CONMEBOL





























South American Football Confederation

CONMEBOL logo (2017).svg

CONMEBOL member associations map.svg
Abbreviation
CONMEBOL
CSF
Formation
9 July 1916; 102 years ago (1916-07-09)
Type
Federation of national associations
Headquarters
Luque (Gran Asunción), Paraguay
Coordinates
25°15′38″S 57°30′58″W / 25.26056°S 57.51611°W / -25.26056; -57.51611
Region served

South America
Membership

10 member associations
Official languages

Spanish, Portuguese
President

Alejandro Domínguez
Vice Presidents

Ramón Jesurún (1st)
Laureano González (2nd)
Arturo Salah (3rd)
Treasurer

Rolando López
Parent organization

FIFA
Website
www.CONMEBOL.com




The old logo, used between 1989 and 2017, featured the flags of every member of the confederation




Countries members of CONMEBOL


The South American Football Confederation (CONMEBOL, /ˈkɒnmɪbɒl/; Spanish: Confederación Sudamericana de Fútbol;[1]Portuguese: Confederação Sul-Americana de Futebol[2] or CSF) is the continental governing body of association football in South America (apart from Guyana, Suriname and French Guiana) and it is one of FIFA's six continental confederations. The oldest continental confederation in the world, its headquarters are located in Luque, Paraguay, near Asunción. CONMEBOL is responsible for the organization and governance of South American football's major international tournaments. With 10 member football associations, it has the fewest members of all the confederations in FIFA.


CONMEBOL national teams have won nine FIFA World Cups (Brazil five, Uruguay two and Argentina two), and CONMEBOL clubs have won 22 Intercontinental Cups and four FIFA Club World Cups. Argentina and Uruguay have won two Olympic gold medals each, Brazil has won one Olympic gold medal. It is considered one of the strongest confederations in the world.


The World Cup qualifiers of CONMEBOL have been described as the "toughest qualifiers in the world", for their simple round-robin system, entry of some of the top national teams in the world, leveling of the weaker national teams, climate conditions, geographic conditions, strong home stands and passionate supporters.[3][4] Currently, the Confederation is planning to create the first women's qualification to the FIFA Women's World Cup to replace the Copa América Femenina.


Juan Ángel Napout (Paraguay) was the president of CONMEBOL until 3 December 2015 when he was arrested in a raid in Switzerland as part of the U.S. Justice Department's bribery case involving FIFA. Wilmar Valdez (Uruguay) was interim president until 26 January 2016 when Alejandro Domínguez (Paraguay) was elected president. The Vice Presidents are Ramón Jesurum (Colombia), Laureano González (Venezuela), and Arturo Salah (Chile).




Contents





  • 1 History


  • 2 Members


  • 3 Competitions

    • 3.1 International


    • 3.2 Club


    • 3.3 Current champions


    • 3.4 CONMEBOL Competitions



  • 4 World Cup participation and results

    • 4.1 Men's


    • 4.2 Women's



  • 5 FIFA Confederations Cup


  • 6 FIFA Futsal World Cup


  • 7 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup


  • 8 Corruption


  • 9 Leadership

    • 9.1 Executive Committee


    • 9.2 Past presidents



  • 10 Rankings

    • 10.1 National teams


    • 10.2 Beach soccer national teams


    • 10.3 Clubs

      • 10.3.1 Football Database Rankings


      • 10.3.2 IFFHS




  • 11 See also


  • 12 References


  • 13 External links




History


In 1916, the first edition of the "Campeonato Sudamericano de Fútbol" (South-American Football Championship), now known as the "Copa América", was contested in Argentina to commemorate the centenary of the Argentine Declaration of Independence. The four participating associations of that tournament gathered together in Buenos Aires in order to officially create a governing body to facilitate the organization of the tournament. Thus, CONMEBOL was founded on 9 July 1916 under the initiative of Uruguayan Héctor Rivadavia Gómez, but approved by the football associations of Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Uruguay. The first Constitutional Congress on
15 December of that same year, which took place in Montevideo, ratified the decision.


