1975 Copa Chile

Last updated
1975 Copa Chile
1974
1977

The Copa Chile 1975 was the 7th edition of the Chilean Cup tournament. The competition started on March 27, 1975 and concluded on November 19, 1975. Palestino won the competition for the first time, beating Lota Schwager 4-0 on the final.

Contents

Calendar

RoundDate
Preliminary round27–30 March 1975
First round30 March 1975
6 April 1975
Round of 161–13 May 1975
Quarterfinals21 May 1975
10 September 1975
Semi-finals22–29 October 1975
Final19 November 1975

Preliminary round

Team 1 Agg. Team 21st leg2nd leg
Curicó Unido 5–1 Deportes Linares 3–02–1
Deportes Ovalle 5–2 Deportes La Serena 2–03–2
Unión San Felipe 0–3 Trasandino 0–10–2

First round

Team 1 Agg. Team 21st leg2nd leg
Universidad de Chile 7–2 Ferroviarios 6–21–0
Palestino 5–3 Audax Italiano 2–03–3
San Luis 3–5 Santiago Wanderers 2–21–3
Colo-Colo 5–4 Universidad Católica 3–22–2
San Antonio Unido 2–6 Aviación 2–30–3
Everton 2–2 (3-4p) Unión La Calera 2–00–2
O'Higgins 4–6 Santiago Morning 2–12–5
Deportes Concepción 5–2 Ñublense 2–13–1
Lota Schwager 2–2 (a) Independiente de Cauquenes 1–01–2
Iberia 0–2 Naval 0–00–2
Malleco Unido 0–4 Green Cross Temuco 0–20–2
Curicó Unido 0–4 Rangers 0–10–3
Deportes Ovalle 4–4 (a) Deportes Antofagasta 1–23–2
Magallanes 5–4 Trasandino 2–23–2

Round of 16

Team 1 Agg. Team 21st leg2nd leg
Deportes Ovalle 0–3 Universidad de Chile 0–10–2
Santiago Wanderers 1–2 Aviación 0–11–1
Colo-Colo 0–3 Palestino 0–10–2
Unión La Calera 2–9 Unión Española 1–61–3
Magallanes 4–5 Santiago Morning 3–11–4
Rangers 2–6 Huachipato 2–20–4
Naval 4–2 Green Cross Temuco 1–23–0
Deportes Concepción 0–2 Lota Schwager 0–10–1

Quarterfinals

Team 1 Agg. Team 21st leg2nd leg
Universidad de Chile 1–3 Unión Española 1–3 [1]
Palestino 4–2 Santiago Morning 2–22–0
Huachipato 2–2 (5-4p) Naval 1–11–1
Lota Schwager 5–1 Aviación 1–04–1
  1. Unión Española was declared winner because U. de Chile retired from the field in the second half.

Semifinals

Huachipato 1 1 Palestino
Sintas Soccerball shade.svg33'Soccerball shade.svg51' Messen
Estadio Las Higueras, Talcahuano
Attendance: 2,171
Referee: M. Lira

Lota Schwager 2 0 Unión Española
H. González Soccerball shade.svg12'
Ponce Soccerball shade.svg42'
Estadio Federico Schwager, Coronel
Attendance: 4,890
Referee: R. Hormazabal

Palestino 1 0 Huachipato
Pinto Soccerball shade.svg5'
Estadio Nacional, Santiago
Attendance: 5,535
Referee: G. Castro

Unión Española 0 1 Lota Schwager
Soccerball shade.svg46' Ahumada
Estadio Nacional, Santiago
Attendance: 5,535
Referee: P. Andrade

Final

Palestino 4 0 Lota Schwager
Messen Soccerball shade.svg27'
Fabbiani Soccerball shade.svg42'
Hidalgo Soccerball shade.svg78'
Pinto Soccerball shade.svg87'
Estadio Nacional, Santiago
Attendance: 5,229
Referee: R. Hormazabal

Top goalscorer

See also

Related Research Articles

Listed below are the dates and results for the 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification rounds for South America. 10 teams took part, all in a single group. The rules were very simple: the teams would play against each other in a home-and-away basis, with the four teams with most points qualifying to the 2006 FIFA World Cup. The fifth ranked team would have to play-off against the best team from Oceania, with the winner of this play-off also qualifying. For the first time, defending champions Brazil was required to go through the qualifying process and did not automatically qualify for the tournament.

Listed below are the dates and results for the 2002 FIFA World Cup qualification rounds for the South American zone (CONMEBOL). For an overview of the qualification rounds, see the article 2002 FIFA World Cup qualification.

The 1975 edition of the Copa América football tournament was played between 17 July and 28 October. For the first time there was no fixed venue, and all matches were played throughout the year in each country. In addition, the tournament changed its name from South American Championship to Copa América. All ten CONMEBOL countries participated, with defending champions Uruguay receiving a bye into the semi-finals and the rest starting in the group stage.

