South American U-15 Championship
The South American U-15 Championship, also known as the Campeonato Sudamericano Sub15, is a South American association football competition held every two years contested by male players under the age of 15 and is organized by CONMEBOL, the governing body for football in South America. The first edition was for under-16 age players.
Organizing body | CONMEBOL |
---|---|
Founded | 2004 |
Region | South America |
Number of teams | 10 |
Current champion(s) | Brazil (5th title) |
Most successful team(s) | Brazil (5 titles) |
Website | Official website |
2023 South American U-15 Championship |
Brazil is the most successful team with five titles.
Results
Edition | Year | Host | Final | Third Place Match | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Winner | Score | Runner-up | Third Place | Score | Fourth Place | |||
1 | 2004 Details |
Paraguay | Paraguay |
0–0 (5–3 pen.) |
Colombia |
Argentina |
No third place match | Uruguay |
2 | 2005 Details |
Bolivia | Brazil |
6–2 | Argentina |
Paraguay |
1–0 | Bolivia |
3 | 2007 Details |
Brazil | Brazil |
[1] | Uruguay |
Argentina |
[1] | Chile |
4 | 2009 Details |
Bolivia | Paraguay |
[1] | Brazil |
Ecuador |
[1] | Uruguay |
5 | 2011 Details |
Uruguay | Brazil |
[1] | Colombia |
Argentina |
[1] | Uruguay |
6 | 2013 Details |
Bolivia | Peru |
1–0 | Colombia |
Argentina |
2–1 | Chile |
7 | 2015 Details |
Colombia | Brazil |
0–0 (5–4 pen.) |
Uruguay |
Argentina |
1–0 | Ecuador |
8 | 2017 Details |
Argentina | Argentina |
3–2 | Brazil |
Paraguay |
No third place match | Peru |
9 | 2019 Details |
Paraguay | Brazil |
1–1 (5–3 pen.) |
Argentina |
Paraguay |
2–1 | Colombia |
10 | 2023 Details |
Bolivia |
Performances by countries
Team | Titles | Runners-up | Third-place | Fourth-place |
---|---|---|---|---|
Brazil | 5 (2005, 2007, 2011, 2015, 2019) | 2 (2009, 2017) | ||
Paraguay | 2 (2004, 2009) | 3 (2005, 2017, 2019) | ||
Argentina | 1 (2017) | 2 (2005, 2019) | 5 (2004, 2007, 2011, 2013, 2015) | |
Peru | 1 (2013) | 1 (2017) | ||
Colombia | 3 (2004, 2011, 2013) | 1 (2019) | ||
Uruguay | 2 (2007, 2015) | 3 (2004, 2009, 2011) | ||
Ecuador | 1 (2009) | 1 (2015) | ||
Chile | 2 (2007, 2013) | |||
Bolivia | 1 (2005) |
Notes and references
- The tournament's four highest positions were decided by a final round-robin group contested by four teams.
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