Over the years, the other football associations in South America joined, with the last being Venezuela in 1952. Guyana, Suriname, and the French overseas department of French Guiana, while geographically in South America, are not part of CONMEBOL. Consisting of a French territory, a former British territory, and a former Dutch territory, and located near the Caribbean Sea, they are part of the Confederation of North, Central American and Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF), mainly due to historical, cultural, and sporting reasons. With ten member nations, CONMEBOL is the smallest and the only fully continental land-based FIFA confederation (no insular countries or associates from different continents).



Members




































































Country
Association
Founded
Joined
National team
Top division

 Argentina

AFA
1893
1916
ARG (M, W)

Superliga Argentina

 Bolivia

FBF
1925
1926
BOL (M, W)

Liga Profesional

 Brazil

CBF
1914
1916
BRA (M, W)

Campeonato Brasileiro Série A

 Chile

FFC
1895
1916
CHI (M, W)

Primera División

 Colombia

FCF
1924
1936
COL (M, W)

Primera A

 Ecuador

FEF
1925
1927
ECU (M, W)

Serie A

 Paraguay

APF
1906
1921
PAR (M, W)

División Profesional

 Peru

FPF
1922
1925
PER (M, W)

Primera División

 Uruguay

AUF
1900
1916
URU (M, W)

Primera División

 Venezuela

FVF
1926
1952
VEN (M, W)

Primera División


Competitions



International


The main competition for men's national teams is the Copa América, started in 1916. CONMEBOL also runs national competitions at Under-20, Under-17 and Under-15 levels. For women's national teams, CONMEBOL operates the Copa América Femenina for senior national sides, as well as Under-20 and Under-17 championships.


In futsal there is the Copa América de Futsal and Campeonato Sudamericano de Futsal Sub-20. The Campeonato Sudamericano Femenino de Futsal is the women's equivalent to the man's tournament.



Club


CONMEBOL also runs the two main club competitions in South America: the Copa Libertadores was first held in 1960 and the Copa Sudamericana was launched by CONMEBOL in 2002 as an indirect successor to the Supercopa Libertadores (begun in 1988). A third competition, the Copa CONMEBOL, started in 1992 and was abolished in 1999. In women's football CONMEBOL also conducts the Copa Libertadores Femenina for club teams. The competition was first held in 2009.


The Recopa Sudamericana pits the past year's winners of the Copa Libertadores against the winners of the Copa Sudamericana (previously the winners of the Supercopa Libertadores), and came into being in 1989.


The Intercontinental Cup was jointly organised with UEFA between the Copa Libertadores and the UEFA Champions League winners.



