Copa Bolivia

La Copa Bolivia is an official football competition organized by the Bolivian Football Federation, which is played by the direct elimination system, the winner of which qualifies for a Copa Simón Bolívar.

Copa Bolivia
Founded1976
RegionBolivia
Number of teamsTBA
2022 Copa Bolivia

History

La Copa Bolivia was first held in 1976 and is the oldest association football competition in Bolivia. Because it involves clubs of all standards playing against each other, there is the possibility for "minnows" from the lower divisions to become "giant-killers" by eliminating top clubs from the tournament and even theoretically win the Cup, although lower division teams rarely reach the final. In 2002 it was replaced and transformed into the current Aerosur Cup.[1] The tournament was created by the Bolivian National Football Association (ANF) so that the second of the associations had one more opportunity to qualify for National B, where promotion is played to the League. The initial game mode was aimed at classifying three teams to National B. It was played by the runner-up teams of the nine departmental associations, the runner-up of the Interprovincial Tournament and 2 teams as guests. The Bolivia Cup stopped being played as of the 2017 season. The ANF focused its argument on the fact that the clubs participating in the 2016 Bolivia Cup faced organizational problems, the lack of financial resources being the main obstacle. For the 2022 season of Bolivian soccer, the Bolivian Soccer Federation plans to hold three tournaments in the year, one of them the Bolivia Cup.

Format

The competition is a knockout tournament with pairings for each round drawn at random – there are no seeds, and the draw for each round is not made until after the scheduled dates for the previous round. The draw also determines which teams will play at home.

There are a total of 5 rounds in the competition — six qualifying rounds, followed by two group stages, semi-finals, and the final. The competition begins in January with the extra preliminary round, followed by the preliminary round and first qualifying round, which are contested by the lowest-ranked clubs. Finally, teams from the Liga de Fútbol Profesional Boliviano enter at the third round, at which point there are 64 teams remaining in the competition. From 1976 to 1996, the final was played in the Estadio Hernando Siles.

Media coverage

The Copa Bolivia Final is one of 10 events reserved for live broadcast on Bolivia terrestrial television under the ITC Code on Sports and Other Listed Events.

In October 1998 La Liga manager announced that ATB, Canal 7 and Unitel Bolivia would show an additional match (For example: the Second Qualifying round, the group stage and also the final).

List of championships

Copa Bolivia

Season Champion Runner-up
1976Jorge WilstermannDeportivo Municipal
1977The StrongestOriente Petrolero
1978Oriente PetroleroGuabirá
1979BolivarChaco Petrolero
1980Deportivo WarnesBolivar
1981Mariscal BraunUnión Central
1982Unión CentralGuabirá
1983BloomingOriente Petrolero
1984The StrongestFraternidad Tigres
1985LitoralOriente Petrolero
1986Oriente PetroleroUniversitario
1987BloomingOruro Royal
1988Oriente PetroleroThe Strongest
1989BolivarJorge Wilstermann
1990BolivarReal Potosí
1991Jorge WilstermannFerroviaro
1992Oriente PetroleroBolivar
1993Oriente Petrolero12 de Octubre
1994Oriente PetroleroBolivar
1995Oriente PetroleroUniversitario de Pando
1996Atlético CiclónABB
1997Oriente PetroleroThe Strongest
1998Jorge WilstermannBlooming
1999Oriente PetroleroBolivar
2000The StrongestGuabirá
2001BolivarReal Santa Cruz
2002Oriente PetroleroJorge Wilstermann
2022Cancelled by the FBF[2]

Results by team (Copa Bolivia)

Club Titles Runners-up Seasons won Seasons runner-up
Oriente Petrolero1031978, 1986, 1988, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 1999, 20021977, 1983, 1985
Bolívar441979, 1989, 1990, 20011980, 1992, 1994, 1999
Jorge Wilstermann321976, 1991, 19981989, 2002
The Strongest321977, 1984, 20001988, 1997
Blooming211983, 19871998
Unión Central1119821981
Deportivo Warnes101980
Mariscal Braun101981
Litoral101985
Ciclón101996
Guabirá031978, 1982, 2000
Deportivo Municipal011976
Chaco Petrolero011979
Fraternidad Tigres011984
Universitario011986
Oruro Royal011987
Real Potosí011990
Ferroviaro011991
12 de Octubre011993
Universitario de Pando011995
ABB011996
Real Santa Cruz012001

See also

References

  1. "Historia de la Copa América (1963): cuando Bolivia rompió los prejuicios y ganó su único título". Goal.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 2019-05-09.
  2. "FBF ratifica suspensión de la Copa Bolivia; los aficionados ven opciones" [FBF ratifies suspension of the Copa Bolivia; amateurs check options] (in Spanish). Los Tiempos. 19 July 2022. Retrieved 10 August 2022.
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