Copa Iberoamericana

The Copa Iberoamericana (Spanish: Ibero-American Cup) or Copa Iberia, is an international official football competition. It was created to face the champions of the Copa de Oro Nicolás Leoz and the Copa del Rey, because of an agreement signed between CONMEBOL and the Royal Spanish Football Federation.

Copa Iberoamericana
The trophy awarded to champions
Organising bodyCONMEBOL
RFEF
Founded1994
Abolished1994 (1994)
RegionSouth America
Spain
Number of teams2
Related competitionsCopa Oro N. Leoz
Copa del Rey
Most successful club(s) Real Madrid
(1 title)

It was disputed only once between Boca Juniors and Real Madrid in 1994, with victory to the Spanish club. After two decades, in 2015 CONMEBOL recognised the Copa Iberoamericana as an official tournament.[1]

Match details

First leg

Real Madrid 3–1 Boca Juniors
Hierro  34'
Morales  70', 79'
MacAllister  85'
Attendance: 10,000
Real Madrid
Boca Juniors
GK1 Francisco Buyo
DF2 Chendo
DF6 Fernando Hierro
DF  Rafael Alkorta
DF3 Mikel Lasa  75'
MF8 Míchel
MF5 Luis Milla  86'
MF10 Robert Prosinečki  46'
FW Dani  67'
FW11 Rafael Martín Vázquez
FW9 Iván Zamorano
Substitutes:
DF Nando  75'
MF Sandro  46'
FW17 José Luis Morales  67'
Manager:
Vicente del Bosque
GK1 Navarro Montoya  2'
DF4 Diego Soñora
DF2 Juan Simón
DF6 Carlos Moya
DF3 Carlos MacAllister  33'
MF8 Julio Saldaña
MF5 Leonardo Peralta
MF10 Alberto Márcico
FW7 Sergio Martínez  2'
FW9 Rubén da Silva  67'
FW11 Ivo Basay  70'
Substitutes:
GK12 Esteban Pogany  2'
FW16 Luis Alberto Carranza  67'
MF15 Carlos Tapia  70'
Manager:
César Luis Menotti

Second leg

Boca Juniors 2–1 Real Madrid
da Silva  40'
Naveda  73'
Milla  74'
Attendance: 35,000
Referee: Jorge Nieves
Boca Juniors
Real Madrid
GK1 Esteban Pogany
DF4 Julio Saldaña  26'
DF2 Luis Adrián Medero
DF6 Raúl Noriega
DF3 Rodolfo Arruabarrena
MF8 Alejandro Farías
MF5 Alberto Naveda
MF7 Marcelo Tejera
MF10 Carlos Daniel Tapia
FW9 Rubén da Silva
FW11 Luis Alberto Carranza
Substitutes:
DF Carlos Moya  26'
Manager:
César Luis Menotti
GK1 Francisco Buyo
DF2 Chendo
DF3 Marcos
DF4 Nando
DF5 Luis Milla
MF6 Mikel Antía
MF7 Velasco  87'
MF8 Míchel
FW9 Dani  80'
FW10 Robert Prosinečki
FW11 Martín Vázquez
Substitutes:
DF Luis Miguel Ramis  87'
FW José Luis Morales  80'
Manager:
Vicente del Bosque

Real Madrid won 4-3 on aggregate

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References

Sources

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