- River Plate 3-0 Tigres (Alario 45, Sanchez 75, Funes Mori 79)
- Argentine club win 3-0 on aggregate over the two-legged final
Argentina’s River Plate completed the most remarkable transformation in the team’s history by beating Mexican club Tigres 3-0 to guarantee their third Copa Libertadores triumph.
The win came four years after the Buenos Aires club were relegated for the first time in over a century and means that under the stewardship of Marcelo Gallardo they now hold both of South America’s top club competitions, having won the Copa Sudamericana in December.
“The history of this club is about fighting for these kind of competitions,” said midfielder Leonardo Ponzio. “Today is the greatest that you can achieve as a club and we did it.”
Lucas Alario, the 22-year-old striker who only joined the club in July, got the opener on the stroke of half-time when he dived to glance home a curling cross from Leonel Vangioni.
Carlos Sanchez was felled in the penalty box with 74 minutes gone and then hammered the spot kick past Nahuel Guzman before Ramiro Funes Mori guaranteed the victory when he rose to head home a corner four minutes later.
The result gave River a 3-0 aggregate victory after the first leg in Monterrey ended scoreless.
The match was scrappy with 44 fouls and nine yellow cards but River were superior throughout in constant rain and heavy conditions at the Estadio Antonio Vespucio Liberti in Buenos Aires.
The result gives River their third Libertadores title, the South American equivalent of Europe’s Champions League, following triumphs in 1986 and 1996 and means they will travel to Fifa’s Club World Cup in December.
River won the tournament in spite of being the last-placed of the 16 teams that qualified for the knock out phase in April. They only advanced into the quarter-finals after their arch rivals Boca Juniors were disqualified from the tournament when a Boca fan attacked River players in the tunnel at half-time in the second leg.
They lost the home leg of the quarter-finals against Cruzeiro but destroyed the Brazilians 3-0 in Belo Horizonte, before overcoming Paraguayan side Guarani, the surprise package of the competition, in the semi-finals.
The final was a particular triumph for manager Gallardo, who played for the club when they beat Colombian side America of Cali to win the title in 1996.
Gallardo was barred from the dugout after being sent off in the first leg but joined the team as they rode around the stadium in an open-topped bus. Thousands of River fans stayed behind to watch and thousands more congregated in the centre of Buenos Aires to celebrate the win.
“They deserved it,” said Rafael Sobis, a Tigres player who won the trophy twice with Brazilian side Internacional. “They should enjoy it. Life goes on.”
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