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Argie Bargy

Madness and magic from Maradona’s motherland


Joel Richards

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Draw for South America's hypothetical cup fails to set pulses racing


Friday 26 November 2010 16:54

It is the number one club competition on the continent, but the Libertadores Cup has its flaws. It has nothing to do with the final being over two legs, nor does it have anything to do with it being a South American club competition in which North American teams play.

As the South American Champions’ League, it is steeped in tradition. Its name – The Liberators – adds far more gravitas than any choral arrangement at the beginning of the transmission does for its European counterpart.

Quality of football aside, however, the problem with the Libertadores Cup is how it gets going. It inspires next to no emotion. The draw is a farce.

On Thursday, we had the sight of eight groups of four being decided. Of the 32 balls in the mix, only 11 were real teams, with real players, and real aspirations to win the trophy. The remainder were hypothetical league winners, league runners-up, cup winners and playoff winners.

Group 7, is the worst offender for anonymity, looking like this:

Argentina 2 Apertura Champion
Paraguay 2
either Guaraní, Apertura champion, Clausura champion or someone totally different
Brazil 4
Brasilerão runner up
Game 1 winner
winner of preliminary play off between Brasilerão 3rd place v. Colombia’s best placed team in the annual league table

It is complex, speculative, confusing and thoroughly under-whelming.

Yet despite knowing just three teams' identity in Group 3, it has already been labelled the Group of Death. Argentinos Juniors, Nacional (Uruguay) and América (Mexico) will be joined by the Brasilerão champion. Danger.

While we have to wait for the anonymous slots to be taken up, in Argentina the race to qualify is reaching its climax. Estudiantes and Argentinos Juniors have already done so via their yearly performance and having won the Clausura ’10, respectively.

The remaining four slots go to teams based on their annual performance – results from the Clausura ’10 and this season, the Apertura ’10 – making the last four games of this season for those involved all the more vital.

So far the teams to go through would be this season’s title winners, Godoy Cruz, Vélez and then Newell’s. Just behind them are Banfield and Racing, making this weekend’s clash between the two vital for the Libertadores qualification.

In and amongst all this is the King of the Libertadores, the team whose new stadium is named the Libertadores of America, Independiente.
With seven Libertadores trophies from seven finals, the Rojos are the Real Madrid of the competition - the ultimate champs.

On Thursday they did that tradition proud by making it to the final of the Sudamericana. If they go on to win that, then they will steal a place in next year’s Libertadores Cup.

So while we now keep track of who is qualifying for the Libertadores Cup, keeping track of the league action is an even more drawn out exercise. Action starts Friday night, and ends… on Tuesday.

FIXTURES Friday Gimnasia v Godoy Cruz, Arsenal v San Lorenzo Saturday Quilmes v All Boys, Banfield v Racing Sunday Independiente v Estudiantes, Newell’s v Boca, River v Olimpo Monday Huracán v Lanús, Argentinos v Colón Tuesday Vélez v Tigre.


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About Joel Richards

After four years in Spain, Joel Richards decided to swap the tapas of Madrid for the steaks of Buenos Aires. A freelance sports writer and producer, he follows the fortunes of emerging wunderkids, former Albiceleste stars and Diego Maradona, while trying to avoid conversations involving the Mexico 86 quarter-finals or a group of small islands in the South Atlantic.

Comments

  November 28, 2010 13:21

Yorugua said:

The Flaw is adding so many Brazilian teams... even the Copa Sudamericana saw 2 semi-finalists from Brazil, and one of the finalists for that competition is a Brazilian team that is near dead last in the Brasileirao!

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