Current champions































































































































Competitions
Champion
Title
Runner-Up
Next Edition
Clubs

Copa Libertadores de América

Brazil Grêmio
3rd

Argentina Lanús

2018

Copa Libertadores Femenina

Brazil Corinthians/Audax
1st

Chile Colo-Colo

2018

Copa Sudamericana

Argentina Independiente
2nd

Brazil Flamengo

2018

Recopa Sudamericana

Brazil Grêmio
2nd

Argentina Independiente

2019

Copa Libertadores de Futsal

Brazil Carlos Barbosa
5th

Paraguay Cerro Porteño

2018

Copa Libertadores Femenina de Futsal

Brazil Unochapecó
2nd

Paraguay Sport Colonial

2018

U-20 Copa Libertadores

Uruguay Nacional
1st

Ecuador Independiente del Valle

2020

Copa Libertadores de Beach Soccer

Brazil Vasco da Gama
2nd

Uruguay Malvin

2018
Nations Men

Copa América

Chile Chile
2nd

Argentina Argentina

2019

South American Under-20 Championship

 Uruguay
8th

 Ecuador

2019

South American Under-17 Championship

 Brazil
12th

 Chile

2019

South American Under-15 Championship

 Argentina
1st

 Brazil

2019

Copa América de Futsal

 Brazil
10th

 Argentina

2019

FIFA Futsal World Cup qualifiers

 Brazil
1st

 Argentina

2020

South American Under-20 Futsal Championship

 Argentina
1st

 Brazil

2018

South American Under-17 Futsal Championship

 Brazil
1st

 Argentina

2018

Copa América de Beach Soccer

 Brazil
2nd

 Paraguay

2020

FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualifiers

 Brazil
6th

 Paraguay

2019

South American Under-20 Beach Soccer Championship

 Brazil
1st

 Argentina

2019
Nations Women

Copa América Femenina

 Brazil
7th

 Chile

2022

South American Under-20 Women's Football Championship

Brazil Brazil
8th

Paraguay Paraguay

2020

South American Under-17 Women's Football Championship

Brazil Brazil
3rd

Colombia Colombia

2020

Copa América Femenina de Futsal

Colombia Colombia
1st

Uruguay Uruguay

2017

South American Under-20 Women's Futsal Championship

Brazil Brazil
1st

Colombia Colombia

2018


CONMEBOL Competitions










World Cup participation and results


Legend

  • 1st – Champion


  • 2nd – Runner-up


  •  3rd  – Third Place[6]


  • 4th – Fourth place


  • QF – Quarterfinals


  • R16 – Round of 16 (since 1986: knockout round of 16)


  • R2 – Second round (for the 1974, 1978, and 1982 tournaments, which had two group stages)


  • GS – Group Stage (in the 1950, 1974, 1978, and 1982 tournaments, which had two group stages, this refers to the first group stage)


  • 1S – First Knockout Stage (1934–1938 Single-elimination tournament)

  • Q — Qualified for upcoming tournament


  •    — Did not qualify


  •     — Did not enter / Withdrew / Banned


  •     — Hosts


Men's


































































































































































































































































































Team
Uruguay
1930

Italy
1934

France
1938

Brazil
1950

Switzerland
1954

Sweden
1958

Chile
1962

England
1966

Mexico
1970

West Germany
1974

Argentina
1978

Spain
1982

Mexico
1986

Italy
1990

United States
1994

France
1998

South Korea
Japan
2002

Germany
2006

South Africa
2010

Brazil
2014

Russia
2018

Qatar
2022
Total
 Argentina2nd1SGSGSQFR21stR21st2ndR16QFGSQFQF2ndR16
17
 BoliviaGSGSGS
3
 BrazilGS1S3rd2ndQF1st1stGS1st4th3rdR2QFR161st2nd1stQFQF4thQF
21
 ChileGSGS3rdGSGSGSR16R16R16
9
 ColombiaGSR16GSGSQFR16
6
 EcuadorGSR16GS
3
 ParaguayGSGSGSR16R16R16GSQF
8
 PeruGSQFR2GSGS
5
 Uruguay1st1st4thGSQF4thGSR16R16GS4thR16QF
13
 Venezuela
0
Total721523543434444554565TBD85


Women's


























































































































Team
China
1991

Sweden
1995

United States
1999

United States
2003

China
2007

Germany
2011

Canada
2015

France
2019
Total

 Argentina
GSGS
2

 Bolivia

0

 Brazil
GSGS3rdQF2ndQFR16Q
8

 Chile
Q
1

 Colombia
GSR16
2

 Ecuador
GS
1

 Paraguay

0

 Peru

0

 Uruguay

0

 Venezuela

0
Total1112223TBD


FIFA Confederations Cup


Legend

  • 1st – Champions


  • 2nd – Runners-up


  • 3rd – Third place


  • 4th – Fourth place

  • GS – Group stage

  • Q — Qualified for upcoming tournament


  •  ••  — Qualified but withdrew


  •  •  — Did not qualify


  •  ×  — Did not enter / Withdrew from the Copa América or withdrew from the Confederations Cup / Banned


  •    — Hosts









































































































Team

1992
Saudi Arabia

1995
Saudi Arabia

1997
Saudi Arabia

1999
Mexico

2001
South Korea
Japan

2003
France

2005
Germany

2009
South Africa

2013
Brazil

2017
Russia

2021
Qatar
Total

 Argentina

1st

2nd



×

2nd




3

 Bolivia



GS







1

 Brazil

×

1st

2nd

4th
GS

1st

1st

1st


7

 Chile










2nd

1

 Colombia






4th





1

 Uruguay



4th






4th


2
Total1122122121


FIFA Futsal World Cup


Legend

  • 1st — Champions


  • 2nd — Runners-up


  • 3rd — Third place


  • 4th — Fourth place

  • QF — Quarterfinals

  • R2 — Round 2 (1989–2008, second group stage, top 8; 2012–present: knockout round of 16)

