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How to watch Copa Libertadores online for free

The Copa Libertadores, with top teams from throughout South America, is CONMEBOL’s answer to the Champions League.

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P.J. West

watch Copa Libertadores online for free

South America has long been a dominant soccer continent, best expressed in its World Cup victories and its history of transcendent players like Pele, Maradona, and Messi. The continent also has a long, rich history of professional leagues, and its top club teams face off in a massive annual tournament known as the Copa Libertadores. Here’s everything you need to know about Copa Libertadores and how to watch it online.

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What is Copa Libertadores?

Copa Libertadores, which started in 1960, is also known as CONMEBOL Libertadores. (CONMEBOL is the federation of 10 South American soccer-playing nations.) The tournament has had different looks and configurations throughout its history, but now resembles its European cousin, the Champions League. Like the Champions League, the Copa Libertadores features 32 top-performing teams from the 10 nations’ top-flight leagues. (The field actually starts with 47 teams but is winnowed to the more tournament-friendly number through a series of qualifying matches.) The teams initially compete in eight four-team groups, with the top two from each group advancing to a 16-team knockout phase.

The 2018 edition saw bitter Argentine rivals River Plate and Boca Juniors advance to the finals, which proved troublesome given the two-leg home-and-away format of the finals. While the first leg in Boca’s stadium finished in a 2-2 draw, the initial second leg match was postponed after Boca’s team bus was attacked en route to the match by overzealous River fans. River won the match, which was moved to Madrid two weeks after its initial date due to ongoing safety concerns, with emerging star Pity Martinez scoring the second of two extra-time goals in his final match for the club before joining MLS champs Atlanta United.

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This year’s final will just be a single match—and it won’t take place until Nov. 23 in Santiago, Chile. The knockout phase will start in late July and continue through late summer and fall.

It’s been nearly 20 years since one team has won back-to-back tournaments, with Boca Juniors pulling off that feat in 2001. The top five all-time winners are Argentine, led be Independiente with seven, Boca Juniors with six, Uruguay’s Peñarol with five, and River Plate and Estudiantes with four each.

Which Copa Libertadores teams should I know?

A number of the best-known club teams from South America have qualified for the group stages of the 2019 edition.

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Argentina, with seven slots, is again represented by River Plate and Boca Juniors, as well as San Lorenzo and Huracan, two Buenos Aires-based teams that have their own ongoing rivalry. San Lorenzo gained international attention in 2013 with the ascendancy of Pope Francis; the leader of the Catholic church is a lifelong fan of the team.

Brazil, which typically gets seven slots, has an eighth due to Athletico Paraneanse winning CONMEBOL’s secondary Copa Sudamericana (analogous to UEFA’s Europa League). Traditional Brazilian powers featured at this year’s tournament include Palmeiras, Gremio, Flamengo, Cruzeiro, and Sao Paolo.

The other eight CONMEBOL numbers get four slots each. Ten teams, including Uruguay’s Nacional and a trio of Paraguayan teams—Olimpia, Libertad, and  Cerro Porteño—have already advanced into the Round of 16. Boca Juniors, Gremio, and Chile’s Universidad Católica are among the biggest clubs in South America still needing the final group matches (May 7-9) to determine whether they’ll graduate past the group stage into the knockout stage.

Copa Libertadores live stream: Watch Copa Libertadores matches for free

Each of the following services carries beIN SPORTS, providing a one-week trial and therefore an easy way to watch Copa Libertadores matches for free.

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1) Sling TV

copa libertadores conmebol live stream free
Sling Orange + Blue

Sling TV provides two base channel package options, each priced at $25 per month. Sling Orange includes three ESPN channels, while Sling Blue includes sports channels like NFL Network, FS1 and FS2, NBCSN, and local channels. If you’re Team “Why Not Both,” Sling Orange + Blue combines the two for just $40 per month. To add beIN SPORTS and maximize your soccer-watching potential, you’ll want to add either Sports Extra: Sling Orange ($5 per month) or Sports Extra: Sling Blue ($10 per month). (The latter also includes NFL RedZone.)

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Spanish-speaking viewers have quite a few options. For bilingual families, you might consider the Español: Best of Spanish TV package for either Sling Orange or Sling Blue for 24/7 specialty channel LaLiga TV and beIN SPORTS Connect: Channels 4-9, which features matches from LaLiga, Ligue 1 and Copa del Rey, among others. Both packages cost $5 per month after your free trial. Sling TV Latino is another Spanish-language package for $10 per month, including NBC Universo, History en Español, and—of import to soccer fans—four beIN SPORTS channels. (And choosing Sling TV Latino + Sling Orange for $30 per month gives you access to ESPN Deportes.) For more information, check out our guide to Sling TV channels and our Sling TV review.


2) FuboTV

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FuboTV
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FuboTV is a solid TV streaming service option, whether your tastes run to entertainment (AMC, Syfy, FX), news (MSNBC, CNN), or sports (NBA TV, NFL Network). If you’re a soccer fan, however, it will appear tailor-made for you, with 10 beIN SPORTS channels, NBCSN, FS1, FS2, and UniMás all on tap. If you can’t watch a match live, FuboTV offers a three-day replay for each match and 30 hours of cloud DVR. (Check out the complete FuboTV channels list.)

FuboTV also has bilingual families in mind; each subscription comes with UniMás, Galavisión, NBC Universo, beIN SPORTS, Univision, and Fox Deportes. An extra $7.99 per month will bring you Latino Plus, which includes CNN en Español and TyC Sports among its offerings.

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Copa Libertadores top scorers

The top scorers in the tournament to date (as of the April 25, 2019 matches) are:

Adrian Martinez, Libertad: The Argentine striker is a recent addition, moving from another Paraguayan Primera Division team, Sol de America, this past December, and has netted six goals to lead Libertad safely through the group stages.

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Ricardo Oliveira, Atlético Mineiro: At age 38, the Brazilian striker is still profilic; he has played for pro teams in Spain, Italy, and the United Arab Emirates in a distinguished career now nearing the 20-year mark.

Patricio Rubio, Universidad de Concepción: The Chilean international striker recently featured for Mexican pro team Querétaro before returning to one of his native country’s top sides earlier this year.

Fred, Cruzeiro: The Brazilian player born in 1983 (not to be confused with the Fred born in 1993 playing for Manchester United, or the journeyman former MLS player born in 1979) had a five-year stint in Lyon but has played most of his pro soccer in Brazil. He has a claim to one of the fastest goals in world soccer history, just 3.17 seconds into a U-20 match.

Marco Ruben, Athletico Paraneanse: The Argentine striker, on loan from Argentine pro club Rosario Central, has made pro stops around the globe, including River Plate, Villarreal, Dynamo Kyiv, and Tigres.

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Copa Libertadores champions

  • 2018: River Plate (Argentina)
  • 2017: Gremio (Brazil)
  • 2016: Atlético Nacional (Colombia)
  • 2015: River Plate (Argentina)
  • 2014: San Lorenzo (Argentina)
  • 2013: Atlético Mineiro (Brazil)
  • 2012: Corinthians (Brazil)
  • 2011: Santos (Brazil)
  • 2010: Internacional (Brazil)
  • 2009: Estudiantes (Argentina)

Here’s the complete rundown of the finals, dating back to the inaugural affair in 1960.

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