Qualified Teams
Country | Team | Qualification method |
---|---|---|
CONMEBOL |
Racing | 1967 Copa Libertadores winners |
Argentina |
Independiente | 1967 Primera División champion |
Estudiantes | 1967 Primera División runner-up | |
Bolivia |
Jorge Wilstermann | 1967 Torneo Nacional champion |
Always Ready | 1967 Torneo Nacional runner-up | |
Brazil |
Palmeiras | 1967 Taça Brasil champion |
Náutico | 1967 Taça Brasil runner-up | |
Chile |
Universidad de Chile | 1967 Primera División champion |
Universidad Católica | 1967 Primera División runner-up | |
Colombia |
Deportivo Cali | 1967 DIMAYOR champion |
Millonarios | 1967 DIMAYOR runner-up | |
Ecuador |
El Nacional | 1967 Campeonato Ecuatoriano de Fútbol Serie A champion |
Emelec | 1967 Campeonato Ecuatoriano de Fútbol Serie A runner-up | |
Paraguay |
Guaraní | 1967 Primera División champion |
Libertad | 1967 Primera División runner-up | |
Peru |
Universitario | 1967 Campeonato Descentralizado champion |
Sporting Cristal | 1967 Campeonato Descentralizado runner-up | |
Uruguay |
Peñarol | 1967 Primera División champion |
Nacional | 1967 Primera División runner-up | |
Venezuela |
Deportivo Portugués | 1967 Primera División Venezolana champion |
Deportivo Galicia | 1967 Primera División Venezolana runner-up |
Read more about this topic: 1968 Copa Libertadores
Famous quotes containing the words qualified and/or teams:
“Lets face it. With the singular exception of breast-feeding, there is nothing about infant care that a mother is innately better qualified to do than a father. Yet we continue to unconsciously perpetuate the myth that men just dont have what it takes to be true partners in the process.”
—Michael K. Meyerhoff (20th century)
“A sturdy lad from New Hampshire or Vermont who in turn tries all the professions, who teams it, farms it, peddles, keeps a school, preaches, edits a newspaper, goes to Congress, buys a township, and so forth, in successive years, and always like a cat falls on his feet, is worth a hundred of these city dolls. He walks abreast with his days and feels no shame in not studying a profession, for he does not postpone his life, but lives already.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)