2004 Copa América
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox international football competition
The 2004 Copa América was the 41st edition of the Copa América, the South-American championship for international association football teams. The competition was organized by CONMEBOL, South America's football governing body, and was held in Peru, who hosted the tournament for the sixth time, from 6 to 25 July.
The tournament was won by Brazil in a shootout over Argentina. This made Brazil hold the World Cup and Copa América titles simultaneously for the second time in history, as happened after 1997 Copa América.
There is no qualifying tournament for the final tournament. CONMEBOL's 10 South American countries participated, along with two more invited countries, making a total of twelve teams competing in the tournament. The two invited countries for this edition of the Copa América were Mexico and Costa Rica.
Venues
| Lima | Cuzco | Arequipa |
|---|---|---|
| Estadio Nacional | Estadio Garcilaso | Estadio Arequipa |
| Capacity: 45,574 | Capacity: 45,056 | Capacity: 40,000 |
| File:Copa America-2004-02.jpg | File:Estadio Garcilazo.jpg | File:Tribuna Occidente Estadio Virgen de Chapi.JPG |
| Piura | Template:Location map+ | |
| Estadio Miguel Grau | ||
| Capacity: 26,550 | ||
| File:Estadio-miguel-grau-piura-entrada-occidente.jpg | ||
| Tacna | Chiclayo | Trujillo |
| Estadio Jorge Basadre | Estadio Elías Aguirre | Estadio Mansiche |
| Capacity: 25,850 | Capacity: 25,000 | Capacity: 25,000 |
| File:Estadio de Tacna.jpg | File:Estadio Elias Aguirre Oriente.jpg | File:Estadio Mansiche de Trujillo.jpg |
Squads
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Officials
- Template:Flagicon Héctor Baldassi
- Template:Flagicon René Ortubé
- Template:Flagicon Márcio Rezende de Freitas
- Template:Flagicon Rubén Selman
- Template:Flagicon Óscar Ruiz
- Template:Flagicon William Mattus
- Template:Flagicon Pedro Ramos
- Template:Flagicon Marco Antonio Rodríguez
- Template:Flagicon Carlos Amarilla
- Template:Flagicon Eduardo Lecca
- Template:Flagicon Gilberto Hidalgo
- Template:Flagicon Gustavo Brand
Draw
The draw for the competition took place on 8 March 2004 at the Lima Art Museum in Lima.[1] The teams were divided into three groups of four teams each. For logistical reasons the three teams from Pots 1 & 4 were manually assigned to their groups ahead of the draw.[2]
| Pot 1 | Pot 2 | Pot 3 | Pot 4 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Template:Fb (assigned to Group A) Template:Fb (assigned to Group B) Template:Fb (assigned to Group C) |
Template:Fb Template:Fb Template:Fb |
Template:Fb Template:Fb Template:Fb |
Template:Fb (assigned to Group A) Template:Fb (assigned to Group B) Template:Fb (assigned to Group C) |
Group stage
Each team plays one match against each of the other teams within the same group. Three points are awarded for a win, one point for a draw and zero points for a defeat.
First and second placed teams, in each group, advance to the quarter-finals. The best third placed team and the second best third placed team, also advance to the quarter-finals.
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- Tie-breaking criteria
Teams were ranked on the following criteria:
- 1. Greater number of points in all group matches
- 2. Goal difference in all group matches
- 3. Greater number of goals scored in all group matches
- 4. Head-to-head results
- 5. Drawing of lots by the CONMEBOL Organising Committee
| Key to colors in group tables | |
|---|---|
| Group winners, runners-up, and best two third-placed teams advance to the quarterfinals | |
- All times local (UTC-5)
Group A
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Group B
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Group C
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Ranking of third-placed teams
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Knockout stage
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Bracket
{{#lst:2004 Copa América knockout stage|Bracket}}
Quarter-finals
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Semi-finals
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Third-place match
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Final
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Result
Goalscorers
With seven goals, Adriano was the top scorer in the tournament. Template:Goalscorers
Awards
- Most Valuable Player: Template:Fbicon Adriano
- Top Goalscorer: Template:Fbicon Adriano (7 goals)
Team of the Tournament
| Goalkeeper | Defenders | Midfielders | Forwards |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Template:Flagicon Javier Zanetti |
Template:Flagicon Lucho González |
Marketing
Mascot
The official mascot of the tournament was known as Chasqui. He was based on the Incan messengers of the same name.[4][5]
Sponsorship
Global platinum sponsor
Global gold sponsor
- América Móvil (Telcel & Telmex are the brands advertised)
- LAN Airlines
Global silver sponsor
- Anheuser-Busch InBev (Corona (beer) is the brand advertised)
- PepsiCo (Pepsi and Gatorade are the brands advertised)
- 51 (brand)
- Volkswagen
Official Supplier
- Tolteca
Theme songs
- "Más Allá de los Sueños" by Peruvian singer-songwriter Gian Marco was the official theme song for the tournament.[6][7] The song was well received and became popular in Latin America but mostly in Perú.[8][9][10][11] Despite it being the official tournament theme song, Gian Marco was unable to perform it during the closing ceremony due to him being on tour at that time.[12]
- "La Copa Será Tuya Al Final" by Betzaida was used by Univision as their theme song.[13][14][15]
References
External links
Template:2004 Copa América Script error: No such module "Navbox".
- ↑ Grupos, sedes y calendario de la Copa América 2004 Template:In lang
- ↑ México en tercera línea del sorteo de Copa América Template:In lang
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ En la voz del peruano Gianmarco
- ↑ Sorteo en problemas por peticion del presidente Toledo
- ↑ Copa América 2015: las canciones del torneo desde Perú 2004 hasta hoy
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Copa América: Repasa las canciones de los torneos de Perú 2004 a Chile 2015
- ↑ De 2004 a hoy: cuáles fueron las otras canciones de la Copa América
- ↑ Gianmarco no interpretará tema oficial en clausura de Copa América
- ↑ Betzaida pretende conquistar tres mercados
- ↑ Template:Cite magazine
- ↑ Billboard Gears up for its 2nd Annual Regional Mexican Music Summit Featuring Star Panelists Jenni Rivera, Montez De Durango, Diana Reyes and More!
- Pages with script errors
- Pages with broken file links
- 2004 Copa América
- 2004 in South American football
- International association football competitions hosted by Peru
- Copa América tournaments
- 2004 in Peruvian football
- 2004–05 in Costa Rican football
- 2004–05 in Mexican football
- July 2004 sports events in South America
- Football competitions in Lima
- 2000s in Lima
- Arequipa
- Chiclayo
- Department of Piura
- Department of Tacna
- Trujillo, Peru