2024 Copa América de Futsal

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Host countryParaguay
CityLuque
Dates2–10 February
Teams10 (from 1 confederation)
2024 Copa América de Futsal
CONMEBOL Copa América de Futsal
Paraguay 2024
Tournament details
Host countryParaguay
CityLuque
Dates2–10 February
Teams10 (from 1 confederation)
VenueCOP Arena – Estadio Óscar Harrison
Final positions
Champions Brazil (11th title)
Runners-up Argentina
Third place Venezuela
Fourth place Paraguay
Tournament statistics
Matches played27
Goals scored108 (4 per match)
Top scorer(s)Brazil Arthur Guilherme
Brazil Rafa Santos
Colombia Felipe Echavarría
(4 goals each)
2022
2026

The 2024 CONMEBOL Copa América de Futsal was the 14th edition of the Copa América de Futsal, the international futsal championship under FIFA rules organised by CONMEBOL for the men's national teams of South America. It was held in Luque, Paraguay from 2 to 10 February 2024.[1][2]

This edition marked the return of the tournament as the CONMEBOL qualifiers for the FIFA Futsal World Cup (the last time was in 2008) after CONMEBOL decided to discontinue its specific qualifying tournament for that purpose after three editions in 2012, 2016 and 2020.[3] The top four teams of the tournament (the four semi-finalists) qualified for the 2024 FIFA Futsal World Cup in Uzbekistan as the CONMEBOL representatives.[4]

Argentina were the defending champions.[5]

Squads

All ten CONMEBOL member national teams entered the tournament.

Team Appearance Previous best top-4 performance
 Argentina (holders)14thChampions (2003, 2015, 2022)
 Bolivia7thFourth place (2000)
 Brazil14thChampions (1992, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2008, 2011, 2017)
 Chile9thNone
 Colombia8thFourth place (2011, 2015, 2022)
 Ecuador8thFourth place (1992)
 Paraguay (hosts)14thRunners-up (1998, 1999, 2015, 2022)
 Peru8thNone
 Uruguay12thRunners-up (1996, 2008)
 Venezuela8thNone

Each national team had to submit a squad of at least 10 and up to 14 players, including a minimum of two goalkeepers (Regulations Article 45).[4] Members of each squad are listed on the CONMEBOL website.[6]

Venue

On 19 December 2023, CONMEBOL confirmed Luque, Paraguay as the host city.[1] This is the third time that Paraguay host the tournament and the second consecutive time after the previous edition in 2022; it had also hosted the 2003 edition.[7]

All matches took place at the COP Arena – Estadio Óscar Harrison located within the Parque Olímpico sports complex in Luque.[7]

Draw

The draw of the tournament was held on 12 January 2024, 11:00 PYST (UTC−3), at the CONMEBOL Convention Centre in Luque, Paraguay.[8] The hosts, Paraguay, and the previous tournament's champions, Argentina, were seeded and assigned to the head of the groups A and B respectively. The remaining eight teams were split into four "pairing pots" (Brazil–Colombia, Uruguay–Venezuela, Ecuador–Bolivia, Peru–Chile) based on the final placement they reached in the previous edition of the tournament (shown in brackets).[8]

Pot 1 Pot 2 Pot 3 Pot 4

From each pot, the first team drawn was placed into Group A and the second team drawn was placed into Group B. In both groups, teams from pot 1 were allocated in position 2, teams from pot 2 in position 3, teams from pot 3 in position 4 and teams from pot 4 in position 5.[8][9]

The draw resulted in the following groups:[10]

Group A
PosTeam
A1 Paraguay
A2 Colombia
A3 Venezuela
A4 Ecuador
A5 Chile
Group B
PosTeam
B1 Argentina
B2 Brazil
B3 Uruguay
B4 Bolivia
B5 Peru

Match officials

On 18 January 2024, CONMEBOL announced the referees appointed by its Referees Commission for the tournament.[11][12]

Association Referees
 ArgentinaAndrés Pena García, Lautaro Romero and Estefania Pinto
 BoliviaHenry Gutierrez
 BrazilRicardo Messa and Anelize Schulz
 ChileChristian Espíndola, Rodrigo Concha and Valeria Palma
 ColombiaYuri García and Daniel Manrique
 EcuadorJonathan Herbas and Leonel Ruales
 ParaguayBill Villalba and Carlos Martínez
 PeruRolly Rojas and Ulises Ureta
 UruguayDaniel Rodríguez, Andrés Martínez and Federico Piccardo
 VenezuelaOriana Zambrano and Junior Patiño