The South American Championship 1955 was a football tournament held in Chile and won by Argentina with Chile as runners-up. Brazil, Bolivia, and Colombia withdrew from the tournament. Rodolfo Micheli from Argentina became top scorer of the tournament with 8 goals.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">C.D. Antofagasta</span> Chilean football club

Deportes Antofagasta is a Chilean football club based in the city of Antofagasta currently playing in the Campeonato Nacional. The club's home stadium is the Estadio Bicentenario Calvo y Bascuñán, which has a capacity of 21,178.

The South American zone of 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification saw ten teams competing for places in the finals in South Africa. The format is identical to that used for the previous three World Cup qualification tournaments held by CONMEBOL. Matches were scheduled so that there were always two games within a week, which was aimed at minimizing player travel time, particularly for players who were based in Europe.

The South American Zone of 2014 FIFA World Cup qualification saw nine teams competing for 4 or 5 berths in the finals. Brazil automatically qualified for the World Cup as the host nation so were not involved in CONMEBOL qualifying. Argentina, Colombia, Chile, Ecuador and Uruguay advanced to the World Cup.

The 2011 Primera División del Fútbol Profesional Chileno season was the 80th season of top-flight football in Chile. Universidad Católica was the defending champion. Universidad de Chile won both the Apertura and the Clausura Championships

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2015 FIFA U-17 World Cup</span> International football competition

The 2015 FIFA U-17 World Cup was the sixteenth tournament of the FIFA U-17 World Cup, held in Chile from 17 October to 8 November 2015.

The 2012 Campeonato Internacional de Verano, also known as 2012 Copa Bimbo for sponsoring purposes, is the fourth edition of the Campeonato Internacional de Verano, an exhibition international club football competition that featured two clubs from Uruguay, one from Peru and one from Chile (Palestino). It is played in Montevideo, Uruguay at the Estadio Centenario from 13 to 15 January 2012.

The 2012 Primera División del Fútbol Profesional Chileno season is the 81st season of top-flight football in Chile. Universidad de Chile is the defending champion. Universidad de Chile won both the Apertura and the Clausura Championships

The 2012–13 Copa Chile,, is the 33rd edition of the Copa Chile, the country's national cup tournament. The competition started on June 23, 2012 with the First Round and concludes on May 8, 2013 with the Final. The winner qualifies for the 2013 Copa Sudamericana.

The Copa Apertura 1998 was the 27th edition of the Chilean Cup tournament. The competition started on February 14, 1998, and concluded on April 1, 1998. Only first level teams took part in the tournament. Universidad de Chile won the competition for their second time, beating Audax Italiano on the finals.

The Copa Chile 1996 was the 26th edition of the Chilean Cup tournament. The competition started on February 17, 1996, and concluded on November 30, 1996. Colo-Colo won the competition for their tenth time, beating Rangers in the finals.

The South American section of the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualification acted as qualifiers for the 2018 FIFA World Cup held in Russia, for national teams which are members of the South American Football Confederation (CONMEBOL). A total of 4.5 slots in the final tournament were available for CONMEBOL teams.

The Copa Digeder 1988 was the 18th edition of the Chilean Cup tournament. The competition started on March 19, 1988, and concluded on July 6, 1988. first and second-level teams took part in the tournament. Colo-Colo won the competition for their sixth time, beating Unión Española 1–0 in the final. The points system in the first round awarded 3 points for a win. In the event of a tie, each team was awarded 1 point, and an additional point was awarded to the winner of a penalty shoot-out.

The Copa Chile 1977 was the 8th edition of the Chilean Cup tournament. The competition started on February 6, 1977, and concluded on April 9, 1977. Palestino won the competition for their second time, beating Unión Española 4-3 on the final.

The 1976 Campeonato Nacional de Fútbol Profesional was Chilean top tier's 44th season. Everton was the tournament's champion, winning its third title.

The Copa Chile 1974 was the 6th edition of the Chilean Cup tournament. The competition started on April 6, 1974 and concluded on August 25, 1974. Colo-Colo won the competition for the second time, beating Santiago Wanderers 3-0 on the final. The points system in the group round awarded 2 points for a win. In the event of a tie, 1 point was awarded to the winner and no points for the loser of a penalty shoot-out.

The Copa Polla Gol 1985 was the 15th edition of the Chilean Cup tournament. The competition started on January 26, 1985 and concluded on May 8, 1985. First and second level teams took part in the tournament. Colo-Colo won the competition for their fifth time, beating Palestino 1–0 in the final. The points system used in the first round of the tournament was; 2 points for the winner but, if the winner team scores 4 or more goals, they won 3 points; in case of a tie, every team took 1 point but, no points for each team if the score were 0–0. The winners of each group, plus the second place of group 3, and the two best second places of the others groups, advanced to the quarterfinals.

References