Copa Premier Honor Uruguayo
Organising body | AFA AUF |
---|---|
Founded | 1911 |
Abolished | 1924; 100 years ago (1924) |
Region | Montevideo |
Number of teams | 2 |
Related competitions | Copa Premier Honor Argentino Copa Lipton Copa Newton |
Last champions | Argentina (1924) |
Most successful club(s) | Uruguay (8 titles) |
The Copa Premier Honor Uruguayo or the Copa Honor Uruguayo was an international football friendly competition contested by Uruguay and Argentina national teams. It was played for on thirteen occasions between 1911 and 1924. All games were played in Montevideo.
Overview
Outside the British Home Championship, Argentina–Uruguay is one of the oldest fixtures in international football. During the 1910s and 1920s they regularly played each other up to four times a year. In addition to South American Championship matches, the Copa Premier Honor Uruguayo was one of several trophies the two national teams regularly competed for during this era. The others included the Copa Premier Honor Argentino, which was played in Buenos Aires, the Copa Lipton and the Copa Newton.[1][2]
For the final game in 1924, both teams were selected by dissident national associations. The Argentina team represented the "Asociación Amateurs de Football" while the Uruguay represented the "Federación Uruguaya de Football", both associations formed outside official bodies AFA and AUF.
List of champions
Finals
The following list includes all the editions of the Copa Premier Honor Uruguayo:[1]
- Playoff result
Ed. | Year | Champion | Score | Venue |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1911 | Uruguay | 1–1 | Parque Central |
3–0 | Parque Central | |||
2 | 1912 | Uruguay | 3–0 | Parque Central |
3 | 1913 | Uruguay | 1–0 | Parque Central |
4 | 1914 | Uruguay | 3–2 | Parque Central |
5 | 1915 | Argentina | 3–2 | Parque Central |
6 | 1916 | Argentina | 1–0 | Belvedere |
7 | 1917 | Argentina | 2–0 | Parque Central |
8 | 1918 | Uruguay | 1–1 | Parque Pereira |
3–1 | Parque Pereira | |||
9 | 1919 | Uruguay | 4–1 | Parque Pereira |
10 | 1920 | Uruguay | 2–0 | Parque Central |
11 | 1922 | Uruguay | 1–0 | Parque Central |
12 | 1923 | Argentina | 2–2 | Parque Central |
2–0 | Parque Central | |||
13 | 1924 | Argentina | 3–2 | Pocitos |
Titles by country
Team | Titles | Years won |
---|---|---|
Uruguay | 8 | 1911, 1912, 1913, 1914, 1918, 1919, 1920, 1922 |
Argentina | 5 | 1915, 1916, 1917, 1923, 1924 |
All-time scorers
Player | Goals |
---|---|
Ángel Romano | 6 |
Hector Scarone | 4 |
Alberto Marcovecchio | 4 |
Jose Piendibene | 3 |
Carlos Scarone | 2 |
Pascual Ruotta | 2 |
Ricardo Vallarino | 2 |
Fausto Lucarelli | 2 |
Most finals by player
- 9: Alfredo Foglino (won 6)
- 7: Angel Romano (won 5), Cayetano Saporiti (won 4)
- 6: José Piendibene (won 5)
- 5: Hector Scarone (won 4), Pablo Dacal (won 4), Juan Enrique Hayes (won 1)
- 4: Juan Domingo Brown (won 1), Carlos Tomás Wilson (won 1)
- 3: Alberto Marcovecchio (won 3), Carlos Scarone (won 2), Pedro Calomino (won 1)
See also
References
- v
- t
- e
- Internacional Nocturno (1936–44)
- South American Championship of Champions (1948)
- Copa Rio (1951–52)
- Small Club World Cup (1952–75)
- Torneio Rivadavia Correa (1953)
- Copa do Atlântico (1956)
- Copa Confraternidad Iberoamericana (1964–65)
- Torneos de Verano (1968–)
- Copa EuroAmericana (2013–15)
- Supercopa Euroamericana (2015–16)
- Copa Lipton (1905–92)
- Copa Newton (1906–76)
- Copa Premier Honor (Arg) (1908–20)
- Copa Centenario Revolución de Mayo (1910)
- Copa Premier Honor (Uru) (1911–24)
- Copa Roca (1914–76)
- Copa Rodrigues Alves (1922–23)
- Copa Río Branco (1931–76)
- Copa Juan Mignaburu (1935–43)
- Copa Héctor Rivadavia Gómez (1935–43)
- Taça Oswaldo Cruz (1950–76)
- Copa Bernardo O'Higgins (1955–66)
- Taça do Atlântico (1956–76)
- South American Access Championship (1962–94)
- Taça das Nações (1964)
- Taça Independência (1972)
- Mundialito (1980)
- World Cup of Masters (1987–95)
- Superclásico de las Américas (2011–)