  • R1 — Round 1

  • Q — Qualified for upcoming tournament


  •    — Hosts







































































Nation

1989
Netherlands

1992
Hong Kong

1996
Spain

2000
Guatemala

2004
Chinese Taipei

2008
Brazil

2012
Thailand

2016
Colombia
Years

 Argentina
R2R2R1R24thR2QF1st8

 Brazil
1st1st1st2nd3rd1st1stR28

 Colombia
4thR22

 Paraguay
R2R1R1R2R2QF6

 Uruguay
R2R1R13
Nations33333444


FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup


Legend

  • 1st — Champions


  • 2nd — Runners-up


  • 3rd — Third place


  • 4th — Fourth place

  • QF — Quarterfinals (1999–2001, 2004–present)

  • R1 — Round 1

  • q — Qualified for upcoming tournament


  •  ••  — Qualified but withdrew


  •  •  — Did not qualify


  •     — Hosts
































































































































































































1995
Brazil
(8)


1996
Brazil
(8)


1997
Brazil
(8)


1998
Brazil
(10)


1999
Brazil
(12)


2000
Brazil
(12)


2001
Brazil
(12)


2002
Brazil
(8)


2003
Brazil
(8)


2004
Brazil
(12)


2005
Brazil
(12)

2006
Brazil
(12)

2007
Brazil
(16)

2008
France
(16)

2009
United Arab Emirates
(16)

2011
Italy
(16)

2013
French Polynesia
(16)

2015
Portugal
(16)

2017
The Bahamas
(16)
Total Participations

 Argentina
R1
7th
R1
8th
4th
R1
8th

R1
10th
3rd
R1
8th

QF
7th
QF
8th
QF
5th
R1
11th
QF
5th
R1
9th
R1
11th
QF
8th
R1
12th

16/19

 Brazil

1st

1st

1st

1st

1st

1st
4th

1st

1st

1st
3rd

1st

1st

1st

1st
2nd
3rd
QF
5th

1st
19/19

 Chile



R1
9th















1/19

 Ecuador


















R1
16th
1/19

 Paraguay
















R1
9th
R1
11th
QF
7th
3/19

 Peru



4th
4th
2nd
QF
7th
R1
9th











5/19

 Uruguay
R1
6th
2nd
2nd
3rd
3rd
R1
9th
R1
11th
3rd
R1
5th
QF
6th
QF
5th
2nd
3rd
QF
7th
4th




15/19

 Venezuela





QF
5th
R1
9th








R1
16th



3/19


Corruption



On 27 May 2015, several CONMEBOL leaders were arrested in Zürich, Switzerland by Swiss police, and indicted by the U.S. Department of Justice on charges of corruption, money laundering, and racketeering.[7] Those swept up in the operation include former CONMEBOL Presidents Eugenio Figueredo and Nicolás Léoz and several football federations presidents such as Carlos Chávez and Sergio Jadue. On 3 December 2015, the CONMEBOL President Juan Ángel Napout was arrested also.[8]



Leadership



Executive Committee




















Name
Nationality
Position

Alejandro Dominguez

 Paraguay
President[9]

Ramón Jesurún

 Colombia
1st Vice President

Laureano González

 Venezuela
2nd Vice President

Arturo Salah

 Chile
3rd Vice President

Jose Astigarraga

 Paraguay
General Secretary[10]


Past presidents




Headquarters of CONMEBOL in Luque, Paraguay


  • 1916–1936 Uruguay Héctor Rivadavia Gómez

  • 1936–1939 Argentina Luis O. Salesi

  • 1939–1955 Chile Luis Valenzuela Hermosilla

  • 1955–1957 Chile Carlos Dittborn Pinto

  • 1957–1959 Brazil José Ramos de Freitas

  • 1959–1961 Uruguay Fermín Sorhueta

  • 1961–1966 Argentina Raúl H. Colombo

  • 1966–1986 Peru Teófilo Salinas Fuller

  • 1986–2013 Paraguay Nicolás Léoz

  • 2013–2014 Uruguay Eugenio Figueredo

  • 2014–2015 Paraguay Juan Ángel Napout

  • 2015–2016 Uruguay Wilmar Valdez (interim - 2 months)

