Copa FMF
Football tournament
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Copa Federação Matogrossense de Futebol, also known as Copa FMF, is a tournament organized by Federação Matogrossense de Futebol every second half of the season.
| Founded | 2004 |
|---|---|
| Region | |
| Teams | 6 (2022) |
| Current champions | CEOV (1st title) |
| Most championships | Luverdense (4 titles) |
The tournament was also previously called Copa Governador de Mato Grosso and Copa Mato Grosso before changing its name to the current one in 2017.
List of champions
| Season | Winner | Scores | Runner-up |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2004 | Luverdense | 6–1 1–1 |
Cuiabá |
| 2005 | Operário | Round-robin tournament | União Rondonópolis |
| 2006 | Cacerense | 1–1 2–1 |
Vila Aurora |
| 2007 | Luverdense | Round-robin tournament | Cacerense |
| 2008 | Araguaia | Round-robin tournament | União Rondonópolis |
| 2009 | Vila Aurora | 1–1 1–0 |
Cuiabá |
| 2010 | Cuiabá | 3–1 2–1 |
Operário |
| 2011 | Luverdense | 2–2 1–0 |
Operário |
| 2012 | Mixto | 1–1 1–0 |
União Rondonópolis |
| 2013 | Rondonópolis | 1–1 2–0 |
União Rondonópolis |
| 2014 | Not played[1] | ||
| 2015 | Dom Bosco | 2–0 3–2 |
União Rondonópolis |
| 2016 | Cuiabá | 2–1 3–2 |
Mixto |
| 2017 | União Rondonópolis[a] | 1–1 0–0 (2–0 p) |
Cuiabá |
| 2018 | Mixto | 2–1 0–1 (3–2 p) |
Dom Bosco |
| 2019 | Luverdense | 0–1 2–1 (4–3 p) |
Cuiabá |
| 2020 | Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic | ||
| 2021 | União Rondonópolis | 2–0 0–0 |
Dom Bosco |
| 2022 | Nova Mutum | Round-robin tournament | CEOV |
| 2023 | Mixto | Round-robin tournament | Cuiabá |
| 2024 | CEOV | 1–0 0–0 |
Nova Mutum |
- a Originally Cuiabá won 2017 Copa FMF (1–1 and 2–0 against Dom Bosco). Two months after the ending of the Copa, Superior Tribunal de Justiça Desportiva (STJD) gave back 9 points deducted to União Rondonópolis in the first stage. So, União Rondonópolis finished fourth and qualified for the semi-finals. The previous semi-finals, Dom Bosco v Mixto, were annulled and União Rondonópolis played new semi-finals against Dom Bosco.[2] União Rondonópolis won on penalties and advanced to the new finals against Cuiabá.[3] In the finals, União Rondonópolis won on penalties.[4]
Titles by team
- Luverdense 4 titles
- Mixto 3 titles
- Cuiabá and União Rondonópolis 2 titles
- Araguaia, Cacerense, Dom Bosco, Nova Mutum, Operário, Rondonópolis, Vila Aurora, and CEOV 1 title