Qualified Teams
Country | Team | Qualify method |
---|---|---|
Argentina |
Independiente | 1971 Metropolitan Championship winners |
Rosario Central | 1971 National Championship winners | |
Bolivia |
Oriente Petrolero | 1971 Copa Simon Bolívar winners |
Chaco Petrolero | 1971 Copa Simon Bolívar runners-up | |
Brazil |
Atlético Mineiro | 1971 Campeonato Brasileiro winners |
São Paulo | 1971 Campeonato Brasileiro runners-up | |
Chile |
Unión San Felipe | 1971 Chilean league winners |
Universidad de Chile | 1971 Chilean league runners-up | |
Colombia |
Santa Fe | 1971 Copa Mustang winners |
Atlético Nacional | 1971 Copa Mustang runners-up | |
Ecuador |
Barcelona | 1971 Ecuadorian league winners |
América | 1971 Ecuadorian league runners-up | |
Paraguay |
Cerro Porteño | 1971 Paraguayan league winners |
Olimpia | 1971 Paraguayan league runners-up | |
Peru |
Universitario | 1971 Peruvian league winners |
Alianza Lima | 1971 Peruvian league runners-up | |
Uruguay |
Nacional | 1971 Copa Libertadores champions |
Peñarol | 1971 Uruguayan league runners-up | |
Venezuela |
Valencia | 1971 Venezuelan league winners |
Deportivo Italia | 1971 Venezuelan league runners-uo |
Read more about this topic: 1972 Copa Libertadores
Famous quotes containing the words qualified and/or teams:
“I used to join the murmurings about Where are the qualified women? As we murmured, we would all gaze about the room, up toward the chandelier, into the corner behind the potted palm, under the napkin, hoping perhaps that qualified women would pop out like leprechauns.”
—Jane OReilly, U.S. feminist and humorist. The Girl I Left Behind, ch. 5 (1980)
“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)