- 2009 Copa do Brasil de Futebol Feminino
-
2009 Copa do Brasil de Futebol Feminino Country Brazil Teams 32 Champions Santos Runner-up Botucatu Matches played 47 Goals scored 223 (4.74 per match) ← 2008 2010 → The 2009 Copa do Brasil de Futebol Feminino was the third staging of the competition. The competition started on September 24, 2009,[1] and concluded on December 5, 2009.[1] 32 clubs of all regions of Brazil participated of the cup, which is organized by the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF).[2] The winner of the cup will represent Brazil in the 2010 Copa Libertadores de Fútbol Femenino.[3]
Contents
Competition format
The competition was contested by 32 clubs in a knock-out format where in the first three rounds will be played over two legs and the away goals rule will be used, but if the away team won the first leg with an advantage of at least three goals, the second leg will not be played and the club will be automatically qualified to the next round.[2] The fourth round will be played in one leg.[2] The final and the third-place game will be played in one leg in a neutral venue.[2]
Participating teams
The 2009 participating teams are the following clubs:[4]
- Assermurb ( Acre)
- CESMAC ( Alagoas)
- Oratório ( Amapá)
- Nilton Lins ( Amazonas)
- São Francisco ( Bahia)
- Caucaia ( Ceará)
- CRESSPOM ( Distrito Federal)
- Desportiva Capixaba ( Espírito Santo)
- Aliança ( Goiás)
- Boa Vontade ( Maranhão)
- Mixto ( Mato Grosso)
- Comercial ( Mato Grosso do Sul)
- Atlético Mineiro ( Minas Gerais)
- Iguaçu ( Minas Gerais)
- Pinheirense ( Pará)
- Botafogo-PB ( Paraíba)
- Novo Mundo ( Paraná)
- Sport ( Pernambuco)
- Tiradentes ( Piauí)
- CEPE-Caxias ( Rio de Janeiro)
- Volta Redonda ( Rio de Janeiro)
- Potiguar ( Rio Grande do Norte)
- Pelotas ( Rio Grande do Sul)
- Porto Alegre ( Rio Grande do Sul)
- Juventus ( Rondônia)
- São Raimundo ( Roraima)
- Kindermann ( Santa Catarina)
- Botucatu ( São Paulo)
- Saad ( São Paulo)
- Santos ( São Paulo)
- Atlética Gloriense ( Sergipe)
- São José ( Tocantins)
Table
First round Second round Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals São Raimundo 3 0 Nilton Lins 0 2 São Raimundo 3 4 Assermurb 1 1 Juventus 0 2 Assermurb 1 4 São Raimundo 4 2 Pinheirense 6 6 Oratório 2 1 Pinheirense 2 7 Pinheirense 2 3 Tiradentes 2 1 Tiradentes 2 5 Boa Vontade 2 1 Santos 8 Pinheirense 0 Atlética Gloriense 0 São Francisco 6 São Francisco 4 10 CESMAC 1 0 CESMAC 3 4 Potiguar 1 1 São Francisco 2 5 Caucaia 1 0 Botafogo-PB 0 Sport 4 Sport 0 2 Caucaia 2 2 São José 0 Caucaia 4 Santos 3 Botucatu 0 Mixto 1 1 Aliança 0 2 Mixto 0 0 Santos 12 11 CRESSPOM 1 Santos 4 Santos 4 7 Novo Mundo 0 0 Atlético Mineiro 2 2 Volta Redonda 1 1 Atlético Mineiro 2 1 Novo Mundo 4 2 Novo Mundo 8 6 Pelotas 0 1 Botucatu 6 São Francisco 0 Iguaçu 2 2 Saad 4 2 Saad 3 2 Botucatu 2 7 Comercial 0 0 Botucatu 2 8 Botucatu 2 5 CEPE-Caxias 2 1 Desportiva Capixaba 1 CEPE-Caxias 5 CEPE-Caxias 2 0 Kindermann 1 0 Kindermann 2 2 Porto Alegre 2 0 Semifinals
November 26
21:00Santos 8 – 0 Pinheirense Estádio Alfredo de Castilho, Bauru
Referee: Simone Xavier de Paula e SilvaMaurine 8', 90'
Cristiane 59', 64', 67', 83'
Marta 75'
Érika 79'Report
November 27
21:00Botucatu 6 – 0 São Francisco Estádio Alfredo de Castilho, Bauru Third-place playoff
December 1
18:30Pinheirense 1 – 5 São Francisco Estádio do Pacaembu, São Paulo Final
December 1
21:00Santos 3 – 0 Botucatu Estádio do Pacaembu, São Paulo Marta 10', 71', Cristiane 39' Report 2009 Copa do Brasil de Futebol Feminino
SANTOS
Champion
Second titleNotes and references
- ^ a b "Copa do Brasil de Futebol Feminino será de 24 de setembro a 5 de dezembro" (in Portuguese). CBF. September 3, 2009. http://www.cbf.com.br/xmlnoticias/noticias.php?e=41&n=10427. Retrieved September 9, 2009.[dead link]
- ^ a b c d "Copa do Brasil de Futebol Feminino de 2009 - Regulamento da Competição" (in Portuguese) (PDF). CBF. September 3, 2009. http://www.cbf.com.br/destaques/regcbfem09.pdf. Retrieved September 9, 2009.
- ^ "Copa do Brasil de Futebol Feminino começa no dia 24 de setembro com 32 clubes. Veja a tabela" (in Portuguese). CBF. September 18, 2009. http://www.cbf.com.br/xmlnoticias/noticias.php?e=41&n=10509. Retrieved September 19, 2009.[dead link]
- ^ "Tabela da Copa do Brasil de Futebol Feminino de 2009" (in Portuguese) (PDF). Brazilian Football Confederation. September 18, 2009. http://www.cbf.com.br/2009/copadobrasilff/tabela.pdf. Retrieved September 19, 2009.
Copa do Brasil Men's Seasons Men's Finals 1989 · 1990 · 1991 · 1992 · 1993 · 1994 · 1995 · 1996 · 1997 · 1998 · 1999 · 2000 · 2001 · 2002 · 2003 · 2004 · 2005 · 2006 · 2007 · 2008 · 2009 · 2010 · 2011 · 2012Women's Seasons Women's Finals 2007 · 2008 · 2009 · 2010 · 2011Winning teams (Men · Women)2009 in Brazilian football « 20082010 »Domestic leagues Série A · Série B · Série C · Série DDomestic cups Copa do Brasil · Women's Copa do BrasilState leagues Acre · Alagoas · Amapá · Amazonas · Bahia · Ceará · Distrito Federal · Espírito Santo · Goiás · Maranhão · Mato Grosso · Mato Grosso do Sul · Minas Gerais · Pará · Paraíba · Paraná · Pernambuco · Piauí · Rio de Janeiro · Rio Grande do Norte · Rio Grande do Sul · Rondônia · Roraima · Santa Catarina · São Paulo · Sergipe · TocantinsSouth American competitions Copa Libertadores · Copa Sudamericana · Recopa Sudamericana · Copa Suruga Bank · Women's Copa LibertadoresCompetitions involving Brazil Award Winners Bola de Ouro · Bola de Prata · South American Footballer of the Year · FIFA World Player of the YearCategories:- Copa do Brasil de Futebol Feminino seasons
- 2009 domestic association football cups
- 2009 Brazilian football (soccer) competitions
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.