2023 Copa Libertadores final | |
Event: | 2023 Copa Libertadores |
Team1: | Boca Juniors |
Team1score: | 1 |
Team2: | Fluminense |
Team2score: | 2 |
Details: | After extra time |
Date: | 4 November 2023 |
Stadium: | Estádio do Maracanã |
City: | Rio de Janeiro |
Referee: | Wilmar Roldán (Colombia) |
Attendance: | 69,232 |
Previous: | 2022 |
Next: | 2024 |
The 2023 Copa Libertadores final was the final match which decided the winner of the 2023 Copa Libertadores. This was the 64th edition of the Copa Libertadores, the top-tier South American continental club football tournament organized by CONMEBOL.
The match was played between Argentine team Boca Juniors and Brazilian side Fluminense on 4 November 2023 at the Estádio do Maracanã in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.[1]
Fluminense won their first ever Copa Libertadores after defeating Boca Juniors 2–1 after extra time.[2] [3] [4]
As winners, Fluminense qualified for the 2023 and 2025 FIFA Club World Cups and earned the right to play against the 2023 Copa Sudamericana winners LDU in the 2024 Recopa Sudamericana (which Fluminense would later go on to win as well). They also automatically qualified for the 2024 Copa Libertadores group stage.
El Cilindro | Avellaneda | 61,000 | ||
Estadio Monumental | Buenos Aires | 70,074 | ||
La Bombonera | 54,000 | |||
Estadio Libertadores de América | 48,069 | |||
Estadio Mario Alberto Kempes | Córdoba | 57,000 | ||
Arena da Baixada | Curitiba | 42,372 | ||
Estádio Beira-Rio | Porto Alegre | 50,128 | ||
Estádio do Maracanã | Rio de Janeiro | 78,838 | ||
Estádio do Morumbi | São Paulo | 67,052 | ||
Arena Corinthians | 49,205 | |||
Estadio Nacional Julio Martínez Prádanos | Santiago | 58,665 | ||
Estadio Monumental Isidro Romero Carbo | Guayaquil | 59,283 | ||
Estadio Monumental | Lima | 80,093 | ||
Estadio Nacional del Perú | 50,000 | |||
Estadio Centenario | Montevideo | 60,235 |
Team | Previous finals appearances (bold indicates winners) | |
---|---|---|
Boca Juniors | 11 (1963, 1977, 1978, 1979, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2007, 2012, 2018) | |
1 (2008) |
Note: In all scores below, the score of the home team is given first.
Boca Juniors | Round | Fluminense | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
width=25% | Opponent | width=10% | Venue | width=10% | Score | width=10% | width=25% | Opponent | width=10% | Venue | width=10% | Score | |
Bye | Qualifying stages | Bye | |||||||||||
Group F | Group stage | Group D | |||||||||||
Monagas | Away | 0–0 | Sporting Cristal | Away | 1–3 | ||||||||
Deportivo Pereira | Home | 2–1 | The Strongest | Home | 1–0 | ||||||||
Colo-Colo | Away | 0–2 | River Plate | Home | 5–1 | ||||||||
Deportivo Pereira | Away | 1–0 | The Strongest | Away | 1–0 | ||||||||
Colo-Colo | Home | 1–0 | River Plate | Away | 2–0 | ||||||||
Monagas | Home | 4–0 | Sporting Cristal | Home | 1–1 | ||||||||
Seed 4 | Final stages | Seed 8 | |||||||||||
Nacional (tied 2–2 on aggregate, won on penalties) | Away | 0–0 | Round of 16 | Argentinos Juniors (won 3–1 on aggregate) | Away | 1–1 | |||||||
Home | 2–2 (4–2 p) | Home | 2–0 | ||||||||||
Racing (tied 0–0 on aggregate, won on penalties) | Home | 0–0 | Quarter-finals | Olimpia (won 5–1 on aggregate) | Home | 2–0 | |||||||
Away | 0–0 (1–4 p) | Away | 1–3 | ||||||||||
Palmeiras (tied 1–1 on aggregate, won on penalties) | Home | 0–0 | Semi-finals | Internacional (won 4–3 on aggregate) | Home | 2–2 | |||||||
Away | 1–1 (2–4 p) | Away | 1–2 |
Marcos Rojo (sent off in the semi-final second leg) and Exequiel Zeballos (knee injury) from Boca Juniors and Manoel (doping suspension) from Fluminense were ruled out of the final.
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Assistant referees
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