it is called these days, is the oldest surviving international football tournament in the world. This summer, the United States is hosting the centennial edition of an event that’s had an irregular history over the years, using a wide variety of different formats.

From an FC Barcelona perspective, it’s only really since the late 1990’s that the club has been represented. Before then, the few South Americans that did cross the Atlantic would usually only play for their national teams in World Cup matches. The Copa America tended to clash with the European club season, making travel impossible.  

The early years

But the championship has always been a valuable way of assessing the talent on offer in Latin America, and several players packed their bags for Barcelona on the back of fine performances. The earliest of these was Hector Scarone, the forward who won the trophy for the fourth time with Uruguay in 1926, and joined the Catalans immediately after. A decade later, in 1935, another Uruguayan, Enrique FernĂ¡ndez, left for Barcelona after leading his country to the title.

Paraguay won the cup for the first time in 1953, and Barça acquired one of the brightest stars of that team, Melanio Olmedo. Paraguay’s 1955 squad featured two more players that caught Barça’s eye: Eulogio MartĂ­nez and Hermes GonzĂ¡lez. Two further examples of players that would impress at the tournament and be wearing an FCB shirt just a few months later were Evaristo, runner-up with Brazil in 1957, and Miguel Loayza, who scored 5 goals in 6 games for Peru in 1959.

1975: Sotil distinction

A current Barcelona player appeared in the tournament for the first time in 1975. Not only that, but he won it! When Peru qualified for the final in Caracas, Hugo Sotil was granted special permission to fly out for the game. He got there just in time, racing from the airport and arriving at the stadium as the rest of the team was already warming up.

[[DES_1]]But it was worth the effort. With Cruyff and Neeskens hogging the two foreigners’ berths at Barça, Sotil had hardly played any competitive football all season, yet he scored the only goal of the game against Colombia, the last time Peru ever won the coveted trophy.

1997 and 1999: Barça and Brazil back-to-back

Barcelona would not be directly represented at a Copa America again until the 1997 tournament in Bolivia, when both Giovanni and an inspired Ronaldo appeared for Brazil (the latter shortly before leaving for Inter Milan). Though no longer a Barça player, Romario was also in that marvellous Brazilian side, which won all six games on the way to the title.

Probably the greatest Copa America performance by a current Barça player was that of Rivaldo when Brazil successfully defended the trophy at Paraguay 1999. He silenced the critics who believed he always under-performed for his country by scoring five goals to finish joint top scorer (along with Ronaldo), and being named tournament MVP.

Goalkeeper Roberto Bonano was set to be Barça’s sole representative at the 2001 Copa America in Colombia, but Argentina pulled out at the last minute due to security concerns. But three of the Brazil team that year, Belletti, Rochemback and Geovanni, would be headed for Barça soon after, as would Rafa Marquez, whose Mexican team finished runners-up to the hosts. As a Barça player, he’d be back for the next two editions.

2004 and 2007: Two more for Brazil

Brazil beat Argentina on penalties to win the 2004 final in Lima, and that was despite manager Carlos Alberto Parreira opting to field an experimental squad and leaving Barça megastar Ronaldinho at home. But there was a winner’s medal for 19 year-old Adriano Correia, then of Coritiba, although he didn’t feature in any games.

Another future Barça star, Javier Mascherano, then of River Plate, was part of the losing side, as was Javier Saviola, officially a Barça player but out on loan to Monaco.

Ronaldinho also missed the 2007 Copa America in Venezuela, tiredness being cited as the cause, where Brazil once again beat Argentina in the final. Dani Alves, then of Sevilla, scored the third goal in a 3-0 win. The defeated finalists included Gabriel Milito and a 20-year-old Leo Messi of Barcelona who was voted best young player of the tournament, as well as Mascherano, now into his spell at Liverpool.

2011: SuĂ¡rez strikes gold

In 2011 Argentina were playing on home soil, by which time Messi, Mascherano and Milito were all team-mates at Barça. But the hosts crashed out at the quarter final stage to Uruguay, a side that included Martin CĂ¡ceres (on loan to Sevilla from Barcelona) and a certain Liverpool player called Luis SuĂ¡rez. Uruguay would go on to win a record 15th title, and SuĂ¡rez was named MVP.

Adriano, Dani Alves and future Barça star Neymar Jr were in the Brazil squad that suffered an early exit at the hands of Paraguay that year. 2011 was also a poor tournament for Chile, stunned by Venezuela in the quarter-finals. Two of the Chilean squad were future Barça players, and they were headed for much greater things the next time the Copa America came around.

2015: Bravo Chile

Alexis Sanchez had left for Arsenal by the time Chile hosted in 2015, but Barça were still represented by Claudio Bravo as ‘La Roja’ won on home soil to clinch the trophy for the first time ever by beating Messi and Mascherano’s Argentina in the final.

Luis SuĂ¡rez, now at Barça, was unable to play any part in the competition due to the FIFA suspension, while Neymar Jr was given a four-match ban after Brazil’s game with Colombia and that ruled him out for the rest of the tournament too. With Dani Alves again featuring, Brazil crashed out on penalties to Paraguay for the second time in a row.



from News at FCB http://www.fcbarcelona.com/football/first-team/detail/article/fc-barcelona-and-the-history-of-the-copa-america
FC Barcelona and the history of the Copa America Reviewed by Unknown on 06:34 Rating: 5

No comments:

All Rights Reserved by Jumpy News Blog © 2015 - 2018
Designed by JumpyNews

Contact Form

Name

Email *

Message *

Powered by Blogger.