Palmeiras beats Santos in second Copa Libertadores triumph
The game, South America’s equivalent of the Champions League, took place behind closed doors at the Maracana.
Palmeiras' Raphael Veiga celebrates winning the Copa Libertadores, January 30, 2021
Substitute Breno Lopes scored in injury time as Palmeiras won its second Copa Libertadores title on Saturday with a 1-0 victory against Santos in an all-Brazilian final.
It is the first South American title for the Sao Paulo club since 1999 and the second consecutive year that a Portuguese coach has won the South American title and .
Palmeiras' Abel Ferreira, who took over in November, follows the footsteps of Jorge Jesus, who won the title last year with Flamengo.
Palmeiras won with its first shot on goal in a match that disappointed any neutral fans.
“I could never dream this could happen in my life, just the other day I was playing in the second division,” Lopes said.
The Copa Libertadores title was also the first title for 42-year-old Ferreira as a manager.
READ MORE: River Plate wins Copa Libertadores
Got to love a 98th minute winner!!
— Richard Webster (@rw_roundworld) January 30, 2021
Brilliant cross, textbook header to win it for #Palmeiras
Feel bad for Soteldo and Santos but that's a great header to win any game https://t.co/A7qPM49jm6
Late goal
The two Sao Paulo teams were bitter rivals in the 1960s, and some fans of both sides travelled to Rio de Janeiro to cheer from outside the Maracana stadium despite the coronavirus threat.
Little-known Lopes joined Palmeiras in November, coming from second division team Juventude. Ferreira brought him on at 84 minutes, replacing midfielder Gabriel Menino and intending him to be a target man for crosses.
The plan worked perfectly nine minutes into stoppage time. Rony crossed from the right and found Lopes, who headed the ball to the left of Santos goalkeeper John.
Although fans weren't allowed, the final did have 4,000 invited guests watching the match, without too much apparent regard for social distancing. Some of them did not wear protective masks. All took Covid-19 tests to be able to attend, the South American soccer confederation said.