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Montevideo, March 28th 2024 - 12:21 UTC

 

 

Argentina paralyzed by South America's equivalent of Europe's Champions' League

Saturday, November 10th 2018 - 06:17 UTC
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It is the first time Argentina's two biggest and most popular clubs have met in the final of the region's premier club competition It is the first time Argentina's two biggest and most popular clubs have met in the final of the region's premier club competition
”There's never been a final like this in 58 years (of the competition),” Alejandro Dominguez, president of CONMEBOL, said on Friday. ”There's never been a final like this in 58 years (of the competition),” Alejandro Dominguez, president of CONMEBOL, said on Friday.
The presidents of the two clubs met with Dominguez (R) on Friday to plead for peace and a focus only on football The presidents of the two clubs met with Dominguez (R) on Friday to plead for peace and a focus only on football
Conmebol will pay U$S 6 m. to the Champion Conmebol will pay U$S 6 m. to the Champion

Argentina's biggest clubs Boca Juniors and River Plate meet in the most highly anticipated Copa Libertadores showpiece in history this Saturday as the Buenos Aires rivals clash in the first leg of a final that has captivated soccer fans. Argentina has been totally captivated in the days leading to the event, as conversations and media coverage dominate national attention.

 ”There's never been a final like this in 58 years (of the competition),” Alejandro Dominguez, president of the South American football confederation (CONMEBOL), said on Friday.

It is the first time Argentina's two biggest and most popular clubs have met in the final of the region's premier club competition, South America's equivalent of Europe's Champions League.

Argentine football has been tarnished by violence in recent years and only home fans will be able to attend each leg in keeping with a ban on away supporters introduced five years ago.

The last time the teams met in the Libertadores in 2015 Boca fans attacked River players with pepper spray at halftime and the referee called off the match with Boca kicked out of the competition.

Football is a passion in Argentina, the home of national team greats such as Diego Maradona and Lionel Messi, and the presidents of the two clubs met with Dominguez on Friday to plead for peace and a focus only on football. Adding to the excitement is the fact that this year's final is the last to be played on a home-and-away basis before CONMEBOL adopts a single-match format in 2019.

Even the players admit the fanatical build-up to the match has taken its toll. “There is little to enjoy and I'm not enjoying it,” Boca Juniors captain Pablo Perez told reporters in Buenos Aires ahead of the first leg at Boca's Bombonera stadium.

“I am trying to treat it as a World Cup final and think about it all the time so that no details escape me,” he added. The second leg will be at River's Monumental stadium in two weeks' time.

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  • Little J

    Hopefully law and order will prevail whichever the final result Not totally sure that this will be the case as the usual hooligans will no doubt be there, to cause all manner or disturbances, not the least of which will be politically orientated.

    Nov 10th, 2018 - 01:04 pm 0
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