The South American Confederation gave some curious statistics to the game that will take place Wednesday night:
This will be the eighth consecutive final to take place in Brazil. The previous seven finals were St. Paul (2005), Porto Alegre (2006, 2007), Rio de Janeiro (2008), Belo Horizonte (2009), Porto Alegre (2010) and Paul (2011).
The stadium Paulo Machado de Carvalho, also known as "Pacaembu" where the second-leg game will be played, will host a final (either leg) for the sixth time. Before it was in 1961, 1968, 1974, 2002 and 2011, and the only team that could celebrate in this scenario was Santos, precisely in 2011.
Corinthians is the 12th Brazilian team to reach this stage. Palmeiras, Santos FC, Sao Paulo FC, Cruzeiro, International, Flamengo, Gremio, Basque da Gama and Sao Caetano, Fluminense and Atlético Paranaense were the previous Brazilian clubs to earn a berth in the final.
Boca Juniors is the second team (after Penarol) to reach 10 finals in the Copa Libertadores. Boca's other appearances were in 1963 (vs. Santos FC), 1977 (vs. Cruzeiro), 1978 (vs. Deportico Cali), 1979 (vs. Olympia), 2000 (vs. Palmeiras), 2001 (vs. Cruz Azul), 2003 ( vs. Santos FC), 2004 (vs. Once Caldas), 2007 (vs. Gremio) and this year against Corinthians.
Argentina is the country with the most Copa Libertadores finals with 31 decisions. Brazil follows closely with 29, counting for both the end of 2012, and taking in the singular the end of 2005 and 2006 where the two finalists were Brazilians.
Whenever Boca Juniors played a final against a Brazilian team in Brazil, they won. This happened in the 2000 edition with Palmeiras in São Paulo, with Santos FC in 2003 also in St. Paul, and in 2007 against Gremio in Porto Alegre.
Of the previous nine finals contested, Boca Juniors has a clear advantage outside of its stadium, "La Bombonera". In the 1977 final at the Estadio Centenario in Montevideo, Uruguay it celebrated as in 2000, 2003 and 2007, except when Boca fell in 2004 with Once Caldas in Manizales.
Playing at home, Boca has not been as lucky. It lost the 1963 final at home (against Pele's Santos) and in 1979 (at Olympia). It won in 1978 (by thrashing Deportivo Cali) and in 2001 (with a tough victory against Cruz Azul on penalties).
This will be the 13th clash between Argentine and Brazilian teams in the final of Copa Libertadores. Argentina, with nine wins, won the finals in 1968, 1974, 1977, 1984, 1994, 2000, 2003, 2007 and 2009. Brazil on the other hand only won finals in 1963, 1976 and 1992, and it has been 20 years since it has beaten a rival of its neighbor country for this tournament.
Clemente Rodriguez, Rolando Schiavi, Pablo Ledesma and Juan Roman Riquelme of Boca Juniors have played in finals and they were all champions of America. Sebastian Sosa, the Argentine team goalkeeper, started for Penarol in the 2011 final. Coach Julio Cesar Falcioni was the goalkeeper for America de Cali the finals of 1985, 1986 and 1987, but was never crowned.
On the side of Corinthians, Danilo, Alex and Fabio Santos already know what it is to play a final and win. Danilo and Santos won the cup in 2005 with Sao Paulo FC, and were an important part in winning with Internacional in 2006.
If Boca Juniors wins the tournament it will be Argentina's 23rd title, which makes it the country that has won the most Libertadores. If Corinthians wins, it would be number 16 for Brazil.
The player with most goals scored in a final is Thiago Neves. He scored all three goals for Fluminense in the 3-1 win against Liga de Quito in the first leg of the 2008 final. It was not enough to be crowned champion.
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Photo via Flickr/rogeriotomazjr