Group stage

Final stage

In the final stage, if a match is tied after the regular playing time (Regulations Article 20):[4]

  • In the semi-finals and final, two extra time periods of five minutes each would be played. If still tied after extra time, the match would be decided by a penalty shoot-out.
  • In the play-offs for third, fifth, seventh, and ninth place, extra time would not be played, and the match would be decided directly by a penalty shoot-out.

All match times are in PYST (UTC−3), as listed by CONMEBOL.[14][15]

Bracket

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
9 February
 
 
 Paraguay0
 
10 February
 
 Argentina1
 
 Argentina0
 
9 February
 
 Brazil2
 
 Brazil3
 
 
 Venezuela0
 
Third place play-off
 
 
10 February
 
 
 Paraguay1
 
 
 Venezuela4

Semi-finals

Brazil 3–0 Venezuela
Marcênio 12', 29'
Vinícius Rocha 39'
CONMEBOL
APF
COP Arena – Estadio Óscar Harrison, Luque
Referee: Ulises Ureta (Peru)

Paraguay 0–1 Argentina
CONMEBOL
APF
Matías Rosa 6'
COP Arena – Estadio Óscar Harrison, Luque
Referee: Yuri García (Colombia)

Ninth place play-off

Ecuador 0–0 Bolivia
CONMEBOL
APF
Penalties
Steven Soria soccer ball with check mark
Jordan Mercado soccer ball with check mark
Alejandro Nazareno soccer ball with check mark
Bryan Montaño soccer ball with check mark
Bryan Salazar soccer ball with red X
Dalember Segura soccer ball with check mark
Jimmy Espinales soccer ball with check mark
Felipe Cortez soccer ball with red X
6–7 soccer ball with check mark Carlos Ramos
soccer ball with check mark Rubén Sandi
soccer ball with check mark Miguel Padilla
soccer ball with check mark Alan Valda
soccer ball with red X Joel Guzmán
soccer ball with check mark Saúl Gareca
soccer ball with check mark Bruno Tecos
soccer ball with check mark Horacio Miranda
COP Arena – Estadio Óscar Harrison, Luque
Referee: Estefania Pinto (Argentina)

Seventh place play-off

Colombia 1–4 Peru
Julián Pardo 24' CONMEBOL
APF
Luis Pier Ramos 7'
Xavier Tavera 12', 37'
Juan Pablo Saravia 30'
COP Arena – Estadio Óscar Harrison, Luque
Referee: Anelize Schulz (Brazil)

Fifth place play-off

Chile 0–2 Uruguay
Report Agustín Sosa 34', 40'
COP Arena – Estadio Óscar Harrison, Luque
Referee: Andrés Pena García (Argentina)

Third place play-off

Paraguay 1–4 Venezuela
Pedro Pascottini 24' CONMEBOL
APF
Rafael Morillo 14'
Carlos Sanz 21'
Víctor Carreño 39'
Jean Trujillo 40'
COP Arena – Estadio Óscar Harrison, Luque
Referee: Lautaro Romero (Argentina)

Final

Argentina 0–2 Brazil
CONMEBOL
APF
Pito 10'
Rafa Santos 40'
COP Arena – Estadio Óscar Harrison, Luque
Referee: Christian Espíndola (Chile)

Qualified teams for FIFA Futsal World Cup

The following four teams from CONMEBOL qualified for the 2024 FIFA Futsal World Cup in Uzbekistan.

Team Qualified on Previous appearances in FIFA Futsal World Cup1
 Brazil6 February 2024[16]9 (1989, 1992, 1996, 2000, 2004, 2008, 2012, 2016, 2021)
 Argentina6 February 2024[16]9 (1989, 1992, 1996, 2000, 2004, 2008, 2012, 2016, 2021)
 Venezuela7 February 2024[17]1 (2021)
 Paraguay7 February 2024[17]7 (1989, 1992, 2004, 2008, 2012, 2016, 2021)
1 Bold indicates champions for that year. Italic indicates hosts for that year.

Ranking

References

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