Copa Libertadores (trophy)

For the competition, see Copa Libertadores.
Copa Libertadores

The first trophy, designed by
Alberto De Gasperi in 1959.
Awarded for Winning the Copa Libertadores
Sponsored by Banco Santander
Presented by CONMEBOL
First awarded 1960 (1960)
Currently held by Colombia Atlético Nacional
Official website conmebol.com

The Copa Libertadores trophy, or simply Copa Libertadores, is a trophy awarded annually by CONMEBOL to the football club that wins the Copa Libertadores.

Trophy

The concept of having a standard Cup awarded to the winner was thought of by Teófilo Salinas, a boardmember of CONMEBOL, and it was his initiative that led to the creation of one of the most prized awards of the world. The original trophy was created in 1959 by Alberto de Gasperi, an Italian immigrant, who owned an artisan shop in Lima, Peru; the prestigious memento was forged in the Camusso Jewelry workshop, located on Colonial Avenue of the same forementioned city.[1][2] Gasperi later commented:

He gave us an idea, we did a drawing, rejected. Did another design, aproved. What took the longest time was the approval. Whenever he didn’t like a model we had to start from scratch. As we say in our jewelry shop’s jargon, we had to "pagar el ojo." [3] When Salinas saw the final result he was delighted.

The original trophy carried room for a mere 18 badges (perhaps as a sign of the little faith its organizers had on the duration of the tournament). The top of the laurel is made of sterling silver, with the exception of the football player at the top (it is made of bronze with a silver coating).[4] The pedestal, which contains badges from every winner of the competition, is made of hardwood plywood. The badges would be placed at the top base of the pedestal one underneath another and span six columns. At the top of the cup, there is a football player getting ready to kick a ball. The top half of the globe beneath him carries the coat of arms of every CONMEBOL nation. The middle bar has "Campeonato de Campeones de Sudamerica" inscripted on it.[5] There are two handles on each side of the globe. The non-wooden part of the laurel is made of sterling silver, with the exception of the football player at the top (it is made of bronze with a silver coating).[6]

Estudiantes won the right to win the first trophy outright after their third, consecutive win in 1970. The pedastal was placed on the new top portion of the trophy which shared similar characteristics to the first one. A third switch was implemented in 1974 after Independiente's triumph. This time, the middle bar has "Copa Libertadores" inscripted on it.[7] Eighteen editions after its inauguration, the pedestal was filled to capacity and a new pedestal that carried room for 24 badges was installed. The old badges were installed on the new pedestal and the Cup carried room for six more editions. After six years the pedestal was full and a new stand was installed. This new pedestal had room for 28 badges and it was designed to have seven columns of four. A quick solution practiced after the 28 slots were occupied was to put their badges on the bottom edge of the pedestal. The first team to do this was Atlético Nacional.[7]

Although the edge of the pedestal was filled in 1994, the pedestal stayed the same size until 2004. The Copa Libertadores debuted with a new pedestal, and with space for several champions and with all its badges in place. But this was short lived due to an accident in the celebrations of the consecration of Once Caldas in July 2004, after beating defending champions Boca Juniors. This issue was highlighted when the old trophy ended shattered when Herly Alcazar, who plays for Once Caldas, let the trophy fell from his hands. Repair was entrusted to Chilean company Alzaimagen. Among the differences from the current to the original is that the handles are larger, and the man kicks with his left foot and not with his right.

In 2009, the trophy went through a major renovation as the badges were organized to have nine horizontal columns with vertical rows. The first team to receive the current trophy was Estudiantes. The trophy is scheduled to be filled by the 2024 edition.[7]

Rules

Copa Libertadores winners keep the real trophy in their possession. It remains so until the draw and seeding of the next Copa Libertadores begins. Before the proceedings happen, the club president of the defending champion will return the trophy to the president of CONMEBOL and a replica trophy is awarded to the winning club. Winning clubs are also permitted to make exact replicas of their own. A club gets to keep the trophy indefinitely if they win three consecutive tournaments.

As well as winning the right to keep the trophy until the start of the next tournament, the winner gets to have a metal badge of gold or silver placed on the wooden pedestal of the trophy. The badge has the name of the winner and the year of the triumph.

Badges

Every winner of the Copa Libertadores has a badge, commemorating the team and edition won.

The metal badge was added to the Cup in order to commemorate past winners of the title. The former badge contained the year at the top and the club name and nation of the winners side by side, e.g., "1960, Peñarol, (URU)". The rebranded badge (since 2009) contains the year of the triumph, the full name of the winning club, and the hometown and home country of the winning club. To the left of that information is the club's logo.[7]

Salver

A separate "award" was given by Toyota Motor Corporation to the eventual Copa Libertadores champions in the trophy ceremony. A golden salver was introduced in 1998 by Toyota since the competition was primarily sponsored by Toyota Motor Corporation from 1998 to 2008; thus, the competition was known as the Copa Toyota Libertadores. The golden salver contained the competition logo in the middle, "CAMPEON X" at the top (the X representing the edition won) and the logo of Toyota and the word "TOYOTA" at the bottom.[8] Since Toyota stopped being the primary sponsor of the Copa Libertadores, no salver has been awarded to the champions.

Winners

Peñarol successfully defended the trophy in 1961.
Estudiantes de La Plata after winning a third consecutive title in 1970.
The current Copa Libertadores trophy, won for the first time by Estudiantes in 2009.

Two clubs have kept the actual trophy after three consecutive wins:[9]

Independiente is the only team to have won all three trophies at some point in time.

List of winners of the original Copa Libertadores trophy (1960-1970)
Team Won Years won
Uruguay Peñarol31960, 1961, 1966
Argentina Estudiantes31968, 1969, 1970
Brazil Santos21962, 1963
Argentina Independiente21964, 1965
Argentina Racing11967
List of winners of the second Copa Libertadores trophy (1971-1974)
Team Won Years won
Argentina Independiente31972, 1973, 1974
Uruguay Nacional11971
List of winners of the current Copa Libertadores trophy (1975–present)
Team Won Years won
Argentina Boca Juniors61977, 1978, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2007
Paraguay Olimpia31979, 1990, 2002
Brazil São Paulo31992, 1993, 2005
Argentina River Plate31986, 1996, 2015
Argentina Independiente21975, 1984
Brazil Cruzeiro21976, 1997
Uruguay Nacional21980, 1988
Uruguay Peñarol31982, 1987
Brazil Grêmio21983, 1995
Colombia Atlético Nacional21989, 2016
Brazil Internacional22006, 2010
Brazil Flamengo11981
Argentina Argentinos Juniors11985
Chile Colo-Colo11991
Argentina Vélez Sársfield11994
Brazil Vasco da Gama11998
Brazil Palmeiras11999
Colombia Once Caldas12004
Ecuador LDU Quito12008
Argentina Estudiantes12009
Brazil Santos12011
Brazil Corinthians12012
Brazil Atlético Mineiro12013
Argentina San Lorenzo12014

See also

References

External links

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