Advertisement
Advertisement
Fifa
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
River Plate supporters celebrate winning the Copa Libertadores title in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Photo: Reuters

Copa Libertadores: Argentine fans celebrate River Plate’s title win at home in Buenos Aires

  • Second leg of final was moved to Madrid, Spain after outbreak of supporter violence in Argentina
Fifa

The game was played in Madrid but the celebrating and suffering stayed in Argentina. River Plate won the Copa Libertadores tournament, beating bitter rivals Boca Juniors in an eternal final that lasted a month and that was moved to Spain for the first time in history because of fan violence prior to the second leg.

Even though that decision by CONMEBOL to move the game to Spain angered many Argentinians, each fan base lived the final at Buenos Aires with the same passion, intensity, emotion and the craziness similar to when the game is played in South America.

Jubilant River Plate fans flocked to the iconic Obelisk in downtown Buenos Aires on Sunday to cheer their team’s fourth Copa Libertadores title.
River Plate fans celebrate their team’s victory in the final of the Copa Libertadores, in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Photo: EPA

“A minute of silence because Boca is dead”, fans chanted in ecstasy waving the red and white flags from River under heavy rain. “Christmas Eve is coming, Christmas Eve is coming, for every Boca fan this is your daddy’s gift”.

Many “Millionarios” fans also gathered outside of estadio Monumental, the place where the game was set to take place on November 24th.

“You cannot believe this”, said Marcelo Gomez, a River Plate fan who followed the action In a local bar a few blocks from the Obelisk. “We could not play the game here but we hang in there and at the end we did it”.
River Plate fans celebrate winning the Copa Libertadores title in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Photo: Reuters

The celebration in downtown Buenos Aires was held without any violence and supervised by over two thousand police officers.

Argentina president Mauricio Macri, a confessed Boca Juniors fan, congratulated River.

“Congratulations to River and all of their fans for the win in this historic match. In Boca we know that football always gives you a time for revenge”, Macri said on his official Twitter account.

Desolation was the mood in the south of the city, where Boca are based. “I do not like to lose. I started crying,” lamented Sabrina Ortiz, wearing a team jacket. “Boca deserved (to win),” she said.

Post