  • 2016–present Paraguay Alejandro Domínguez


Rankings



National teams



Men's Top FIFA
ranked team



Brazilian national football teamArgentina national football teamBrazilian national football teamColombian national football teamArgentina national football teamColombian national football teamArgentina national football teamUruguayan national football teamBrazilian national football teamArgentina national football teamBrazilian national football teamArgentina national football teamBrazilian national football teamArgentina national football teamBrazilian national football teamArgentina national football teamBrazilian national football teamArgentina national football team







































































Men's national teams
FIFA Rankings
  Women's national teams
FIFA Rankings
RankNationPointsRankNation
Points
2 Brazil16199
 Brazil
1955
4 Argentina145524
 Colombia
1756
9 Chile1173*
 Argentina
1621
10 Peru116040
 Chile
1562
13 Colombia1095*
 Paraguay
1459
17 Uruguay1034*
 Ecuador
1451
36 Paraguay75056
 Peru
1409
50 Bolivia66462
 Venezuela
1388
51 Venezuela663*
 Uruguay
1361
60 Ecuador60883
 Bolivia
1217

* Inactive for more than 18 months and therefore not ranked

Men's update: 16 October 2017

Women's update: 1 September 2017



Beach soccer national teams



































Men's national teams
BSWW Rankings
RankNation
Points
1
 Brazil
4193
8
 Paraguay
1473
20
 Ecuador
671
27
 Argentina
558
30
 Chile
461
37
 Peru
353
39
 Venezuela
346
40
 Uruguay
339
45
 Colombia
271
58
 Bolivia
174

Men's update: 12 March 2018[11]



Clubs



Football Database Rankings



































Rank
Club
Points
29
Argentina Boca Juniors
1729
42
Brazil Santos FC
1684
45
Argentina River Plate
1674
51
Brazil Corinthians
1661
52
Brazil Palmeiras
1656
55
Argentina Lanús
1655
56
Argentina Independiente
1653
61
Brazil Cruzeiro
1648
64
Brazil Grêmio
1644
67
Argentina San Lorenzo
1642

Last updated: 15 October 2017[12]



IFFHS














































Zonal
Ranking

IFFHS
Ranking
Club
Points
17
Colombia Independiente Santa Fe
240
29
Argentina River Plate
234
313
Argentina Boca Juniors
220
418
Brazil Internacional
210
521
Ecuador Emelec
207.5
625
Brazil Corinthians
198
728
Paraguay Guaraní
193.5
829
Argentina Racing Club
192
932
Brazil São Paulo FC
182
1034
Argentina Huracán
178.5

Last updated on: 7 January 2016 – [1]



See also



  • Union of European Football Associations (UEFA)


  • Confederation of North, Central American and Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF)


  • Confederation of African Football (CAF)


  • Asian Football Confederation (AFC)


  • Oceania Football Confederation (OFC)


References




  1. ^ Spanish pronunciation: [komfeðeɾaˈsjon suðameɾiˈkana ðe ˈfuðβol].


  2. ^ Portuguese pronunciation: [kõfedeɾaˈsɐ̃w ˈsuw.ɐmeɾiˈkɐnɐ dʒi futʃʲˈbɔw].


  3. ^ "La eliminatoria más difícil del mundo". ESPN Desportes (in Spanish). 11 October 2011. 


  4. ^ Vickery, Tim (18 October 2011). "South American WCQ toughest in world". ESPN. 


  5. ^ Las competiciones oficiales de la CONMEBOL


  6. ^ There was no Third Place match in 1930; The United States and Yugoslavia lost in the semifinals. FIFA recognizes the United States as the third-placed team and Yugoslavia as the fourth-placed team using the overall records of the teams in the 1930 FIFA World Cup.


  7. ^ "FIFA Officials Face Corruption Charges in US". 2015-05-27. 


  8. ^ "Arrest of soccer bosses creates power vacuum at CONMEBOL". 2015-12-04. 


  9. ^ "The Executive Committee". CONMEBOL. 


  10. ^ "CONMEBOL". FIFA. 


  11. ^ Overall World Ranking – CONMEBOL, at Beach Soccer Worldwide


  12. ^ "World Football / Soccer Clubs Ranking". FootballDatabase. 




External links



  • (in English) Conmebol official website








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